Ohio State.... 33 .Ioa..........27 Purdue....... 9 MichiganState 0 Oklahoma.... 28 Missouri......14 Minnesota....20 Indiana..... 6 Georgia.......17 Illinois.......14 Northwestern. 0 Southern Cal. 17 Oregon State. 13 SUNDAY MORNING See editorial page p S43au Iaitg Tennessee... 31 Mississippi ... 0 SLIZZLE High-40 Low-27 Intermittent drizzle mixed with occasional snow Vol. LXXIX, No. 69 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, November 17, 1968 Ten Cents Ten Pages last0 ohnson 34, isconsin 9 By DAVID WEIR Sports Editor Ron Johnson shattered ten rushing records to single- handedly demolish Wisconsin 34-9 in a downpour yesterday and set up a "Dream Game" showdown with Big Ten co- leader Ohio State in Columbus next Saturday. Johnson racked up five touchdowns and gathered 347 yards in 31 attempts to turn a two-point first-half deficit into a one-man runaway in the third quarter. It was Michigan's eighth straight win, and combined with Ohio State's 33-27 squeaker over Iowa, sets the stage for next week's titanic struggle which will determine the Big Ten championship and a trip to the 1969 Rose Bowl in Pasa- dena, California. Johnson's touchdowns came on explosive spurts of 35, 67, one, 60, and 50 yards as he raked Wisconsin's defense for the highest rushing and scoring totals in Big Ten football his- tory. He was taken out of the game early in the fourth quar- ter. Michigan Head Coach Bump Elliott said "Johnson gave the greatest one-man performance I have ever seen. He should definitely be rated an All-American football player." All in all, Johnson managed to eclipse three Big Ten single game marks, three Michigan single game records, three Michigan season totals and one team career record. Johnson's new Michigan and Big Ten single game marks: 0 Most Points . . . 30 * Most Touchdowns . . . 5 ! Most Yards Rushing . . . 347 Johnson's new Michigan season records: *RushingAttempts .. . 234 *Most Yards Rushing . . . 1300 0 Most Touchdowns . . . 17 Johnson's new Michigan career record: f Most Yards Rushing . . . 2349 (Johnson broke the career mark for rushing attempts last week against Illinois. He now has 466.) Also, the 6'1", 200-pound bruiser is within 70 yards of Jim wGrabowski's single season rushing m a r k of 996, and two touchdowns away from Leroy Keyes' record of 15. Asked what his 'secret' was in the locker room, Johnson replied: "There is none. You're born with it . . . God gives it to you. "The more I carry the ball the, better I feel," he continued. "This is a great football team to play on. We've come a longf sway this season, and you can be sure we'll be ready for Ohio State next Saturday." In the first quarter, Johnson slashed over left tackle for 46 yards in his initial two carries and Michigan had a 7-0 lead after two minutes of play. The normally-porous Badger defense then pulled togeth- er and bottled up the Wolverine attack for the remainder of the half. Wisconsin managed to score 'a touchdown and a field goal on fresh plays to take a 9-7 halftime margin to theC -Daliy-Jay Cassidy RON JOHNSON, greatest Michigan halfback since Torm Harmon, breaks the last tackle on the way to his fifth touchdown of yesterday afternoon. The score broke the modern Big Ten single game record, one of the many marks shattered by the big halfback. Johnson was responsible for all of Michigan's scoring, an awesome display of running prowess that could well make Johnson an All-American. G (RAD PROGRAM REFORM -Daily-Andy Sacks DENNY BROWN takes a spill. The flashy Michigan quarterback suffered this upending at the hands of Wisconsin's amazing Ken Criter.' While Brown gave th~e slimy pigskin to Johnson, Criter, the confer~encte's top tackler led in vain the Badger defense. SHAKEUP: C Zechs curb power of Dubek. regime Comparl increase, By MARTIN HIRSCIIMAN While students in many divis- ions of the University are press- ing their faculty for liberalized requirements and programs, grad- uate students in comparative lit- erature are doing just the reverse. Students are pushing for unifi- cation of the now loosely structur- ed comparative literature program. with the formation of a separate department in the field as a final goal. And they apparently have the attie d cu lit students propose 'ricuhum unification r PRAGUE t]-Czechoslovak Communist leaders, under visitor'sl pressure of the Soviet occupation, curbed the power of liberal In t party chief Alexander Dubcek today in a shakeup that (Elliott.) brought orthodox party members into higher ranks.; The reshuffle apparently squashed hopes for restoration of pre-occupation freedoms demanded by militant students yesterday. The personnel changes were made public in the finalR stages of a three-day plenary session, of the party's Central EDITOR Committee. The 190-member committee met all last night. !The f The complete program changes will be announced to- refers to locker room. he home locker room, things were pretty "somber" See MICHIGAN, Page 9 p k 1 night.' There was no immediate report of any violent public reaction to the shuffle. CTK, the Czechoslovak news agency said Zenek Mlynar, a Dubcek ally, resigned as a member of the party presidium, and Central Committee Secretariat and as chairman of thej .-- - ---p arty legal committee. He was Bond set, for Detrol From Wire'Service Reports Bond was set yesterday for t Detroit policemen charged w the alleged beating of black tei agers at the Veterans Memor Building two weeks ago. Patrolman Leo T. Haidys v released under $5,000 bond af he pleaded innocent to the cha of felonious assault. Patrolman Richard Stinson v released under $1,000 bond at pleading innocent to an asss 4 and battery charge. Seven other policemen hs been suspended from duty. Recorder's Court Judge Geo Crockett said he was setting b( reported to have asked "to re- turn to his' research work in the Institute for State and) Law of the Czechoslovak! Academy of Sciences." " Mlynar was one of the origina- tors of the freedom of information policy that for several months gave Czechoslovakia the freest, press in the Communist world. Later he came under heavy at- tack by hard liners at home and in the Soviet Union. Mlynar was replaced on the 21- member party presidium by con- servative Lubomir Strougal, a vice premier. Strougal also was named a party secretary. Creation of a. new eight-mem-, ber executive committee within the presidium was announcedl This apparently would dilute the authority of Dubcek as first sec- retary. The announcement said the executive committee was tempor-' ary and would "permit evaluation of the urgent political problems inform the presidium of its work and place before it all its significant decisions for approval." incident Prof. H 4 and s the Ann our cove In our that Pro Denton o cratic S class. Pr tendedn regret th not hav Bretton certain rect. . To th In vie received I believe titled to tent of cent lett trol of S of the stateme able tot pearanc The Nev latter st a mislea naturec Bretton attention to his c -Luke Chai of St Nov. A nctony of acontroversy 'S NOTE: proceedings and to publish a to recognize them for these rea- ollowing correspondence version of what happened was sons: While they of course ima- Daily coverage of an requested and none was granted. gine that only groups-of their in the classroom of No permission to take phot- persuasion might intrude into enry Bretton on Nov. ographs in class was requested a classroom and disrupt the ubsequent publicity in and none was granted. lecture then in progress, I saw, Arbor News concerning By publishing the ',proceed- in my mind's eye, stormtroopers rage.. ings, regardless of the degree of in uniform pouring into the hall origial story, we said accuracy, The Daily has set a and taking notes for their pur- f. Bretton ivited Peter precedent, and the University poses. There are other experi- of Students for a Demo- will share responsibility for that ences I could relate. In my mind, ociety to speak in his precedent. Unless the act of stocked with experiences under no such invitation, We publishing under the circum- two fascist regimes, this even- he error. We also regret stances is authoritatively and tuality was brought closer to Ing checked with Prof. unequivocally condemned and reality by the mindless acts of after the event to make unless professor and students the students that morning and all our facts were cor- are guaranteed that their views by The Daily on the following expressed in the classroom will day. -S. It. IV not be published without their Second, after breaking into e Editor: consent, this University will my lecture, none of the leaders w of the publicity it has have lost something of inestim- of the intruding group bothered in the Ann Arbor News, able value. The doors will then to introduce themselves to me e your readers are en- have been opened to all kinds or to the class. This alone was be informed of the con- of abuse. Then professors must a regrettable oversight. It also ProfessormBretton's re- assume henceforth that their deprived me of any basis for ter to the Board in Con- remarks will appear in print, judgment what it was the class etudent Publications, and most likely distorted and with- was facing at the moment. complete text of the out their consent. More than Surely, before a class is to be mt which I made avail- that, any professor and any stu- disrupted and students from the News after the ap- dent will henceforth have to outside are to be granted the e of its initial story, assume that whatever he says right to address that class, some ws' failure to print the on whatever subject and in of the usual formalities might tatement in full creates whatever context may be pub- be observed. Thus, The Daily iding impresssion of the lished in The Daily or in some was wrong when it asserted that of the issues Professor other paper, including, of course, I declared the class disrupted has raised, and ,of the papers reflecting views detri- after I had recognized the in- n which is being given mentally opposed to those truders. I had refused to rec- omplaint. shared by the editorial board of ognize them and shall continue K. Cooperrider The Daily at a given point in to do sotregardless oftthe cause rman, Board in Control time. represented, right, left, or cen- tudent Publications In my opinion, failure to pre- ter. I will of course be delighted 16 vent a repetition of The Daily's always to discuss with students conduct in this instance will under orderly conditions, this full support of the program's fac- had difficulty enrolling in t h e partment ulty committee. course." time." At a meeting last week between Students and faculty in the pro- The fo student representatives and the gram have also decided to hold departme faculty committee, major changes regular joint meetings as a result creased in the nature of the program were of last week's discussion. comparal agreed upon and the tone was The major topic of this contin- says Nie; set for continued cooperation and uing dialogue is sure to lead to the "Most further reform. possibility of forming a compara7 dents co "The revisions are not in any tive literature department in the ing depa sense a slackening of the require- literary college. those de rents," emphasizes student repre- Tentative plans have, in fact, al- care of t sentative Angela McCourt. "This ready been set for submission of a Departn is a reorientation of the compara- proposal for the creation of this withit i tive literature program." department to Dean William dergradu Probably the most significant Hays of the literary college. tive liter revision is a reduction in the num- The major advantage of form- is "wary ber of preliminary examinations ing a comparative literature de- required for the doctoral program partment, Niess points out, would posal for and a change in the kind of test be the, creation of a full-time Virtual] required. staff which could teach the type in comps Formerly, students were requir- of comparative literature courses en place ed to take six "prelims" drawn we envision. both stu from regular examinations in the "Even with the meager resourc- . hopefulf various language departments. es we now have, we can still dig "Every Under the new program, the re- up plenty of people to teach," he very enl quired number is cut to four, one says, but quickly adds "if their de- says Nies of which will specifically be de-x--- signed to allow the student toiIN E'' . compare the literature of two lan- IRDISCIPLINARY: guages. Miss McCourt describes this change as a move "away f r o m meeting t h e requirements of a rad urban number of different languages" and toward the creation of a uni- fied comparative literature pro- en100 ra gram. Last week's meeting also lead to an innovation which promotes By RICK PERLOFFdevelopi this aim - the creation of a stu-ByRC PELF{delpi ent-run seminar. Until now the "We all work pretty much in-viding n I only soley comparative literature dependently," explains a graduate plins class has been a reading course. student in urban and regional m n of Another outcome of the meeting planning. "Everybody has their planning was the elimination of the pro- own particular interest but we The p gram's only course requirement, have the chance to expose our gram tr English 885. Prof. Robert J. Niess, work to other people in other dis- ministra chairman of the faculty committee ciplines." how to describes this change as largely a Urban and regional planning, an up effec matter of necessity. interdisciplinary analysis of the Beside "The English department want- various aspects of the planning students ed to keep all 800 level courses process, combines the facilities toral pr primarily for English concen- and research of eight different dividedi trates," he says. "0 u r students colleges. ronmen But the emphasis remains on the appraisa individual, according to Jim Sny- ban an V i Parachute der, a grad student participating group it T I 'g in the Self-Determination Semi- nomic d nar.regina.,, stud'ies iversity rg a region, aims at pro- ew social innovations, ex- William D. Drake, chair- the urban and regional g program. public administration pro- ains prospective city ad- tors on such matters as float bond issues and set etive planning committees. es the masters program, 11 are enrolled in a doc- rogram. This program is in five core areas: envi- tal' design and resource al; analytic tools for ur- d regional analysis; social interaction processes; eco- development of urban and l areas and governmental g process. nts specialize in two areas maintaining a lesser pro- in the others. emphasizes "we're not fering a smorgasbord of there is some rationale s would give them the rmation of the proposed ent would also provide in- fellowship support for tive literature students, ~S. of our support for stu-" Imes out of already exist- rtments," he notes, "And partments have to take their own students first." nentalization would bring he possibility of an un- ate program in compara- ature, but Niess says he of considering this pro- the present at least. MY all the reform activity arative literature has tak- in the last six weeks, and udents and faculty seem for continued progress. 'one involved in this is husiastic' and optimistic," ss. attack started na pec SAIGON (A) - The South Viet- so namese army mounted its first bla tnajor combat parachute assault in in almost two years yesterday, throw- tai ing 500 elite jumpers plus 1.500 su r. regional "In our semin ar, different plannin ople are studying strategies for Stude cial change. I'm involved with while m ack capitalism and have been ficiency terviewing those promoting cer- Drake in aspects of black capitalism just off ch as the programs of the Black- courses; In-c,1-