ALASKA RETURNS BURY NIXON See Page 4 C, , r Sixty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom 41v :43 IA - tt]g CLOUDY, SNOW VOI. LXIX, No. 2ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1958 FIVE CENTS EIGHT PA Wolverine Cagers Trounce Pitt in Opener, 75- C 'I Guards Star in Easy Upset Winl Mins ters T Ao% Panthers' Guard Scores 28 Points By JIM BENAGH Berlin -Daily-Peter Anderson STRICTLY FOR BIG BOYS-Michigan's Gordie Rogers (6'6") and Pittsburgh's John Fridley (6'5"), two of the tallest players at the Yost Fieldhouse court last night, strain for possession of the ball. The game ended seconds later with the Wolverines win- ning their season opener, 75-55. HEARING THURSDAY: CityCounil itPostpones Urban RenewalAc tion By PHIIP MUNCK City Council last night put off action on Urban Renewal until a public hearing in Council Chambers at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Debate on the project flared up during discussion of adopting a uniform building code as Councilmen Richard Dennard and Carl Brauer exchanged heated words on the availability of housing in Ann Arbor. Brauer objected to the passage of the building code as a "horrible encroachment on our> private liberty." He objected speci- fically to parts of the proposed or- dinance which would require e±- isting structures to come up to code. "It's wrong to legislate some of} these things," he said, "If a person O Renewal doesn't wan to live in sub-standard housing he can move out." Ann Arbor's Mayor, Prof. Sam- Dennard, a Democrat from the uel J. Eldersveld of the political First Ward and a Negro, shot back. science department, took a stand "Can I get one of those rooms s stmnt ook Urand you say are available?" He said against stalling over Urban Re- that not all the people needing newal at the City Council meeting better housing can get it because last night. of discrimination. Interrupting a debate between Councilman Florence R. Crane Councilmen Lloyd Ives and George added that a number of years ago Keebler on passage of a resolution 'she had talked to people "in to allow the city administrator to rented unhealthy, unsafe rooms submit a preliminary Urban Re- who can't find other places to newal application, he told council live. members to quit stalling., Passes First Reading "If you're not convinced Urban The proposed building code Renewal is right, by all means passed first reading with two votes vote against it," he said, "but I'm against it. not going to tolerate delaying tac- r _a _ ___ .. a _ _ -4 -.C 4 -: _ 1 A sensational start by a young sophomore and the play-making of his revenge-seeking mate at guard got Michigan off to an im- pressive 75-55 upset of Pittsburgh here last night in the basketball opener for both schools. John Tidwell, a lanky yearling from Herrin, Ill., made his opener, a happy day with a 22-point spree and a good job of defensing All- America Don Hennon - despite the Panthers' 28 marks on the scoring column. Miller Aids Win Junior guard Terry Miller, re- membering his own disappointing opener against Pitt last year, made the evening an easy affair for Michigan by feeding Tidwell on the fast-break with his timely passing. He further pestered the visitors by picking off interceptions and scoring three early baskets which gave the Wolverines a lead they never surrendered. Miller was held to a mere three points as the Panthers swept over the Wolverines, 72-62, last Decem- ber. He scored 11 last night. Team Win However, it was a real team vic- tory for Michigan as veterans George Lee and M. C. Burton, co- captaining the squad since the suspension of Jack Lewis, chipped in 17 and 15 points, respectively. The senior pair also teamed with center Gordie Rogers, Miller and Tidwell in giving the host quintet remarkable backboard control. Michgian out-rebounded Pitt, 55-38, although both start- ing teams had identical height averages., Most of the sparse crowd ofj 4,000 who watched the contest had their eyes focused on the short - yet husky - Hennon at the start. The 5'9" jump-shot artist from Wampum, Pa., had averaged 26.0 as a junior last year and was the main reason predicters gave Pitt high hopes of being the first quin- tet to ruin a Michigan home opener since the 1951-52 season. Miller Scores After Tidwell's successful free throw became the first score of the year, Hennon came back strong with five straight points. Then Miller produced his three consecutive jump shots -- break- ing Michigan's goalless stretch which lasted for four minutes from the game's start. M' Leads Michigan led, -5, and was never threatened by Hennon again. Wolverine points flowed easily after that point, too, with Miller passing for assists to Burton, Tid- well and Lee as they scored the next three baskets. These goals, combined with free throws by Tidwell and Miller, gave the Wolverines a 17-10 edge and prompted Coach Bill Perigo to say after the game: "That scoring spurt, while Pitt See 'SOPHOMORE', page 8 State begins 'Paying Debts To Schools U.S") BRITAIN, RUSSIA: I- -- Begin Nuclear-Cont By THOMAS HAYDEN Michigan has begun to pay off its debts to the three major state universities. But it still owes the University, Michigan State University, and Wayne State University more than1 11 million dollars in monthly bud- get payments. Checks totaling $5.6 million went out to the institutions last week, with the University receiving $2.7 million, MSU $2.1 million, and WSU $810,000. The cash for the schools was due Oct. 1. Payment had been held up until balances in the state's treas- ury Improved. As a result of the payment, a possibility that the schools might have to borrow funds from banks has been temporarily avoided, ac- cording to a Lansing observer. MSU had authorized borrowing of nearly one million dollars to meet its month-end budget, and had planned to seek $2.5 million in funds if the checks from Lans- ing did not come through. University officials in Ann Arbor had feared the University might have to resort to borrowing funds to meet its payrolls. The state still owes the schools checks for November and Decem- ber. Nearly $5.5 million is due the University, while $4.2 million is owed to MSU and $1.5 million to WSU. State Treasurer Sanford A. Brown saw at least some hopes yesterday that back checks will be forthcoming by the end of this month. However, he pointed out, "we can't be certain until collections come in" to the stat's general fund, out of which the schools are paid. rine .Reveals Whereabouts The missing student from West Quadrangle telephoned his par- ents during the Thanksgiving holidays and informed them that he was working in Miami. David Rinne, '62A&D, who dis- appeared from his room Nov. 15, told his parents in F't. Wayne, Ind., that he was employed in Miami, according to Jack Hale, senior director of men's residence halls, who spoke with Rinne's parents yesterday. GENEVA OP) - The United States, Britain and the Soviet Union yesterday began hammering out the opening article of a treaty defining what a controlled suspen- sion of nuclear weapot tests means. After a month of procedural wrangling the world's atomic' powers came to grips for the first time with the difficult task of drafting a treaty defining their obligations. East, West Agree East and West agreed that no quick and easy agreement is in sight, but bothasides emphasized that the delegations have moved into the substance of the problem. Up for discussion was a revised opening article of a Soviet draft treaty and a separate first article submitted by United States Am- bassador James J. Wadsworth. Yesterday's negotiations and ex- changes to follow are aimed at getting agreement on the language of the opening article. The opening article of a treaty usually defines the scope of the obligations undertaken by the signing powers. In the case of these negotiations the United States and Britain insist that the opening article must link the stis- pension of tests with a promise to School Fire Claims 89 Children, Nuns CHICAGO (4)-- A fire alarm rang 18 minutes before the dis- missal bell yesterday and sounded the death knell for 89 persons in Our Lady of the Angels grade school. At least three of the dead were Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary who perished leading their charges through smoke-filled halls or calming them from panic. The suddenness with which the flames dealt death to so many prompted Chicago's fire commis- sioner to suspect an arsonist may have touched off the fire the third worst school disaster in the last 100 years. A picked team of arson special- ists from the detective bureau joined firemen in poking through the ruins for clues as to what turned the Roman Catholic grade school in a low Income neighbor- hood of the northwest side into a screaming inferno within minutes after the fire broke out at 2:42 p.m. cooperate with an in control organization. If agreement ultim reached, the two sides w have defined the scop treaty and they hope to Many mountains still w be surmounted, howev full and final agree reached. Reopen ITU Negotiations By SUSAN HOLTZER Negotiations in the week-long strike against the Booth news- paper chain, including the Ann Arbor News, will be reopened in Lansing this morning for the first time since the walk-out. Striking members of the Inter- national Typographical Union Wednesday halted publication of Booth papers in Grand Rapids, Bay City, Jackson, Flint, Kalama- zoo, Muskegon and Saginaw, be- sides Ann Arbor. Total circulation of the chain is over 500,000. ITU spokesmen have asked a, wage increase of 15 cents an hour for the first year and 10 cents for the second year of a two-year contract. Booth has offered a nine cent an hour hike for the first year, and ten for the second. Base wage now is $3.12 an hour on six of the Booth papers, with the Flint Journal and the Grand Rapids Press paying 10 cents more for a 372-hour work week. Ann Arbor News Editor Arthur Gallagher said the papers and the: union "are still pretty far apart," and that there is "no indication of anyone giving in on anything." Gallagher broke down the con- tract dispute into three points: a' wage increase, fringe benefits and modification of the "reset clause." The reset clause refers to hand- setting local advertisements that reach the newspaper as already- prepared mats. controlled suspension of tests must be organized on a year-by-year basis with its continuation depend- ing on progress in the related field of disarmament? A Western source made this comment on yesterday's meeting: "There was a back-and-forth discussion of article 1 with the drafts of both sides under con- sideration. We are talking now about the substance of a treaty, but there are a lot of problems before us, Ike To Preside Over Defense Conferences AUGUSTA (IV) -- President Dwight D. Eisenhower will preside at high level Washington confer- ences tomorrow on defense spend- ing and the future of the army's space scientists, Plans for White House meetings of the National Aeronautics and. Space Council and of the National Security Council were announced as President Eisenhower neared the end of a 13-day working vaca- tion at the Augusta National Golf Club. He will start back to the capital by plane late this afternoon for a busy next few weeks in prepara- tion for convening of the new Congress early in Jan, The President faces the job of getting along with much heavier Democratic majorities in both the House and Senate as a result of the Nov. elections. He will call in leaders of both the Democrats and the Republicans for conferences later this month. I 1 L r a 1 a Z .i Coordinate No Date Set rot Treaty Work May Confer ternational Still to be defined are the an- ThislM onth swers to these major questions: aately is Will the Soviet Union accept an will at least international control syttem which Expect Proposv pe of the will meet the West's demands for complete. a tight policing of ban on atomic To MeetSovit ill have to and hydrogen weapon tests? er, before Will the United States and For Negotiatior ement is Britain continue to insist that a BERLIN (RP)-The West's can paign plan for the newest batt of Berlin may emerge from a Par meeting in mid-December., Diplomatic sources said yeste day foreign ministers of the Unite States, Britain, France and W4 Germany will confer to coordinal policy in combatting the Sovi demand for neutralization of We Berlin. The date was not set. But tI expectation was that Secretary C State John Foster Dulles and hi three colleagues will get togethi in the French capital either befo0 or during the 15-nation Nort Atlantic Pact Council meetttl opening there Dec. 16. Conference Possible The western Big Three and We Germany probably will propose I meet the Russians two or thrt months later in a summit or fo eign ministers conference on 1 whole German problem. That might be one way of averi ing a ciash between western az: communist forces on the expiri tion of Moscow's six-month tin limit for acceptance of the Fr City proposal and withdrawal i the western Big Three garrisons, Informed officials in Washinj ton said Secretary Dulles is read to make the trip to Paris. TI others are Britain's Foreign Bec retary Selwyn Lloyd, France's Pbi eign Minister Maurice Couve C Murville and West Germany Foreign Minister Heinrich T Brentano. Problem Yet Unsolved The question of whether ti West should deal with Communi East German border guards a agents of the Russians when an iIf the Soviet Union actually witi draws was still unresolved, Lloyd told the House of, Con mons in London that Britain ci be said to accept some minor , Germans as agents of the Sovu government in executing fou power control of Berlin. Dulles last week indicated Wes en willingness to deal with tl East Germans as Soviet agents certain circumstances. The West German governme, expressed dismay.mBonn officia said any such policy would be step toward recognizing the re East Gerfian government, Recognition Possible And responsible informants hei said last night American ocia feel such an arrangement wou' be impractical. They reasoned thi any difficulties would have to 'e taken up with the s GeraG and that this would imply reco nition in fact, opinion ais hardening amon American officials, they said, f defying any attempt to iapOi East German controls and necessary to launch an airlift fi supply of West Rerlun at the ri of clashes with red fighter plane "No agreements exist betwea the Soviet Union and the wet powers over connections betwe4 West Berlin and West Germn Berlin was a part of the Sovi occupation zone of Germany at today is a part of the (Communis German Democratic Republic." Senior Board Holds Contest World News Roundup By The Associated Press ATLANTA-A motion to quash indictments against five men on charges of dynamiting the Jewish temple here was overruled yesterday by a judge who declared that the defense contended state law provides "open season" on churches. Fulton Superior Court Judge Durwood T. Pye held that a Georgia law providing the death penalty in some dynamiting cases covers the <.crimes charged against the de- P endants. Action on the final passage of the proposed off-street parking ordinance was put off for the fourth time to Dec. 8. Councilman M. Alicia Dwyer, of the business administration school, requested the matter be postponed until the latest revisions of the bill are printed and submitted to Council in a completed ordinance. The Planning Commission, in a, report submitted by Dean Coston, of WUOM, recommended changes described as "not substantial and keeping the original intent of the ordinance." The report recommended group- ing the requirements of social fraternities with those of sororities and placing professional fraterni- ties in the same classification as rooming houses. Cites Space Need Coston said the number of per- mits issued to students in social fraternities does not now exceed the number of parking spaces at fraternity houses. He explained that due to the high number of students over 21 years old in pro- fessional fraternities there is a vrnotr nnA fn nar--inr cr ..No tics." COTY STEPS DOWN AS EXPECTED: De Gaulle Lone French Presidential Candidate PARIS (P) -- Gen, Charles del Gaulle was given a clear field last night to run for the presidency off the new French Republic and, in effect, let it be known he is ready to take the job. His election, by a newly created and large electoral college, is a virtual certainty. De Gaulle's office disclosed thel development with a communique confirming that President Rene Coty and Premier de Gaulle have been consulting about the election and that Coty doesn't want to stand again.1 Office Confirms The fact that de Gaulle's officeI allowed the communique to be is- sued was virtual confirmation of what everyone in France has be-f lieved - that the new constitu-1 't4in is t inrm.l +fn - r iA a nl.. Sunday's election, in which can- fixed agenda could be called by didates waving the banner of de either the premier or a majority Gaulle gained control of parlia- of the assembly, ment, was another straw in the Process More Difficult wind. In the present political cli- Under the old Fourth Republic, mate of France no individual the assembly frequently tossed out could stand before the 68-year-old the premier by refusing to give general's overwhelming strength. simple majority support to his programs. Now the process is full Provides for Runoff Iof roadblocks. The assembly must The electoral college includes some 70,000 mayors, municipal councillors and other governmen- tal figures. The election will be Dec. 21. A runoff a week later is provided for but will hardly be necessary. The term is seven years. As president, de Gaulle would be able to keep a firm hand on the government and carry through policies - mainly for peace in Al- !ria -- which he has hrdly h- now vote a motion for formal cen- sure. First the motion must be signed by at least a tenth of the deputies. If the motion is rejected, it ordinarily can't be brought up again in the same session. The position of the president of the Republic is much more impos- ing now. Article 16, of de Gaulle's! constitution, says the president "may take ameasures demanded by the elrn,,r +a nnno i 47 +1..a "r r- right of de Gaulle's own thinking on an Algerian settlement. De Gaulle vs. Soustelle De Gaulle is known to want to offer the Algerian nationalists a large measure of autonomy and economic development. Soustelle's powerful Union for the New Re- public (UNR), with 188 seats in the new assembly, is firmly pledged to an ironclad integration of Algeria with France. Aside from Algeria, the political flavor of the new assembly is ob- scure. Many old faces in French politics disappeared in the week- end voting. Only about 146 former deputies were returned to their seats in the 546-seat assembly. Soustelle himself is a veteran deputy, but he has only 13 form- er denuties in his 188-man nartv. 4 4 * MEXICO CITY - Adolfo Lopez Mateos took over yesterday as Mexico's 57th president and em- barked on a policy of friendship with the United States and other western nations. Delegates from 51 nations, in- cluding United States Secretary of State John FosterhDulles, were on hand to watch the inauguration carried out in a festive atmos- phere enlivened by gay Christmas decorations. A communist attempt to whip up an anti-American dem- onstration on Dulles' arrival Sun- day fell flat. WASHINGTON - Adlai Steven- son says "I am not and I will not" be a candidate for a third presi- dential nomination in 1960. Some talk has persisted of Stevenson as a possible choice of the Democrats, despite the fact he was snowed under twice by President Dwight D. Eisenhower. * - - i{' KANSAS C --'Pe-q:ce tttlkg nn