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October 25, 1961 (vol. 72, iss. 33) • Page Image 1

…FRATERNITY- AUTONOMY Y Sir :43 at t49 OVERCAST High-65 Low-r47 Increasing cloudiness, with evening rain likely. See Page 4 Seventy-One Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXII, No. 33 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1961 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES Ask Women Visitors For Men in Quads IQC To Hear Motion Tomorrow; Each House To Set Its Own Policy By DAVID MARCUS Inter-Quadrangle Council will hear a motion tomorrow night that would all...…

October 25, 1961 (vol. 72, iss. 33) • Page Image 2

…THE MICHIG~AN (DAILY REIGN PANEL: Students View Berlin Crisis By GERALD STORCH >anel of foreign students yes- y discussed countervailing egies and possible solutions to 'Crisis in Berlin." . s. Rosa Erlichman, Spec, of l, thought that the crisis s mainly from Russia being :d of the contrast in prod- standards of living and free- between the two Berlins. student from West Germany, n Gliss, Grad, added that iain problem was the constant of ref...…

October 25, 1961 (vol. 72, iss. 33) • Page Image 3

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1 ations Condemn Soviet Est H-Bomb Test t :: .. ::.....~i.~nA..~ *4 For Lat( -AP Wirephoto .CONFERENCE-Japanese, Thai and Canadian delegates to the United Nations confer before the meeting of the Political Committee yesterday where several nations denounced the Soviet Union for its recent test of a 30-megaton hydrogen bomb. y NEW RULING: Close Off East Berlin TO U.S. Civilan Aes BERLIN ()- 'ihe United States Army ...…

October 25, 1961 (vol. 0, iss. 33) • Page Image 5

…T1 THE MICHIGAN DAILY RNATIONAL STUDIES GRANT: j Ford Foundation Aid To Help 'U' Groups i (Continued from Page 1) tion of Japan," "The Cultural At- las of Japan," and a multi-disci- plinary survey of the country and its people. .The Center for Chinese Studies is planning two major un-dertak- ings, Prof. Albert Feuerwerker, di- rector of the Center, said. One project is a study of "Con- tinuity and Change- in Modern China" which will sup...…

October 25, 1961 (vol. 0, iss. 33) • Page Image 6

…rI'uF' fflfuV~iA N TbA T ~v in KAMM Nlllililli}11Y' LAlLY a WEDNESDAY, ( innesota Poses Strong Offensive Threat ~. n Thn7~ Y~f C NOT IN TOP SHAPE: Raiey Hampered by Injuries This is the primary reason why the offense has opened up, be- cause the linemen can move out and block more effectively on wide-open plays. Last year, pointed out Nelson, the bulwark of the defense rest- ed mainly with the guards and linebackers, but this year it rel...…

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