SGC DISSECTED G See Page 4 Y Seventy-One Years of Editorial Freedom Iai PARTLY CLOUDY High-52 , Low--35 Partly cloudy and cooler today VOL.[XXI, No.24 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1961 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT PAGES S n Joint Unit" Postpones Discussion Group Awaiting Hatcher Report By CAROLINE DOW The joint meeting of the Devel- opment Council and the Alumni Association yesterday deferred consideration of a report defining. their inter-relationship awaiting the report of a committee ap- pointed by University President Harlan Hatcher. A report and recommendations concerning the inter-financing and representation of the two or- ganizations was held for further discussion last June just. before the departure of Lyle Nelson, the former vice-president for Uni- versity relations. As there was a misunderstand- ing on the report, it was sent back ,to the administration when, Vice- President for University Relations Michael Radock succeeded Nelson. The report is now under study by an administrative committee ap- pointed by President Hatcher. The committee report of the Alumni Fund to the Eighth An- nual Development Conference re- ported gifts for the fiscal year 1960-61 totaled $364,032.92 with the number of donors increasing to 17,897; the highest in Univer- sity history. The Development Council budg- et for the coming year will be within $9 of last year, Halsey Davidson, Council vice-chairman, said in his budget report. The 1960-61 budget being $142,833 with the 1961-62 budget going down to $142,824, he reported. In addition, the Development conference reviewed the organi- zation of the newly initiated Pres- idents Club and the Law School Fund. The Presidents Club, with membership requirement of a gift of not less than $10,000 in a per- iod of ten years, announced club membership up to 12. The Law School Fund plans to hold its first campaign between Oct. 30 and Nov. 18, contacting alumni of the Law School who have not given to the Law School or supported the Michigan Alum- ni Fund in 1961. Upon a report from Prof. Charles 1. Sawyer of the history of art department and chairman of the University Senate Advisory Com- mittee, the Council agreed to rec- ommend to the Regents that an- other representative of the Sen- ate, an alumnus, be appointed to the Council in addition to the ex-officio membership of the Sen- ate chairmen. 1 James C. Zeder, chairman of the Memorial- hoenix Project Board of Gov rnors announced that the Phoenix fund raising campaign has collected $2,175,876 and is expected -to go over the $2.2 million mark with the final collection of pledges. The, conference received a re- port on the alumni-house office building plan which stated con- sideration of combining the pro- posed new faculty center and the alumni facilities. The Council accepted the re- port of the Student Relations Board and agreed to underwrite the publicity for the Second An- nual Development Council Jazz Concert on February 24. The conference will continue to- day with a public panel discus- sion on "Meeting the Challenge of the University" at 9:30 a.m. in the Union. Panel participants will include Robert P. Briggs, president of the Michigan State Chamber of Com- merce as moderator and Vice- President and Dean of Faculties Marvin L. Niehuss as principal speaker. Swainson Opposes Voiding 'Rule Nine' e Expect 103,000 To View Contest Undefeated Michigan To Meet Twice Victorious MSU Gridders By DAVE ANDREWS Associate Sports Editor The big one is here! And from the looks of things it could be the biggest of the season in more ways than one. The game figures to an- swer plenty of questions, the foremost being just how good is Michigan? Better than 103,000 are expected in the Stadium to see AMBASSADOR REPLIES-United States Ambassador to the United Nations Adlai E. Stevenson indignantly refuted the charges of Soviet delegate Valerian A. Zorin that the United States controls the Secretariat. Zorin Charges U.S. Controls Secretariat WASHINGTON (P)-Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian A. Zorin charged yesterday tht "one man"-evidently meaning Ameri- can Andrew W. Cordier-had seized power illegally over the United Nations Secretariat. Zorin, at a 1%Y2-hour news conference, alleged that the unidenti- fied official was running the 4,400-member Secretariat of the 101- nation organization in a one-sided way. A spokesman for the Secretariat denied that any one man had taken charge among the 29 UN Board lets New Polic By JUDITH BLEIER undersecretaries. In a statement, he --said there had been "no change whatsoever in the responsibilities" of the undersecretaries, but they Vice-President for Student Af- fairs James A. Lewis has approved a policy statement issued by the Human Relations Board and ap- proved by the Committee qn Off- Campus Housing, which says that any person who practices discrimi- natory policies \will not be per- mitted to use University facilities or services for advertisement. The Board attempts to bring about the full implementation of the Regents' Bylaw 2.14, adopted Nov. 20, 1960, which reads: "Policy on Nondiscrimination: the University shall not discrimi- nate against any person because of race, color, religion, creed, na- tional origin or ancestry." Action at their meeting yester- day in which the latest statement was confirmed is a further exten- sion of a policy adopted in May, 1960, which prohibited University services from rental or sale of housing to its students by owners known to discriminate. The policy now says that since bulletin boards and publications serve all students and staff of the University any services, merchan- dise or housing advertised should be offered without regard to race, color, religion, creed, national ori- gin or ancestry. were consulting among themselves much more than before Secretary- General Dag Hammarskjold died in a plane crash in Africa Sept. 18. United States Ambassador Ad- lai E. Stevenson, Zorin's opposite number in negotiations on the sub- ject, commented that the United States would "resist the concept of the troika or the ideological division of the world into three blocs." "I wish Mr. Zorin would not threaten the United Nations with disaster if he does not have his way," he added. Zorin said the United Nations would collapse "if the path of non-agreed decisions is taken" in the Secretariat. He reiterated the Soviet Un- ion's willingness to have a single acting secretary - general take charge temporarily instead of the three-man board, or troika, that it wants to be installed eventually. He said the acting secretary- general should choose three, four, six or seven other secretaries of specified nationalities for princi- pal advisers and should promise before his election to consult them and seek mutual agreement with them on major questions. But he stressed that the top man should make his own decisions and should not be subject to their veto. for themselves whether or not Soviets Oust' Dutchi Aide MOSCOW (P)-The Soviet Un- ion withdrew its ambassador to Holland yesterday and ordered the Dutch ambassador to leaveMos- cow in protest against the brawl between Soviet embassy officials' and police at Amsterdam's airport Monday. In a note to the Dutch govern- ment, the Soviet government de- clared police had made a "shame- ful provocation" against the per- son of Soviet Ambassador Ponte- leimon K. Ponomarenko while he was performing his duties protect- ing Soviet citizens. Halt Fight The affair grew out of a con- troversy over Mrs. Alexei Golub whose husband, a Soviet biochem- ist, had defected while on a tour in the Netherlands. The Russian woman arrived at the airport evi- dently prepared to depart but Dutch police insisted on talking to ser to see whether she was leaving of her own free will. She then was allowed to fly back to the Soviet Union while her husband stayed in the Neth- erlands. In the note the Soviet govern- ment accused the police of an in- tentional provocation made with the knowledge of the Dutch gov- rnment. After the affair Ponomarenko was rebuked by the Dutch foreign office. The Russians refused to accept the blame. Reject Memoire "The Soviet government rejects as slanderous the contents of the aide-memoire of the Netherlands government of Oct. 12 blaming the personnel of the Soviet embassy," the note said. "This is only proof of an ef- fort to justify gross trampling by Holland authorities upon the nor- mal rights of diplomatic person- nel. ",The above-mentioned cannot be appraised outherwise than as an attempt to worsen relations and sharpen the situation." The note added that the affair could only bring serious consequences. "The Soviet government insists that measures be taken which will exclude all possibility of such ac- tions in the future." the Wolverines can withstand the challenge of Michigan State. Millions more will watch from their living rooms on na- tionwide TV. Kickoff time is 1:30 p.m.I Both Unbeaten Both squads are unbeaten in two starts and both have' been impressive. Michigan has demol- ished UCLA and Army, both con- sidered to be the class of their respective sections, while Michi- gan State has bounced Wisconsin and Stanford. The impressive start has earned both squads places in the wire services' "Top Ten," but the Wol- verines weren't supposed to be that good. Today's battle figures to tell the tale. At stake besides a high national ranking and the satisfaction of knocking off the state's other big football power is Mr. Paul Bun- yan, actually titled the "Paul Bunyan-Governor of Michigan Trophy." Currently it rests with the Spartans via MSU's 24-17 vic- tory a year ago at East Lansing. It has been there for the past five years. (The Bunyan award was inaug- urated some years back, when for- mer Gov. G. Mennen Williams felt that the traditional M-MSU rivalry ought to have a trophy. For a while, however, the idea was not very well received.) Game Called Tossup The oddsmakers are calling the game a tossup, and who's to ar- gue. The series has been full of surprises and thrills since its in- ceptionsback in 1898. The Wolver- ines hold a 35-14 advantage with four games ending in ties. Both teams have worked behind See MICHIGAN, Page 7 Petitions Set Competitors For Elections Thirteen students have returned petitions for the Student Govern- ment Council elections. Petitioning closed at 5 p.m. yes- terday with the following students officially enrolled as candidates in the Nov. 7 and 8 elections: Thomas A. Brown, '63; Douglas Dahn, '62; Joseph Feldman, '64; Richard G'sell, '63; Sharon Jef- frey, '63; and Stanley Lubin, '63. Also running are: Kenneth Mc- Eldowney, '62 (incumbent); Rich- ard Magidoff, '63; Council Presi- dent Richard Nohl, '62BAd.; Fred Riecker, '63; Robert Ross, '63; Steven Stockmeyer, '63 and John Vos, '63. Candidate orientation sessions conducted by SGC elections direc- tor Barbara Perlman, '62, will be held at 2 p.m. and again at 4 p.m. tomorrow in Rm. 3532 of the Student Activities Bldg. Group Honors 'U' President President Harlan Hatcher was honored by the Development Council last night with the an- nouncement of the creation of a Harlan Hatcher Distinguished Pro- fessorship in the Humanities in recognition of his services to the By DAVID MARCUS More than 250 quadrangle resi- dents stood watch from midnight to morn last night in an attempt to foil pre-game vandalism on the part of both University and Michi- gan State students. The quadrangle residents, organ- ized under the direction of Inter- quadrangle-Council Vice-President Robert Geary, '63E, deployed in groups at key points across the campus. Minimize Incidents Hopefully, through close organi- zation and weight of numbers, the presence of observers who were in close touch with the Ann Arbor police, the Sanford Security police and each other minimized .inci- dents of painting and malicious mischief, Geary said. Thursday night, eight incidents of painting were reported to the Ann Arbor police and one of lye being thrown on the lawn of the Michigan Union. Approximately 40 MSU students and 20 University students were stopped 'by police that night. There was also one incident, of a statue on the MSU campus being painted with a large blue M. The students involved were not appre- hended. 'Incidents Unworthy' Dean of Men Walter B. Rea commented that such incidents are "unworthy of a high school and no way to help college spirit. "This should be a friendly rival- ry," he said. Under an agreement between the two schools, anyrMSU students caught in Ann Arbor- are turned over to MSU authorities for disci- pline and University students caught in East Lansing face disci- plinary action by the University, Dean Rea said. He added that in the case of defacing a building not belonging to either of the two schools, the matter would become a civil one, outside of the jurisdiction of either university. Investigation Held Assistant Dean of Men John Bingley said that an investigation -Daily-Ed Langs VICTORS-The Michigan football team charges through the tunnel into the stadium for another game. In its,first two games, the squad has charged on to victory, but MSU will be trying to reverse this trend today. OPERATION FOIL; Quad Men Guard 'U' Campus into those University students caught Thursday is now being con- ducted. According to Dean Rea, usual penalties for mischief at MSU has been barring attendance at today's football game. The buildings that received paintings Thursday night were the Frieze Bldg., the Michigan Union, the stadium, a railroad bridge, the Rackham Bldg., the Museum of Natural History, the Engineering Ford, UAW Fail To Sign .Labor Policy DETROIT OP-) - Yesterday was supposed to be the day Ford and the United Auto Workers Union signed their new three-year na- tional labor agreement. Top level negotiators agreed to terms Wednesday., The union's international exec- utive board approved it Wednes- day night. The union's Ford national coun- cil endorsed it Thursday. The signing was set for 1 p.m. yesterday. The participants - President Walter P. Reuther for the union and Malcolm L. Denise, Ford's vice- president -labor relations - were reported in shape along with their full bargaining committees. The signing hour came and went. Then came the word-postpon- ed. The official reason: techni- cians for both sides have been too busy to complete all of the for- mal language. A spokesman said the date on the calendar-Friday the 13th- played no part in the postpone- ment. But when the contract gets signed it will bear another date, today or sometime soon. Arch, and a local.restaurant. In two cases, students were caught in the process and forced to clean the damage immediately, Dean Rea said. T m IFC Rejects Group's Bid'. The Interfraternity Council Executive Committee Thursday night defeated a motion to rec- ommend Evans Scholars for ad- mission into IFC. The motion would then have gone to the Fraternity President's Assembly for final approval. The decision not to recommend the group was based on a report compiled by an executive subcom- mittee which listed possible alter- native means of admission of the group. Evans Scholars is a .group of students who have received schol- arships as caddies from the West- ern Golf Association. Members are chosen by a combination of in- terviews by alumni and members of the chapter. The report from the executive subcommittee noted the houses lack of rush' and stated that it would mean either a change in or reinterpretation of the IFC's con- stitution and bylaws regarding rush. Evans Scholars has been peti- tioning IFC for admission since March of last semester. The University chapter was founded in 1953 and is currently located on Olivia St., the former Alpha Chi Omega sorority house, which it occupied in 1960. The organization originated Golf Pro Chic Evans donated $14,- 000, in royalties he had received for golf lessons on phonograph records to establish caddying scholarships. Union Takes Wastebasket PEP RALLY: Cow Flees, Humans Freeze Everybody shivered but the cymbalist, and leaves sailed away in the biting wind, but Michigan !prepared itself for today's big game against its traditional foe. The hard core of fans' who braved the frigid air applauded posters reading "Udder Catastro- phe" and "MSU: The herd shot 'round the -world'." Bandsmen, cheerleaders, and even a hapless cow were present at the pep-rally held last night in front of the graduate library. Speakers jeered the "agrarian re- formers" and asked the fans to let their enthusiasm "radiate ti ,.... _