Indiana . . . .21 Iowa . . . . . . 17 Purdue . . . . . 4.1 Ohio State . . . . 6 Minnesota. . . . 10 Illinois . a . a 7 Pittsburgh Wisconsin . r . 13 . .Z Southern Cal . . 24 Notre Dame. . . 7 Colorado . . . . 23 Missouri . . . . 9 Mississippi Georgi(i . . . . 29 .s . . 21 Shippensburg . . 28 Lock Haven . . 13 tDRAFT RESISTANCE: LEGALIZATION IN '68? See editorial page Ink r43zma &111J4 CLOUDY hligh-65S Low-45 Cooler. 40 Per Cent Chance of Rain Seventy-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom I V UL. LAVIII, NO. 4U ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1967 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT PAGES _ , u , .,r a,_, --- - i/iV i.i i { LA] Spartans Crush By RICK STERN Associate Sports Editor It's bad politics to draw 103,200 people together and then bore them stiff for over an hour. Jim Raye, Al Brenner, and Sterling Armstrong obviously aren't politicians. In a 24 second span near the end of the first half, this Michigan State trio put together enough football skill to render ster- ile the remaining 31 minutes.of what is sometimes a great football game. The score was a not unreasonable 14-0 in favor of State with just over two minutes left in the first half, when Raye threw on the fly from his own 30 yard line all the way down to the Michigan 15, where Brenner took the ball in front of baffled Michigan safety George Hoey and scampered into the end zone. Seconds later Dick Vidmer's last pass of the game landed comfortably in Armstrong's gut on the Michigan 42 yard line, and no one stopped the senior substitute cornerback until he reached the . r**::.:::~:x-...... ~ ... ....*.* Despite the fact that most Michigan fans went home sad last night, a handful found cause for elation in the day's events. Those who stopped at Wines Field after leav- ing the football game saw the Michigan rugby club claim a pair of hard-fought victories from Michigan State. The ruggers, enjoying their best day of the season, won the 'A' contest 3-0, then came back to take a lopsided 18-3 decision in the 'B' game. (See story, page 7 ). k 4 Wolverines, 34-0 -Daiiy-Bernie Baker DENNIS BROWN, MICHIGAN'S RUNNING quarterback, begins one of his rollouts in the second half of yesterday's game. The junior kept the ball 11 times gaining 33 yards while completing 6 for 17 passes. L RAFT ADVICE: SGC Establi shes Counseling Service Wolverine eight yard line. Raye's first play from scrimmage, a pass out in the right flat to Frank Foreman, was good for the TD and the score at the half was 27-0. Head Coach Bump Elliott of Michigan, and his Spartan coun- terpart, Hugh "Duffy" Daugherty, agreed that the five touchdown margin "was not indicative of the closeness of the game." They were right. It was worse. " Traffic on the green grass of Michigan Stadium yesterday was as one way as Saline road after the game, and it was all moving to- MICHIGAN CORNERBACK GEORGE HOEY ward the Wolverine goal line. the first half in yesterday's 34-0 loss to the SI Vidmer and his offensive associates started seven drives in the MSU's third touchdown of the afternoon. T first half. The first six were capped by Pete Drehmann's ubiquitous - punts and the seventh by Armstrong's interception. The total net RULES CONAT RO EDRSY- Wolverine yardage in the first half was an eyebrow-raising -4, in- . . 1 cluding 40 through the air and 44 backwards on the ground. MSU had eight chances to move the ball, which was only one more than Michigan. The difference was measured in yardage and yard gains, and whenever the' Wolverine defense, which was essen- tially geared for a running offense, did stop him, he would throw the By MICHAEL HEFFER units they d ball to Brenner or Foreman, accurate six out of ten times, thrice to city Editor countered I each. aily News Analysis thing from1 MSU's halftime yardage total was 267, 137 on the ground and Individual dormitory houses, "IHA felt 130 through the air. prodded by Joint Judiciary Coun- extreme, so Eighty-five of these came on the first of the four Spartan cil and Student Government to relegate scoring marches late in the first quarter Rave started the drive with Council, have begun an attack up- make condi -Dally-Jay Cassidy leaps in vain for a pass from Michigan State quarterback Jimmy Raye near the end of partans. State end Al Brenner, however, gathered it in and reached the end zone to score he fleet Brenner grabbed off three such tosses to gain 86 yards for the day. Decide Future of IHA eein appropriate," IHA by asking the same the board. to work out compromises between the houses before submitting the policies to the board. In the fu- By BRIAN FORD Student Government Council is currently offering a draft counsel- ing service, which began opera- tions last week. The 11 available counselors, the majority of whom are graduate students, were trained at a work- shop this summer conducted by Joseph Tushinski, a draft coun- selor and faculty member of Roosevelt University in Chicago. SGC is urging students seeking advise concerning their draft ice is intended to supplement the University's draft counseling agen- 'cy. Kahn said that the SGC serv- ice will be in frequent contact with the Selective Service System1 to provide students with access tot the most recent information con- cerning the draft. This policy of keeping up-to-1 date information readily available has "never been done before in anr organized way," Kahn added. Kahn pointed out that a draft counseling service is "one of the most needed services" because the Q WIls aaa.aG , "GAlUA I UU a ~. ay ~1UG 1G U V runs of eight and six yards and finished wtih a 16 yard sweep two yard plunge for the TD. In between were completions of2 and six yards, the first to Foreman and the latter two to Bren nine yard run by Dwight Lee on a pitchout sustained the drive key third and seven situation. The second drive, which actually preceded the bomb to ner by only a minute and 33 seconds, was largely to the credito Apisa, the big Hawaiian fullback who had been sitting on the1 a good portion of the time up until yesterday. Starting on his own 33 yard line,' after a fine 45 yard pu and a 24, 15, ner. A e on a' Bren- of Bob bench on unpopular rules that has Inter-House Assembly and bring about an women's hours. end to fresh The actions of these groups the lack of any action taker the administration, has left question of student power rules fairly clouded. split Racheter, '6 may president. Lmen The four the board v and quest. Ther n by theboard. the "IHA is over official of of the boar fa ... in ... SGC's action was too ture, we'll submit each house's we asked the board original request and work to get to IHA its power to them passed." Lct rules," said, Don Whether or not this will satisfy 9, IHA executive vice- the houses may be seen at IHA's meeting tomorrow. East Quad has faculty members on already refused to pay IHA dues voted against this re- pending an investigation of the e are two students on value of IHA membership. IHA can claim some progress, dead," moaned one however, having stjcceeded in get- IHA after the end ting students into board meet- rd meeting where the ings, and getting the board to ask made. the Regents to divide board mem- concedes a change is bership equally between students HA's policy: and faculty. le in the past has been Meanwhile, the houses have unt by status to call the GC . office and ""' 0DRbh make an appointment to talk with draft "affects all males." Drehmann, Raye mixed 'em up by running through the middle for a while. Apisa went by left guard on runs of 26, 6, and 1 yard. Dwight one of the counselors. Differentiating between the SGC Lee went over the middle just once but it was good for 27 yards, and According to SGC President agency and the University's agen- Raye took it over center himself on a sneak for the tally. Bruce Kahn, the SGC draft serv- cy, SGC executive vice-president See FIRST, Page 7 Ruth Baumann said that coun- selors from SGC are prepared to advise students on the best ways CLOSED-RESER YE: to avoid being drafted whereas the counselor for the University "ex- plicates the law." Conscientious make appeals will find informed counselors at SGC, according to 1 Miss Baumann. One of the confusing aspects is that JJC, SGC, IHA and the houses all see different routes to- ward attaining power over rules. The current controversy dates back to last spring, when several candidates for vacant JJC posit- ions said they would enforce only those rules passed by students without administrative veto.. These students, now on JJC, have already thrown out two cases because they involved administra- tion-made rules. JJC members want students to determine and enforce their own rules. decision was Racheter needed in II 'IHA's rol Freshman Hours: A Matter of" Opinion -_-11 A "" * I @ QQ .JAA 1- G Approximately 10 students have F I1 I It O EJUI 110 SGC also seeks to enlarge the role already used the service. After of the student. SGC has recognized speaking with a SGC draft coun- By DAVID STEIN to charge books and keep records. the right of individual houses to selor, William Murphey, '71, said, Looking for something? Previously most books design- make conduct rules. "You wouldn't want to talk to a A student need go no further ated as required reading were During the summer SGC re- nicer person. She told me every- than the Undergraduate Library's placed on an open reserve where viewed the administration's Uni- thing I wanted to know and more." closed-reserve desk to find 'the the book could be used duing the versity Regulations. Last month Both SGC and the Student I assigned reading for a particular day by any student and then SGC passed these rules with cer- Peace Union began planning sepa- course. checked out overnight. tain changes, making this version rate draft counseling agencies this The UGLI has put all assigned According to Miss Rose-Grace of the rules the one JJC will ac- past summer. Toward the end of reading on a closed-reserve sys- 11Faucher, head of the Undergrad- cept as University Regulations. August. SGC and SPU combined tem in an effort to provide better uate Library, "only teacher's As far as SGC's rules are con-! theii efforts and sponsored the service in getting assigned books copies, rare edition, or books we cerned, John Feldkamp, director workshop that trained the coun- to the student. Adapted this fall, had only one copy of were on of University Housing says, "SGCj selors. the system employs a computer closed reserve. As a result stu- has no authority in the individual -. - dents could hide a book during the conduct area," and therefore the day, reducing our service to the r u 1 e s of the administration, studentn" are still in effect. reUnder the new system all books SGC, as part of its rules changes, listed for assigned reading by gave the houses control over in- r -u c. 7 0professors will be closed reserve. dividual conduct rules. IHA, how- By 2MICHAEL HEFFER City Editor and MARTIN HIRSCHMAN Daily News Analysis Freshmen women's hours do exist, and then again, they don't. Punishment for violation of cur-y few does exist, and then again, it doesn't, but that depends on which house the woman is in. And everything depends on whosel rules you follow. University Regulations, as writ- ten by the administration, state that freshmen women in dormi- tories have hours. University Regulations, as re-s written by Student Government Council, state that freshmen wo- men have hours until such time as the freshmen women in each house vote to eliminate them. college that the student be dis- ciplined. However, James Shaw, associ- ate dean of the literary college in charge of student relations, says his college would probably defer action until the presidential com- mission on decision-making re- ports. James Robertson, director of the Residential College, and Shaw's predecessor in charge of students, says he has "never heard of a case" in which a stu- dent was brought directly from the housing office for punishment for violating hours. If Feldkamp were to choose the traditional route of taking cases through the judiciary system he would have to, in a case where the house no longer included hours in its rules, take the case before JJC as a violation of Uni- started acting without IHA. - JJC has requested that all- houses pass the rules they want to follow. Four houses have al- ready done this. These houses, while accepting the philosophy that students should determine tleir own rules, have avoided direct confrontation with the administration. Three of the houses refused to pass enforcement of late hours. Although they also did not pass rules requiring hours ,they do not see this as an abolition of hours. Explained the president of one of these houses, "We are not in any way abolishing hours, nor are we assuming any power. We are rather relinquishing\ a power we really have not had all along." The affect of such action, and indeed one of its purposes, is to place the responsibility for en- forcement of hours and other rules upon the residence hall staff. It is unclear what the staff will do as far as enforcement. Feld- kamp has told the staff they may only "counsel and persuade" stu- dents in cases where the student judiciary no longer enforces a rule. The staff will be able to disci- pline under such rules only when specifically asked to by the stu- dents. Otherwise, "if counseling isn't effective, the staff will have to request the student's college or school to take action." How willing the schools will be to do this, or what will happen in the case of mass violations or late hours is not clear. James Shaw, associate dean of the liter- ary college in charge of student relations, has said he felt his college would wait until the Pres- idential Commission on Decision- Making reports before deciding what to do. But even as the rest of the houses were deciding what rules to adopt, SGC gave them a fur. ther push by declaring that fresh- man women should themselves decide whether or not they want hours. SGC reversed its earlier position of an hours referendum in favor of giving the freshmen in each house the right to decide. All this emphasis on house ac- tion has weakened IHA. IHA officials have said they will now attempt to take any changes in rules the houses want before the board of governors. They may ask the houses tomor- row to give them their constitu- tions to present to the board. "This request could place the houses in a compromised posi- tion," a high SGC observer corn- ment_ "SC ha uid the houses BRUCE KAHN 3 i General Li Above Cen I Iral tcampui By JAMES NEUBACHER versity has refused to comply with Those big grey walls surround- the provisions of Public Act 124 ing the south end of the General which stipulates that the state Library were not intended to be- controls planning and selection come the delight of campus gra- of any architecture. For this rea- fitti scribes although that's the son, funds for the new annex are way things hav worked out. provided by a Federal loan, a, However, University officials Federal grant and funds from thei are looking' forward to the day $55-Million Fund Drive. Books are charged for four hour. ever, has shied away from the 6 periods during the day and may SGC position, and attempted to sY 't be used only in the building.'work out rules changes with the1 When the demand for a book is Boar'd 'of Governors of Residence] Plans for the new building also Halls include special rooms for the great, the charge period is re- Hatd i Rare Book and Map collections, duced to two hours. Closed reserve cHA feels that it should initiate air conditioning, and space for books can still be charged over- changes in policy ad th a ke adirnirtivofies, Th se tech night. Reserve periodicals may them to the board for approval. administrative offices. The tech- not leave the building This is what it did for open-open1 nical services, which will expandn policy and it was accepted by both in order to serve both the old and Rolland C. Stewart, Assistant the board and the houses without new structures, will remain in the Director of the University Libr- difficulty. existing offices in the General aries, said that the new system was But there was objection to the Library. To alleviate the space prompted by student complaints imposition of one set of rules on shortage in this area that of- that books couldn't be found and each of the different houses. ficials feel.- is "certain to crop that too many reserve books were Randy Braccialarghe, East Quad up," a new Technical Services lost. president, argued that each house1 Building on North Campus is in "We gave the open reserve sys- should be able to make its own +1,-. 1- 0- - n.. _.1. . . . ,, t n n nA n ;enA A - m cany tI - Administration Policy versity rules. admiistration, whih JJC, however, doesn't recog- The administration, which didnize administration rules, and not give SGC the power to change might therefore throw the case rules, still considers its regula- out tions in force, according to John o Administrative Dilemma Feldkamp, director of University Therefore, in order to have a Housing, student punished by JJC, Feld- Joint Judiciary Council, which kamp might have to use SGC rues is the supreme student judiciary for his complaint. This would be body, follows SGC rules as op- a recognition of SGC rules. Feld- posed to the rules of the admin- kamp says he won't go before istration, but may uphold mdi- JJC. when the addition to the General Library will first peep over the3 top of those walls. The nine-story structure will be the dominating3 landmark of the Central Cam- According to the terms of the contract, the building was to be completed within 600 days from the time that the contract was awarded. at a cost of $5.432,000. I S vidual house rules over SGC Even if Feldkamp, or anyone rules, according to Peter Stein- else, brought up such a case, JJC berger, chairman of JJC. would have to decide between the Blagdon, Elliot and F-i s h e r SGC rule on hours and the house houses, in Markley, have elimi- lack of recognition of hours. nated punishment for curfew vio- Freshmen in Blagdon house lations from their house rules. { have already begun to circulate Blagdon and Elliot also ommitted netition to end hnurs Stein-