Northwestern 18 MSU . ........ 31 Minnesota .....17 Wisconsin, OSU .........14 Notre Dame ... 7 Illinois ....... 0 Iowa .... ..... 42 Navy . .....14 Boston . ... . .. Colleg 26 ' Penn State 6 Syracuse . ... 20 Pittsbur gh .... 8 Slipper y Rock 20 6 Westminister . .:I ....19 UCLA Colleges Witness New Advances in Co-ed 1 ousing By ELLEN SILVERMAN The concept of coeducational housing is slowly gaining advocates, Assistant to the Director of Housing John Hale said recently. The University, the first school in the Big Ten to implement coed living, will soon venture into the field again. In September coed units will be opened for use. Coeducational housing experiments have in the past proved sat- isfactory, Hale noted. In smaller colleges coed housing often is a mat- ter of two separate buildings with one building for dining. In larger schools this may be the case or complete coed housing units exist which means putting both men and women in the same physical plant for living as well as dining. The history of universities often includes the policy of separating the sexes in living, Hale noted. Although the distances between living. units is not as great as at the University, most large schools separate a "men's area" and "women's area." Now, however, the trend is toward eliminating these distances and unifying living units for both sexes. 'Choice' Housing At the University, the policy of coed housing is included in an overall objective of "choice" hcusing. When the Oxford Road project for women is completed, and coed housing has been implemented, stu- dents entering will have a choice between many types of living; large or small, one sex dormitories or quadrangles, apartment living or coed housing. The University's first experiment with coed housing came during the Korean War, Hale said. The population of men declined and that of women proportionately increased. At that time Tyler and Prescott houses in East Quadrangle were converted into women's units. Following this successful experiment, Chicago House in West Quadrangle was also opened to women. And ultimately, after Chicago was returned to men, Frederick House in South Quadrangle housed University women.' Worked Well All of these arrangements worked out well, Hale noted. The only two problems were the administration and the facilities' changes. Since, at that time, the housing of women was guided by the officz of the Dean of Women and men by the Dean of Men administration was often overlapping and difficult. Since these units were for tem- porary use, too, facilities had not been changed to accommodate wo- men. The physical plant remained the same. Hale commented that student government in these units worked exceedingly well. There were no serious conduct problems, in fact, "conduct improved," he said. In the new, proposed coed plans for next fall, existing facilities will be used. No definite plans have been made yet as to which units will be used for coed living. The decision will be made within the next few months by the Residence Hall Board of Governors and a; special Assembly Association-Interquadrangle Council study com- mittee. North Campus Unit The University once had plans for a coed unit to be built on North Campus. These plans will be re-evaluated now in reference to planning for the new conversions of existing units. Bursley Hall, as the proposed unit was named, consisted of a circular, central unit connecting with two V-shaped buildings. A wing of each of the buildings was for women, the other for men. In each wing separate "private" facilities existed such as lounges for men or women only. In the central vortex of the V common dining rooms and lounges were housed. The two buildings were then connected to the central circle which was also a common area for both units. Coed housing at most other Big Ten universities is more along than at the University, Hale noted. A few schools have altered exist- ing facilities but a larger number have built new buildings. In the Big Ten now Indiana University, the University of Wisconsin, Ohio State University and Michigan State University now operate coed units. The University of Illinois and the University are contemplating such action with definite plans and a target date set. At MSU there are two separate buildings with only the dining room and snack bar in common. This type of housing is also unique in that the complex of buildings includes classrooms. OSU's coed unit is similar to the- one at MSU. Hale noted that at MSU there have been complaints that there is not enough privacy; eating privately, for example. At IU and the University of California at Berkeley coed housing units are all in one building. Some of the halls at IU are newly constructed but others were converted. Decision on Finances When a school is considering coed housing much of the decision as to whether to convert existing facilities or build new ones is de- termined by finances. It also depends on what standards the school wishes to maintain, Hale said. If few changes are to be made and this is considered adequate then conversion can be inexpensive. If the standards include many more changes, for example, longer beds for men, full length mirrors for women, the expense can be very high. At many of the Big Ten schools a majority of the students now live or will live in coed housing units. At the University "the signifi- cant step by next September will be to decide how much further to go," Hale said. He speculated that most interest for coed housing comes from freshman and sophomore women and men in all classes. "Senior women don't care too much." STUDENTS REJECT CENSORSHIP See Editorial Page Yl e ilirI t~ 1Iilj FAIR Nigh--80 Low-SB8 Partly cloudy this afternoon, fair and cool tonight Seventy-Two Years of Editorial. Freedom VOL. LXXIII, No. 32 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1962 SEVEN CENTS TEN PAGES s S I U 3 24) * * * * * * Fihting Rages in * * * Indian * * * Provinces '.*2 Communists Attack From Two Fronts Government Says Three Outposts Captured by Chinese in Onslaught y BEQUEST: Vassar Sets Court Case NEW DELHI (')-Wave after wave of Red Chinese troops firing burp-guns under mortar cover drove Indian troops back on two fionts yesterday along their disputed Himalayan border. Both sides reported heavy casualties in the battles that began be- fore dawn and continued after dark. The Indian government said the Chinese threw one, possibly two divisions into an attack on Indian positions along a 15-mile front two miles up in the snow-covered Himalayas on India's northeast fron- tier. Three Indian outposts were reported captured as the Chinese drove south across the Nam Kha (Kechilang) River. Indian troops V. K. KRISHNA MENOr retreated to positions as much as four miles south of the line India . . deplores deploymen "claims as its borders. India had, U E xpe s maintainedoutposts within a mileEReds Charge IJOS. Ex p eets of that line. Cag On the other fighting front, in N the Chip Chap Valley of Ladakh' 900 miles to the northwest, In-A dian soldiers fell back from one 1)1 and possibly a second outpost be- O Q n orders WASHINGTON (A) - State De- fore the Chinese onslaught. partment officials kept a close Indian troops were said to be j TOKYO (P)-Communist C watch on reports of heavy fight- regrouping in both areas and In- announced last night Ch ing between Indian and Red Chi- dian Defense Minister V. K. Krish- troops "cleared away" some In nese forces yesterday. na Menon, frequent champion of posts on both the east and But they said both sides prob- Red China, vowed that India will Himalayan frontiers, but bla ably have limited objectives which "fight on, come kwhat may, until India for yesterday's heavy fi should keep the conflict from ex- the aggression is vacated." ing. ploding into a big Asian war. Declares in Speech An announcement issued b The Kennedy Administration is "For every Indian soldier the spokesman of the Chinese Def N it POUGHKEEPSIE P)-Trustees of Vassar College yesterday auth- orized a legal battle, if necessary, to remove a whites-only clause from the scholarship bequest of a North Carolina woman. The $200,000 bequest was made by the late Sally Baker Staton of Tarboro, N.C., whose will specified the money should be used for scholarships for white girls from Tarboro or Edgecombe County, N.C. The Vassar Board of Trustees at a meeting yesterday authorized the officers of the college to de- cline the bequest unless the re- striction to white girls is elimin- ated. The board described the restric- tion as "contrary to the policies and philosophy of the college." However, the trustees announced they had also authorized any ap- propriate legal proceedings aimed at eliminating the restrictive clause and sustaining Miss Stat- on's will "against any possible con- testants.", Miss Staton, a member of the class of 1897 at Vassar, died re- cently. A similar instance occurred at Rutgers University last year. A will which included a clause regarding race was contested in court. The clause was ultimately removed from the will, The University will accept such wills but strongly urges the donor to delete any provisions of this nature from gifts. Bromage Analyzes Urban Government By PHILIP SUTIN "Development of a full-fledged federation appears to be the only course of action if the theory of self-government is to be carried to the metropolitan- level," Prof. Arthur W. Bromage, chairman of the political science department, declared in a recently published pamphlet on metropolitan government. Discussing urban government and single-purpose authorities in "Political Representation in Metropolitan Agencies," pub- lished by Institute of Public Administration, Prof. Bromage noted that urban areas have resulted in a series of population, economic and social problems that go beyond political boundries. He said that two-tiered metropolitan government is the best way to cope with these problems. The metropolitan council would concern itself with ordinance making and administering area-wide services such as water supply and garbage collection. Retain Functions The local units comprising the metropolitan federation would retain functions that are of local concerns. "Federalism does bring complications in its train which are, not easily resolved: division of functions; composition of the upper tier government, possible dimunition of public interest in internal units; and the costs of supporting another level of administration," Prof. Bromage declared. "The real problem in metropolitan federation is not whether a government can be designed, but whether it can recommend itself to a state legislature and the people of the region," he said. Growing Areasj "For the growing areas, it is a compromise between decen- tralization into established local units and consolidation on a' unitary basis," he added. Single-purpose metropolitan authorities were also reviewed by Prof. Bromage. He noted that most are autonomous and are removed from direct popular control. Some authority board members are appointed by local governments, others by the state and a few have representatives, of commercial interests they serve on their boards, he noted. hina inese dian west aied .ght- by a 'DiGravio T hrows T hree T D Passes Purdue's Overpowering Offense Eiids 33-Year Drought in Rivalry {V By TOM WEBBER sports Editor Special To The Daily LAFAYETTE-The Michigan Wolverines made early game mistakes and sputtered ondoffense again to suffer a 37-0 loss to Purdue, marking their second straight humiliating shutout. This time the defeat was the worst suffered by a Michi- gan team since Minnesota scored a 40-0 win way back in 1935. It was even worse than last year's Ohio State debacle and marked Purdue's first victory over Michigan since 1929. The entire game was played under dark skies and oc- casional rain, but 48,907 Boilermaker fans stayed till the end urging their team to score - -- even more points. The game was almost a repiav of last week's loss to Michigan State except the Boilermakers threw in more pass plays against Michigan's untested secondary. The Wolverines got behind early and couldn't give their quarter- backs the protection needed to open up the attack. The Boilermakers rode the arm of Ron DiGravio, who threw for two early touchdowns,-to the stun- ning victory. They also used a new variation of the man-in-motion play to help out the not unexpect- ed passing attack. Purdue, 10-7 losers in a shocker to Miami of Ohio last week, came out for this one rarin' to go and scored on its very first play. On a well-planned play, DiGravio con- nected with Tom Fugate for a 54- yd. pass play. Fugate, a sopho- more who was starting his first game after seeing only two min-,. utes of action in the Boilermakers' first three games, sped past Mich-. See DiGRAVIO, Page 9 ense evidently prepared to sell Prime Chinese kill, we will kill many," imstry said Chinese frontier Minister Jawaharlal Nehru's gov- Menon declared in a speech to a guards "recovered" Khinzemane, ernment military equipment if he cheering crowd in New Delhi in Che-Dong and Kalung on the east- requests it for his forces in the which he frequently used the word ern sector and some Indian strong- face of the Red Chinese pressure. "war." points in the western sectar. However, officials said the Indians "Every war has its reverses, its 'The announcement, broadcast by have not made any such requests. good and bad days, but these are the New China News Agency, said Official thinking here is that the test of nation's mettle," he the Chinese suffered heavy losses the scope of the conflict should be said. "This is war where every "under the fierce shelling of In- known rather quickly. With the tiller in the field, every worker in dian troops." onset of winter in the high moun- the factory is a frontline soldier. The spokesman denied a state- tains of the India-China border "Nobody ever tried to under- ment made by Indian Defense regions, heavy snows and freez- stand China as I have, but I can Minister V. K. Krishna Menon ing winds within the next ten days say without any pangs of con- that Chinese forces opened simul- or two weeks would normally put science that it is the Chinese who taneous attacks at both ends of the border. a halt to all military operations. have forced India into war by com- "The Chinese frontier guards The Indians have recently nego- mitting aggression and slaughter- have been subjected to an all-out tiated with the Soviets over the ing Indians." Iattack, which the Indian aggres- purchase of modern jet fighter Despite Warnings sive troops launched after long- planes. Despite New Delhi's recent term preparations. The Chinese The situation is one in which warnings that it would drive the side had no choice other than to the great powers are likely to use Chinese out of territory India fight back resolutely and recover their influence to try to restrain claims, Menon admitted that In- the territory." rather than to extend and intens- dian troops were surprised by the --- ify the struggle. proportions of the Chinese at- 7 -,tack. .emen Asks t ; Two Critique Con1stlittion. By The Associated Press LANSING-Gov. John B. Swain- son and Republican challenger George Romney believe the pro- posed new constitution is an issue in the current, campaign, but they. clash sharply over the merit of the document. Swainson contends that "the Constitutional Convention was un- dertaken .with high hopes which were crushed in the most arrogant display of deceptive packaging Michigan citizens have ever wit- nessed." Overall Failure He charges that Con-Con result- ed in an "overall failure to mod- ernize the present constitution.". Romney is quick to praise the proposed document. "The new constitution is a vast improvement over the present doc- ument, as evidenced by the 2 to 1 majority for it in the convention and the support it has attracted from nonpartisan citizen groups including some which opposed the calling of the convention," he said. Romney Ahead Michigan voters will not rule on adoption of the new constitu- tion until April, 1963, election, but both gubernatorial contenders cite leadership - or lack of it - as Con-Con's prime influence in the present campaign. Meanwhile,.The Detroit News reported last night that Romney has pulled ahead in the third of its pre-election surveys. Romney, the News' surveyors, said, would receive 52 per cent of the vote and Swainson would get 47.3 per cent. In the previous poll, two weeks ago, the spread between the two contenders was .2 per cent. The polls covered the reaction to Romney's appearance on the BACKSTAGE: Markey Attributes Success to Diversity By MARJORIE BRAHMS Enid Markey is a seemingly age- less actress who has run the full theatrical gamut, from the first Jane in the silent Tarz~an movies to vaudeville to Aunt Violet in a recent television series. Miss Markey, presently in the I Association of Producing Artists rsnation if G'ieor e M. Cohan's she became dissatisfied and want- ed to try her skill on Broadway. Although discouraged by a collec- tion of people who told her how difficult breaking in was, she went ahead to the East coast and, by writing "outrageously bragging letters to all the big producers," got a part in a play produced by the then-famous A. H. Woods. Miss Markey next went into vaudeville, headlining under the Orpheum Circle in a playlet with three other people called "Here Goes the Bride." The playlet had a choice spot on the bill whichwas. since most business is done through an agent." Miss Markey also remarked on the rising costs of Broadway ro- ductions and of actor's salaries which has caused ticket prices to go up. "Now everyone can't enjoy the theatre,'' she lamented. "I've always been typed as a comedienne," she said, "although I've gone through a transitio n from ingenue roles to character parts." Outside Comedy As her role of Mrs. Candor made clear, Miss Mar1ey's comedy is Delegate Sees No New Polic TY7iT '.rY T rA rrtTr1TL ' 1 J T i _'. On the diplomatic :front, the "The Tavern," began her theatri- New China News Agency said Red F r UN H eT caern bean" thtri- China's vice foreign minister, Keng 0drIIcal career at 14."straight fron Piao, summoned P. K. Banerjee," i drama school." She created the Pia, smmoed . K Baerjeoriginal Jane, playing opposite Indian charge d'affaires in Pei- D A M A S C U S (A) - Royalists Elmo Lincon's Tarzan "The ping, and handed him a note of fighting a "holy war" to regainme fa i edithe wilds nf I : :; I