Purdue . . . . 25 Michigan State 22*1 Minnesota . . .17 \ Iowa . .w Illinois..... .21 Ohio State.... 7 \ OhioState ...7 Indiana . . . 20 Notre Dame ..31 1SMU ..... .134labama . . . 0 . . .19 Navy . . . . . . . 7x s . . 12 I1Miss. St. .. .0. 27 Indiana St.(Pa) 21 14 SlipperyRock . 0 CYCLE ORDINANCE: AMENDMENTS NEEDED ? See Editorial Page Y A6F AOF 4.Ajtr tgan, :4Ia it FREEZING High-40 LOW.-25 Sunny and unseasonably cool Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVII, No. 51 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30 1966 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT PAGES M' ense Rolls on; Ba dgers Topple, 28-17 By JIM TINDALL1 Associate Sports EditorE Special To The Daily; I in bogs and for 30 minutes, Mich- scrimmage. Kemp kicks. Ball sails igan played in one. According to over everyone's head. Statistic: 69 one player: "they seemed to know yards from scrimmage. About 82 yards to bolster Michigan's aver While the rest of the third per. age a tad. An incomplete pass to iod was dominated by the Wol- Ward and a completed down-and- verines, they were unable to cash l i 1 i 1 MADISON-It was a great first every play we were going to run yards in the air.) Kemp: "It was in to Clancy gave Michigan a in until early in the fourth stan- half for red hot dog balloons, pear- in the first half." Another added : like a coming-out party. I fin- first down on the Badger 23. za when Michigan traded a Vid- shaped people biting their nails "The coaches really chewed us out ally kicked one." (P.S. The next 'Fish' Got Away mer fumble for a Sygar intercep- in the Wisconsin Union, and cran- between the halves." . time Kemp went in to kick, the tion that gave Michigan a first berry public relations men. Highlights of the day: Dets safeties moved back 60, count 'em. Vidmer then worked the option down on the Wisconsin 30. Carl It was just another half for scores two . . . Kemp punts one 69 yards from the line.) neatly and flipped the ball to Fish- Ward, whose glory this year has Michigan. yards ... Fisher is brilliant again. Badgers Respond er, who 'rumbled in for the score been spotty. carried the ball three It was a great second half for Sidelight of the day: "Cran- Though visibly shaken by the even though Mike Cavill had him times on the seven plays leading coffee vendors, more plum-shaped berry quality: determined by the boot, the Badgers started on a by the seat of the pants for the to his touchdown, climaxing his people, and more cranberry farm- bounce." drive that led to their first touch- last five yards. efforts with a powerful off'tackle ers. Machine-Like March down of the day. Or was it a One the same play in the fourth slash that 'was labeled with pure It was a better half for Mich- Michigan marched 80 yards for touchdown? On their fourth crack quarter, Fisher pulled a muscle desire. igan. Better, but not even close its first score, and the Wolver- at the Michigan line Wisconsin in his left shoulder and he did Out the Gates to best. ines didn't even think twice about was credited with a score; how- not reappear in the game. In the Gastronome's Delight gambling on fourth and one at ever, the entire west side of the locker room, Fish had to be dried While the cranberry diggers Like Wisconsin's "famous" cran- the Wisconsin 30. Michigan line thought that they? off anddressed by his teammates headed for the extra with only berris, the victory was' a "Tart, Jim Detwiler, who continues to had held. The touchdown ruling since he was unable to lift his th Tangy, Tasty Treat." Not a sweet astound everyone by leading the was made by the referee in the tightly taped upper arm above the the Badgers connected on a nifty victory. But another victory. A Big Ten in scoring, jumped in for defensive backfield, not either of level of his shoulder; however, ac- pass play that went for a touch- 28-17 victory. the score from the three yard line. the line judges. According to Rick cording to team physician Dr. dra. "Those are the kind that It was an exciting game be- The Badgers (wearing cranber- Volk, "As far as I could see, they Dennis Burke, the injury "was a break your neck. That play just cause favored Michigan could ry jerseys of course) took the ball didn't put it in, and I was stand- minor one," and Fisher "would shouldn't have happened. But we have lost. to the Michigan three before a ing right there when he went off bie ready" to roll next week. When won," explained Volk. It was more exciting for Wis- goal line stand and a fumble end- tackle." the bits of Badger fur from the That's what the Michigan consin fans because their team ed their first threat. The average kickoff return of interior lineman had cleared, coaches said too, "We won." might have won. (Enter Stan Kemp, stage right. the day was 30 yards, and fol- Fisher had bashed his way around And the cranberry pickers and Cranberries ("Sassamanesh" to Wisconsin safeties stationed a re- lowing the Wisconsin "touch- the -field for 99 yards in 13 at- promoters? It was a "Tart, Tangy, the American Indians) are grown spectful 40 yards from the line of down," Detwiler romped for 51 tempts. . Tasty Treat." i -Associated Press . POPPING HIGH INTO THE AIR, the errant pigskin has just slipped from the grasp of Wolverine quarterback Dick Vidmer who is surrounded by three Badger defenders. Program on UNESCO Here Today Foreign Students, Professors To Talk On Ann Arbor's Role By DAVID DUBOFF Ann Arbor's role in the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and C u 1 t u r a 1 Organization (UNESCO) is the theme of a pub- lic program at 2 p.m. today in the Rackham Lecture Hall. The program is being presented in conjunction with United Na- tions Week, which ends tomorrow, and the twentieth anniversary of UNESCO next week, and is being sponsored jointly by the Mayor's Planning Committee for United Nations Week Activities, the Ann Arbor Chapter of the United Na- tions Associations, and the United Nations Committee of the Inter- national Center. The meeting will include a showing of the film "In the Minds of Men," a discussion on "The Ann Arbor Area and the UN" by ex,- perts at the University, and state- ments on the work of UNESCO in other countries by foreign stu- dents at the University. Foreign Students In attendance at the meeting today wil be several students hold- ing fellowships from the United Nations, UNESCO, and the World Health Organization. At the pres- ent time there are approximately twenty students studying here on fellowships from the UN and its affiliated organizations, represent- ing countries in all parts of the, world. The foreign students holding fellowships indicate that the op- portunity to study at an American university is valuable for the fur- therance of education, science, and culture in other countries. Victor I Lugo, a student from Venezuela See EDUCATION, Page 2 NEWS WIRE Late World News BERKELEY, CALIF. (AP)-Stokely Carmichael, leader of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Commitee, was cheered wildly by 14,000 mostly white students yesterday when he decried U.S. involvement in Viet Nam and the universal draft. The "black power" advocate, addressing a capacity crowd in the outdoor Greek Theater on the University of California Berkeley campus, said the only way to stop the war in Viet Nam is for young Americans to say "to hell with the draft." "And I am saying, 'To hell with the draft," he shouted. SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (A)-The prototype of what may be the underwater cargo ship of the future tooting around a dormi- tory swimming pool at Ti.e University of California. The 10-foot craft, powered by batteries, was built by stu- dents and instructors at a cost of $1,650. Prof. Charles Devlin said the craft employes an electro- magnetic principle ,and is propelled by pushing water behind it. "The potential for an electro-magnetic submarine lies in its gigantic underwater cargo movement," Devlin said. "It could be a 100,000-ton underwater blimp.". * a TWELVE CANDIDATES for the governing boards of the University, Michigan State University and Wayne State will be interviewed by the editors of the student newspapers on three television programs during the next week. Candidates for the University's Board of Regents will be televised at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, when they will be paired with candidates from MSU, and at 4 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 6 when they will face the Wayne State candidates. ' Questoning the candidates are Mark Killingworth from the Daily, Vartan Kupelian from the Wayne Collegian and Kyle Kerbawy from the Michigan State News. CONSTANTINOS A. DOXIALIS, an award-winning Greek architect, engineer and urban planner, said "there is no hope for our cities if we allow all of them to grow." Speaking to Michigan State University students last week,I Doxiadis suggested that creating new cities would relieve the pressures of growth and change on old cities, and allow plan- ners to avoid making the mistakes of the past. "The system of roads we are still building is ridiculous," he said, "and our cities' centers are being choked to death." He predicted 'that in less than half a century metropolitan Chicago and Detroit will be one continuous city with Battle Creek as the halfway point. AT UNIVERSITY OF DETROIT: Kennedy Endorses Williams, Calls for MVore Aid to Education Arrives Late For Speech At Ypsilanti Polls Audience For Views on U.S. Policy, Favors Lottery Draft By The Associated Press YPSILANTI - Sen. Robert Kenhedy (D.-N.Y.), told a cheer- I ing crowd of 2,500 persons at Eastern Michigan University that "in the highest councils of gov- ernment advice from no one was more sought after" than from G. Mennen William, Democratic sen- atorial candidate, while he was as- sistant secretary of state for Afri- can affairs. Kennedy arrived over an hour late on his first stop of an eight- hour barnstorming tour through the state. The route from Willow Run air- port was lined with placards and signs displaying such sayings as "RFK for President in 1968" and "All the Way With RFK." After a brief speech, he an- swered questions from the audi- ence, made up mainly of students. And he drew groans when re- plying to questions about the draft. "I thing it is unfair," he said. "It should be done through a lot- tery system, and there should be no college deferments. Everybody should be treated equally." x -Associated Press Michigan politicians basked in the Kennedy charm yesterday as Sen. Robert Kennedy (D-NY) swung through an eight-hour campaign tour with a few good words for all state Democrats. Stick- ing close to the man with the magic name are (from left) Att. Gen. Frank Kelley, G. Mennen Wil- liams and Zolton Ferency. CHRYSLER PRESIDENT- Business Brings Revoution President Lynn A. Townsend of Chrysler Corp. said here last night that people of underdeveloped ac- tions "are beginning to see the superiority" of a free enterprise system and are turning toward it in a "quiet revolution." "By its efficiency in providing for the needs of free people every- where," Townsend said, "our busi- ness system is forcing the destruc- tion of the inefficient and tyran- nical system of controls used by the Communists." Townsend spoke before a regional convention of Alpha Kappa Psi, a professional business fraternity. He was initiated an honorary member. 'Old Days' Gone He said that the "days of the whitevested, gold-watch-chained A UNIVERSITY TRADITION: You Can Count on the Blue Front To Have a 'Times' Dwner-manager who worked only for himself" are gone beyond re- call. Today, he asserted, "business needs men with a world view and an understanding of world needs." Finding such businessmen pre- sents a "big and exciting chal- lenge" to business, Townsend said. But an equally important chal- lenge has to do with educating the public about modern business and the free enterprise system. "We have also had the great satisfaction in recent years of see- ing men who once farmed in the Philippine rice paddies become supervisors in our new automobile plant in Manila, he said. "We have brought men from the Turkish government back to Detroit for training in such things as truck maintenance and repair.} "We're not there to take the place of the Peace Corps, and we wouldn't want to. But the answers to human problems are not found just in agencies of the federal government. Basic Opportunity "Private business provides a more basic kind of opportunity for a concrete expression of the idealism our young people are blessed with today... "In 1964-the last year we have figures for-business investment' in foreign countries, many of at.,, _.. _-4 -sAnvl a - k Campaigns For State Candidates Young Crowd Awaits Arrival; Entertained By Rock-'n-Roll Band By AVIVA KEMPNER Special To The Daily DETROIT-Arriving more than two hours late here yesterday, Sen. Robert Kennedy (b-NY) bol- stered the Democratic campaign slate with an enthusiastic speech before nearly 6,800 persons at the University of Detroit field house. The senator called for election of the Democratic slaterfrom top to bottom, but the strongest en- dorsement was' voiced for former Gov G. Mennen Williams, who is seeking to unseat Republican Sen. Robert Griffin in the Senate race. Midst a hall filled with balloons, placards and Williams - Ferency girls, the eager crowd.was enter, tained by a rock-and-roll band and a high school band while awaiting Kennedy's arrival. Williams 'Unique' In a prepared text, which he did not deliver due to his late arrival, Kennedy said, "Of all the candi- dates for the Senate all over the country, Mennen Williams' is unique in experience and insight into the problems of war anU. peace, new nations and nuclear weapons." Speaking to a predominantly young audience, Kennedy's pre- pared speech centered on the theme of education. He said, "First we must con- tinue to accelerate present efforts to expand federal and local sup-* port for education of every kind. Education is a national resource. It should be paid for on a na- tional basis with each paying his share. Deserve Chance "We should also expand our efforts for the education of the poor and disadvantaged. In the long run welfare payments solve nothing. Free Americans deserve the chance to be fully self-sup- porting, and this requires educa- tion," Kennedy asserted. "Third," he continued; "we must vastly expand opportunity for college study for all our children. This means, among other things, the creation of 3.5 million new places in colleges in the next ten years alone." Job Training Kennedy also talked about *ex- By ROGER RAPOPORT Three stores at the corner of State St. and Packard Roard car- ry the Sunday New York Times. Today one will sell 15 copies, an- other 95 and a third 650. If you ask Ray Collins, owner of the Blue Front Cigar Store, why he's got the Times market locked up he'll just mumble something about good luck. But he won't tell you about the 98 hour work week he's put in. (It was 70 until two of his employees were drafted last month.) Nor will he let you in on his trade-secret- controlled clutter. Ray's newsstand is a marketing man's nightmare. The window rmien u i MP wih nn-niin Golden Anniversary year. "The Blue Front is the biggest news- stand in Michigan outside the De- troit air terminals," says Harry Genova President of the Wash- tenaw News Co. Adds a New York Times Circulation official, "The Blue - Front certainly has one of. our biggest Sunday sales among. newsstands outside New York." The Blue Front has grown with the University from a small cigar stand carrying papers as a side- line to a news emporium. Collins bought the Blue Front in 1925 from Ray Housel who had opened the cigar stand in 1916. Collins originally came to Ann Arbor in 1923 to attend the University. He into the Blue Front's paperback library. Crowded Corner Today the store is filled from; 8 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. with patrons checking out the New Yoi'k Daily News ("China A Bomb Pollutes Air"), Redbook ("The Pregnant Bride; Can Her Marriage Suc- ceed?) Reader's Digest ("We're helping the Communists win the; Propaganda ,War") and National Insider ("Sex is Dead"). Immediately opposite Ray's; counter is a long aisle leading into the store's inner sanctum. "I'llx never know why they flock to thati Pleasure Corner," says Ray, glanc- ing at a queue of men readingi msea..zinein the store's vast lady : him read." Curently he figures the store is selling about 10,000 magazines, 3,000 paperbacks, 2,500 daily news- papers and 1,800 Sunday papers a week. "Playboy's our biggest magazine -about 800 copies a month," says Ray. "I rarely fail to look it through," says Ray. Worst seller among the big magazines? Read- er's Digest-about 40 a month. Diversity is a key factor in the store's success. Ray carries every- thing ranging room the "Econo- mist" and "Die Welt" to the Mich- igan Daily. ("I can always tell if something hot is going on on cam- pus by the way The Daily moves," he says. . :<>