ALUMNI SUPPORT MAINTAINS QUALITY See Page 4 Y Sjir~ta :4!Iaiti Seventy-One Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXII, No.30 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1961 M!' To Host Pu rdue ti Crucial 4? Highly-Rated Team To Meet Wolverines First Match in Nine Years To Show Boilermakers' Fullbacks, Passing By CLIFF MARKS Associate Sports Editor Homecoming finds Michigan at the crossroads. The Wolverines' future in the Big Ten race will be on the line as the rugged Purdue Boilermakers provide the opposition at 1:30 today at the Michigan Stadium. This will be the first time in nine years the two teams have met. Purdue will open its Big Ten season, after polishing off two re- spectable opponents and losing a heart-breaker to nationally-ranked Notre Dame, 22-20. Hope To Bounce Back Michigan will be hoping to bounce back from a 28-0 loss last week to number one-ranled Michigan State. The pollsters still thought * * * * * * *- CONGRESS: Stalinists SCOTT MAENTZ .. , ambushed AUDITOR: May Give, State Post To Farnum LANSING-Michigan will get a new auditor general next week, Gov. John B. Swainson's office said. At least half a dozen candidates are under consideration for the job left vacant when Otis M. Smith resigned to accept an ap- pointment to the state supreme court. Top contender is BillIe S. Far- num, Deputy Democratic State Chairman and former Deputy Sec- retary of State. Both Detroit daily newspapers said flatly that the former United Atuo Workers international representative would get .the appointment. Swainson said Thursday night that he had not decided on a suc- cessor for Smith. He was hunting pheasant in Huron county yester- day and was unavailable for fur- ther comment. Other potential candidates for the job include Richard Vander- veen, Grand Rapids lawyer who was an unsuccessful candidate for the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor last year; William Reamon, Grand Rapids attorney who has been a candidate for congress in the fifth district; Richard Austin, Detroit delegate to the conctitution convention, and William Burgett of Lansing, the acting auditor general. Hicks, Radock, Mohler Picked For Positions Special To The Daily DEARBORN-The. Regents ap- proved three new appointments at their meeting yesterday. *enough of Michigan to rank them 15th on the basis of impressive wins over UCLA and Army. Pur- due is given th 14th ,national spot. Past Wolverine elevens have shown that they can come back from crushing defeats as witness the 1958 team which beat Min- nesota, 20-19, after. losing to Northwestern by an unbelievable 55-24 score the week before. And coincidentally, the rebound came, on Homecoming that year. Added Incentive In fact, the Wolverines have gone two Homecomings without a vic- tory and this should be added in- centive. But the Boilermakers, led by their sophomore quarterback, Ron DiGravio, boast triumphs over Washington and Miami (O). DiGravio is a fine passer (16 for 30) but he can run, too,. as his 89 yds. puts him second, only to pile-driving fullback Roy Walk- er. Walker, the other sparkplug in the Lafayette squad's backfield, has churned 196 yds. in three games for better than four yds. average per carry. Second string fullback Gene Donaldson gives the Boilermakers added punch, with a total of 81 yds. Elliott Worried Michigan Coach Bump Elliott is worried about the one-two punch of powerful fullbacks and an effective passing attack. Since Michigan has shown a minor de- ficiency in covering the air lanes against Army and Michigan State, the latter is of special concern. A total of 10 different receivers have caught aerials from DiGravio or his capable understudy, Gary Ho- gan. Elliott also pointed out that the Boilermakers have always had a tough interior line which should test the highly regarded Wolver- ine forward wall. Averages 213-Lbs. Purdue's line averages only 213 lbs., 10 lbs. less than Michigan's. However, Michigan State's line was lighter last week. Statistics can be deceiving, which is the rea- son why scouts warned Michigan linemen to disregard comparative weights. Both teams have injury prob- lems. Purdue's first three right halfbacks are sidelined with the possible exception of Dave Miller, an announced starter, who will+ likely se^ some action. He has the highest rushing average on the1 squad. See WOLVERINES, Page 6 f May Face New Purge MOSCOW (R)-A flood of con- demnations directed at old line Stalinists poured out in the 22nd Soviet Party Congress yesterday indicating possible preparations for new purges. East German Communist boss Walter Ulbricht also got in some shots at his favorite target, West Germany, assailing it as "the main seat of war danger" and reiterat- ing Communist demands for an all-German peace treaty. Meanwhile, portraits of Ul- bricht rapidly disappeared from public places in East Berlin, pos- sibly as a reaction to Khrush- chev's attack on the "personality cult" or possibly indicating that as a result of Khrushchev's offers to ease tension over Berlin, the East German leader is on his way out. Major targets of the session's parade of speakers were the top conspirators in the 1957 plot to unseat Premier- Khrushchev-for- mer premier and foreign minister V. M. Molotov, former premier Georgi M. Malenkov, ex-deputy premier Lazar M. Kaganovich and former president Klementi ,Voro- shilov. The old Bolsheviks have been forced into relative obscurity but the tone of the denunciations sug- gested worse times may be ahead for them. Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas K. Mikoyan declared that "during the (Stalinist) period of the cult of personality, those people would have been liquidated by means they well know." "We liquidated their ideology," Mikoyan said. "We did not liqui- date them physically. This was in conformity with Leninist princi- ples." Mikoyan and other speakers al- so lashed out at Albanian party boss Enver Hoxha-accused by Premier Khrushchev as practicing Stalinist repressions, but defend- ed by Red China's Chou En-lai as a brother, in an ideological rift opened up at the Congress. Mikoyan accused the Albanian leadership of "departing from the internationalist (Communist) po- sitions and sliding to national po- sitions." Chou and Khrushchev indicat- ed to congress delegates that the dispute had not affected their per-1 sonal relations. Following an in- termission, the two strolled to-1 gether to the rostrum and witness-1 es said they were talking amiably. By SANDRA JOHNSON Special To The Daily DEARBORN - The University's two-year-old Dearborn Center was dedicated yesterday at ceremonies held on the central mall of the spacious 205-acre campus. The eight Regents and the two Regents-Elect participated in the dedication which took place before their October meeting. In the principal address, Presi- dent Walter C. Langsam of the University of Cincinnati, which has over 50 years experience in the field of cooperative education, lauded the center's co-op program. "The simultaneous presence on the campus of the traditional pro- gram in the liberal arts and the co-op programs in engineering and business administration makes possible the tempering of each by the other and the provision of a rounded course for all students," Langsam pointed out. The co-op plan provides for participants to alternate their class work with on-the-job train- ing by trimesters. Langsam explained that this system "makes higher education both possible for and attractive to many able young people who would not otherwise go to college. "The chance to earn while learn- ing and the practical aspects of the program have a special appeal to young men and women who have great academic talent, but whose families have had no college tradition." Following the center's dedica- tion, a second ceremony was held to dedicate the tall gnarled bronze sculpture presented to the center by the engineering class of '24- the class in which Vice-President Stirton, the center's director, was graduated. The statue was created by Prof. Thomas F. McClure of the archi- tecture and design college. Enrollment at Dearborn Center has increased tenfold since it opened in the fall of 1959, from a UN Nearing Congo Treaty. In Cease-Fire LEOPOLDVILLE UP) - The United Nations Secretariat has specifically endorsed the govern- ment of Premier Cyrille Adoula in a new clause inserted in the Ka- tanga-United Nations cease-fire now in the last stages of ratifica- tion in New York, diplomatic in- formants said yesterday. UN sources expect announce- ment of the final ratification to- day. The final version is reliably re- ported to contain several new clauses referring to the UN man- date of Feb. 21, including recog- nition of the Leopoldville govern- ment as the legal government of all the Congo-including separa- tist Katanga. President Moise Tshombe of Ka- tanga has held up the exchange of prisoners taken in the week of fighting last month until the sec- retariat's ratification is complet- ed. pilot group of some 30 students to the 335 juniors and seniors now enrolled. However, officials note that the center is in fact serving nearly twice this number since many students are absent from the cam- pus this term working on indus- trial and business assignments with major firms. In addition, the center provides graduate training for the 850 per- sons who attend evening classes. The $10 million campus pro- vides more than adequate facili- ties for this relatively small stu- dent body-"We planned for the future," Stirton explained. Officials figure the campus, without expansion of the plant, could have an enrollment of some 2,700 -- one-third full time, and one-third off-campus at any spe- cific time on work assignments. This would divide the student body equally among the three de- partments-the literary college section, the business administra- tion section and the engineering section. Funds for the creation of the center and the land on which it is built came from the Ford Motor Co. and the Ford Foundation four years ago. The land is part of Henry Ford's original estate, Fair Lane. A representative of Ford was present at the meeting, as were representatives of the architect- ural -firm which designed the campus buildings which Stirton praised as both pleasing and func- tional. PROCESSIONAL-The Regents, the faculty of Dearborn Center and several distinguished guests march to the platform before the dedication ceremonies at the center yesterday. U' Officials Dedicate Dearborn Center ROLLICKING BLUE: Torches, Bonfire, Light Beat Purdue' Pep Rally By ELLEN SILVERMAN A torch-light parade began last night's pep rally and a huge :.. -"bonfire ended it. Throughout the spirit was "Michigan, beat Purdue?" . -: The pep rally crowd yelled loud enough for Coach Chalmers "Bump" Elliott and team until the echoes from the Intramural Bldg. were almost as loud as the cheers themselves. Chief highlight of the evening was, however, the "Yell-Like-Hell" contest. Eleven housing units competed, yelling for Michigan with their original cheers. Winners of the event will be announced at to- morrow night's dance. Sounds Theme Rev. Fred E. Luchs of the First Congregational Church, main speaker of the evening, sounded the theme of the weekend when he declared, "we'll be going along on the highway at 100 miles an hour while they'll be behind, honking to get ahead." Traditional show stoppers, the Friars were called back three times for their humorous renditions of "Peanuts," "Blue Moon," and "The Tom Cat."