F f Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year LIIL Sir DaitAp Q 0 CHRISTMAS SPIRIT See Page 2 Latest Deadline in the State OCCASIONAL SNOW VOL. LXII, No. 75 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1951 FOUR PAGES i 'M' Cagers Lose; Icers Top Denver Northern IL .S. of Shivers Snow, Under Sleet, Ice * * * <"> * * * Wolverines Take Early Game Lead By BOB LANDOWNE Neil Celley's return to the Ann Arbor hockey scene was not suc- cessful for him as his former Wol- verine mates downed his Denver team, 7-5, at the Coliseum last night. Michigan was in control of the contest all the way as they jumped out to a 3-0 first period lead and were never headed thereafter. * * * CELLEY'S Pioneers took the in- itiative in the opening minutes but could not break through goalie Willard Ikola. Then at 9:21 John Matchefts sent the Wolverines on their way with the first of his two goals. Matchefts scored on a fifteen footer from the left side after being beautifully set up by wing- man John McKennell. McKen- nell carried the puck in from the blue line, then sped around the. defense and passed, from behind the goal line, to Matchefts who quickly converted. A little more than a minute la- ter the Wolverines made it 2-0 as Doug Mullen scored from a scram- ble in front of the Denver nets. SHORTLY after this, Captain Earl Keyes scored the best goal of the evening on a quickeback- hander from fifteen feet out. Keyes tallied on the rebound of his own shot that had been kicked Seo PUCKSTERS, Page 3 Full POW List Almost. Completed WASHINGTON-()-The Pen- tagon virtually. wound up last night its massive task of telling American families who was on the Communist list of prisoners of war in Korea. To thousands the news was the best Christmas present ever. To even more, who waited in vain for messages from the Defense De- partment, the holiday season was tainted with gloom. Only a few names, possibly 200, remained to be processed by the Pentagon, w h i c h had sifted through more than 3,000 names made public by the Communists. T h e s e were "special cases," mostly questions of confused iden- tity. The Communist list included 3,- 198 Amercian POW's, just about one-third of the Americans offi- cially logged as missing in action by the Defense Department. The original Communist list contained no home addresses, involved a big job of checking by U.S. officials so messages could be sent to the home folk. In unprecedented fashion, the Pentagon made public the names with addresses just as soon as the families of the men had been noti- fied. The Associated Press re- layed the entire roster, a task which took a day and a half. The Pentagon had cautioned that the names should be received with skepticism since there was no way of checking the accuracy of the Communist lists. Draft To Resift MentalRejects WASHINGTON - (P) - Local draft boards will begin next month to re-examine an estimated 300,- 000 men who previously failed to Late Quaker Rally Gives 68-63_Win By GENE MACKEVICH Michigan's basketball team ab- sorbed its third consecutive set- back last night when the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania came from behind in the game's final three minutes to eke out a 68-63 victory at Yost Field House. Michigan has yet to win a con- test this season, while the victory was the Quaker's fifth without a loss. - ERNIE BECK, Pennsylvania's candidate for All-American cage honors, scored 22 points on seven field goals and eight free throws. Beck's value to his squad was clearly shown when, in the third period the 6'4" forward sat on the bench with four fouls against him, the Maize and Blue five was able to turn a 34-40 de- ficit into a 49-42 advantage. With 3:30 minutes remaining in the game, the home team held a 63-60 edge. Twenty-five seconds later Dick Williams registered his fifth personal and left the court. Then Tom Holt tallied three fast two-pointers to put his team in the lead permanently. PENNSYLVANIA began to freeze the ball with 1:58 minutes remaining in the game. With the score 65-63 and thirty seconds remaining to play, Michi- gan obtained possession of the ball See QUAKER, Page 3 Naughty, Naughty! DECEMBER 20, 1911-- Wil- liam Pearce, star Minnesota basketball guard, was barred forever from varsity competi- tion yesterday upon his confes- sion that several summers ago he accepted $1 in prize money for winning a footrace at a church picnic. University authorities were equally severe with certain foot- ball players who openly admit- ted that they had played sum- mer baseball games at which admission was charged. With other Big Eight uni- versities commending the Min- nesota authorities for their handling of these cases of pro- fessionalism, the people are having their confidence in the purity of college athletics re- stored. Congratulations Minnesota- let your example inspire the rest of the schools and univer- sities where similar charges of corruption have been made! Blanket Travel Crippled, Roads Dangerous -Daily-Al Reid -Daily-Al Reid BY CAR OR BY RAIL IT WAS THE SAME STORY YESTERDAY-STUCK UN Hands Two Defeats To Soviet Bloc Truce Talks -------------- :_ PARIS-(VP)-The United Na- tions handed two defeats to the Soviet bloc yesterday. Greece defeated White Russia for a seat in the UN Security Council. And over bitter Russians protests the General Assembly .named a five-nation commission to investigate the possibility of free all-German elections. Victory for Greece came in a World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The govern- ment yesterday forecast a 9 per cent reduction in next spring's pig crop, virtually dashing previous hopes of a larger supply of meacs in butcher shops next year. It also may mean noticeably higher meat prees, on the average. LITTLETON, N.H.-Nomina-j tion papers for Gen. Dwight Eisenhower for president - on the Deiocratic ticket-will be filed about Jan. 25, the sponsor of the movement has announced. BERLIN-The U. S. Army an- nounced last night three of its soldiers, described as "fugitives from military justice," had desert- ed to Communist-ruled East Ger- many and been granted political refuge there. record-breaking 19th ballot in Assembly. the * * * THIS GAVE the United States one of its hardest-won victories. in a contest which split London and Washington temporarily and provoked screams of protest from Moscow. The final vote was 39 for Greece to 16 for White Russia. Four countries abstained and South Africaewas absent. Immediately after the Security Council vote, the Assembly admin- istered another defeat to the So- viet bloc. It created a five-nation commission with intructions to inquire into the possibility of hold- ing free elections in all of Ger- many. The Soviet bloc denounced Hopes Apw-pear Dim To Avert Steel Walkout WASHINGTON -({) - Gov- ernment mediators reported no progress yesterday after all-day conferences seeking to avert a threatened New Year's Day strike in the steel industry. Hopes for any agreement con- tinued dim. Cyrus S. Ching, Federal Media- tion Service Director, said the steel firms had come forward with no offer yet in response to CIO President Philip Murray's demand for an average 18 1/2 cent-an-hour' pay boost for steel workers. "It seems to me this is a major domestic crisis," Ching told re- porters after the meetings with Murray and representatives of 10 key steel firms. CHING SAID he had no dead- line on how long he would xeep the government-sponsored nego- tiations going-before reporting a deadlock to President Truman. Ching arranged to meet with the management group at 9:30 a.m. today and with the union at 10:30. the commission in advance and made it clear the group would not be admitted to East Germany. The vote on the German com- mission was 45 to 6 and 8 absten- tions. * * * U N Social Set{ Perturbed by Res Red Ban PARIS-'P)-The tea and crum- pet set in the United Nations was boiling yesterday about Secretary- General Trygve Lie's edict barring all members of his staff from par- ties given by the Russian bloc or any other function unless Lie is invited. The Russians laughed when they heard about it but then came through with comments that Lie was being "ridiculous." One Rus- sian who would not permit use of his name said the Lie ban was "an infringement of personal rights." The feud began last year when the Russians opposed Lie's extended term as Secretary- General and began a strict boy- cott on Feb. 2 when his first five-year term ended. The Rus- sians relaxed this fall and in- vited the Secretary-General to a Soviet film showing. Lie had another engagement, but sent his two daughters to rep- resent him. These moves for reconciliation never made any progress. The event that really raised Lie's tem- per came when the Russian bloc boycotted en masse the annual huge reception given by Lie and the President of the General As- sembly. Stalled Over Supervis ion MUNSAN, Korea, Friday, Dec. 21-(P)-The Reds drummed up fresh propaganda controversy over t he stalled.- prisoner exchange question Thursday while rival ne- gotiators sought a new approach to the old problem of supervising a Korean armistice. The Reds hinted they might consider a compromise on super- vision, but the price looked high to Allied negQtiators and was re- jected. HOWEVER, United Nations and Communist staff officers sched- uled a meeting in Panmunjom at 10 a.m. today (7 p.m. yesterday, Ann Arbor time) after working on a set of rules for policing the truce. Regardless of the outcome of this single-shot staff officer ef- fort to crack the deadlock, the regular joint subcommittee on truce supervision was due to meet three hours later, at 1 p.m. (10 p.m. yesterday, Ann Arbor time). For the second consecutive day there was no meeting Thursday on the vital prisoners exchange ques- tion. T:1ere was no word when talks on prisoners would oe re- sumed. While neither side intends to exchange a single prisoner until final agreement is reached on an armistice, the U.S. Eighth Army Thursday completed plans for the reception, care and air lift of Allied prisoners when the ex- change can be made. .By The Associated Press Old man winter dealt another snowy, stormy blow to the shiver- ing northern two-thirds of the nation yesterday. Ice storms crippled transporta- tion in parts of the midwest and east, while parts of South Dakota approached a helpless condition after fifteen days of snow bom- bardment.- * * * WITH FRESH snow blowing in- to the Chicago area, motorists were, advised to call off out-of-town, trips and "sit at home." Mayor Martin Kennelly warned an emer- gency meeting of city officials and transportation executives that more snow could paralyze the city. Meanwhile, snow and sleet were crippling Michigan trans- portation and an ice storm mov- ed into the east causing the U.S. Weather Bureau at Albany, N.Y. to warn that severe icing conditions would result. Freez- ing rains coated roadways in Kansas City, central Illinois and central Indiana making travel treacherous and traffic a snarl of creeping cars. Hard hit was the South Dakota area where, according to Gov. Si- gurd Anderson, "the situation is becoming progressively worse." The manager of a flying service these predicted that the storm is going to be worse than the blizzard of 1949 when the Army's "Operation Snowbound" brought relief to much of the state. THE CAPITAL city of Pierre, approximately in the center of the state, is shrouded in the thickest blanket of snow-26 inches, but on some county roads drifts ap- proach 15 feet in depth, making it impossible for even snowplows to get through. The State Highway Department has stopped travel out of Pierre 10 times in the past 15 days. While Pierre attempts to dig itself out, ranchers an# farmers in snowbound areas are tramp- ing out big "X" marks as distress signals to the planes bringing relief. Meanwhile, the national death toll from the week long barrage of snow and ice has reached at least 242. Ohio leads the list of fatali- ties with 33 dead and Michigan is sixth on the list with 15. AS THE nation counted its storm deaths last night, another grisly total was being compiled in Chicago where National Safety Council statisticians are await- ing the 1,000,000 American traffic fatality to Qccur. The count of highway slaughter stands at 999,- 780 as of 3:30 p.m. yesterday, with over 100 deaths being chalked up daily. The Council has designated the day of the millionth fatality as M' Day and are hoping that the grisly milestone will serve as a warning to pedestrians end drivers to take more care in traffic. The first fatality occur- ed on Sept. 13, 1899 when one, H. H. Bliss, stepped from a New York City trolley car and was struck and killed by a horseless carriage. The slaughter has been going on ever since with 1941, when 39,969 people lost their lives in traffic ac- cidents, being the peak year. Fa- talities for 1951 had reached the 36,200 mark up to last Wednesday night. * * * Mass Trek On Despite Conditions By CAL SAMRA Nearly 17,000 University stu- Vents, anticipating 16 days of egg nog and vermouth, will start a mass retreat from education today in the face of hectic weather con- ditions. A swirling snowfall-the weath- erman promises more to. come-c bids fair to dampen their spirits, possibly even to strand a large number of students in the. Wol- verine city longer than they ex- pect. THE THIRD heavy snowfall in six days swept into Ann Arbor yes- terday and left a hoary mess; a re- peat performance is expected to- day. City streets and state high- ways were mirrored with ice, traffic was slowed to legal speeds, cars struggled for freedom at icy curbs, buses and trains were run- ning behind schedule, and all flights were cancelled at Willow Run Airport. And, throughout the midwest, the same congested conditions pre- vailed. More deaths were reported on slippery Michigan highways as the snow chnged to a dangerous sleet late last night. THOUGH no -major accidents were reported locally, a sheriff's deputy cautioned that the "roads are terrible." Even the ever-present hitch- hikers failed to dot the city's thoroughfares yesterday, attest- ing to the miserable conditions. Actually, the mass evacuation out of Ann Arbor began a week ago, with a trickle of truants flee- ing their books. The trickle erupt- ed into an onrush yesterday as a slew of luggage-loaded students flowed into bus, train, and air terminals. Then they waited ... knitting, chatting, cursing, napping .. waiting with their boots on. Trains were delinquent by two to three hours. Buses also missed their schedules. Transportation officials stood by-hapless and helpless. At the New York Central tera" inal, one young lady, perched on a strained suitcase, strummed dis- consolately on a ukelele-"I'll be home for Christmas." The residence halls will be va- cant, except for those few who applied for vacation-time residence in dormitories. Students Nabbed With Milk Truck 'WHAT SHALL I DO?' Re-Wed War 'Widow' Faces Domestic Cris is LA GRANGE, N.C. - )-- A pretty 22-year-old bride, starting out on a honeymoon Tuesday with her second soldier husband, read the stunning news that her first husband is a Korean war prisoner. "I just don't know what to do,"' Mrs. Agnes Sasser of Cullman, Ala., told newsmen yesterday. "I haven't been able to think it through. You have no idea how I feel. I just can't believe Walter's alive." MRS. SASSER said she was in- formed last May of the death of Pfc. Walter B. Dixon, her husband of five days before he went over- her first husband because the ser- ial numbers match. S * * YET, SHE ADDED, "the De- fense Department told me Walter was wounded by bomb fragments at the front and died the same day." She said she also received let- ters from the chaplain of Dix- on's unit, and also from Dixon's commanding- officer saying the same thing. There was never any indication he might have been taken prisoner, she added. The government also paid her f tv ,r - 1A Anon lif - ntt -r nt" GOOD CHEER, COMRADES! Stalin's Birthday, 'U' Exodus Clash * * * By GAYLE GREENE Ann Arbor students and Moscow residents were both cheering today, but for somewhat different rea- sons. In Ann Arbor, it was the begin- ning of a long-awaited vacation; in Moscow, it was Stalin's birth- day. Frank E. Robbins, head of the Calendar Committee, had no ex- planation for the simultaneous ar- (Glory to Stalin), Ann Arbor streets will stick to "Merry Christmas." But the Soviet press will more than make up for American in- difference with much ado about their leader. * * * BORN IN Gori, Georgia, Josef Vissarionovitch Dzugashvili, was the son of a cobbler. As a youth he The government fears fect a strike would have mobilization effort. the ef- on the MEANWHILE, John L. Lewis apnarently is nreparing a spring