Michigan State 12 UCLA ........ 20Arkansas . .... 42 Illinois..,.....20 Purdue ..,....26 Minnesota ....42IN.Carolina St.. Notre Dame ... 3 | Southern Cal ..16 Texas Tech .... 24 Northwestern .. 6 Indiana . . .... .21 Wisconsin ..... 7 Iowa ......... 28 Dartmouth .... 28 20 Princeton .....14 HULCHER SHOULD RECONSIDER MOVE See Editorial Page I SirA6 ~Iait0 PARTLY CLOUDY High-4 s Low--33 Light, Gradually Fading into Darkness Seventy-Five Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVI, No. 73 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1965 SEVEN CENTS TEN PAGES OSU s Funk Boots Blue in Final Seconds, 9-7 By LLOYD GRAFF Michigan rooters would have de-I Acting Sports Editor jectedly predicted "he'll make itI if he has to dropkick with his left "The kick was good as gold, as foot." good as gold," huffed chubby It was that kind of season. Stay Woody with a grin stretching from close and lose. Play well and lose. shirtsleeve to shirtsleeve.sel "I peeked up on the kick and Get the breaks and lose. Miss the it looked real close, too close," breaks and lose. But you don't pledged a moonfaced Bob Funk, want to hear verbhl sobs and clutching the game ball in one wordy sighs. So let's delve into hand, autographing crumpled pro- the Ohio State anguish and re- grams with the other. construct it with the 20-20 vision "He'd have missed it last year,"j called hindsight. slobbered the alum boozily making Michigan held a 7-6 lead thanks his way out of the Stadium for to a muffed kick by none other the last time this season. than Funk, himself. Midway into Three opinions about a. field the fourth quarter the Wolverines' goal that slugged Michigan down punter, Stan Kemp, daintily plac- into the slagheap of defeat for the ed the ball in the OSU coffin cor- sixth and final time, 9-7. ner, and John Fill managed to If you'd taken a poll of the saunter to the nine before getting 77,734 fans prior to Funk's 28-yard jumped. From this rather un- plunk a preponderance of the promising field position the Buck-a eyes began their debilitating An-1 schluss. Now normally Woody Hayes re- gards passing as a strain of the Bubonic plague to be avoided at all cost, but he's embraced the scourge himself this season. Don Unverferth, his quarterback, is no Unitas or even a Sammy Baugh, but he's one of the better throwers in the conference. Prior to the fourth quarter he'd unloaded on an average of one out of every two plays. But when things were get- ting a bit queasy in that last quarter Woody "went back home" to the running game. Willard Sander, who looks like a large imitation of Dave Fisher, began pommeling the Michigan line. It was grunt football, with all the finesse of a rhinocerous herd in a lettuce patch. If there Was a gamebuster in:I the drive you would have to callG it Sander's smash for two yards1 on a fourth down situation. Ohio1 State was mired in its own divots on the Michigan 17. A punt was plausible because if the Bucks failed, Michigan could have crawl-x ed in, but Hayes played aggres- sively and directed Sander to, charge. And it was Hayes who was in complete control of his team's, offense, calling every play from the bench. Sander took the handoff from$ Unverferth, butted, stomped, wrig- gled, and careened to the 19. ItE was the kind of headbasher that Ohio State has -immortalized. It was a dull, squalid play, no dust, was raised, and a first down was grabbed by a measly foot. It was a most forgettable play, a highly unromantic call, and not particu- larly well executed, either. The blocking was practically non- existent. What it lacked in beauty it made up in significance, because the Buckeyes started mowing down the Michigan front line like Northwestern did last week. Bo Rein gobbled 20 yards on a cutie of a reverse. Then, old Will Sander mangled the Wolverines on three straight attacks for 21 yards. Three plays later Sander nimbly crunched for a baker's dozen more. But with Ohio on the Michigan 16, the Wolverines held on. Three Sander thrusts netted only five yards, setting the situation for Funk's lethal field goal with 1:15 left in the game. See 'M,' Page 9 No Violence as Thousands MVarch In Protest at U-C -Daily-Gerry Ahronheim SOPHOMORE DENNIS MORGAN smashes OSU fullback Willard Sander from behind with a jar- ring tackle forcing him to cough up the ball. Rick Volk recovered the fumble. To Consider Commission Appointees 0Cty Council To Vote On Proposed Housing Committee Members By DAVID DUBOFF The City Council will consider tomorrow night Mayor Wendell E. Hulcher's appointments to the newly-created Housing Commis- sion. Since the mayor's announce- ment of his appointments two weeks ago a controversy has been raging over the acceptability of his choices. The controversy centers around the facts that only one of the ap- pointees actively supported the passage of the referendum Oct. 191 to set up the commission, and that two of them are members of the Ann Arbor Chamber of Com-I merce-one of the three groups that opposed the establishment of the commission. Henry Aquinto, former member of the City Council and Human Relations Commission, has been recommended for a three year term, and also for the chairman- ship of the commission. He feels that the commission should try to utilize the help of private en- terprise as much as possible, us- ing long term federal loans if nec- essary, Conlin William Conlin, recommended for a one-year term, is a local attorney and a member of the Chamber of Commerce. He pro- poses that the commission have a well qualified full time staff, work with other community or-_ ganizations, consult with private industry and set up a survey fi- nanced by a federal grant of the need for low-cost housing in the city. He also advocates temporary emergency housing and a pilot program, to test how well the n; eas of a ieN w income famna ies are satisfied by a low-cost housing program. Recommended for - a five-year term is Joseph W. Edwards, a: member of the City Planning Commission and the Chamber of Commerce. He also advocates the use of private enterprise, a fed- erally subsidized study, and a full time professional to work with the commission. Powell Robert L. Powell is the only Negro recommended for appoint- ment. He has worked for several years against discrimination in housing and has been active in State Board What's New at 764-1817 Backs MSU -Med School Hotline Inter-Cooperative Council will officially open its tenth unit today. The new co-op, Pickerill House, is named in honor of Rev. Katherine G. Pickerill, who managed Guild House from 1934 to 1957. Pickerill House was purchased in 1964, renovated,and united to the adjacent Mark VIII co-op by a dining room seating 100 people. A third co-op joins the two units for meals. The new facility, costing $85,000, increases the capacity of the system by 28 rooms and 14 boarders. University President Harlan Hatcher will publicly unveil the report of his special task force on housing this Tuesday at a luncheon with the student-faculty-citizen committee that frame the report * * * * In the national moot court competition yesterday Michigan's appellee team lost to Wayne State in the first round, and the appellant team lost to Ohio State. Wayne and Ohio State will go on to the final championship in New York. * * * * The University's sesquicentennial conferences and programs for 1967 have already reached 201 in number. Five major ceremonies will highlight the programs which are being coordinated by the Conference Department in the Extension Service Bldg. In March there will be an alumni pro- gram. Presidents of 400 institutions of higher learning through- out the world will be invited to attend the April Commencement. In July there will be a three-day program on "The University and the Body Politic." A fo'urth program will be dedicated to the theme of the sesquicentennial, "Knowledge, Wisdom, and the Courage to Serve." A mid-November ceremony will consider popu- lation control in developing' nations.. The University's "Operation Michigan" program will be continued next year, with three conferences already planned for the spring, Don Morris, special programs manager for the Office of University Relations, said yesterday. Under the series of day- aind-a-half conferences, the office brings leading businessmen, industrialists and educational and labor leaders to the University for a "person to person" information program. Two grants given by the National Science Foundation and one given by the Atomic Energy Commission will provide support for research and equipment for a program in nuclear reactor analysis. One NSF grant of $17,920 was awarded to 16 University un- dergraduates in mathematics. The other grant of $14,000 was awarded to 10 undergraduates in botany, The Atomic Energy Commission grant of $38,900 went to the depart;ment of nuclear engineering to provide equipment for a teaching and research program, The physics department has announced that this year's re- search appropriation from the Atomic Energy Commission is approximately $1.5 million. The AEC program in which the Uni- versity participates annually extends funds for research to most colleges and universities in the country. The money will be available for experimental grants in high energy, nuclear and atomic physics. The Tutorial Bucket Drive, originally scheduled for Wednes- day and Thursday of this week, failed to materialize. This was evidently due to a lack of coordination and communication between IFC, Panhel and UAC, co-sponsors of the project, and the Ann Arbor Tutorial Drive itself, which is responsible for Two-Year Program .. Starts Next Autumn With Twenty Students By NEIL BRUSS The State Board of Educationr this week gave its formal approval $ to Michigan State University's College of Human Medicine, a two-year medical program sched- uled to open with a class of twenty next fall.- The board had expressed its intent to rule on the controversial program and held a public hear- ing for this purpose three weeks ago. However, at that time board member unexpectedly sidestepped > the issue, asserting that the pro-f gram was outside of the board's " jurisdiction because the Legisla- ture had already approved it. This week's resolution simply officially accepted the present status of the MSU college without commenting on the program's merits. It went on to emphasize, ARCHITECT'S N however, that the board will play ran nearly $4 mil an active part in determining work is at lower1 whether the college should be ex- panded to a full four-year medi- cal school, if and when this ques- tion arises in the future. Board The MSU Medical School con- troversy developed out of a pro- N gram to increase medical schooll facilities in Michigan in order to increase the number of practicing physicians in the state. Officials By LAURENCE K had been aware of a great gap ; Managingr in doctors for several years. The State Board of Education The painfully-d has envisioned a four-year medical to build a new der school in the state, but stressed cility here have that the two-year program at shocking and poss MSU not proceed creation of a blow by the peren four-year program. Thus, the the University's co board expanded its resolution to gram--inflation. state that expansion of the MSU school must be approved by the; When the contra board. the proposed $141 Board President Thomas J. were opened thist Brennan'was unavailable for com- est offer totaled app ment. million. More prec MODEL OF PROPOSED dental school building which faces reassessment after bids lion above fund levels available. Kellogg institute for post-graduate and graduate left. North University Ave. is at bottom of picture. Fletcher St. is at left. !,h Bids JeopardizeVU Dental Schtool Plan KIRSHBAUM The urgency of their task par- ing flexibility that would loosen Editor allels the urgency of the school's up the curriculum requirements. need for a complete plant and 0 Research activity has been eveloped plans equipment overhaul. As Doerr said severely hampered by equipment ntal school fa- yesterda:: "We have been making and space shortages. The new been dealt a due and temporizing" with inade- building would include some clin- ibly shattering quate facilities practically since ical space for graduate work pro- nial menace to the end of the Second World grams that dovetails with existing nstruction pro- War, work programs undertaken in the Classes Expanded W. K. Kellogg Institute for Post- actor bids for Following the war, classes were Graduate and Graduate Dentistry, million project expanded from a range of 35-50 which is contiguous to the dental week, the low- to the present level of 97 students school. proximately $18 per class. Since that time, the " The construction of- a new isely, the bids main operating clinic has been re- building would provide a psychol- igher than the, habilitated at a cost of $300,000, ogical incentive to "affect changes available from but no space additions have been gracefully" that need the justifi- ources that the possible. cation-and the space-provided carefully nur- Doerr explained yesterday that by new surroundings. Among those of its $14 mil- the new structure is imperative changes, Doerr cited the possibil- to the school for the following ity of providing clinical experience a reasons:(now limited to juniors and sen- e Dean Robert e Separate clinical facilities are ors) for freshmen and sopho- needed for junior and senior stu- mores also. J school declar- dents in order to permit schedul- See BIDS, Page 6 U.S. Actions In Viet Nam Disapproved Peace Prevails as Police and Marchers Crowd Public Parks By KATHY EDELMAN More than 10,000 people parti- cipated yesterday in a well-or- ganized march from the University of California at Berkeley to pro- test the United States military action in Viet Nam. There were no incidents of violence as in the Berkeley march of Oct. 16 to the Oakland Army Terminal when some Hell's Angels attacked marchers. Participants lined in extensive columns headed by monitors from the Viet Nam Day Committee were led some five miles to DeFre- mery Park in the heart of a West Oakland Negro slum district where the demonstration evolved into a massive rally in a picnic atmos- phere. The VDC had originally in- tended to march on the Oakland Army Terminal but city officials refused to grant them a permit to hold any demonstration. Judge A federal judge, however, over- ruled the officials and let the VDC march to specified sites but not to the army terminal. DeFremery Park was selected as the desti- nation since it was the closest location to the terminal and, was in accordance with the judge's rulings. At the rally, which lasted some five hours, there were young Ne- gro men from the neighborhood, the marchers, observers, and anti- VDC groups mingling and discuss- ing issues and principles. Several groups of 10 to 15 policemen mix- ed with the crowd but there were no incidents, explained Christine Cudiamat, a night editor on The Daily Californian-the Berkeley student paper. Speakers Speakers denounced United States policy in Viet Nam and demanded withdrawal of U.S. troops. One speaker, Don Duncan who was a member of the special forces in Viet Nam for 18 months, explained the cynical attitude of Americans in Viet Nam. While the VDC estimated that there were 18,000 marchers, staff members of The Daily Californian who were present said last night that there were at most perhaps 14,000. The Associated Press re- ported there were no more than 10,000 participants. The VDC ex- pected 15,000 marchers. State af Emergene Current Plans Current plans call for an en- rollment of 20 students in thej freshman class this fall, according to MSU Medical School authori-. ties. The program would be ex-I oanried to take a class of 64 with- in three years. Wayne State Uni- versity officials have stated that their medical school would be will- ing to take MSU medical school, graduates wishing to complete their education, toward a M.D. degree. were $3.8 million h amount of funds; federal and state sc University has been turing on the basis lion estimate. ii ] i, "We are absolut of shock," Associat Doerr of the dental ed yesterday. "We had expected that there would be some increase in the bids over the estimates, but City certainly not THAT much." 'U' Officials Resign Very Disappointed V I