.2 I I Notre Dame. 14 Indiana . . 13 .lH ..6 . West Vir ginia 12 Northwestern 28 Stanford . .. 0 Pittsburgh . . 13 Minnesota 7 M. , 1 s Navy .....28 Boston U..I. . 14 Milisaps .. TVJ~L2. ~ Ap.a - . . W [L0 rni L0725 " ! 1 0 . s 1' V!4G s f " 1v r- - v e v ....r b VS. PRINCIPLES See Page 4 1MwF Sixty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom D43ait ti FAIR, COOLER ANN ARBOR MICHIGAN SUNDAY OCTOBER 5, 1958 FIVE CENTS EIGHT PA , ,_ _ _ , - m o.- .. , . I .. 'Board To Review SGC's Decision Request Meeting on Sigma Kappa; Date for Session Not Yet Announced The Board in Review of Student Government Council has been called to consider SGC's decision that Sigma Kappa violates Uni- versity anti-bias rules. Notice of the Board's intent to meet is published in today's Daily Official Bulletin, effecting a stay of action on SGC's decision. No meeting date was announced. The meeting was called by Dean of Women Deborah Bacon at the request of local Sigma Kappa President Joan Taylor, '59, and President Jane Otto of Sigma Kappa's Michigan Province, accord- Spartans Revive in Third Quartei Injury Ridden 'U' Football Squa( Halts State's Final Scoring Surge By AL JONES Daily Sports Editor Special to The Daily 'EAST LANSING - Yesterday's game here lasted thr minutes and 36 seconds too long for Michigan. Played before a sellout crowd of 76,434 spectators - new record for Spartan Stadium - on a breezy but beautif football day, the 1958 Michigan-Michigan State contest a most became the upset of the year. The determined Wolverines 'built up a 12-0 half-tin lead, and battled bravely to protect it for most of the secor half before settling for a 12-12 tie with Michigan State. 'M' Squad Beset by Injuries The rugged Michigan squad, racked by injuries throug] out the game, couldn't contend with State's depth and t. brilliant running of Spartan II Fritz Reiner To Conduct oSymphony Under the direction of Fr Reiner, the Chicago . Sympho Orchestra will present the fi concert in the University's Ext Concert Series at 8:30 p.m. ti morrow in Hill Auditorium. This will be the 186th conce the orchestra has played in A Arbor since their first appearan in 1892. It is also the first conc of their own season. The overture, "The Corsai Opus 21, by Berlioz will open t program. The orchestra will 'a Wuing to Ruth Callahan, secretary to SC. Desires Review of Case Mrs. Otto had indicated her de- sire to have the Board meet aft- er SGC foundSigma Kappa still in violation last Wednesday night. The Board in Review is empow- ered to review any decision of SGC in the light of administra- tion or regental policy. It may be called by request of any Board itz member. ny Administration members are rst Dean Bacon and Dean of Men ra Walter B. Rea. t- Deans Hold Seats Music school Dean Earl V. ert Moore, literary college Assistant nn Dean James H. Robertson and ice medical school Assistant Dean ert Robert G. Lovell hold the three faculty seats. r," SGC President Maynard Gold- he man, '59, and Stan Levy, Grad., lso represent the student body.. The council has established a, committee to draw up alternate courses of action regarding Sigma Kappa's future status, but if the decision were to be reversed the group would be dissolved. ~ et Liner~s Cross Ses NEW YOR.K (A) . w Rih --Daily-Robert Kanner PTACEK TO HERRNSTEIN-Bob Ptacek (49 at left) throws a pass to John Herrnstein (out of picture to right) for a 40-yard gain early in the first quarter of the Michigan State game yesterday. Blocking for the Wolverines are George Genyk (70), Brad Myers (on ground) and Gerry Marciniak (at right), while State players are John Middleton (61), Fran O'Brien (72), Jim Chastain (50) and Ellison Kelly (57). T o Consider, Urban Plan By PHILIP MUNCK The Ann Arbor City Council will tomorrow night hear the recom- mendations of the Citizens Com- mittee on Urban Renewal on the standards to be followed in the City's urban renewal project. Urban renewal is, briefly, a com- bined federal, local and neighbor- hood program directed towards the replanning and reshaping of a blighted area of a city. In Ann Arbor the urban renewal area extends roughly from Iepot St. to Division to Catherine St. to Ashley and back to Depot land covers about 75 acres. The intent is to take a neighbor- hood that has started to decay and rebuild as much as necessary. The United States Housing and Home Finance Agency is the sec- tion of the federal government in- volved in supplying funds for the project. Roughly, the government pays about two-thirds of the cost of redevelopment. To obtain this government sup- port for the )program, the city's plans must meet rigid specifica- tions by the HHFA including relo- cation of families whose homes are being rebuilt. The final plans of the project are due in the HHFA by Dec. 15. The Citizen's Committee will submit their ideas, the result of almost half a year's meetings, for See COMMITTEE, page 2 MISSING 'U' STUDENTS:' Discovery of Body May Halt Search By THOMAS HAYDEN Discovery of an unidentified, body yesterday in the Canadiana wilderness may bring a grim halt3 to a three-week-old search for two University students. Found near the remnants of a canoe, the body is believed to be Group To Act. A A On Integration In U.S. Courts RICHMOND (P)-- Moves to re- open Virginia's nine integration-' closed schools and perhaps curtail the employment of public school teachers by private education founders will be made in United' States courts next week.' The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People yesterday included Charlottesville with Warren County and Norfolk to make its renewed integration fight cover the entire field of Vir- ginia schoca closures. - It filed a motion with Federal Judge John Paul of Harrisonburg, seeking the reopening of the two closed schools at Charlottesville. A similar motion was filed Thursday in the Warren County. case and Friday an attorney said he would make the same request in Norfolk's federal court tomor- row. Almost 13,000 students are idled by school closures in the three communities. that of Robert Carey, '58E, or Alan Price, '59E, missing fo'r two months in the bushlands of northern Quebec. The discovery was made ten miles south of James Bay - the planned destination of the pair. Flies to Camp Price's father, Prof. Percival Price, University carillonneur, planned to fly from Senneterre. ,Que., this morning to McLean Camp on James Bay, where the body has apparently been brought. Prof. Price, who arrived in Sen- neterre last week to aid in the search, was notified of the discov- ery yesterday by a telegram from Royal Canadian Mounted Police in Moose Factory, Que. The telegram, sent to Provin- cial Police Detective Louis Paten- aude in Senneterre, read in part: "McLean Camp at mouth of Nottaway River advises one body and part of canoe found ten miles south of McLean Camp on east shore of Nottaway River. Body not identified but believed to be either Price or Carey." Search to Continue Patenaude wired back a request to continue searching for the oth- er student, Prof. Price said last night. . He added chances are only slight that the body may not be that of his son or Carey, since other canoeists in the area would p r o b a b ly be "veterans" and known to the Mounties. Price and Carey have not been seen since July 26 when they left. Lake Waswanipi, 270 miles north of Montreal, for Rupert House on James Bay. Prof. Price indicated that the students may have overturhed in the last of a long series of rapids or in swirling currents from the bay.' Envo Seen For Chiang WASHINGTON (4) - Officials yesterday discounted-but did not dismiss-the possibility that the Eisenhower administration might send a ?special emissary to For- mosa to discuss the Quemoy crisis with President Chiang Kai-shek. The purpose of such a mission presumably would be to try to persuade- sthe Nationalist'Chinese Generalissimo to swing his gov-. ernment's views .on the offshore islands near the Chinese mainland more into line with the views of United States leaders. Specifically, President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Secretary of State John Foster Dulles feel that Chiang has too many of his forces com- mitted to the defense of Quemoy and Matsu. Dulles was reported today to have broached the idea of a special mission in a conversation in New York a week ago with John J. McCloy, banking executive who formerly held several high govern- ment positions. FRITZ REINER Chicago conductor play Divertimento, "The Fairy' s Kiss," Allegorical Ballet by Stra- vinsky; Interlude and Dance from "La Vida Breve" by De Falla and "Suite for Orchestra, No. 1, Opus 3" by Bartok. The Chicago SymphonyOrches- tra was founded in 1891 by Theo- dore Thomas, one of the pioneers of symphonic music in America. in 1905 it came under the baton of Frederick Stock, who conducted the organization in Orchestra Hall in Chicago and in many tours for 38 years. Rener joined the Orchestra as its music director in 1953. His career began in opera in Budapest and Dresden. The Cincinnati Symphony was Reiner's first American post; later he spent several seasons with the Pittsburgh Symphony. Arabs Refuse To Ask Debate UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (A) -- Foreign Minister Mohammed Ah- med Mahgoub of Sudan said last night that no Arab government at present intends to ask the United Nations General Assembly for a full debate on the Middle East. Mahgoub made his statement after talking with Foreign Minis- air liners ushered in the jet age of transatlantic passenger plane travel yesterday. One ship, a De Haviland Comet TV of the British Overseas Airways Corp., set a new record time for a transatlantic passenger plane, streaking across the 3,500 miles from New York to London in 6 hours and 12 minutes. A sister craft, which stopped for refueling at Gander, New- foundland, made the London to New York trip in 10 hours and 20 minutes. Pan American World Airways, which had boasted that its bigger, faster Boeing 707 would start the world's first commercial jet flights across the Atlantic, plans to send up its first jet flight between New York, Paris and Rome Oct. 26.. halfbacks Dean Look and Art Johnson in the second half. Look, a fleet junior who is also the top baseball prospect in the Big Ten, broke the Wolverines' back at 5:42 in the third period. Darrell Harper, Michigan's ter- rific punter, who averaged 48 yards per kick for six tries, got off a booming 62-yard punt. Taking the kick on his own 10- yard line, Look moved behind great blocking to the western sideline, and outraced Michigan's; 11 men for a 90-yard return and the first Spartan touchdown. Mliss Extra Points Sam Williams, State's captain and candidate for All-American end, missed the first of his two extra-point tries, and the Wol- verines still held a six-point ad- vantage. The teams played even for the remainder' of the third quairter, and Michigan had a chance to put a clincher on the game just as the fourth period began. The Wolverine line, which played In s p i r e d ball all day, crashed in on Look as he punted from the State 23-yard line. John Halstead, a s o p h o m o r e-ed, blocked the punt, and guard Gerry Marciniak fell on the ball on tthe ,six-yard line. 'M' Gets Five-Yard Penalty However, the Wolverines had been playing defense without a quarterback, since Jack Zachary was spelling rugged Bob Ptacek, who played the entire game on offense and much of the defen- sive time, too. Michigan was penalized five yards for illegal substitution, and thus was in a first down and 11 yards to go situation. Halfback Brad Myers gained four yards in two plays, and then Ptacek had a pass intercepted in the end zone by. center Jim Chastain to halt the threat. Long Drive Chastain ran the ball out to the three-yard line, from /which. point the Spartans staged a dra- matic 97-yard drive for the final and tying touchdown. Johnson's knife-like running and Bob Ber- cich's power up the middle pro- .vided the key to the long drive. Michigan was apparently too tired to halt the determined Spartans, who were aided by a 15- yard personal foul penalty and a well-executed" pass play., from quarterback Mike Panitch to Wil- liams with second down and 24' yards to go from the Michigan 46- ,yard line. See-PRAHST, page 6 ; Po lo Cases S till Risin DETROIT (P)- Only two new cases were reported yesterday in Detroit's polio epidemic, but an Us.Troops f3 Shiped .Out Of Lebanon BEIRUT (P)- The first Unit States soldiers to leave Lebanon ship boarded a transport yesterd in Beirut's tense dock area, whe government.opponents were ma ning antitank barricades. The 1,000 support troops are e pected to sail today or tomorro for Bremerhaven, Germany. This will leave 5,900 Americ troops in the Beirut area, as cor pared with 14,000 at pe strength. The last Marines pull out earlier in the week. Mob Rule Evident Despite new roadblocks, politic kidnapings and other signs. growing tension, the United Stal still plans to have all its fora out of Lebanon by the end of th month. The troops, marching aboard t transport Eltinge could see a vii demonstration of the mob rule si prevailing 11 days after the tak+ over by President Fuad Chehat new government. Women and children of t Christian Phglangist party stoe at barricades only a block or from the dock, halting traffic a preventing workers from reachi their jobs. Block Roads in Beirut Some American Army true were stopped, but there were incidents. The women and ch dren, armed with sticks a stones, halted the trucks goc naturedly, then waved them or The Phalangists were blocki roads to cut off their part of. t capital, including the vital po area, from the rest of Beirut. Apparently women and childri were, used, for the jo4 becau government security forces .he tate to move against them wil tanks,. World News Roundu By The Associated Press DETROIT - Whether Gene Motors Corp.'s industrial emp: will get back into production, ei partially, by tomorrow remaine question yesterday. Not a single local strike at.: plants across the nation has be settled since General Motors a the United Atto Workers agre, on a new three-year master co tract Thursday night. LONDON - The Soviet new paper Sovetsky Flot 'declared y terday the use of American sid winder missiles against Red Chi: PAUL BUNYAN FLOP: 'Traditional' Trophy Remains Mystery to Fans By DICK MINTZu Special to The Daily EAST LANSING-Spartan Stadium may have seated a capacity1 crowd of 76,434 but to the Wolverine fan making his first visit to; State's stadium it was reminiscent of the home crowd gathered for" the weekly high school football games. A table-top tier that seemed to be balanced precariously at a point where the last row of seats should have ended, added some 25,000l seats that were lost to view to those gathered in the lower stands. Set on the sidelines was a two-and-a-half-foot-tallcolorful wood- carved statue of Paul Bunyan, propped on a six-foot-high base. This was the Governor's Trophy, sup- posedly symbolic of the Michigan- They challenged the Wolverines, Michigan State football rivalry, who were'in pursuit of the jug, to However, its symbolic value re- beat them the next year for its re- mained a mystery to most Wol- turn. Since that time it has held verine fans. First awarded in 1953 a place of honor in the athletic by Michigan's Governor G. Men- showcases of both schools. nen Williams to the winner of that Bunyan Hides in Warehouse classic, the trophy since that time "The Governor's Trophy," how- has spent almost half itslieever, spent two of its five years of! terday's game however, leaves doubt as to the possessor of the trophy. Michigan doesn't want it and State's ashamed to take it. When asked what was to be done now with the trophy, Fred Stabe- ley, director of sports information at MSU, said he simply didn't know. Rivalry at Half-Time The half-time show was marked by a continuation of the rivalry that has existed between the bands. State, resplendent in green uniforms, tried to match the high- stepping of the Michigan bands- men, "Stadium Travelog," a review of summer's thrills, was the theme of the MSU show. The Spartan band struck up such numbers as "Come to the Fair," "Go Gallop" M az