ichigan Smashes Illinois, 21-6; Purdue F alters ' Rolls over Illini Sixth Straight Year Sophomores Nunley, Ward Sparkle As Seniors Appear in Home Finale By TOM ROWLAND Associate Sports Editor Michigan, its nationally-tops rushing attack stymied by a rugged first half Illinois defense, capitalized on a fumble and pass inter- ception to key the way to a 21-6 Big Ten victory over the Illini here yesterday. The Wolverines' offensive machine, which led the country with a 265-yards-per-game rushing average before the game, then came to life with a 94-yard drive for a final tally in the third quarter as Michigan won its sixth straight over the Illini. The victory left Michigan just one-half game behind league- Spartan Win Dims Purdue Title Hopes EAST LANSING (P) - Michigan State happily played the role of a spoiler, dealing a body blow to Purdue's Big Ten title and Rose Bowl hopes by upsetting the Boilermakers 21-7 yesterday. hIt was the first conference loss for Purdue, previously tied with Ohio State for the league lead with four Big Ten victories. Purdue now is 5-2-0 overall, the other loss to mighty Notre Dame. The come- back victory made MSU 4-3-0 overall and 3-2 in the Big Ten. Purdue never has made a Rose 1 Bowl appearance. ,% Michigan State capitalized on two key breaks for touchdowns. One came after a blocked punt in the second period and the other following a pass interception call in the thrd i~ HALFBACK CLINTON JONES Charlie Thornhill, a sophomore guard, leaped to block a punt try by Ross Pfanier. MSU tackle Har- old Lucas caught the ball after it bounced high in the air and he stepped over the goal line. The other score was set up by an interference call on a 32-yard pass from Dave McCormick, in- tended for Tom Krzemienski. Clint Jones bucked over for the score.' A 15-yard pass from quarterback Steve Juday to Jones was the fourth quarter cinceh. Lou Bobich, who boots the ball in side-footed soccer fashion, converted all three extra points. Restitution The Purdue score was in the first period when the Boilermakers marched 74 yards in 10 plays the first time it got the ball. Fullback Randy Minniear ran in the last eight yards. It was the last home game of the season and the last memory of Spartan home fans this fall will be of seeing Coach Duffy Daugh- erty carried off the field on the shoulders of his jubilant players. leading Ohio State and - with Purdue losing to Michigan State- one step closer to the Rose Bowl. Fifth Straight Defeat For. llinois coach Pete Elliott it was just another one of those days; he has yet to beat brother Bump and his Wolverines in five years of coaching at Champaign. For Michigan fans the game didn't even start until the next to last play of the first period when Wolverine linebacker Frank Nunley picked off a wayward Il- linois aerial and set the Blue up at the Illini 35. The first 13 min- utes saw the Wolverines total a mere 21 yards on the ground and air combined. But, finally within sight of the goal posts and within view of a national television audience, the Michigan attack caught fire, and seven plays later halfback Carl Ward dashed through an Illini obstacle course off right end for the first home score. Custardo Fires The touchdown a d v a n t a g e didn't last for long as Illini quar- terback Fred Custardo took the visitors to midfield following the kickoff and then pitched a pic- ture-perfect bomb to big end Bob Trumpy. In what Michigan coach Bump Elliott called a key factor in the game, Custardo mis-toed the extra point wide to the right. The Wolverines returned to Il- linois goal-line territory once more before the intermission after Trumpy fumbled while taking a Custardo pass. Taking over at the enemy 40- yard line, Wolverine helmsman Bob Timberlake, making his final home appearance along with 16 other seniors, put on an aerial display of his own. After hitting end John Hepder- son for 11 and then running for five himself, the Big Ten's lead- ing scorer faked wide to Hender- son and then shot halfback Jim Detwiler a 24-yard spiral up the' center and into the end zone. Third Score Timberlake scored the third touchdown himself on a one-yard sneak after Michigan's rushing game came to life in the third period for the 94-yard assault. The Wolverine running attack amassed a final total of 202 yards, 67 of which belonged to right halfback Ward, singled out by Elliott as "having a great day with some early runs that really helped out." Ward chalked up Michigan's, first six points on a quick pitch that caught Illinois' up-the-center defense including all-America linebacker Dick Butkus by sur- prise, skirting the end behind key, blocks from Mader and Henderson for the final 15 yards. Gets Away? Michigan originally got the scoring threat underway afterj Custardo, off balance from barely escaping the Michigan defensive line, dashed away from ends Bill Laskey and Jim Conley and threw1 straight into Wolverine lineback- er Nunley's waiting hands at the 40. At the change of the quarter,i See MICHIGAN, Page 6 1 -Daily-Jim Lines ILLINOIS CENTER DICK BUTKUS reaches toward Wolverine quarterback Bob Timberlake during yesterday's contest at Michigan Stadium. After the conclusion of the Michigan victory, Timberlake called Butkus "truly an All-American." -Daily--Jim Lines SENIOR CAPTAIN JIM CONLEY dives at Illinois halfback Sam Price. Conley along with 16 other seniors played their last game in Michigan Stadium yesterday. P r i c e was thwarted continually, amassing just three yards total rushing for the entire game. -- 4AJ t C Ci t1T latli Seventy-Four Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXV, No. 61 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1964 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES V IET NAM CROWDS: Americans Government Warns Imprisoned Ru Dissatisfied Groups SAIGON (R) - Premier Tran Van Huong warned yesterday South Viet Nam's new government prohibits street demonstrations and appeared to be bracing for threatened opposition. Huong, 61, in office only three days, told associates he would not hesitate to use force to quell demonstrations if necessary. Catholic, Buddhist and student factions have expressed dis- satisfaction with the government and were expected to demonstrate in the streets during the week- Back B.urch Leaders hip WASHINGTON (P-Sen. Barry Goldwater, returning to the Capi- tal for the first time since his presidential bid was shattered, has urged retention of Dean Burch as Republican National Chairman de- spite cries from GOP moderates for Burch's scalp. "My recommendation would be to keep him, because for the first time in memory we finished the campaign in the black," Goldwater told an airport news conference on his arrival from Phoenix.? The GOP presidential nominee, who carried only six states in Tuesday's election, added that Burch, whom he selected for the job as chairman, had done a "very, very commendable job." Goldwater urged a thorough analysis of the election returns, and said the GOP would be wrong "going off half- cocked before that is done." Meanwhile in Philadelphia, Sen. Hugh Scott (R-Pa),' one of the few top Republicans in the nation to breast the Democratic landslide and win re-election, said last night there is presently "no leader of the Republican party (but) we will develop one." Scott, in a television interview, said Goldwater had "the worst managed campaign in American history, bar none." end. Students issued a petition last night, demanding dissolution of the Huong government. Maj. Gen. Nguyen Khanh, the former premier and now Chief of the Armed Forces, issued a state- ment in support of Huong. Friday, faced with the prospect of hostile demonstrations by stu- dent and religious factions, Huong ' conferred with U. S. Ambassador Maxwell B. Taylor and then took to the radio to appeal to the peo- ple "to help us restore authority and discipline in building up the country against Communism." On the military front, a new effort is under way to improve the war effort against the Com- munists. The U. S. and South Viet Nam have embarked on, a crash program that would boost the na- tional police force within four years from 28,000 to 72,000 men. Taylor probably will return from Saigon in a week or so for con- sultations on South Viet Nam with President Johnson and top advisers, State Department offi- cials said yesterday. A broad review of the U.S. Southeast Asia policy is being undertaken in the wake of the election. No lessening of the strong support being given the South Viet Nam government in its fight to overcome the Com- munist Viet Cong is expected. If there is any change in U.S. policy, experts said, it more likely will be in the direction of increased support where needed. As Hostages iia LEOPOLDVILLE (4') - The leader of a Communist-backed rebel regime in the eastern Con- go has declared 60 Americans and 1nearly 800 Belgians trapped by his rule are considered prisoners of' war. Rebel Christophe Gbenye, self- proclaimed president of the "Con- e is willing to negotiate the release! H of his captives. S tud ~ Gbenye made his announcement l d in a broadcast Thursday, the same day a group of 200 white mercen- B aries led Congolese regular army By BARE troops to capture the main rebel The gover center of Kindu, 250 miles south University ar of Stanleyville. cation projec The day before the fall of Kin- Academic Aff du to the Congolese regulars, an said in a spee attack by U.S.-supplied planes dent Banque sent rebels fleeing. Apparently it believe it is was this that prompted Gbenye took its part to act against the Americans and seriousness." Belgians. The Univer. Some in Leopoldvill: interpret- certain obligE ed the broadcast - the text of students who which was made available Satur- For instance, day - as a sign of rebel disinte- in the selec gration. Last week Gbenye issued make surei a call for help from African na- training to hE tions friendly to his cause. here. Premier Moise Tshombe called E on the rebels yesterday to lay "Also, a st down their arms, arrest their lead- in foreign s ers and end the threat to whites. crucial. In tr Gbenye in his broadcast indi- and Europe y cated he was hoping to use his mental effect American and Belgian captives as such a stand bargaining counters. He said he Total integ had instructed rebel foreign min- into the Uni ister Thomas Ganza to keep in another fact( touch with Prime Minister Jomo equally impoi Kenyatta of Kenya, chairman of versity not to an Organization of African Unity eign students committee on the Congo. munity herec Gbenye said he hoped that with with their s the committee's assistance he has a genuin could find "an African solution back and join to the Congo affair and drive out land." the American and Belgian sol- Speaking s diers who have been massacring he recalled fr the Congolese people." mer impressic is Views Foreign, !ent Program-Holes. i RARA SEYFRIED nment, students, and e partners in an edu- t, Vice-President for fairs Roger W. Heyns ech at the India Stu- t last night. "And I time that each side ner with much more rsity, for example, has ations to the foreign come here, he said. it has to be careful tion of students, to they have adequate andle the school work Excellence andard of excellence student education is aveling through Asia you can see the detri- ts of not maintaining ard," Heyns added. ration of the student versity community is or, he stressed. "But rtant is for the Uni- attempt to keep for- in the college com- once they are finished tudies. The student e responsibility to go n in the work of his specifically on India, om his trip last sum- ons of progress made, ssian Defense Chief .PS Alleged Threat U.S. Against USSR °Malinovsky VICE-PRESIDENT HEYNS THROUGH SONG AND WORD: Anti-Communists Point to Dangers of Conspiracy challenges present, and problems to solve which he said illustrated how important it was to the demo- cratic way of life that India suc- ceed in coping with its problems. "Nowhere else is there such a firm commitment to the demo- cratic way of life, and nowhere else are there such serious prob- lems to solve," he said. "The foreign student has a moral responsibility to work hard while he is here, and even harder when he returns to his own coun- try," Heyns said. It is the duty of each foreign student to return to his home country and help solve the many problems that face it, despite poorer working conditions and salaries, less appreciation for the work done, and less acceptance as a person. "Even though training is a pri- vate affair," Heyns said, "it is also a social event, it has social con- sequences and carries with it social obligations. "Each man must take a part in the significant battles of his times, or run the risk of feeling that he has not lived at all." Four Honored At Convocation In a special convocation at the joint University-University of Illi- nois Men's Glee Club Concert last night, University President Harlan Hatcher presented Outstanding Achievement Award citations to four alumni. Line Follows China View,. Civilian Leaders Continue Theme Of Co-Existence MOSCOW (AP) - Following a policy of alternating civilian friendship and military toughness, the Soviet Defense Minister ac- cused United States Defense Sec- retary Robert S. McNamara yes- terday of threatening to destroy the Soviet Union "at any mo- ment." Grim-faced Marshal Rodion Y. Malinovsky said "any attempt from an enemy will be answered in a suitable manner." He spoke shortly after smiling Anastas I. Mikoyan, the Soviet President, spoke of peace in the whole world. Leonid N. Brazhnev, first secretary of the Soviet Com- munist Party had said earlier that the majority of Americans cher- ish peace. China Malinovsky's parade speech phrase about "imperialist quar- ters of the western powers, head- ed by the United States. of Amer- ica," echoed Chinese phrasing. Re- cent statements by Soviet civil leaders have not singled out the United States for this type of general criticism. Malinovsky and Mikoyan were among top Soviet leaders mak- ing toasts at a Kremlin reception that concluded celebrations of the 47th anniversary of the Bolshevik" revolution. The defense minister's remarks we"e similar to, and perhaps a bit softer than, his usual Revolu- tion Day and May Day statements. Lenin Speaking from Lenin's tomb at the parade through Red Square, he accused the United States of "military ventures . . . creating a threat to peace." "We are not threatening any- one," he said. "We shall not fol- low the U. S" Defense Secretary who threatens to destroy the So- viet Union at any moment. "Anyone who threatens to de- stroy others is not a serious per- son in our contemporary condi- tions." In a statement to the Demo- cratic party's platform commit- tee in August, McNamara had said U. S. strategic forces are "suffi- cient to insure the destruction of both the Soviet Union and Com- munist China, under the worst imaginable circumstanes accom- i By ROGER RAPOPORT A trio of anti-communists used rhetoric, reminisces, and folk- singing in an attempt to convey to an audience of nearly 1,000 at Ann Arbor High School last night, that Communism is a "deceitful con- spiracy bent on overthrowing the United States by any means possible." The Christian Anti-Communism Crusade presented its president, Dr. Fred Schwarz, lecturer, Herbert Philbrick, and music director, Mrs. Janet Greene who spent two and a half hours "exposing the Com- munist conspiracy." Each performer used a distinct method to achieve the crusade's purpose: "to instruct citizens about Communism." Philbrick Philbrick discussed Communist practice, based on personal ex- perience as an FBI counterspy in the Communist Warty more than a decade ago. Dr. Schwarz addressed himself to the theory of Com- munism, while Mrs. Greene sang several songs to illustrate Communist theory and practice. Philbrick said that to invite a Communist to speak at a college . ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ - - ..,., ,. f - - 1 - ,rtrlir- tn n m vn n ~ " f n . lir Schwarz defined Fascism as, "The name given to a political sys- tem organized by Mussolini." According to him, 'Communism and Fascism are idealogical twins, peas out of the same pod. The opposite of Communism is human liberty. "Therefore Communism fits the Fascist definition and is the reall threat to the United States." Premiere To illustrate Schwarz's point, Mrs. Greene sang the premiere of her song, "The Fascist Threat." The ballad briefly defined Fascism as "small-single party leader." The final line supplemented Schwarz's views: "The greatest Fascist threat you! see, is the Communist conspiracy." Schwarz went on to define Communism as, "The name given to a system devised by Marx and revamped by Lenin. "People don't understand Communist theory," he said. "Com- munism is fearful in theory and tragic in practice." Psychology Schwarz also dealt briefly with psychology stating that people are motivated by their beliefs. "Don't be fooled by this psychological gob- hledygook." he said referring tn those who contend that Lee Harvey xx- I