Ohio State ., Nittitesothi ... 3 Puiirduie . . . . . . 35 Iowa . .. ..... 31 Indiana ...... 4I Illinois ....... 20 Northwestern 27 Wisconsin . . . . 7 Southern Cal .14 Notre Dame ..14 Tennessee ... 41 Alabama .....14 Penn State.. .15 Syracuse .....14 Slippery Rock 29 Wilmington.. 20 State r By ANDY BARBAS Executive Sports Editor Special to the Daily EAST LANSING-Certain elements of immaturity were fatal to Michigan's foot- ball team yesterday, as Michigan State ran away with a 23-12 victory. After the game, Michigan's Coach Bo Schembechler called the performance "terrible," and put most of the blame for the team's mistakes on "the inexperience of the sophomores." There actually was no one factor which accounted for the final result. Michigan State came onto the field with substitutes sprinkled throughout the lineup. Despite being hampered by these second stringers filling in for injured players, the Spar- tans put out a whale of a performance. They had worked on a whole new series of plays and executed them well. Michigan came out with a very healthy team. Phil Seymour was playing for the first time since his injury; Glenn Dough- om ps to ty was back to full strength. Nonetheless, the team had poor execution of plays and made major mistakes galore. Doughty, the Wolverine's top yard gainer with 89 yards, also proved himself the team's top mistake maker. His first big goof came on the first series of plays. The Wolverines took the opening kickoff and moved the ball to the Spartan 32. Doughty then grabbed a pitchout to sweep the right end; that is he almost grabbed the pitchout. He bobbled the ball, dropped it, and finally recovered the pig- skin 11 yards back. There's nothing like an eleven yard fumble to kill a drive. Three plays later, Mark Werner punted and pinned the Spartans on their two yard line; that is he almost pinned them. On Michigan State's first play from scrimmage, quarterback Bill Triplett ran around left end on a naked reverse where the team goes one way and the quarter- back the other. The Wolverine defense 23 -12 fell for it lock, stock, and barrel going with the rest of the Spartans while Triplett dashed to the 30. Michigan State must have liked what it saw since two plays later they ran the same play. The Wolverines couldn't have minded too much as they again watched him scamper away. This time the play carried him to Michigan's 28 yard line. Michigan's defense finally realized it was playing football and held the Spar- tans, who missed a field goal from the 32. Down the rug stomped the Wolverines offense once again, seemingly intent on getting the ball into the endzone. They made it to the 25 before Doughty blew it again. This time he didn't even have to touch the ball. Moorhead went back to pass, defensive end Rich Saul charged, Doughty cleanly missed the block, and Saul mashed Moorhead on the 38 yard line. End Michigan's second drive with Werner punting into the endzone. After an exchange of punts, Michigan victory State gave the Wolverines their big chance when Don Highsmith fumbled on his own 30. The Maize and Blue took quick advantage of this to stall at the 12 yard line and settle for a three- pointer. The Spartans, however, had lost their benevolence. Taking Michigan's kickoff, they drove 80 yards in 12 plays, with Highsmith driving in from the two for the touchdown. Where State had decided to push, Mich- igan decided to help them along. Four plays after Michigan State's kickoff, Moorhead fumbled the hike and Duffy's boys took over at Michigan's 32 yard line. After five plays, Triplett swept around right end from the 10 to hit pay- dirt. Doughty must have figured that the Spartan's must have needed even more help. He caught the ensuing kickoff on the one and stepped back into the end- See MICHIGAN, Page 11 Dash'--Jay Cas~idv Mo10orhead ltrap.ped by !SpartanI iline SUNDAY DAILY tee Editorial Page g4i lt Iai SPLOTCHY High--60 Low--43 Variable cloudiness with chance of rain Vol. LXXX, No. 40 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, October 19, 1969 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Nixon to ietnam 'accelerate withdrawal CSJ finds LOCK-IN RULING student, SDS guilty WASHINGTON President Nixon has ordered the Penta- gon to work out a dramatic speed-up of U.S. troop w i t h- drawals from Vietnam, it was reported in a copyrighted story in the Long Island news- paper Newsday. The story, reprinted here in yesterday's Detroit F r e e Press, says reliable informants have indicated that plans call for pulling out up to 300,000 men during 1970, at the rate of over 20,000 per month. Nixon will reportedly announce Tenants Union 1meets with, landlord's agent A Tenant's Union negotiating committee met with McKinley As- sociates manager Ton Weisner yesterday in their first prelimi- nary negotiating session. Dale Berry, of the Tenants Un- ion, refused to comment on what transpired at the meeting. Berry simply acknowledged that a meet- ing did take place, and indicated there would be others, Apparently, McKinley Assoc- iates have not yet recognized the Tenant's Union as a legitimate bargaining agent. The Union has been seeking such recognition as a fundamwntal demand since the beginning of the rent strike. Weisner also declined to com- ment on the meeting "I h a v e nothing significant to say at this point." Weisner must report to Ott Tod ay',sI Pa (,ge ThreeI t Efforts are bcing' made to develop a student image for the Michigan Union. Cyclamate production h a s been halted. Product sales will stop Feb. 1. Servicemen find they can't live on their monthly pay and niust resort to joining welfare rolls. Mckin y Associates. who are the owners, and is not expected to make any significant concessions to the Tenant's Union without close consultations with his boss- McKinley Associates are the first Ann Arbor management companyj to agree to hold preliminary ne- cotiations with a Tenant's Union negotiating committee. It remains unclear at this point whether McKinley's action' will cause any of Ann Arbor's larger management companies to follow suit and negotiate with the Tenants Union. Other Ann Arbor real estate managers had no comment on the development. Rent strike organizers claim, over 50 per cent of McKinley tenants either are striking or plan to begin striking with their next rent payments. McKinley man- ages 90 housing units with ap- proximately 200 tenants. Regarding negotiations, the Ten- ants Union stated last week, "it is understood that, the first topic on the agenda is union recogni- tion. Until that recognition, no f u r t h e r bargaining can take place." Last year, Tenants Union rep- resentatives met briefly with managers from Summit Associ-' ates, but the discussions did not lead to recognition of the union or any breakthrough in the strike. his intentions in a scheduled television speech to the nation Nov. 3. The Associated Press lent con- firmation to the Newsday story last night in a report Washington budget officials had advised the Armed Forces that American mili- tary strength will be reduced by, up to 500.000 men across the board by mid-1971. A large portion of this reduc- tions should stem from the scaling down of U.S. involvement in Viet- nam, the AP said. The plan reflects a shift of in- fluence in the administration from the military to those civilian leaders who have been arguing that domestic. troubles are too near the disaster point to permit the much more gradual "Vietnam-} ization" of the war that the gen- orals wanted. Nixon's Nov. 3 speech will come at the end of a week of hearings before the Senate Foreign Rela- tions Committee in which Defense Secretary Melvin Laird is supposed to testify. ht is expected that Laird will say that "Vietnamization" has made rapid progress. Secretary of State William Rogers is also expected to tell that committee the rate of North Vietnamese infiltration and a battlfield lull are political sig- nals from Uanoi. Pentagon sources reportedly consider these factors merely a shift of enemy battle tactics, but Nixon's advisers plan to announce them anyway. In this way Nixon's Nov. 3 announcement of troop withdrawals will not appear to be a capitulation to pressure in American streets. The plan for increased with- drawls was begun before the Oct. 15 Moratorium Day, but after the scope and broad spectrum of sup- port for the demonstrations had become forseeable. According to Newsday, the Nixon withdrawal plan does not foresee how the war will be' completely ended, and do-s not make plans for disposing of American bases and investments in Vietnam. students from having an in- terview with Augustin L'Et- oile, recruiter for the Naval Underwater Weapons Labora- tory, on March 25 in the West' Engineering Bldg. CSJ ruled it would not consider political justifications for the act as grounds for acquittal when the free speech rights of others were involved, when a division of opin- ion existed in the community over' merits of the justification, and, when the case was not tried by a jury. The maximum possible penal-' ties would have been a $250 fine! and four months suspension for SDS and a $50 fine for Rotkin. CSJ listed eight reasons for re- ducing the punishment: By DAVE CHUDWIN Central Student Judiciary yesterday found SDS as a stu- dent organization and Donald Rotkin '70 guilty on charges resulting from the lock-in of a naval recruiter last spring. CSJ fined SDS $25 and Rotkin $2 for violating a Student Government Council rule prohibiting "interfer- ing with the free movement of persons on campus." Last Tuesday CSJ found three other students, Fred Mil- ler, Nais Roulet, and Stephen Kriegal, not guilty on similar charges. Infact-finding statements CSJ said the demonstrators h a d prevented a number of - ----_- i- Fellows to meet 011 UIOfI Teaching fellows interested in the formation of a recognized teaching fellows union have sched- uled an open meeting for all in- terested persons for 2:00 p.m. to- day at 3569 Platt Road, Ann Arbor. The meeting, according to organizers, will address itself to the type and possible affiliation of the union and explore doubts -Daily-JimJudkis CSJ members Dan Share and Barb Addison discuss the case SENA TE ASSEMBLY: Faculty to debate ROTC report k - mhere was no substantli levidence L'Etoile was prevented aching fellows might have con- from leaving the interview room; cerning a union's possible effects - The demonstration occurred on their professionalism. at a time and place which mini- During the week organizers also mized the danger of crowd reac- plan to retain legal assistance and tion; to schedule larger on-campus - The demonstration was a meetings meetings for interested matter of political principle; teaching fellows. A report recommending com- plete severance of all financial ties between the University and ROTC, and elimination of all credit and departmental standing for the program will be the only topic of business at tomorrow's Senate As- sembly meeting. The Assembly may take final action on the report, which was prepared by its Academic Affairs Committee. If adopted, the report will be sent to the Regents who will have to make the final deci- sion, to alter the current status of; ROTC programs. The report asks that a commit- tee be established to evaluate all ROTC personel and course offer- ings, and to mediate between ROTC and students who have dis- putes with the program. The report specifically recom- mends ROTC become completely extracurricular if the Department '' WOMEN START TO SWING Liberation! Females no longer in a bind of Defense cannot accept the rec- ommendations of the report. Currently the University is con- tributing free classroom space as well as supplies and services. The total worth of these contributions is more than $350,000 per year. If the report is adopted, the Defense Department would have to provide the money. A minority report also sent to the Assembly for consideration to- morrow asks the University to sever its ROTC contract complete- ly and recommends that the Uni- versity "seek to pursuade other I universities to do likewise." While only one member of the committee, Prof. Eugene Litwak, signed the minority report, three members of the committee en- dorsed a provision calling for the elimination of those ROTC courses' hich teach methods of "elimina- tion of human life." Their resolution is in accordance with the Elidem'field Report adopt- ed by the Assembly last year, which states that research aimed at killing should not be accepted by the University. Assembly c h a i rin a n Joseph Payne last night called the major- ity report "reasonable." He said he believes the report is one that should be acceptable to all seg-" ments of the University com- munity, but warned that there were a number of controversial factors that mivht affect the out- com of the report. - The demonstrators augment- ed the educational value of the event with leafletting and discus-! sions; - No weapons were used and nobody was injured; - The disruption involved a' relatively small number of people for a relatively short period of time; -Under engineering school pol- icies the demonstrators could not See CSJ, Page 8 Once a lawyere has been retain- ed, the organizers intend to begin circulating petitions among all teaching fellows seeking signatures of support for unionization. When the signatures of a cer- tain percentage of the fellow have been obtained, the State Labor Mediation Board is required to hold bargaining elections to of- ficially designate the structure anci affiliation of the union. By JANE BARTMAN and ('RIS STEELE Editorial Page Editor 19'70 - the year to hang loose? It may be just that if the bra- ess sensation continues spread- ng to more and more girls both n and off college campuses across the country. New York's East Village Elec- ric Circus has announced that )raless girls will bY' admitted ree to Sunday performances. -orset companies are beginning o feel the finch of the revolu- ion and some clothes designers ,ave begun to adapt their n e w queasy stomach if her bra was uncomfortable. Others simply say they are "more free, in o r e natural" without a bra. Some girls try to hide their braless state with clothes that obscure the fact. "I only do it when no one can tell -- I'd be embarassed if I thought any- one knew,' says one senior. For many, no-braing-it is a seasonal affair - but the sea- sons vary. Som' go braless in the spring and summer because, they say, it is too cool in the winter without a bra. But oth- Perhaps a bit tongue-in-cheek, one girl declares, "It's my own little revolution. It frees me from my straight-laced in i d d I e class background." However flippant the explanation, rebel- lion is a part of the rationale behind bralessness. A coed from Berkeley wearing a smock type of blouse which was frontless except for a few lat- ticed bands of material is re- presentative of the militant anti- bra group. She says she went to Berkeley to "blow the p i g s minds." In a manner as airy as her blouse she declared that t h e man responded: "It's only a small group of girls who are go- ing without them - it's strictly a fad." Another well-endowed matron insists that she owes her still firm and striking figure to her bra. But the reaction sometimes approaches vehemence. "I lose who grow into the bra market each year. Bra sales are down in Mich- igan, although they have in- creased in Ann Arbor, local stores report. Some bra manufacturers have tried to accommodate to the changing fashions. They are pro- ducing "no-bra" bras-t h i n, light garments designed to give the look and feel of bralessness. But the braless militants c o n- demn these as a "cop-out." One argument both bra mak- ers and girls bring against go- ing without a bra is the fear that lack of support produces >.