Purdue.......35 0 Illinois .......17 Indiana .......21 Wisconsin ....20 Ohio State.....25 Michigan St...20 Iowa .......... 35 Minnesota .....28 Kansas,...... 27 Colorado ..... 14 Penn State....28 Armyf.........24 California . . Washington,.. Emory & Henry 68 Haml.p.-Sy dniey..14 SUNDAY MORNING See editorial page :Yi A6F A& 4bp :43atty BRISK High-54 Low-38 Cloudy and cool. little chance of rain Vol. LXXIX, No. 57 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, November 3, 1968 Ten Cents Wolverines stompZilcats By BILL LEVIS 27 aerials. "The lack of comple- split end Bill Harris for Michigan s the only Wolverine who inter- Associate sports Editor tions was due to a combination of second touchdown of the game, cepted passes. Defensive tackle EVANSTON-Michigan ran over off-target and dropped passes," the Wildcats' quarterback tried Dan Parks tallied Michigan's Northestern-yesterday like a noted offensive coordinator Tony to get Northwestern on the score- fourth touchdown of the game in locomotive. The Wolverines built Mason.board with a bomb. the second period after Cecil Pry- up steam slowly, but once they Mason felt a key to the game Curtis, ressembling Curt Flood or deflected a Shelbourne pass started to roll they never stopped and to the season has been Michi- catching a high pop fly in shal- into his waiting arms. moving. And they stopped the gan's Ability to hang on to the low center field, swiped a pass The, sophomore lumbered 50. Wildcats: 35-0. ball. "We haven't lost a fumble from two Northwestern receivers yards for the score and then flung Michigan scored three touch- all season. The only time we have and ran 27 yards to the North- the pigskin into one of the Mich- downs within one minute and mishandled the ball was on the western 41 setting up Michigan's igan Marching Band's tubas. thirteen seconds near the end of snap, and we have always been third score. Ron Johnson took a Brown pass the first half to break the game able to recover the ball." After the Wolverines scored a for the two point conversion to wide open/ The Wolverines played For the second game in a row, fourth time some twenty seconds give the Wolverines their 28 a sluggish first quarter before they Michigan didn't even mishandle a later, the junior spoiled another point halftime lead. got untracked in the second stan- snap. Wildcat scoring attempt when, Two other errant Northwestern za to go into the locker room with The difference in yesterday's with three seconds left in the half, passes were picked off by Michi- a 28-0 halftime edge. game, however, was the Wolver- he picked off another Shelbourne gan defenders in the fourth A fourth quarter touchdown ine's defense. The big man was pass and raced 37 yards to the quarter. Backup safety Bob Kieta gave Michigan; its first shutout junior safety Tom Curtis who in- Michigan 40. Luckily for battered intercepted a Dana Woodring at- since the Wolverines whitewashed tercepted two passes in the first Northwestern, time ran out be- tempt and rambled 24 yards to Minnesota 49-0 in 1966. half to bring his season and Big fore Michigan could mount an- the Wolverine 45 to up Michigan's Still it was not the offense that Ten total to seven, tying his con- other threat. final score. shone before 40,101 Wildcat fans ference mark set last year. "It is mostly timing," Curtis Five plays later halfback Lance, on a gray, overcast afternoon. The Curtis snagged two Dave Shel- said of his knack for intercept- Scheffler who had ripped off two offense had more trouble getting j bourne passes in the last two ing. "When the ball is up in the runs of 13 and 12 yards carried started than any time since Mich- minutes of the second quarter air like on the first interception the ball for the third consecutive MICHIGAN TACKLE DAN PARKS (74) leaves the last potential North igan's opening loss to California. when the Wolverines scored three just anyone can get it." time and plunged over left guard he charges across the goal line to score on a 50-yard run following a Quarterback Dennis Brown was 'touchdowns. Curtis, however, was not the for the score. the ball off after Cecil Pryor and Hank Hill had deflected a Dave Shelb only able to complete nine out of After Brown threw 'a pass to only star on defense and was not See SECOND, Page 11 was the fourth of the game for the Wolverines. Twelve Pages -Daily-Thomas R. Copt Western tackler in the dust as n interception. Parks grabbed ourne pass attempt. The score A4 ELECTION STRIKE: Fort Hood Three' H o calls drive on Vietnamese to atte Demonstrations, a classroom strike and a "teach-out" are planned for the election protests on campus tomorrow and Tuesday. The protest activities, coordi- nated by the National Mobiliza- tion to End the War in Vietnam and supported by the Students for a Democratic Society, tomor- row and Tuesday will. include the appearance at a noon Diag rally i of two members of tlie "Fort Hood Three," servicemen jailed Judge han * aout Clea nd protests for refusing to fight in Vietnam, Stockholm, where he talked to Dennis Mora and James John- ' U.S. Army deserters. son, recently released after serv- Rennie Davis, chairman of the ing two years in Fort Hood Mili- I national Mobilization will appear tary prison, will be making their with Mora and Johnson at a dis- first public appearance in a series cussion tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the of Mobilization demonstrations Union. called "Strike Three." Activities on election day will The rally on Tuesday will fea- I include a day-long "teach-out" on Lur asspeker Mra nd ohn ithe Diag. Picket lines will be ture as speakers Mora and John- formed around University build- son and Prof. Sax of the Law ings and groups of demonstrators School, recently returned from will attempt to recruit students ; to work for the election of local anti-war, anti-racist candidates. The Mobilization is urging a CO MII'ii i ltboycott of Nixon, Humphrey and Wallace candidacies as the theme of Strike Three, Gene Gladstone, Michigan co-ordinator for the Ver case, Mobilization, said. "The teach-out will try to create dialogue around to out, U.so forces ef TermsIbomnbing hl great Hanoi victory By The Associated Press North Vietnamese President Ho Chi Minh today accused the United States of "perfidy" and called on "all Vietnamese . . to fight on until the last American aggressor is driven from our land." He called the bombing halt of North Vietnam a "great victory" but his statement broadcast by Radio Hanoi made no mention of the expanded peace talks President Johnson announced with the halt. The U.S. Command in Saigon yesterday reported only scattered shellings in South Vietnam during the second day the bombing halt was in IX011 sas effect. From Wire Service Reportsa eoe h etr fasae the major questions facing stu- roWieSrieRorshas become the center of a state- dents," he added. Superior Court Judge Redmond wide controversy over an experi- Aeng he local Staats of Alameda County, Cali- mental course on racism he plan- Among the local candidates the fornia has prohibited lawyers and ned to teach at the Berkeley "ob isor sherf Era Row- all public officials, including Gov. campus of the University of Cali- Lry and Marge Brazei' for county Ronald Reagan, from making any fornia. supervisors, Bert Garskof for statements or comment about the Both Reagan and Max Rafferty, Congress and the New Politics case of Eldridge Cleaver, contro- State Superintendent of Public candidates. Gladstone stressed the', versial leader of the Black Pan- Instruction and the Republican importance of a large vote for the ther party. candidate for U.S. Senate h a v e New Politics slate since Michigan Cleaver and five other mem- criticized the university's failure law would allow the party to ap- bers of the Panthers are scheduled to prevent Cleaver from making pear on the next ballot only if to stand trial next month on any campus appearances. 14,000 votes are cast in the pres- charges of attempted murder. ent election. In the past few weeks, Cleaver Cleaver, free on $50,000 bail ente electonn rbrc- ._ was indicted last spring on three Dave Gordon, Ann Arbor co- counts, attempted murder and as- ordinator of the Mobilization, em- sault with a deadly weapon against phasized, however, that all activi- Spoliceman, following a gun fight ties around polling places would tou rs inwhich Cleaver was wounded ibe legal and no attempt to disrupt Panther was killed. Gordon's promise of peaceful vrn s .protest responds to Secretary of iven to Aside from Cleaver. Warren State James M. Hare, who earlier Wells, Wendell Wade, Terry Cot- this week warned of anticipated legi lato s jton, Charles Bursey and Donnell incidents at "as many as a dozen Lankford have all pleaded n 0 t 1 polling places." Ann Arbor was leg l ators "guilty on the attempted murder one of the areas he cited as a charges. trouble spot. Hare said he had The Panther's defense lawyer "reason to believe," dissident By SHARON WEINER Charles Garry has asked that the groups planned disruptive protests State legislators will confront indictment be dismissed on that might "include bombings." student stors di nr t 'able Igrounds that the grand jury does The secretary of state said his studn s-over the dinner table- not represent a cross-section of warning to voters was based on during Student Escort Service the community and that Superior i intelligence reports of- the Fed- tr y inaugurated UniversityCourt judges intentionally ex- eral Bureau of Investigation, state slude blacks and the poor from the I and local police and elections of- The escort service was revital- , grand jury. ficials. ized this year when. Thomas Ford In Paris. North Vietnamese Am- bassador Xuan Thuy yesterday said the United States had given assurances that it would bring South Vietnam to the four-sided peace talks to begin Wednesday. Yesterday, South Vietnam Presi- dent Nguyen van Thieu said his government would not attend the sessions since the National Liber- . ation Front (NLF) the political arm of the Viet Cong, would be .e a e h opes dim i. By The Associated Press Republican Presidential candi- date Richard M. Nixon, cam- paigning in Austin, Tex., yester- -Associated Press Nixon, Humphrey: Criticism and patience with Thieu's position THE GALLUP-HARRIS GAP: Pollsters' By DAVID KNOKE Daily News Analysis George C. Wallace claims "East- ern money" controls them. McCarthy's primary perform- ances made them look silly. Romney and LBJ took them at their word and dropped out. "Them" are the pollsters, the ubiquitous political prognostica- tors who can predict the outcome tion. Vietnam's refusal to join the Paris Thuy said North Vietnam had peace talks. He told a rally crowd cred b iitya t s tc he accepted the U.S. proposals "in "the prospects. for peace are not good faith. As for Saigon's atti- as bright as we would have hoped tude, this is for the United States even a few days ago." of an election within a fraction of polls. Both carry much w'eight and Saigon to settle. If they do Nixon said that President John- not want peace, then 'the Ameni- the actual vote--or be leagues with political professionals and cns mut bear thenthe reo- son had assured the candidates by apart when several of them try average voters, but their credibi- silittelephone before announcing the lity has suffered somewhat in the bombing halt that the Saigon gov- to predict the relative strengths unpredictable 1968 campaign. Thuy insisted that Ui.S. pr- ernment would take pat in the of candidates before the voterss posals would permit all four par-e cast their ballots. Gov. Nelson Rockefeller based ties to the talks to be represented negotiations. The two major polling organ- his drive for the nomination on by "independent d e I e g a t i o n s Vice President Hubert Hum- izations, among some 200 which the pre-convention polls which he having the right to speak for phrey, who seems to have the most have been active from the pri- hoped would show him attracting themselves." to lose politically in any faltering maries through the election, are, Democrats and independents in The South Vietnamese observer of the peace moves, attributed of course, the Harris and Gallup greater .numbers than Richard to the United States yesterday Saigon's position to "political -- Nixon. But a week before the clarified Thieu's, statement by problems at home." Miami convention, a Gallup poll saying his government's conditions showed Nixon farther ahead of for participation in the talks . Good sense will overcome any the Democratic rivals, while a would allow the NLF to attend as immediate emotional reaction, to Harris poll two days later showed part of the delegation. He added participating, the Democratic can- Rocky ahead and Nixon trailing, that Hanoi must also give firm didate said in Youngstown, Ohio. ? rA joint statement by Lou Harris assurances of willingness to open One of Nixon's advisers, Califor- and George Gallup that Rocke- "direct and serious talks" with nia Lt. Gov. Robert Finch, said feller had an undisputed lead con- the Saigon government. he called 60 political leaders in vinced almost no one and prob- . Saigon remained quiet follow- major states and was told t h e tunities of appeal." He says they ably damaged the polls' image, ing Thieu's statement, but one bombing halt could not help Hum- probably n.eglected to appeal The Humphrey stretch drive is paper quoted leaders opposed to phrey. He called the arrangement their reclassification to a 1-A placing great emphasis on suc- the bomb halt as saying anti- "hastily contrived." An~ieic n de onstrato wud (R-Grand Rapids) visited the! campus. Ford, accompanied by student escorts dined with dor- mitory residents from his district and chatted with faculty and' leaders of student organizations.; All the members of the state Senate will be invited to tour the campus this semester, along with members of the House Appropri- ations Committee. Other members of .the House will be invited next ,term. "The University is suffering financially because of bad pub- licity and misunderstandings," says Charles Cady, chairman of University Services. "]Legislators don't know what the average stu- dent is like and there simply isn't BLEAK WINTER TERM? Draft stil By RICHARD WINT Despite President Joh decision to end the bomb North Vietnam, gradua lents still face the imn possibility of being draf According to Byront beck, assistant dean of th uate school and direct Rackham ,admissions," look bleak for the g r a d plagues ER dents would be called up by the hnson's military during the course of )ing of the year. Both schools have end- te stu- ed up simply overenrolled. minent Groesbeck says only five stu- ted. dents out of an enrollment of Groes- over 8,000 have been pulled out e grad- of school by the draft since the for of end of the official withdrawal "things period Sept. 16. There have been i u a t e no such cases since Oct. 15, he status last summer wit 30-day appeal period. they were called, the per expired. He said the five studen been given a tuition ref line with the Regents'd last spring. hin the When riod had nts h a d :fund, in directive cessive polls which show him cut- ting into the lead Nixon has com- smanded since the conventions. However, these successive Harris See ELECTION, Page 2 T t(1 ( P ',I T be launched today. Sen. Eugene McCarthy said if Meanwhile, the Soviet Union the South Vietnamese wouldn't hailed the bombing halt and the agree to a settlement, the U.S. "understanding in Paris as an im- shquld withdraw its troops. Mc- portant success along the road to Carthy, in Oregon campaigning for a peace settlement in Vietnam." Sen. Wayne Morse, said South No mention was made of Thiieu's Vietnamese President Nguyen van statement. ! Thieu "thinks he still has the veto ,.,.