OsU ...... Oregon ....... 26 HSU .........31 Wisconsin ....35 Minnesota .... 7 Northwestern 7 Illinois ....... 6 Purdue,...... 7 Georgia Tech.. 7 Oklahoma .... 6 Alabama...... 6 Missouri ...... 13 Princeton .....14 Slippery Rock 13 0 Yale .........10 | E. Stroudsburg 7 SOCIETY AND THE 'U': INHERENT CONFLICT See Editorial Page Y Sir 43ztU I E 4aitp SNOW High-40 Low-s2 Light flurries today; little change tomorrow Seventy-Two Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXIII, No. 56 TWO SECTIONS ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1962 SEVEN CENTS SIXTEEN PADES Defensive Lapses Defeat M', 28-14 Hawkeyes' Fourth Quarter Surge Overcomes Determined Wolverines By JAN WINKELMAN Associate Sports Editor Special To The Daily IOWA CITY-The Wolverines lost their fifth Big Ten game of the season here yesterday afternoon 28-14 to the Iowa Hawkeyes; yet the Hawkeyes needed two key breaks to keep the game from becoming a Michigan triumph. Michigan dominated the entire first half. Up until the end of the second quarter, they were ahead. Even in the second half, the Maize and Blue seemed to be pushing the Hawkeyes -around. "We played our best game of the year," commented Sees Lottery. Michigan mentor Bump Elliott. "Krause's runback was the key Substitute play of the game," observed Iowa A 's se coach Jerry Burns. 'That runback took the psychological edge away from Michigan and gave us the extra lift we needed in the second 11 half." Krause virtually walked into the end-zone. NEW YORK (M)-A Columbia Up until Krause's runback, the Une Wolverines had dominated play. University professor yesterday sug- The second, and clinching Iowa gested a national lottery among blow, came with 2:43 remaining in hich ones shuld be cal eter n the game. The score was tied 14-14 wich onesar shuld bne lled c and neither team had accomplish-, taemilitary duty in the United dsustained second-half threat. Prof. Eli Ginzberg said he based Great Protection his suggestion on a 10-year study Quarterback Matt Szykowny whic covined im hatthedropped back to pass. He had which convinced him that the great protection. Spotting third present system of 'selecting men string flankerback Sammie Harris for active military duty was in along the right sideline, Szykowny error, uncorked an apparently over- In a report on his study, en- thrown aerial. titled "The Optimistic Tradition Suddenly, Harris turned on a and American Youth," Prof. Ginz- spurt of speed just in time to berg complained that most young sneak behind Timberlake. The ball American males feel a call to ac- floated into his hands as if by tive duty is an imposition and an magic on the five yard line; and annoyance. before the stunned Timberlake Distasteful Duty could recover. "Most Americans look upon ac- Michigan lost its chance to come y wfrom behind with 2:00 left to play Live military duty with distaste in the game. Wolverine quarter- and grow up without any under- back Bob Chandler threw too standing of military obligation," short for Timberlake. he said, adding: Second Score "With the consequence that if After McQuiston's interception, and when they are called to duty, Iowa subsequently scored. Szy- they view it as an imposition, an kowny passed to Rich Turici, a annoyance, or a stroke of bad third team fullback, for the tally. luck that they were caught while Jay Roberts kicked his fourth suc- so many others escaped." cessful point after touchdown to provide the final 28-14 Hawkeye "Military service, instead of be- margin. ing an obligation which all young Iowa failed to capitalize on the men recognize, has become more miscue. The Maize and Blue de- and more of a gamble in which fenders, who played excellently certain p 1 a y e r s hold marked throughout the game, covered their cards," he said, men beautifully, preventing Szy- Democratic Permission kowny from throwing his famous "For democracy to permit and pin-point passes. encourage its young men to grow M' Takes Ball up viewing military service as a Michigan took the ball over at burden to be avoided is an invi- their 20 after Iowa punted into tation to disaster," he warned. the end zone. The Wolverines He said the. government also wasted no time in scoring. After could require compulsory military a successful line plunge by Davet training for everyone for from four Raimey, Chandler threw a pass to to six months with another lot- Jim Conley which Conley could tery to determine which ones not hold. Subsequently, the ball shoul sere loger.went right on past him into the( Those not needed in the service, hands of an alert Timberlake he said, should be given some Wayne Sparkman then carried type of non-military service. the ball, and Hawkeye would-be Collaborators tacklers, along with him on two Prof. Ginzberg wrote the report line plunges bringing the ball to in collaboration with James K. the five yard line. Sparkman took Ander'son of Rockland County, the ball a third time and bulled Nw Yorkf personnel director and See SPARKMAN'S, Page 7 FEAR ASSAM LOSS: Red Chinese Take New Indian Territory NEW DELHI OP)-Indian forces have given some ground to counterattacking Communist Chinese around Walong, key defensg position on the Northeast front in India's undeclared bprder war, the defense ministry said yesterday. India was reported rushing reinforcements aboard commandeered civilian airliners. Communist China pictured Indian withdrawals as a rout. A new China news agency broadcast heard in Tokyo said Communist Chinese troops advanced to Walong itself z4 -AP Wireph."to IOWA GAINS YARDAGE-Wolverine fullback Harvey Chapman (46) and quarterback Bob Timberlake hold Hawkeye halfback Larry Ferguson (19) to an 11-yard gain in the first quarter. Iowa quarterback Matt Szykowny (22) juggles the pigskin on a five yard run in the second quarter, while Michigan center Jim Green (55) prepares totackle him. Such Iowa runs brought the team their 28-14 victory, Ferguson credit for being the Hawkeye star, the Iowa coach a new contract, and Michigan its fifth Big Ten defeat. May Cancel Missile Work LOS ANGELES (P)-The Penta- gon told Lockheed Aircraft Cor- poration yesterday it may look elsewhere for missiles if a strike hits the giant aerospace manufac- turing firm. Lockheed promptly declared that it is ready to continue vital mis- sile work in event of a strike-and the machinists union continued plans for a strike vote today among the 20,000 members it claims at Lockheed. The Pentagon warning came in a statement declaring that Lock- heed "stands alone" among missile firms in refusing to accept rec- ommendations of a presidential fact-finding board in settling a labor dispute. The board had recommended that Lockheed permit its employes to vote on a proposal for a union shop, which would require all workers to join the union. Lock- heed, in contrast to other aero- space firms, has refused. Therefore, the Pentagon said, it is looking into alternate means of missile production "so that work on the vital programs can go for- ward in the event of a stoppage at Lockheed." Courtlandt S. Gross, Lockheed board chairman, said if the union calls a strike, "we believe (it) would involve only a part of our work force. "At Lockheed Missiles and Space Co., the machinists have only 5,- 700 members out of a total work force of 31,200," Gross said. "At Lockheed-California Co., the ma- chinists have 10,000 members out of a total work force of 24,000." Lockheed manufactures the Po- laris Missile-a key weapon in the United States' arsenal-which can be fired underwater from a sub- marine to drop a nuclear warhead on an enemy target 1,200 miles away. DOMESTIC PEACE CORPS: To Study 'Service Program' WASHINGTON () - President John F. Kennedy appointed yes- terday a cabinet-level committee of seven to determine whether it would be a good idea to launch a domestic "National Service Pro- gram" similar to the Peace Corps operating overseas. Kennedy picked his brother, Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, to chair the group. The attorney gen- eral has made a preliminary study and turned in a report that favors the new program. He envisioned it as a method for giving Americans of all ages a chance to answer the President's challenge in his inaugural address to ask what they can do for their country. Robert Kennedy said: "We need to offer visible venues for service to these people." Robert Kennedy's report propos- ed that the National Service Corps Co urt Gums Stamp Works By The Associated Press NEWARK-A federal court here issued an order Friday injoining the United States Post Office from its precedent-setting action of sell- ing thousands of (intentionally) misprinted stamps commemorat- ing Dag Hammarskjold; but it acted too late. The Post Office had already flooded the market with 400,000 of the misprints. Leonard Sherman, the stamp collector who brought the court action on grounds that the gov- ernment was trying to cheat him out of a fortune has now threat- ened to sue if all the faulty stamps but his aren't withdrawn from the market. be open to all persons from high school graduates to retired people, with a one-year term of voluntary enlistment, compared with two years for the present Peace Corps. Volunteers would get enough pay to cover living expenses and would receive a small sum in addition at the end of their enlistments. In addition to Robert Kennedy, the committee will consist of Sec- retary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz, Secretary of Welfare Anthony J. Celebrezze, Secretary of the Inter- ior Stewart L. Udall, Peace Corps Director R. Sargent Shriver, Budg- et Director David Bell, and Hous- ing Administrator Robert C. Weav- er. Kennedy asked the committee specifically to look into the size, 'training requirements and costs of setting up a voluntary service corps. Assess Response He asked it to assess also what sort of response would be forth- coming to an opportunity to enlist, and to say on what the objectives should be, how the program should be administered, and .how it would fit in with operations of state and local agencies. As the attorney general viewed it, the projected new service corps could play an important role in helping states and communities in slum schools, recreation centers, mental hospitals, Indian reserva- tions, migrant labor camps and correctional institutions. The report said there is a short- age of trained workers in these fields, and volunteers,directedby professionals and working under local direction could lighten the burden. New Year's Resolution The President asked him to sub- mit recommendations by Jan. 1. This would be a preliminary to possible introduction of legislation to set up the service corps by ac- tion of the next Congress. Bills calling for a form of do- mestic peace corps were introduced in both the House and Senate last year but the House version died in the Rules Committee and the Senate did not act. These bills would have permitted teensage boys and girls, out of school and unemployed, to work in public service instititions. As Robert Kennedy visualizes the 'opportunities for domestic service, there just are not enough people available now to give some sort of hand to 32 million Ameri- cans he said are "living at a lower level than America is capable of providing for its citizens." Needs Workers "Many of these persons," he said, "are handicapped by poor health, diets, and housing, as well as inadequate education. The majority are unable to remedy these conditions by themselves; they are largely dependent Amer- icans." The attorney general said that the status of more than 500,000 migratory workers is one of the most neglected national problems. and Indian troops fled south- ward. The broadcast said Indians were "unable to hold their lines" under Chinese counterattacks. Launch Counterattack The agency noted that the Chi- nese launched their counterattack in answer to an artillery attack in which the Indians lobbed 2,000 shells into Communist positions around Walong early Friday. It also said Indian forces-had launched what it called "fierce attacks" on Communist positions near Jang and Leuhketula, south of the Towang River, about 300 miles west of Wolang. A new China news agency broadcast heard in Toyko said the Indians attacked under cover of heavy shellfire between 3 p.m. Friday and 9:30 a.m. Saturday. jAn Indian Defense Ministry spokesman gave a different ver- sion, saying the Chinese attacked at Jang and were repulsed four times. Crucial Struggles The fighting around Walong ap- peared the more crucial. Indian commanders fear a Chinese break- through there could give the Com- munists easy passage down into the plains of upper Assam state, where India has its main oil in- stallations. The defense ministry spokesman said fierce fighting was in pro- gress up to the time it had re- ceived its latest report yesterday morning. The Chinese counter- attack began Thursdpy after In- dian forces had made attacks in the area to keep the Chinese from consolidating positions. Indians Retain Hold He said the Indian forces still held Walong and presumably the airstrip south of the village. The village lies in the Luhit River Valley and the fighting has been mostly on steep mountain sides on the right bank of the river. The Luhit River runs into the Brahmaputra River flowing into the plains of Assam. The defense ministry said the Chinese attacked in "numbers considerably superior to ours." He made no comment on Indian re- inforcements but informed sources said they were being rushed up the Brahmaputra River Valley. JOHN A. HANNAH ...testifies Recommend Delta Growth- BAY CITY-A two-year senior college built on top of Delta Col- lege's first two-year program is the first recommendation of Prof. John X. Jamrich to solve higher education needs in the Saginaw- Bay City-Midland area. Jamrich of Michigan State Uni- versity is the research consultant of Rep. Lester O. Begick's com- mittee studying higher education needs in the Delta area. His initial report, released Thursday, will be discussed, fully by _the committee at a Dec. 11 meeting. The report establishes a need for higher education in the Delta area. The committee is do- ing research on how to meet that need. Hannah Testifies Thursday afternoon Dr. Ferris McCrawford, assistant superinten- dent in the State Department of Public Instruction, and Dr. John A. Hannah, Michigan State Uni- versit president, testified. Neither one argued against a degree pro- gram in the Delta area. Their tes- timony was quite influential in the final draft of Jamrich's study. In fact, the entire Begick com- mittee expresses itself as recog- nizing the area's need. The com- mittee also was told repeatedly by Crawford and Hannah of the need for a master plan for higher education expansion in Michigan. Jamrich's study in~iudes eight counties-Saginaw, Bay, Midland, Arenac, Huron, Iosco, Sanilac and Tuscola. Growing Enrollment College enrollment in the Mich- igan colleges from the area will be 8,827 by 1965, 12,000 to 14,000 by 1970 and 18,000 to 20,000 by 1978, the report says. "On the basis of planned ex- pansion in our present colleges, about 7,900 college enrollees from the eight-county area would be provided for. Projecting at least 8,900 potential enrollees (from this area), this means there will be about 1,000 students for whom no specific facilities will be avail- able,"' the report said. Asked if MSU was interested in establishing a branch or campus at Delta, similar to the one being talked about by Delta and the Uni- versity, Hannah said if this was to be the pattern of higher edu- cation expansion in Michigan then MSU was interested. State Decision He said this decision, however. Greensboro Police Arrest CORE Members in Sit-Ins GREENSBORO UP)-About 60 members of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) were arrested by police last night when they staged a combination stand-in, sit-in demonstration at two cafeterias which admit only white customers. At a Greensboro cafeteria, as each member entered one of the serving lines, manager Richard L. R. Bentz, and fellow employes halted ; them and Bentz read this state- .V w IV S, JlLV111ULLLV, "4 John L. Herma, a psychologist. The report was made under the university's Conservation of Hu- man Resources Project established by former President Dwight D. Ei- senhower. The project is supported by grants from corporations, founda- tions and the federal government. Prof. Ginzberg is director of the project. The study was begun in hopes of alleviating the problem of a general disapproval of the current draft system, which often forces young men to postpone their studies until their military obliga- tion is fulfilled. SDX Seeks End CONFLICT RESOLUTION: Waiskow Considers War by Accident' By MARTHA MacNEAL "The possibilities of accidental thermonuclear war are tied direct- ly to very un-accidental programs and policies which could lead to catastrophe," Arthur Waskow of the Peace Research Institute in Washington, said yesterday. Speaking at a meeting sponsor- ed by the Center for Research on Conflict Resolution, Waskow call- ed thep nresnt world "atmosnhere "assumes that it is possible to separate people from weapons forces," Waskow said, so that mis- sile bases, rather than civilian cities, would be the targets of at- tack, preserving some civilization. Both sides "blackmail each other into the counter - force policy," so that the arms buildup grows far more extensive than that required simply for deter- program of nuclear weapons" where it is politically necessary to support the institutions now committed to weapons production. It has been assumed that an in- crease in weapons increases the danger of mechanical or human failure which could cause acci- dental war, but, Waskow said, the defense department has reduced this danger so that it is now highly tinliriv hr +it+he intres~tP sprips,,nof ing these weapons. Our tests are not tests of weapons, but only of explosives. "The thermonuclear strategists have invented a rational outside world in their own minds. But in a crisis, things are much more} likely to be chaotic. U.S. Manifestations "Politically," Waskow said, "we have grown up believing in the ment to each: Claims Trespassing "I am Richard L. R. Bentz, man- ager of the . . . cafeteria in Greensboro. We do not wish to serve you. We will not serve you. You are trespassing. P 1 e a s e leave." After the statement was read, police were summoned and the group agreed to go voluntarily to the municipal building. William Thomas, leader of the Greensboro CORE group, said in a statement handed reporters after being arrested: "The Congress of Racial Equality feels that a great injustice is being male to people of color in this city. Equal Rights "We feel that we are American