THE WORLD TODAY THE Nixon Announces Cabinet Tomorrow NEW YORK (UPI) President-elect Richard M. Nixon has chosen his 12 cabinet appointees and will reveal their names in an unprecedented package announcement on nationwide television OBSERVER tomorrow night. Serving the Notre Dame and St. Mary's CulleKe Community Ronald L. Ziegler, Nixon's press spokesman, said yesterday the VOL. Ill, NO. 61 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1968 pre~;ident-clect would go to Washington tomorrow evening to make the cabinet announcements and "possibly other major appoint­ ments" at 9 p.m. C.S.T. from the Shoreham Hotel. Oshkosh Officials Balk It was believed to be the first time a president-elect has announced all his cabinet choices at once. It was 1\csigned for maximum impact on the prime-time television audience. Won't Readmit Students Ziegler said "you could pretty generally conclude that the final ~abinct selections have been made." He added that Nixon would MADISON' Wis. (UPI)--State thousands of dollars damage. reinstatement for the suspended wait until tomorrow to announce them because "it's a matter of university officials announced Seven students filed the fcdcrac1 students. A window in the state personal preference. lie felt Washington would be an appropriate yesterday they will not reinstate court suit to challenge the capitol meeting room was place to make an announcement of this magnitude." 94 Negro students at Oshkosh suspensions. broken by one of the protesters. The other major appointments Nixon might announce tomor­ State University who were T h c dis t urbancc occurred J udgc Doyle ruled the row night were expected to include the Director of the bureau of the suspended after a destructive after the university president suspended students "will be budget, and key ambassadorial posts, including negotiators to the campus rampage Nov. 21. refused to sign a list of irreparably harmed by a Paris Vietnam talks. Robert J. Doyle, university grievances presented by black significant extension of their V C Take Heavy Losses In Meade River system information officer, said students and forced the school present suspensions. the officials decided to usc one to c I o sc down for the "I find that there is not SAJCON (UPI)-Ailicd troops closed the noose around a Viet of the options in a federal court Thanksgiving recess three days available to them the students an Cong stronghold yesterday and reported killing 862 Communists ruling ordering reinstatement to early. adequate remedy at law," Doyle ncar Da Nang in three weeks of fighting described as some of the keep the students on suspension Last Friday, about 200 said. "I find· that this suspension heaviest of the war. until their cases arc decided. shouting young people disrupted has been imposed, and has American losses were 95 Marines killed and 506 wounded. U.S. Judge James E. Doyle a meeting of the state university continued to the present As Operation Meade River ended 13 miles south of Da Nang, the ruled earlier in the day that the regents in an effort to win without due process of law." U.S. command annc".!nced the beginning of a major new offensive to students must be reinstated. But clean out seldom-patrolled waterways between Saigon and the he left open two methods by SLC Subcommittee To Cambodian border. which university system officials In the air war, North Vietnamese gunners shot down an could continue the suspensions, American reconnaissance plane yesterday 50 miles north of the Hold Day of Discussion including immediate scheduling cussed arc: Demilitarized Zone-the fourth such loss since the bombing halt of disciplinary hearings. On Sunday, January 5, the began Nov. I. Both crewmen aboard the RF4C Phantom jet were Hall Life Subcommittee of the I) Role of Hall Chaplin "Notices will be sent before 2) Role of Rector picked up by helicopter from the Gulf of Tonkin. the 6 p.m. Wednesday deadline Student Life Council will hold its "Day of Discussion." The 3) Role of Judicial Boards Rocky Barely Tops Paulsen In NY to all suspended students, 94 of 4) Role of Hall President them, notifying them of a purpose of the day, according to 5) Role of Hall Council ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI)-Gov. Nelson Rockefeller topped comedian hearing starting at I 0 a.m. the committee's agenda, is "to 6) On & Off Campus Pat Paulsen by only seven votes in the write in balloting for Monday, Dec. 16, in the help the sub-committee of the President in New York. Both ran a poor third to Sen. Eugene Student Life Council and to give Housing courthouse at Oshkosh," a 7) Tripartite Hall Review McCarthy, unofficial tallies showed yesterday McCarthy got 314 system spokesman said. "They the university community a Board votos, Rockefeller 54, Paulsen 47, Sen. Edward Kennedy 22 and will remain suspended until the chance to express their views in 8) Parietal I lours New York City Mayor John Lindsay 13. hearings, which the judge said is a discussion concerning the dif­ 9) Drinking okay," the spokesman said. He fcren t aspects of hall Iif c at Dyess And Turner Reach Black Sea Members of the Hall Presi­ said a decision in each case must Notre Dame. From this discus­ dents Council, faculty members, ISTANBUL (UPI) Two U.S. Navy warships yesterday steamed be made under the federal court sion the sub-committee will pre­ and administration members will into the Black Sea to show the American flag in what the Soviet order by Dec. 20. pare a report to be submitted to be participating in the discus­ Union regards virtually as its own private preserve. The students were suspended the Student Life Council for sions. Mr. Edmund Stepan, head The Soviets denounced the visit by the 6th Fleet destroyers to after a rampage through the approval. of the Board of Trustees, may the inland sea as a "provocation" and a violation of international Oshkosh administration Among. the topics to be dis- take part in the day's meetings. treaties. A similar accusation came from Communist Bulgaria which building, which caused has shores on the sea. The 3,500-ton Dyess and Turner passed through the Bosphorus Straits and into the Black Sea, past an unidentified Soviet tanker, Year Wish Comes True I I months in Balboa Naval Hos- talion, told the story of the during the early morning hours. Despite the storm of Russian SAN DIEGO, Calif, (UPI) pita!. determined Marine. He related propaganda, only a few persons watched them go through the -Carl E. Herring tried for II historic waterway. years to become a Marine. He Y cs tc rd ay, Herring stood all Herring's misfortunes. Then U.S. officials said only the Dyess and Turner would spend five finally made it yesterday and, proudly with his fellow boot he announced that because of camp gradua tcs of the I st Re- Herring's "perseverance and will days in the Black Sea conducting "routine operations in intcr­ for his stick-to-it-ivcness, was cruit Training Battalion. tl) win" he was immediately na I ional wa tcrs." promoted on the spot from private to private first class. Col. Dallas R. Walker, the promoted to private first class, Xmas Greeting On Way To VIetnam Herring, 28, of Dallas, Tex., commanding officer of the bat- the only one in the battalion. was only 17 when he first en­ IIA YWARD, Calif. (UPI) -The longest Christmas card in the listed and went to Marine boot Afro Committee Issues Statement world-S~ miles long-was on its way to Vietnam yesterday. camp here in 1957. The second The unique holiday tribute is actually a collection of almost Arthur MacFarland, Chairman follows: week he broke his knee on the I 00,000 individual greetings collcc!..:d Ly the Hayward Daily Review of the Notre Dame "We arc committed to the obstacle course. It failed to heal newspaper and transferred to a iong ribbon of newsprint. Afro-American Society today implementation of a goal stated The "Miles of Messages to v;.::tnam" project contained letters properly and he was given a announced that the planned in t h c stat c m c n t of the mcd ical discharge and sent from every state and overscvs. Also included were greetings from demonstration at the NO-UCLA A fro-American Society dated home. Vice President-elect Spiro T. Agnew and entertainers Bob Hope, Red gam c Staurday was averted November 26, 1968. Our In the course of the next Skelton and Janet Leigh. largely through the agency of purpose is to reduce these goals The scroll, which weighed about two tons, was divided into years, Herring worked al various the newly formed University to detailed programs and to _jobs, got married and had two several sections to case handling problems in connection with the Committee for Afro-American press for their prompt full daughters. But he never gave up airshipmcnt to Vietnam. Students. realization." his goal of becoming a Marine The committee, which The faculty members of the Court Clears Way For Shaw Trial and he bombarded the corps consists of six members of the committee include William WASIIIN<;TON (UPI) The Supreme Court cleared the way incessantly asking for <~nother Afro-American Society, an Richardson, of the Department yesterday for New Orleans District Attorney Jim (;arrison to chance. He paid for an operation organization of black students at of Classical and Modern proceed with the trial of businessman Clay L. Shaw on a charge he on his knee and said he was in Notre Dame, and six members of Languages, Ernest .I. Bartell, conspired in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. great shape. the Notre Dame faculty was c.s.c., Chairman of the In a brief order without comment, the court let stand a lower Last June, Herring was per­ formed last Friday as it became Economics Department, Law court refusal to issue an injunction blocking the trial. The trial had mitted to re-enlist. A month clear llw t the demanded changes Professor and legal aid conscllor been held up pending Shaw's appeal to the Supreme Court for a later, at the same recruit depot, in the situation of blacks at Thomas Sha ffcr, Ad missions hearing on his injunction move. he broke his arm. He was Notre Dame might be ciTectcd Officer John (;oldrich, James An aide to Carrison, Assistant District Attorney James Alcock, shipped off to Dallas on leave to and some form of demonstration Carberry, Professor of Elect rica! let it heal. Herring came back to said in New Orleans that a new trial date for Shaw would be set as would be forced. Engineering, and Engli~h soon as possible. San Diego on July 27 and the graduate stuuenl and Collegiate "The next move is up to us and we will be setting the Shaw case next day he came down with The initial statement of the Seminar Program Acting for trial just as quickly as possible," Alcock said. meningitis. He spent nearly three committee read, in part, as Director Tom Musial. PAGE 2 THE OBSERVER. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10,1968

11111 Police Quiet SFSC Campus ...... Chris Wolfe SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - by a misty rain. Then, 200 Underground Press," called for Police squads, including horse joined in a march on the resistance to "the lies of the mounted officers, forced hard business and social science build­ SDS," anarchy and violence and ND Black Power core demonstrators from San ings. fascism. It urged support for Francisco State College yester­ As they shattered windows Hayak

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.. ~~::~ ,~ ~ ...... ,~,.. ~ ..... :.~f - ••• ~,.~ .. ~\.~· PAGE4 THE OBSERV. 1968 Grid Team Sets 28 Records A 47-year-old team record for yards gained in a First Downs: 296 season heads the list of 28 records set by the 1968 *223, 1967 Notre Dame football team. The Irish established First Downs Rushing: 171 15 team records and I 3 individual marks. *156, 1943 Nine of the individual marks belong to First Downs Passing: 106 , three to split end .lim * 91' 1967 Seymour and one to placekicker Scott Hempel First Downs Penalty: 15 whose 45 extra points bettered a record of 40 set *14, 1964 4 7 years ago by Buck Shaw. Fewest Punt Returns Allowed: 5 In five years under , 108 new lines *8, 1954 of type have been placed in the Notre Dame SEASON INDIVIDUAL RECORDS record book. Parseghian-coached teams have also Passes Completed: 116, Terry Hanratty tied nine marks including the first downs by *114,.1ohn Huarte, 1964 passing record this season. Comp. Pet.: 58.8, Terry Hanratty The new records (*indicates old record): *56.5, Bob Williams, 1949 SINGLE GAME Kicking PAT's: 45, Scott Hempel Total Plays: 104, Iowa *50, Buck Shaw, 1921 *101, Carnegie Tech, 1924 Yards Gained: 673, Illinois CAREER RECORDS *664, Haskell Indians, 1932 Pass Attempts: 550, Terry Hanratty First Downs: 35, Oklahoma & Iowa *436, , 1951-54 *32, North Carolina, 1953 Completions: 304, Terry Hanratty SEASON RECORDS *109, Ralph Guglielmi, 1951-54 Record-setting coach Ara Parseghian Most Rushes: 657 Intcpt's Thrown: 34, Terry Hanratty *625, 1943 *30, , 1941-43 Most Completions: 147 Yds Passing: 4152, Terry Hanratty 36 Win Monograms *131, 1967 *3117, Ralph Guglielmi, 1951-54 Highest Completion Percentage: Tot. Off. Plays: 731, Terry Hanratty Notre Dame awarded 36 Kennedy, Robert K uechenberg, .583 (147 of252) *644, Ralph Guglielmi, 1951-54 players varsity football , Charles Landolfi, *.565, 1948 (61 of 108) Tot. Off. YDS.: 4738, Terry Hanratty monograms for performance Charles Lauck, John Lavin, Mike Tot Offense Plays: 909 *411 0, George Gipp, 1917-20 during the 1968 season. The McCoy, Tom McKinley, Tim *788, 1967 TO's Responsible For: 41, Terry Hanratty monogram winners: Dennis Monty, Eric Norri, Coleman Tot. Offense Yds.: 5044 *36, Red Salmon, 1900-03 Allan, Robert Belden, Terence O'Brien, Robert Olson, Michael *4512, 1921 Passes Caught: 138, Jim Seymour Brennan, Frank Criniti, Larry Oriard, Donald Reed, James Highest Per Game Average: * 7l,JoeHeap, 1951-54 DiNardo, Ronald Dushney, Reilly, Larry Schumacher, James 504.4 Yards on Rcptn's: 2113, Jim Seymour George Eaton, Joseph Freebery, Seymour, John Standring, *441.3, 1946--3972 in 9 games *1242,Jack Snow, 1962-64 John Gasser, Robert Gladieux, Joseph Theismann, Edward Fewest Punts: 23 TO Catches: 16, Jim Seymour Terry Hanratty, Robert Tuck, James Winegardner, Jeff *30, 1964 *13, Leon Hart, 1947=49 Jockisch, Tim Kelly, Charles Zimmerman, Charles Zloch. 19681rish Football Statistics 1968 RESULTS KICKOFF RETURNS PUNT RETURNS TEAM SCORING N.D. OPP Player No Yds TO Player No Yds TO Total Points 376 170 N.D. Opp. Attendance Zimmerman 1 15 0 Dushney 2 30 0 52 24 45 Oklahoma 21 59,075c Criniti 1 19 0 Lauck 1 19 0 by Rushing 38 11 22 Purdue 37 59,075c Dushney 4 52 0 Gladieux 6 91 0 by Passing 13 12 51 Iowa 28 58,043 Gladieux 11 262 0 O'Brien 1 13 0 Others 1 1 27 Northwestern 7 59,075c O'Brien 4 156 0 Theismann 14 99 0 Field Goals 5-9 1-3 58 Illinois 8 59,075c Allan 7 183 0 Reid 3 19 0 Safeties 1 0 17 Michigan State 21 77,339c TOTALS 28 687 0 TOTALS 27 272 0 PAT-Kick 45-50 19-21 45 Navy 14 63,738 RECEIVING PAT-Run 0-1 0 56 Pittsburgh 7 59,075c Player No Yds Avg TO Long PAT-Pass 1-1 2·3 34 Georgia Tech 6 59,075c Seymour 53 736 13.9 4 31 21 Southern Cal 21 82,659 Gladieux 37 442 11.9 2 69 DEFENSIVE STATISTICS Player TM TL-YDS PBU FR BK TEAM STATISTICS N.D. Opp. O'Brien 16 272 17.0 4 50 Olson 129 8-33 3 -TOTAL OFFENSE 5044 2490 Winegardner 14 179 12.8 0 22 Kelly 80 3-29 1 Total Plays 909 629 Dushney 8 117 14.6 0 31 McCoy 72 8-34 7 Yards Per Play 5.5 3.9 Allan 7 93 13.3 1 26 Schumacher 51 2-12 3 2 Yards Per Game 504.4 249.0 Eaton 5 73 14.6 0 31 Freebery 53 4-49 0 1 NET YARDS RUSHING 3059 793 Zimmerman 4 24 6.0 0 16 Kuechenberg 44 8-59 2 2 Rushing Plays 657 358 Landolfi 25 25.0 0 25 Snow liiuck 45 7-59 2 2 Yards Per Rush 4.6 2.2 11 11.0 0 11 Theismann 13 13.0 1 13 Reid 43 1-1 5 NET YARDS PASSING 1985 1697 Jockisch 38 3-15 TOTALS 147 1985 13.8 13 69 Attempts 252 286 Gasser 31 1-3 9 Completions 147 137 RUSHING Zloch 27 3 Completion Percentage .583 .479 Player TC YDS AVG. TO LONG Lavin 17 1-1 1 Had Intercepted 15 11 Gladieux 152 713 4.7 12 57 Lambert 15 3-24 Passes 13 12 Dushney 108 540 5.0 4 32 Wright 14 Yards Per Attempt 7.9 5.9 O'Brien 64 314 4.9 3 27 Norri 18 6-42 Yards Per Completion 13.8 12.4 Hanratty 56 279 5.0 4 43 Neidert 13 Yards Per Game 198.5 169.7 Zimmerman 63 267 4.2 0 33 Standring 13 MADE 11 15 Theismann 59 259 4.4 4 36 Kondrla 12 Yards Returned 33 160 Landolfi 38 203 5.3 2 20 Quinn 11 PUNT RETURN YARDS 272 52 Ziegler 30 163 5.4 2 40 Mudron 13 1-6 Number of Returns 27 5 Criniti 33 151 4.6 3 20 Hempel 6 Avg. Return 10.1 10.4 Allan 33 105 3.2 3 14 Jackson 5 TOTAL RETURN YARDS 305 212 Belden 18 83 4.6 0 13 Wack 5 4 YARDS PUNTING 820 2901 Barz 1 3 3.0 0 3 Nash 4 Number of Punts 23 73 Hempel 1 -12 Sheahan 4 Avg. Punt 35.7 39.8 deArrieta 1 -13 Johnson 3 KICKOFF RETURN YARDS 687 1047 Seymour 1 Lewallen 4 2 Number of Returns 28 60 Kiliany 2 Return TOTALS 657 3059 4.6 38 57 11111111111111111111111111 Avg. 24.5 17.5 Merlitti 2 PENALTIES AGAINST 42 45 Key: TM--Tackles made; TL- INDIVIDUAL SCORING Devine 1 Yards Penalized 411 422 tackles for loss; PB U-passes Player TO Kck PAT(2Pt.l FG TP Gasseling 1 FUMBLES-- LOST 25-16 25-12 broken up; FA-fumbles re- Gladieux 14 84 Heneghan FIRST DOWNS 292 148 Hempel 0 45-50 0-1 5-9 60 Wittliff covered; BK-blocked kicks. Rushing 171 60 11111111111111111111111111 O'Brien 7 42 Stenger 1 Passing 106 79 Seymour 5 30 Offense 14 10 By Penalty 15 9 Theisrnann 5 30 TOTALS 712 56-367 45 20 INTERCEPTIONS Allan 4 1-1 26 Player No Yds TD PASSING PUNTING Dushney 4 24 Zloch 5 31 0 Hanratty 4 Player No Camp lnt Yds Player No Yds ~.vg. 24 TO PCT Long Neidert 1 0 0 Criniti Hanratty 197 116 deArrieta 20 693 34.7 3 18 9 1466 10 .588 69 Reid 1 0 0 Ziegler Theisrnann 49 27 Gladieux 3 127 42.3 2 12 5 451 2 .551 31 • Schumacher 1 0 0 Belden TOTALS 23 820 35.7 Landolfi 2 12 3 3 0 55 0 1.000 25 Standring 3 2 0 Eaton 1 6 O'Brien 3 1 13 1 .333 13 TOTALS 11 33 0 Kuechenberg 1 6 TOTALS 252 147 15 1985 13 .583 69