Indiana ...... 38 Ohio State.... .13 USC......... 27 lMinnesota.....17 Kansas.... ..23 Peti.State.,...21 NotrefDame ....27 Iowa........34 Purdue...... 0 Stanford.....24 Illinois.......10 Nebraska.....13 UCLA........ 6 Northwestern . 7 Drexel T ech ... 20 ?P1 . . .. *. ....10 o verines spie State, 28- 14 By DAVID WEIR Sports Editor For a while yesterday it looked like Bump Elliott shouldn't have worn a short-sleeved shirt. Especially when, two minutes into the final quarter, Michigan State converted on a two-point PAT to take a 14-13 lead. As it turned out, however, Elliott didn't have to pull anything out from under his sleeve to beat the Spartans. An impromptu pass play, a tipped MSU aerial, and a pair of broken tackles shoved the Wolverines to their first victory in a conference opener in four years; 28-14. The key play was a 53-yard touchdown pass from Dennis Brown to tight end Jim MVandich five minutes after State took the one-point lead. The pass, however, wasn't really supposed to work that way. "I wasn't the primary receiver on the play," said Mandich after the game. "It was a bootleg where Brown was going to pass to (Ron) Johnson. But Dennis got trapped and had to look for someone else. "I was right in his line of vision," Man- dich continued, "And I had a step on my man. The pass was perfect and I had clear sailing the rest of the way to the goal line." The Wolverines converted for two on a Brown pass to fullback Garvie Crawi and the score stood 21-14. The Spartans came right back, however, and appeared headed for an equalizer when the next big play turned off their steam. Quarterback Bill Feraco spotted ace flanker Chuck Wede- meyer alone downfield from his perch on the Michigan 40 and let go with a bullet that might have gone for paydirt, except for Phil Seymour's long fingers. Seymour, Wolverine defensive and spe- cialist who tied teammate Tom Goss for game honors with 14 tackles, barely man- aged to tip the pigskin away from Wede- meyer's waiting arms. That broke State's momentum, and on the next play, safety Tom Curtis picked off a pass to end the scoring threat. After that, Brown, Craw, and Johnson rambled 83 yards in nine plays for the clincher TD-with Craw smashing through two would-be Spartan tacklers for the final 25-yarder which sealed State's fate. The Michigan locker room was one big smile afterward. "We'll win eight more this year," shouted Johnson, who racked up 152 yards in 19 carries for the afternoon. There are only six games left on the regular season sched- ule, but the Wolverine captain failed to elaborate on his prediction. "I think this one will make us GO!" opined the 6'2", 220-pound tackle Goss. "Those of us who are seniors have been waiting four years to beat MSU." "This is just the beginning," stated jubi- lant Director of Athletics Donald Canham, wryly. Head coach Elliott looked relieved. "I've' never been happier for a group of guys to win a game." he said. Brother Pete, former Illinois mentor, offered his congratulations. DaitjF A different sort of gentleman, in a dif- ferent sort of atmosphere, had a slightly different reaction. Michigan State Spartan coach, Duffy Daugherty. spoke in soft, de- jected tones about his team's first loss of the season: "We had the ball for 90 plays and they only ran 51 . . ." he said, voice trailing off. "Nevertheless, you can't take anything away from Michigan. They knew how to take ad- vantage of their scoring opportunities." For much of the game, the Wolverines made their own breaks. Speedster George Hoey took the opening kickoff and raced all the way to the Spartan 49. Five plays later, Johnson swept around left end into the open and galloped for a 38-yard touch- down-his fifth of the season. Michigan State came right back, with Feraco and Wedemeyer slashing around the ends for big gains. At the 5:32 mark, soared 37 yards unscathed on a naked reverse to cut the Wolverine lead to one point. The PAT attempt was wide. After the kickoff and a pair of punts, Michigan started out on its own 26. Brown found his aim and hit Mandich for 38 to get into State territory, and then a 33-yard bomb to flanker John Gabler shot the Maize and Blue into another seven-point lead. And that's right where it stayed as Tim Kil- lian booted low on the conversion attempt. At that time there were still about three- and-one-half minutes left in the first period. There had been three touchdowns in under See SPARTANS, Page 11 WOLVERINE END JIM MANDICH (88) snags the halfback Al Brenner (86) vainly tries to catch the pass play. -Daily-Andy Sacks winning touchdown pass of yesterday's 28-14 victory over Michigan State. Spartan Michigan receiver as Mandich heads for the end zone to complete the 53-yard SUNDAY MORNING See editorial page glfr DAPPLED Iligh-74 Low--68 Partly cloudy, chance of rain Monday Vol. LXXIX, No. 39 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, October 13, 1968 Ten Cents Twelve Pages REASSESSMENT BEGINS: McCarthy Faculty debate English reforms endorses v Apollo's problems minor; postpone TV transmission ly The Associated Press /.}. q-ppy By ANN MUNSTER posals are the beginning of such a Daily News Analysis reassessment. The proposals for restructuring The proposed reforms also touch the English department don't on the most sensitive spot iii the come up with revolutionary an- anatomy of the multiversity, for swers, but they do attempt to come they sharply affect the size of to grips with two fundamental classes. It is on this score where questions facing education in the the critics of the sprawling educa- humanities - concentration re- tional institutions have directed quirements and class size. their first intense criticism. What it takes to be "educated Whether the English depart- in English" is a question which ment will come up with programs can never be finally settled. The which successfully deal with these relevance of a particular approach problems is another question. must be reassessed, for society Not surprisingly, the set of changes constantly. The new pro- highly tentative proposals drawn Report decries lack of state college f ds up by new department chairman Russel Fraser have generated an immense variety of reactions among English faculty. The direction of the proposals is to reduce the teaching load, cur- rently the highest of any literary college department, dnd to re- deploy staff toward -upper level concentration courses. All of the proposals are fairly, vague. And some of them, such as those regarding freshmen a n d sophomore courses basically re- present an extension of existing programs already underway on a limited scale. The plan, on which the depart- ment has reached some consensus. will be presented at a hearing for English students on Oct. 16 and then sent to the department's executive committee for further consideration- Fraser says the proposal "is not revolutionary but it does repre- sent real change." "The faculty is changing every year, the students are changing every year, and the world is changing every year," says Prof. John Styan. "Why should the English department stay the same?" "The proposal is really a very modest one," he says. "We are not shaking the whole thing up at all, although it will mean a great deal more flexibility in the de- partment." "I can't see that there will be any diminution in the quality of instruction under this new sys- tem," Prof. Earl J. Schultz, chair- man of the freshman course com- mittee, says assuringly. "It amounts to distilling out of Mils ke the sections those matters which The Apollo 7 Earth orbital flight are best handled in lecture and al- LOS ANGELES {A'} --- Sen. Eu- continued on schedule yesterday, lowing the sections to concentrate gene J. McCarthy endorsed Sen. although the three man crew re- on what is best handled in smaller Edmund S. Muskie for vice pres- ported that bits of fuzz have ap- groups," he explains. ident yesterday, but said endorse- peared on all the spacecraft's win- "Introducing the lecture will ment of Hubert H. Humphrey dows. mean a better chance for students for president is "still an open Saying it "apparently just de- to have class at least once a week question." veloped as a sort of dust," com- with some of the more distinguish- "I'm for Muskie for vice presi- mand pilot Capt. Walter M. Schir- ed members of the department," dent," the Minnesota senator told ra Jr. reported .that the hatches Schulze concludes. newsmen. "That shows you what were getting "a little bit cloudy Prof. Hubert English points out this campaign is coming to." around the edges." that the plan to have faculty McCarthy who lost the Demo- There is also a film on another working tegrally with teaching carthys e lo mt D o window, apparently a form of con- fellows and assistant professors in cratic presidential nomination to densation within the craft. f eellsecndassisangproesorsinl Vice President Humphrey, w a s The fuzz and dust have obscured a lecture-section arrangement will here to lend his support to several observation and threaten to curtail mean better coordination and bet- California Democratic candidates ter induction of new people into picture taking cameras located in- the system. whose positions he agrees with. side the Apollo spacecraft. Prof. James Gindin, who took In reply to questions, he denied Schirra had earlier ruled out a part in drawing up the proposals, withholding support from Hum- planned television linkup w i t h says, "A course goes well or badly phrey to gain concessions on the mission control which was to have depending on about 62 different Vietnam war he opposes. been broadcast by the commercial things, of which size is only one, 'I've not raised the ante," he networks. Schirra, with irritation The notion that size and intimacy said. "We're still playing the same in his voice, said "We have not are directly correlated is some- samd. 'eaten, at this point. I have a cold, thing I am very skeptical about." I refuse to foul up our timelines Prof. Robert T. Lenaghan says, A spokesman for the Democratic at this point." "What really matters is changing National Committee said in Wash- He overruled astronauts Donn the kinds of courses we are of- ington: "We are very happy Sen. E. Eisele and Walter Cunningham, fering." Lenaghan feels there is McCarthy has endorsed Sen. Mus- who agreed merely to test the a wide variety of both teaching kie. I would hope this is a step equipment on the pass over the methods and types of courses toward endorsement of Vice Pres- United States. which the department ought to ident Humphrey. In the words of Technical differences between consider in making these changes. one of our popular songs, 'you, the low power transmission from' The proposal to change the sur- can't have one without the other."' the spacecraft and commercial pp vey course required for majors has McCarthy's endorsement came television result in a blurred and O probably generated the most con- in response to a newsman's ques- often jerky picture. The test was - troversy. There is a general re- tion. He did not elaborate on it. not high on the mission's list of; cognition that students are not Aides pointed out that McCarthy priorities. content with the existing araange- and Muskie are close friends and The transmission may be com- See FACULTY, Page 6 often praise each other publicly. pleted today if Apollo mission con- trol orders it. The decision would Michigan universities have lots' of threadbare company in the' dilemma of surviving inadequate state support. A report issued yesterday by the National Association of State Universities and Land Grant Col- leges (NASULGC) declares that despite percentage increases in state support "Public higher edu- cation still is not receiving the b' support it must have to keep up with rising costs anddemands." t "Despite apparently large in-r creases in appropriations, state and land- grant universitiest throughout the nation are facedt with dangerous threats to theirt quality and to the educational op-$ portunity they have long providedr to citizens of this country," the report claims. The report was based on a sur-t vey of state and land-grant uni- versities and was written by Dr. M. M. Chambers of Indiana Uni- versity. Sixty-one universities in 41 states replied to the NASULGC survey. In comparing appropria- tions between 1967-68 and 1968- 69, the report found an average increase of 15 per cent per uni- versity. State support of operating funds for higher education has reached the $5 billion mark this year, a 43 per cent increase over the $3.5 billion reported two years ago (1966-67) and a 233 per cent in-F crease over the $1.5 billion report- ed in 1960-61. The appropriation for the Uni- versity this year was $63,272,392, a seven per cent increase over the previous year. Expansion, inflation and salaries' were cited as the major reasons' universities are requesting in- creases in state funds. However,. The survey noted that the 1967- 68 salary survey by the American Association of University Profes- sors showed private universities are able to offer full professors an average of $2,110 mrore per year in salary and -$3,281 more in com- pensation (salary plus specified fringe benefits) than public uni- versities. For the 61 responding universi- ties, capital budget requests did not fare as well as operating re- quests with about one-fourth of the universities reporting no capi- tal appropriations and only one out of nine receiving as much as 80 per cent of the capital dollars requested. -Associated Press Artist's sketch of Apollo chase POSITIONS: Petitionii g opens for EnginH boards FA REWELL TO FESTOONZLE One less Ani SArbor By HENRY GRIX Poor REd's is dead. Closed. A martyr to the prefabricated progress represented by the 26- story highrise on Maynard and Thompson in whose shadow REd's crouched. Clark "Red" Shelton, owner of REd's Rite Spot and the al- most existential hero of Ann A r b o r restauranteers, "went broke" Wednesday after 37 years of running the only clean greasy spoon on campus. Red has sold his restaurant, his house, his property up north, and is mov- ing down to Key West to start a new hamburger joint on the coast. There can be no obituary for the crystal hamburger palace REd s be made about noon.gh Later, the crew gunned t h e spacecraft in a chase of the spent second stage of the Saturn rocket which has pushed them aloft. "It's tumbling rather wildly so we want to stay away from it," the astronauts reported, but they handled it as a simulated rescue, of two astronauts lost in moon or- bit. Fighting a tight time schedule, Schirra concentrated on firing the spacecraft's rocket engine, which packs more power than a jet fight- Mike or Red told you "You look awful, have a bromo," you would order a 20 cent bromo and like it. If Red told you your date was ugly, you could tell him it was the food she had been eating. "There was an aura of ,;on- vivial good feeling and non- conformity surrounding t h e place that REd worshippers valued beyond life," a Daily edi- torial lyricised two years ago, It was over two and a hailf years ago that Red "celebrated" the move from his old 14 stool "humble hut of Good Food," into his newer rite spot. B-er can in hand Red swaggered across William Street, attracting a crowd of 50 to watch the de- By MICHAEL THORYN The engineering advisory boards Petitions are now being accept- operate unlike the boards which ed for eight positions on the four advise the University's vice presi- student advisory boards in the dents. These have only student college of engineering, members with a rather limited The boards deal with program power in its decision making, counseling, placement, freshman Faculty members hold a small counseling, and curriculum. majority on the committees. A Petitions should be turned in at typical representation is six facul- the Engineering Council office, ty members to four students. All 128F West Engineering before 5 have equally weighted votes. T d rlara er. p.m. JuesUay. In the past years, the advisory After the maneuver was com- Interv'iewing and selection will boards have dealt with many is- pleted, Schirra broke away from be done by the five-man Engin sues of immediate student con- the rocket for the last time. He Council executive board. cern. also told the ground controllers Chris Bloch, '70E, executive vice The major accomplishments of that he would use the ship's port- president of Engin Council, said these boards have included In- able television camera to give the advisory boards make deci-ts ioofsavrocdeder- America a look at the astronauts sions by consensus. stigation of a procedure whereby in space sometime Monday morn- - students could counsel other stu- ing. dent on courses, and development The Apollo 7 inched as close as H istory for'u i of a pass-fail option in the college. 70 feet of the tumbling rocket and ill L.yThe boards have also partici- jammed on the rocket brakes to pated in improving preregistration avoid getting too close. Then it dela vsm eetina for engineering students. and dis- ,:.