Ohio State . . . . 54 Wisconsin . . . . 23 ndhiiuia . . . . . .1 Mich. State .... 21 Iowa . . . . . . . . .17 Minnesota . . . 7 Northiwestern .10 Mississippi . . . . 25 TIexas . .. 7 Illinois. . . . . . . 6 Georgia . . . . . .17 Oklahoma ....27 Kansas State . . 26 Kansas . . . . . . . 22 Penn State . . . . 20 West Virginia . 0 SUNDAY DAILY See Editorial Page t4r S4r A6V :43 444OO&OPF tt FALLING High-63 Low-50 Cloudy and colder; chance of showers Vol LXXX, No. 34 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, October 12, 1969 Ten Cents Ten Pages Wolverines strip Purdu e's glitter, 31-20 By BILL CUSUMANO Associate Sports Editor Poor Johnny Heismann, he's got to reconsider who he's going to give his trophy to at the end of the season. Because just as Purdue's Golden Girl shone less as the rain went on, so did some of the luster fall off Mike Phipps' golden arm as Michigan stifled the potent Boilermaker offense and scored a big 31-20 victory yesterday. Phipps certainly didn't play poorly as he hit 22 of 44 passes for 250 yards and two touch- downs, but he couldn't create the miracles that he had in Purdue's first three victories. particularly last week's stun- ning 36-35 triumph over Stan- ford. Instead, the great quarter- back had four of his passes pick- ed off by Michigan defenders. three of them being stolen by Marty Huff. All four intercep- tions also caine in Purdue terri- tory and helped to constantly keep pressure on the Boiler- maker defense. In addition to the intercep- tions, Purdue also coughed up the football three times on fum- bles, one by Phipps. While the mistakes kept the Boilermakers in trouble, though, the Wolverines couldn't capital- ize on them until the third quar - ter when Michigan finally blew the game open. The maize and blue victory drive began with only four min- utes gone in the second half and the score knotted 14-14 when on a third down play Phipps h..ul- ed off from his 45 yard line and tried to hit flanker Stan Brown on a deep post pattern. All- American safety Tom Curtis timed the throw perfectly and stepped in front of Brown to make a leaping interception. Curtis raced to the Purdue 45 before being hit and the offense took the field in excellent posi- tion. Quarterback Don Moorhead quickly directed Michigan to the 28 but then the attack stalled hs two passes intended for John Gabler fell incomplete. On fourth down with seven yards needed for the first down, Bo Schembechler took the gamble and went for it. Jim Mandich responded by making a leaping catch of a pass and then fight- ing off a defender to reach the 12-yard line. Three plays later Tim Killian booted a 28-yard field goal to put Michigan into the lead for good. No one was breathing easily despite the lead but tremoring hearts gained a measure of re- lief in just one minute. Phipps fumbled the snap on the second play from scrimmage after Michigan kicked off and soph- ornore defensive end Butch Car- penter pounced on the loose ball. From there it took the of- fense only three plays wvith Moorhead sneaking into the end zone after Bill Taylor had burst 24 yards to the one. All of a sudden it was 24-14 and Phipps didn't have any miracles left to use. Most Michigan people hadn't felt too secure going into the second half, with the exception of Schembechler. "I still felt good at the half," he comment- ed in the locker room. "Phipps wasn't killing us and I felt that we could move." Schembechler's o p t i m i s m wasn't shared by the 80,411 fans because Phipps had come alive late in the second quarter to bring Purdue to a half-time tie after trailing 14-0. It cer- tainly looked like the big senior was beginning to kill Michigan as he hit for 12 of his comple- tions in the last ten minutes of the half while running for one score and passing to tight end Ashley Bell for a second with only 19 seconds left. Phipps' performance brought eerie memories to fans of his feats against Stanford and the situation seemed to be forebod- ing. lie had begun to resemble his reputation of being unstop- pable. But a fact had been over- 1 o o k e d that. Schembechler pointed out after the game. "You also have to compare the times he handed over the football to the gains he made," he said in reference to Phipps' accomplish- ments. Schembechler had a point, as Huff had intercepted a pass in the first quarter and Carpenter recovered a fumble in the sec- ond. The Wolverines didn't con- vert these Boilermaker mistakes into points but the rash of Pur- due errors made it inevitable that some would soon backfire and they did in the third quar- ter. Until the 10 point burst in the second half Michigan had made its living through long drives. The Wolverines quickly drove '72 yards in eight plays after the opening kick-off, with the key plays being passes to See GOLDEN GIRL, Page 9 nioil-.Jim Diehl Wolverine(defend( ers d(Iown PuI'lrdue 11attacker College Presidents cite costs of war on the young From Wire Service Reports A list of 59 presidents of col- leges and universities acrss the country yesterday signed a petition urging President Nixon to end the war in Viet- nam by stepping up t r o o p withdrawals. Not included in the list, however, w e r e University President Robben Fleming or any other Big Ten university presidents. "I haven't heard anything about it," Fleming said last night. Flen- ing commented that often peti- tions such as this one start in the East and do not reach mid- western campuses. The petition was signed by the presidents of three ivy league uni- versities - Columbia, Cornell, and the University of Pennsylvania- as well as several eastern women's colleges. Midwestern college presidents who signed the statement included those of Oberlin and Antioch col- leges in Ohio. "We urge the President and the Congress for a stepped up time- table for the withdrawal of troops from Vietnam. We believe this to be in the country's best interest," the statement read. The presidents wvho signted the petition stressed that "we speak as individuals," and that "our uni- versities take no position on the 'var--these are pluralistic com- munities where each man speaks alone." The cots of the war, the state- mrent contintued, "are not in men and materials alone. The costs too are on the effects of the war on young people and their hopes and beliefs." The presidents held that "the mAjority of our students want to believe in a just, honest, and sen- sitive America. "Our military engagement is a denial of so much that is best in our society. More and more we see the war deflecting energies and re- sources from urgent business on our own doorstep. "An end to the war will not solve the problems onl or off campus." The petition stated that the war's end, however, would permit Amer- icans to "work more effectively in support of more peaceful priori- ties. Far from being depressed about our nation's future and our in- stitutions' future we see bold op- portunities ahead once the devi- sivenes of war is in the past." Oilt(oIdy's I L *I nek of simnoort f rnm ti a- heads urge pullout NEW BOOKSTORE PARLEY Regents to hear proposal By RICK PERLOFF The Regents will meet with student and faculty represent- atives during their regular Thursday session to discuss a new proposal for a student-faculty controlled bookstore. The meeting was set up at a two-hour discussion of the proposal yesterday among President Robben Fleming, Vice President for State Relations and Planning Arthur Ross, members of the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA), the Bookstore Coordinating Committee, Student Government Council and representatives of the governing bodies of various schools and colleges. No objection was raised at the meeting to student control of the store, and no major substantive disagreements were aired on other sections of the draft. Most of the discussion centered around resolving mechanical differences. Fleming will announce tomorrow the specific time and place of the Thursday meeting. The meeting will probably come in the afternoon, after the Regents complete their scheduled work in the morning. Although the Regents are not expected to vote on the proposal during Thursday's discussion, it is likely they will make a decision at their second meeting Friday. The discussion will probably resemble the frank, informal talks on the bookstore issue on Sept. 18 between the Regents and SGC, which preceded the regental decision the next day to establish an administration-controll°d University bookstore. Fleming. referring to SGC's call for a rally and march to Friday's Regents meeting, warned against massing students to attend Thurs- day's discussion. "A discussion with 800 students around a table will not accomplish a thing," he insisted. He added, "If there's another march on the Regents, this subject is absolutely dead. What you're likely to see is adjournment of the meeting." After the meeting, SGC President Marty McLaughlin said the Friday march was still planned as scheduled and added he favors it. SGC will meet at 6:30 tonight to consider revision and clarifica- tion of the proposal-specffically on sections relating to merging the bookstore with the SGC discount store, assuming financial respon- sibility and conducting a referendum. After SGC has, presumably, revised the draft, the ad hoc com- mittee of faculty members and students which drew up the proposal will give it' a final going over before presentation to the Regents Thuisday. The draft calls for a six student-three faculty member board to control the bookstore. One non-voting administrator would sit on the board. The Regents stipulated in September that the store would be run by Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Wilbur Pierpont with students and faculty members serving in an advisory capacity.' Other provisions of tie proposal-released officially yesterday-- stipulate: -The bookstore would operate on a break-even basis with first year savings on textbooks not expected to exceed 5 per cent. This in- See REGENTS, Page 7 Associated Press C: h ica goJlWcfl(m fI ti ett Blood streams from a head injury incurred by a member of the Chicago police force yesterday when SDS marchers broke rank and broke windows in the loop business district. (See story, Page 3.) CONSIDER A LTERNATIVES: 4 AKf U1 29Support (1lmdlmg foir ecation ofcivinlnpolice review board Daily-Jay Cassidy CGPresidenit Marty McLaughlin WAR MORA TORIUM: RC class cancellation draws new opposition The possibility of creating a- civilian review board to handle complaints against the police ap- pears to be losing support in Ann Arbor. A check of key members of the Ad Hoc Committee on Police Com- munity Relations indicates that the review board proposal may be either drastically modified or dropped entirely before the com- mittee presents its final recom- mendations to City Council. Last Monday, the conmittees initial 'ecommenda tions foi eas- ing. tensions between p~olice atid members of the community were implemented by council in an 8-3 vote. The committee wvas appointed by Mayor Robert Harris last June following several incidents between police and members of the com- munity. The initial recommendations were contained in an interim re- porI't released last month which emphasized that the committe planned to consider more tat reaching proposals before presei- me a final report. Man 'vcommitten members .1- euditg University Law Prof. ee Cooperrider. chairman. said he, es that would enough ties. a civilian review b o a r d not constitute effective control ovei' police activi- I hope to find a more effective way o1 corntroiling police t h a n through a review board.'' Wheek',r says. However, Wheeler would not specify any alternate proposals under consideration by the corn- mitt ee. The issue of civilian control of police has aroused strong opposi- tion in conservative circles as well as in the police department. The Ann Arbor Police Officers Association tAAPOA), as well as Police Chief Walter Krasny, have bitterly attacked the committee's initial recommendations. The AAPOA goes as far as to attack the recommendations as being, in effect, "a civilian review board." By RUSS GARLAND Organizing and some counter- organizing is continuing at the University as the Oct. 15 Vietnam war moratorium draws closer. In the Residential College a petition signed by 75 to 85 stu- dents has been presented to RC Dean James Robertson requesting a student referendum be held on the decision of the college's Rep- DISSATISFIED STUDENTS STILL PAY L'esentative Assembly to cancel RC classes on Oct. 15. Robertson said last night that a comnunity meeting would have to be held befoie the referendum so that both sides of the issue could be presented. The results of the referendum would be present- ed to the assembly but they would not be binding on that body. However, several RC students said that they did not think the organizer of the petition. James Kelle', really wanted a referen- dum and was only planning to present the petition to the assem- bly this Tuesday in the hope that it would force the assembly to change its position. Keller' could not be reached last night for comment. Most members of the assembly contacted were not optimistic about the success of this tactic, Assembly tmember lar'y Faigin said "it doesn't really prove any- thing. At the community meeting last. week a straw vote was taken and almost half of those present were not in favor of the motion to cancel classes. I think there is almost no chance that the assem- Dormitories By NANCY TARDIFF "'Eighteen dollars is sort of a lot to pay for two donuts and a paper cup of 1a)ple cider." This is the respomise of many dormi- tory residents responding to an informal Daily survey on the quest io( of house dtues. Mandatory1 house dues in re - idence halls range from 15 emts in Snuth Cunr' Hunt Honiii in aid little niceties like exam week snacks, Sunday sandwiches and ice cream parties. Most dorm residents realize that they owe their respective houses some fi- nancial support. But many feel ttat they are not getting their money's worth. Some house residents never attend the house parties and so- cia fl ninncti n.et theird ies examin paradox but as one student put it, "the majority of the dorm is apolitical." Residents are phenominally apathetic about house government. They a'e content, sort of, to pay their house dues and take their milk and cookies. They may sym- pathize with the students who would rather not pay for the cookies then never see. but they not so that non-payers will not participate in the social func- tions. Students suggested t h a t house cards could be issued to those who have paid. Another popular suggestion recommended that there be standard mandatory dues and that special collections be taken for specific functions with only those particiiting in them con- house dues equalled two dollars. Only about 30 of 167 Hunt residents chose not to pay the social dues. Taylor House has also s p li t its house dues into $8 manda- tory dues and-$5 social dues. The decision on how to split the dues was made by the house council. Mandatory dues there cover such things as repairs,