OSU i n Good Shape; Inl By MIKE BURNS Sports Editor Michigan's Wolverines will pass up the Thanksgiving holiday to- morrow, hoping to feast Saturday on powerful Ohio State in the tra- ditional season finale. Normally shaping up as one of the toughest games on Michigan's schedule because of the intense rivalry, the contest figures to be the most difficult test the Wol- verines have faced this fall, with the hard-driving Buckeyes rated the number two team in the coun- try and seeking a Big Ten title. Coach Bump Elliott's squad s finds itself in the poorest physi- Y cal shape of the entire season. Three normal starters will not be on the field for the kickoff, and several other key reserves are not at top efficiency. Top Shape OSU Coach Woody Hayes will have his crew in top condition for the last game of the year, with a possible 6-0 conference record resting on the contest. Minnesota, tied with the Buckeyes at the top of the Big Ten heap, will play host to Wisconsin in the other juries game which will determine the conference title. The Wolverines have been set- ting their defenses to stop the Buckeyes' crunch-crunch, grind 'em out offense, led by human battering ram, Bob Ferguson. The 217-lb. fullback has picked up 786 yds., more than double any other OSU back. Ferguson has lost only two yds. all year, and has carried the ball over 20 times per game. A senior, Ferguson was named All-American last season .and has scored seven touchdowns this year., McRae Doubtful Michigan's leading ground- gainer, left halfback Bennie Mc- Rae will probably be missing Sat- urday. The 6'1" Newport News, Va., speedster suffered a severe shoulder bruise in the first quar- ter of the Iowa game and is listed as "very doubtful" by Elliott for the OSU game. That's only the beginning of the Wolverine infirmary list. Starting center Todd Grant ended his playing career against the Hawkeyes with a knee injury which required surgery. Tackle Plag John Schopf, who has sat out the last three games with a separated shoulder, may see limited action but is not expected to start. Defensive halfback Jack Stro- bel, a junior, is also out for the season with a knee injury. End Scott Maentz, who sprained an ankle in the Iowa game, should be available but it is not known how seriously the injury may hamper his punting. Center John Walker has a bad ankle, also, but will probably be ready to assume Grant's position on offense as well as on defense. PROBABLE STARTING LINEUPS re Michiga, To bolster the center post, El- liott has shifted tackle John Hout- man to that spot. Whether Hout- man plays there will depend on Walker's condition, as Frank Ma- loney will also be available as a defensive center. At fullback for the Blue, Bill Tunnicliff should be set to start, although still favoring his ankle. Defensive fullback Ken Tureaud is still bothered by a pinched nerve and will be used sparingly against the Buckeyes. Though Ohio State will be fav- ored to defeat the injury-weaken- ed Wolverines, the Michigan squad has a host of seniors who remem- ber the OSU game two years ago; in which the Buckeyes were pick- ed as sure winners. With All- American Bob White and end Jim Huston, the Bucks were loaded. But an inspired Michigan team, using three platoons of players handed the Ohioans a sound 23-14 spanking. Directing the team at quarter- back will be John Mummey with Joe Sparma standing by. Bill Mru- kowski, the team's best runner- passer has an injured hand and will be on the shelf for the Mich- igan game. But Mummey is sec- ond only to Ferguson in rushing with 362 yds. while Sparma has tossed for four touchdowns. The only blemish on the Ohio State record is a first-game 7-7 tie with spoiler Texas Christian, which upset top-ranked Texas only last week. Since that first game, the Buckeyes have rolled over five conference foes and two non-con- ference opponents. Last week while Michigan was upsetting Iowa, 23- 14, the Ohioans were downing Ore- gon, 22-12. The two opponents have faced three common opponents this year and both have won each time. If Michigan wins, it will mean a 7-2 season, the best since 1956. The Buckeyes will arrive Pri- day morning and spend the after- noon working out at the Stadium. Kickoff time for the contest will be 1:30 p.m. Saturday, with ap- proximately 80,000 fans expected to attend, despite the Thanksgiv- ing holiday. The game will be re- gionally telecast on Channel 7. MICHIGAN Maentz .... Houtman Minko .... . Walker ..... Hall ....... Curtis ...... Mans ..... Glinka. Raimey .... Chapman ... Tunnicliff .. LE LT LG C. RG RT RE QB RH LH FB OSU .. Bryant .......Vogel .... Jenkins Armstrong ..Foster .. Sanders Middleton Mummey ... Warfield .......Snell ... Ferguson tr Yt an Seventy-One Years of Editorial Freedom BIaity -Daily-Bruce Taylor GRAB IT GEORGE!-Michigan end George Mans leaps for a Dave Glinka pass early in last Saturday's game with Iowa. Covering the play is Iowa left halfback Paul Krause. The Wolverines won the tilt 23-14 through spirited second-half play. LATE IN 1961: Still Plan Astronaut Shot VOL. LXXII, No. 57 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1961 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES By The Associated Press LANGLEY AIR FORCE BASE - The United States still plans to put an astronaut in orbit during 1961, a spokesman for the Na- tional Aeronautics and Space Ad- ministration said yesterday. The spokesman at the Manned- Spacecraft Center here said "as the schedule nowstands, NASA still plans to have a manned or- bital shot in 1961." "There's no denying that achiev- ing this will be difficult," the spokesman added, "and there's a strong possibility that the at- tempt may come in early 1962." * The spokesman, who declined to be identified, said timing of the orbital shot depends on many favorable factors, including the successful orbiting of a chimpan- OSA Committee Considers Residence: Hall Problems k _ By JUDITH OPPENHEIM The Office of Student Affairs Study Committee yesterday spent its second session on a discussion of the residence halls, Prof. John Reed of the Law School, committee chairman, said. The group tried to consider areas where some improvement could be made immediately, Prof. Reed said, although no definite solution was reached. More Freedom Prof. Reed said some topics discussed were whether women might have more freedom in choosing non-University housing and whether " some structure might be establish- ed where complaints about the Laws Voided residence halls may be acted on more quickly. In M ississippi The committee also considered .5.J.L ~the possibility of separate admin- istrative set-ups for men's and JACKSON, Miss. () - A three- women's residence halls. Judge federal court yesterday de- The committee plans to wrap up clared unconstitutional three Mis- its work by the end of the semes- sissippi laws requiring segregration ter. Next week's meeting will deal in transportation terminals, with campus judiciary bodies. The judges also grantrd an in- OSA Structure junction sought by the govern- The Dec. 5 meeting will con-' ment to force the city of McComb sider philosophy and aims and to remove segregation signs from the last meeting before Christmas sidewalks around the bus and vacation will be concentrated on railroad stations. the structure of the OSA. Judge Elbert P. Tuttle of At- The two weeks after vacation lanta, chief judge of the United will be devoted to preparation of States 5th Circuit Court of Ap- a report which will be directed to peals at New Orleans, said the Vice-President for Student Affairs rulings came on a 2-1 decision. James A. Lewis and the Regents. zee. The chimp shot at the mo- ment is scheduled for next week. Most predictions have been that a manned orbital shot would not be possible before February be- cause of the failure earlier this month to put a chimpanzee into orbit on schedule. At Cape Canaveral, Air Force troops last night successfully fired a Titan missile on a 5,000-mile test flight. The rocket carried an experimental nose cone like those which will be used as targets for the Nike Zeus missile killer. Testfiring Assignment This was the first time an all- Air Force team launched an Inter- Continental range ballistic missile from Cape Canaveral, a testfiring assignment normally handled by civilian contractor crews. The launching climaxed months of training for officers and airmen of the 655th aerospace test wing. The 98-foot, two-stage Titan blazed into a clear Florida sky and unleashed the cone on a 15,- 000-mile-an-hour journey down the Atlantic range. It was the 10th straight test success for the huge rocket, which is scheduled to become operational within a few weeks. Governor Goes To .Bialy Island BIAK ISLAND, New Guinea (A)- New York's Gov. Nelson Rockefel- ler arrived here early today by chartered jet airliner, grimly in- dicating that the chances are dim that his youngest son, Michael, would be found alive. But his daughter, Mrs. Mary Rockefeller Strawbridge, Michael's twin, clung to the belief that the 23-year-old science student can take care of himself. (See earlier story in the World News Roundup, Page 3.) Trustees Ofk Bias Chapters of all fraternities and sororities on the Michigan State Univeisity campus must remove their racial discrimination clauses by Sept. 1, 1962, or lose University recognition. Members of the Board of Trus- tees offered no objections to a resolution adopted Oct. 31 by the Faculty Committee on Student Af- fairs. The resolution, nlow official Uni- versity policy, includes the follow- ing provisions: No Extensions 1) There shall be no extensions granted except by the president of the university. 2) The men's division of the Student Affairs Office shall notify the National fraternities imme- diately of the deadlines and the provisions of this legislation. 3) The women's division of Stu- dent Affairs shallnotify the na- tional sororities immediately of the deadlines and of the provisions of this legislation.1 No Re-establishment 4) No existing fraternity or sorority at MSU shall be allowed to re-establish racial discrimina- tion clauses in their constitutions under penalty of immediate sus- pension; and no fraternity or sorority with racial discrimination clauses shall be chartered in the future at MSU. 5) This legislation shall super- cede all previous legislation which provides for the elimination of racial discrimination in the Greek system. The action was similar to a res- olution originally adopted by All- University Student Government. The Board of Trustees met last Friday at MSU's Kellogg Gull Lake Research Center. USSR Agrees THREAT SQUELCHED' Balaguer Firms Dominican Control CIUDAD, Trujillo (P) - Presi- dent Joaquin Balaguer told the nation last night his government has achieved full control with support of the entire Dominican military establishment. Less than a week ago Balaguer's regime was in danger of a resur- gence of Trujillo dictatorial rule. In an obvious reference to re- ports that some friction had de- Cubans' A sk Conference UNITED NATIONS () - The Cuban government of Fidel Castro yesterday requested an immediate meeting of the United Nations Security Council to consider an alleged United States plan for armed intervention in the Domini- can Republic. The Council president for No- vember, Valerian A. Zorin of the Soviet Union, said the 11-nation council would convene today to hear the Cuban complaint. Cuba's request was made by Am- bassador Mario Garcia-Iiichaus- tegui in a letter to Zorin asserting that the United States is trying to prevent the Dominican people from exercising democratic free- doms and achieving full national independence. To Resume )fl Test. Ban veloped in the military because of some of his officer appointments, Balaguer said in a broadcast that. the most absolute accord exists in the armed forces. He said the mili- tary is behind the government and constitutional law. False Impression He cautioned Dominicans not to be swayed by "propaganda tending to create a false impression" that danger of a counter coup against the government has not been totally eliminated. Balaguer's assurancesscame amid persistent reports that some dwin- dling resistance still existed among diehard pro-Trujillo factions. The president spoke after lead- ers of the two biggest opposition political groups returned from Washington to the wildest demon- stration here in recent memory. City Turns Out The entire population of this city of 300,000 seemed to have turned out for the return of Viriato A. Fiallo, president of the National Civic Union, and Manuel Tavarez Justo, president of the 14th of June movement. The 66-year-old Fiallo clearly was the center of mass,.adulation. The chanting, prancing, crying Dominicans hailed him as "libera- tor." Faillo fought the late Gen- eralissimo Rafael Leonidas Trujillo the full length of his 31-year dic- tatorship without taking exile. He was jailed several times. Earlier in the day the National Civic Union and the 14th of July movement joined a third opposi- tion faction, the Revolutionary Party, in announcing support for President Balaguer following the forced exodus of leading members of the Trujillo dynasty. The demonstration became so wild that police were forced to use noise bombs to scatter crowds that began throwing rocks after an incident apparently sparked by accident. There was no evidence of injuries. Indian Sees China Trouble, SRINAGAR, Vale of Kashmir (M--An Indian army officer yes- terday predicted trouble this win- ter as a result of fresh Chinese Communist incursions along the Ladakh frontier with India. The spokesman said the govern- ment had received reports of Communist Chinese f r o n t i e r guards digging caves, but the guards were thought to be taking precautions against the freezing cold. The Communist Chinese, during their talks with Indian officials late in 1960 and early 1961, pro- duced a new map showing 1,800 more square miles of Ladakh as belonging to them. U.S. Accepts New Position Of Russians Conference Planned With Britain, Soviets Tuesday in Geneva WASHINGTON (IP) - The United States State Department welcomed yesterday Russia's turn- about decision to resume negotia- tions with the United States and Britain on a permanent, inspected nuclear weapons test ban. The negotiations will be re- opened at Geneva next Tuesday. But the United States rejected an implied Soviet demand that this country should now halt its own testing of nuclear and enter. into a new, unpoliced test mora- torium. Trying Maneuver Officials said that Soviet Pre- mier Nikita Khrushchev having apparently completed a test series of 31 or more explosions, was evidently trying to maneuver President John F. Kennedy into a new moratorium and thereby gain some advantage for Russia in the nuclear arms race. United States policy on this point, previously announced by Kennedy, was restated emphati- cally by the State Department which said: "The United States will continue to take such action as it deems necessary to safeguard its national security interest until a controlled test ban agreement is achieved." Brief Notes Britain and the United States had proposed in brief notes to Moscow Nov 13 that the Geneva negotiations be resumed. They were recessed Sept. 9 a few days after Khrushchev began explod- ing nuclear test weapons with the claim that he had to act in the interest of Soviet security because of an increasing danger of war- referring to the Berlin crisis. Yesterday the Soviet govern- ment replied to the Western pro- posal with notes delivered to the American and British emabssies in Moscow. The reply expressed readiness "to make one more at- tempt (at a nuclear test ban agree- ment) bearing in mind that the three powers, participants in these negotiations, have proclaimed that their general aim is geneal and complete disarmament." The State Department announc- ed a few hours after receipt of the Soviet note here that the American delegation to the Ge- neva Conference was being in- East Examines 'Sick South'; Hayden Hits Student Failure Present Cure for Adament Patient By HARRY PERLSTADT "The South is a patient most ill; the signs of the sores are in Montgomery and Tuscaloosa; it is split at the seams and at Little Rock it absolutely ruptured itself; its present trauma is in McComb, Miss." The "doctor" is P. D. East, editor of the Petal Paper of Petal, Miss. and author Of "The Magnolia Jungle." He explained that he believes in the empty gourd theory in medicine. "Get everything that is wrong, put in it an empty gourd, seal the gourd and all is well." Must Admit However, East said that the patient must admit he is sick before he can be cured. "The patient insists that he is not sick and that every- one else is ill." It appears that the patient has been taking an evil concoction called "Snake Oil." It is sold by slick peddlers who "keep the patient under their control through addiction. It lessens the pain but does not help the patient." Trace of Stupidity East said that a lab test revealed "insensitive thinking, self-conceit and, a trace of stupidity." Although he did not have the method for breaking the evil habit of Snake Oil, East offered a substitute pre- scription. Former Editor Contrasts Attitudes By PHILIP SUTIN While the Negro student in Mississippi has been struggling to gain his own and his people's civil rights, Northern students have failed to meet their responsibility, Thomas Hayden, '61, and Alan Haber, '60, told a meeting of the Political Issues Club last night. "The contrast is stark. The American student does not seem to realize the gulf between what is talked about and what is done," Hayden, a former Daily editor, declared. The Negro student is at the "cutting edge" of the civil rights movement, he added. White students do not sense its urgency. Killed, Beaten Hayden cited numerous instances where Negroes and Negro students have been killed, beaten, or taken great risks in attempts to gain civil rights. He noted cases of Negroes attempting to register being beaten on city hall steps of various Mississippi towns. A difference in background between the Northern student who leads a safe life and the Southern integrationist, a deadening horror of a strife torn world on the individual consciousness, a lack of under- standing of the real meaning of discrimination, and a.lack of feeling for another person's suffering were cited by Hayden as the main causes of this student failure. .. ...p ..; .