Michigan State 17 Ohio State. . . 10 Minnesota. . . 33 Iowa .. . Notre Dame.. 7 Northwestern . 0, Illinois ..... 0 Wisconsin .. .47 Clemson .... 17 1 Columbia ... 261LSU ...... 24 Mississippi...4I .. .15 Duke........ 7 | Harvard .... 14 Kentucky . . . 141T ulane. . . . . o WHO CAN JUDGE HENRY MILLER? See Page 4 5k 43UU 4Iat CLOUDY Nigh58 Low--37 No change today, tonight, fair, warmer tomorrow Seventy-One Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXII, No.321 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1961 SEVEN CENTS TEN PAGES -Daily-James Keson Grand Prize Display by Theta Xi -Daily-Ed Langs Glinka to McRae -Fred Shippey McRae on 31-yard Pass Play Allen-Rumsey's Sphinx -Daily-James Keson Theta Xi, KD's Cop Homecoming Prizes Jordan Hall, Rumsey Also Take Trophies This year the grand prize for the best Homecoming display went to Theta Xi with their display "If This Were the Only Fight." Chi Psi won second prize in the fraternity division with "Sticky Wicket" and honorable mention went to Kappa Sigma's "Can It Be Done.'' In the sorority division Kappa Delta won first place with "Peace in the World or a World in Pieces." Sigma Kappa won second with "Hold That, Line," and Kappa Alpha Theta won honorable mention with the "(Iceland Special) . . Snow Purdue." Jordan Hall took first place in the women's dormitory division with "Let's Knock Purdue Cuckoo. Couzens Hall is in second place with "Michigan Fiestas While Purdue Siestas," and Betsy Barbour won honorable mention with S R Texas= Coeds On Probation For Actions AUSTIN (AM - Negro students who staged an anti - segregation demonstration at a white girls'. dormitory Thursday were placed on disciplinary probation yester- day by the University of Texas. The order followed investiga- tions at two Negro girls' dormi- tories and disciplinary hearings before the Dean of Women. The two - sentence -announce- ment from the university did not say hlow many students were af- fected. An, estimated 50 Negro students took over the lobby of Kinsolving Dormitory for about an hour Thursday night, refusing to leave when asked .to do so by the resi- dent counselor. Residents of the white girls' dormitory say they have been told that a Negro girl may visit a white .girl in her room, but the door must be closed and the Negro girl may not use drink- ing fountains or rest rooms in the dormitory. The lobby is barred to Negro men except those on er- rands. One student source said the Ne- gro coeds were summoned indi- vidually to appear before the Dean of Women yesterday but they de- cided to appear in a group.. Classes at the university, both graduate and undergraduate, have been integrated since 1955. Most dormitory space is still segregated. In recent months there have been student .protests against racial segregation of varsity athletics. "Michigan Marches Victorious." In the quad division Allen Rum- sey house of West Quad took first place with "The Great Sphinx." Huber House of South Quad took second with "As the Gods Fill," and Gomberg, also of South Quad, won honorable mention with "Brotherhood." Other winners of other Home- coming events were Sigma Alpha Epsilon over Phi Delta Theta 20-0 in the Mud Bowl. As the half-time event Collegiate Sorosis and Kap- pa Alpha Theta played to a scoreless tie in a rough soccer game. Inhabitants of Gomberg house in South Quad are walking around shivering tonight, because they were dunked in the Huron River by Taylor House in the annual Tug 'O War. Delta Upsilon's Brandy was vic- torious over Lambda Chi Alpha's Other Pictures Page 7 Major. It seems Major was unde- cided about the line of the race course and veered sharply into the crowd and wasn't even a close second. Delta Phi Epsilon won the Phi Kappa Psi Little Le Mans Go- Cart race. The winning entry was' driven by Miss Janice Fine, '62. The team of Phi Beta Phi and Kappa Sigma took first prize in the "Yell Like Hell" contest Fri- day night. Kappa Alpha Theta yelling with Alpha Tau Omega and the team of Delta Phi Epsi- lon and Phi Sigma Delta tied for second place. The climax of the week's fes- tivities was the dance at the In- tra-Mural building featuring Bob-j by Christian and his Orchestra and the. Highwaymen.; VOLTA DAM: May rA id' Project In Ghana WASHINGTON (A') -A review of United States proposals to help finance the big Volta Dam pro- ject in Ghana will be started this week by a team headed by Clar- ence Randall, president of Inland Steel Corp., the White House an- nounced. The review ordered by Presi- dent John F. Kennedy had been reported in the works for weeks, despite pressure from Ghana's President Kwame Nkrumah for a decision. The move was described as a last-minute checkup on de- tails rather than any United States backing off from participa- tion. Big Project J. W. Gildner, assistant White House Press Secretary, said the project is so big and complex that "it is desirable that a last final hard look be taken at the eco-. nomic feasibility." Also, he said, some internal problems of Ghana need to be considered. Success of the project hinges in part upon a $98-million .con- tribution from Ghana and the Ghanian government has been having economic troubles. Britain Involved Britain also is involved in the complicated proposal for the pro- ject-which will cost at least $325 million. United States government loans discussed so far total about $133 million, Gildner said, along with some help with private fi- nancing. The White House said the United States has made no firm commitment of any kind for shar- ing the project's cost, but discus- sions have revolved around a $37 million United States loan toward the cost of the dam-$27 million from the development loan fund and $10 million from the United States Export-Import Bank. ..'L ..W.......... F.... .4.}. f. "VSv. i'i% ;". '' ? . :i. ':' ":..1 +}}. . ""."i.rr;1""~>, Pay e To dU0 Pos110n Opponent's By PHILIP SUTIN and FREDERICK ULEMAN The slated $4.4 million in- crease in the University budget for salaries may put the Uni- versity's graduate and profes- sional schools in a better posi- tion to compete for holding their faculty in the face of the increasing number of offers from other schools. "The faculty has been ex- tremely loyal despite the mori- torium, but this can not be expected to continue,". Dean Floyd A. Bond, of the business administration school said. Despite this loyalty, the deans report an .increasing number of offers made to their facul- ties and increasing tension and competition with other schools. Notes Atmosphere Recently, Vice-President and Dean of Faculties Mar.vin L. Niehuss has noted that the at- mosphere among the faculty is similar to that of the spring when offers are usually num- erous, than the fall when they return to the University from a summer away from academic pressures. "A moritorium on merit' pay increases for another year would be disasterous," he adds. "The proposed salary in- crease ought to do away with a lot of the uneasy feeling around the University," Dean Stanley G. Fontanna of the natural resources school com- ments. In the business administra- tion school, two professors have resigned in the past year. One of these, however, left the Uni- versity to head the national Blue Cross after he had sur- veyed Michigan hospital needs. Loyal to 'U' "This loyalty has given the school remarkable stability in spite of the numerous attrac- tive offers to faculty from other leading universities," Bond declared. Aside from the moritorium and other fiscal difficulties, he cited the intense competition for top men in business ad- ministration fields as a threat to low faculty turnover. "Competition for top faculty men is keener than it has ever been," he said. Low Turnover The turnover in teachers in positions below associate pro- fessor in the business adminis- tration school has remained about the same, as it has in all schools. The University does not extend tenure until the rank of associate professor and many schools see lower clas- sifications as training grounds for future permanent faculty at this and other institutions. Despite a "considerable num- ber of offers" only nine higher faculty members left the en- gineering college last year, Dean Stephen S. Attwood re- ported. Noting the strong staff loyalty, Attwood said that the, college has been successful in retaining "key" people despite tempting offers from private industry and other educational institutions. Others Raise Pay "Other schools have been ef- fective in rasiing salary levels. This contiiued increase un- doubtedly will make outside of- fers increasingly more attrac- tive unless the University is able to remain in a strongly competitive position," he added. Two upper faculty members. have left the music school, but salary discontent was not the -main reason, Dean James B. Wallace said. See CITE, Page 2 Glinka, McRae Connect on Passes; Safety Becomes Victory Margin By DAVE ANDREWS Associate Sports Editor Flashing its air power for the first time this season, Michigan stole a page from Army's book yesterday to subdue stubborn Purdue, 16-14, before 66,805 homecoming fans in the Stadium. The victory, coming on the heels of last week's 28-0 rout by Michigan State, evened the Wolverine's Big Ten record at 1-1. And it was anything but easy. The stout Boilermaker line took everything Michigan threw at it-except junior quarterback Dave Glinka's soft flips to fleet halfback Bennie McRae on Bump Elliott's version of Army's "man-in-motion" pass. It was just two weeks ago on the same gridiron that the Cadets riddled: Tunnicliff Rams Line ...........:....,.....::..... .. . bz::" .tiR":: . .. .. . ... .......Iii "i= i : v::.m a :x......... ..,.... a ... ".« :}:X « r.:{A HARVARD, CORNELL: Study Tells of Ancient Sardis CAMBRIDGE, Mass. O-) - A marble avenue where ancient shoppers thronged, a Roman bath colorful with mosaics, and a glimpse of fabled gold antedating the time of Croesus have been listed among discoveries of a Har- vard-Cornell University expedition in Turkey. A report tells of the expedi- tion's fourth summer at ancient Sardis which-for much of its 3,- 000-year history-was the Paris of the ancient world. The 30 scholars and 200 work- men found that the grand shop- ping street of Sardis had roads and sidewalks paved with marble -50 feet wide. It was flanked with mosaicked colonnades where citi- zens and shoppers could chat out of sun and rain. The stately avenue and its shops were part of a rebuilding project begun about the year 400 A.D. Some 200 years later came disaster in a Persian invasion. t f .. ..-..v. v .. v. ..+. PROFILE OF A MAJORETTE: Purdue's Golden Girl Has Busy Football Weekend Byzantine engineers who later levelled the toppled columns and walls and laid out a humbler, cob- bled road, unwittingly saved a masterpiece of sculpture. It is the bearded head of some ancient, apparently a part of a statue which stood in the colonnade be- fore the Persian destroyers over- ran the city. The archaelogists suggest it depicted a sage or a saint. "Brilliantly carved, the portrait- head vibrates with nearly fanatic spirituality," Prof. M. A. Hanf- mann of Harvard reports. He and. Prof. A. Henry Detweiler of Cor- nell directed the expedition. "It well expressed the spirit of transition from the Roman to the Christian world, when . pagan philosophers and Christian saints shared an intensive quest for oth- erworldliness," Hanfmann added. Inner Life Scholars said such works were attempts by artists to portray a subject's inner life and were, therefore, soul-portraits. Michigan's secondary with the same maneuver. Yesterday the Wolverines made it work for them. In all McRae hauled in six passes for 144 yards. One of them set him off on an electrifying 72- yd. touchdown jaunt on the second play from scrimmage in the second half. Left all alone on the Purdue 45 when defensive halfback Dave Miller slipped and fell, McRae took Glinka's pass, cut across the cen- ter of the field and scored un- touched. It was Michigan's longest scoring play of the year and gave the Wolverines a 16-7 lead after Doug Bickle's perfect placement. Purdue Comes Back Two plays after the kickoff the Boilermakers were back in the game , when sophomore signal- caller Ron DiGravio unleashed his own aerial magic. End Jack Elwell was on the receiving end of this strike at the Michigan 45. Only, halfback Jack Strobel had a chance of catching up, but his dive at the 30 fell short. Much to the dismay of the large Purdue aggregation and their 283 piece marching band, that was the last Boilermaker goalward thrust of the afternoon. "We just couldn't get out of the hole in the second half," Purdue's acting coach Bob DeMoss moaned. Head Coach Jack Mollenkopf. missed the contest because of sur- gery at the Mayo Clinic in Roches- ter, Minn. "They (the Michigan line) kept us pretty well bottled up," he con- tinued, "and we couldn't get room to open up our offense." Neglects Offense He neglected to mention the Wolverine offense, which was the real root of the problem. Though unable to dent the goalline after See EARLY, Page 9 CensorI Sees Press As. Negligent, VIRGINIA BEACH,. Va. (P)-A high FBI official called on edi- torial writers last night to "lift their green eye-shades" and be- come more vigilant against Com- munist infiltration of their prop fession. Assistant FBI Director Cartha D. DeLoach said honest newsmen and newswomen are up front in the nation's struggle against Com- munism. But "a contrary record is still being written by a small segment of so-called journalistic enter- prise," DeLoach said in a speech prepared for a banquet of the Virginia Association of Press Women. "Some press representatives, supposedly giving the reading pub- lic unbiased news accourits, and infiltrators into legitimate news- papers are spewing forth a stream of vilification which has the ef- fect of helping to weaken our foundations of security," he said. Heads Protest Oust of Dean At Wisconsin MADISON (I)-Two department heads at the University of Wiscon- sin Medical School reportedly re- signed yesterday because of the firing of Prof. John Z. Bowers as dean. The Madison Capital Times said that Prof. John H. Flinn, director of student health, and Prof. Rob- ert L. Roessler, psychiatry depart- ment chairman, had submitted By MICHAEL OLINICK Purdue's 'Golden Girl' had little time for football yesterday. While visions of sugar plums and crushed Wolverine gridders danced in the sleepy minds of the Boilermaker eleven, June Ciampa her commitment to baton-twirl- ing. She started training about 10 years ago when her third-grade interest and jealousy was aroused by the girl who lived across the street from her who displayed a Once in her brief but bright majorette's attire, Miss Ciampa claimed she did not mind the gusty winds of Michigan Stadium. "When you get out there on the field with the crowd cheering, you can't think of anything but to keen on twirling and move fast. Miss Ciampa's attention was fo- cused on a Boy Scout who came for her autograph. She obliged. Next, Please Miss Ciampa moves out of the limelight next week as a new Pur- due coed becomes the "Golden