THE CITYCEDITOR'S SCRATCH PAD See Page 4 Pr Latest Deadline in the State AU IM K-. -- _ _. I CLOUDY WITH LIGHT SNOWS VOL. LXIII, No. 68 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1952 S U S Russian Employe Dismissed by UN Aide Had Access to Top Political Documents. on Atomic Energy UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. - (-P) - The United Nations has fired a highly placed Russian employe who was tagged as a Soviet spy by the American State Department. He is Nikolai Skvortsov, who was personal and confidential aide to Constantin E. Zinchenko, a now-absent U.N. assistant secretary- general who was the highest ranking Soviet national in the Secre- tariat here. Skvortsov was boss of the Soviet's state farm system before he came here in 1950. RUSSIANS HAVE always held the assistant secretary-general) post for Security Council affairs since the council first met in 1945. Ike Assured Korean Visit Got Results En Route Home with Eisenhower -(P)-President-elect Dwight D. Eisenhower left for home yester- day, confident his 15 day survey of Korean and Far. East war prob- lems had got results, despite the criticism of President Truman. Eisenhower and his party de- parted aboard an Air Force Con- stellation at 4:53 p.m. scheduled to * bring him to New York today after a single stop in California. * * * THE GENERAL drove, to the Kanoehe Air Base looking fit and ruddy. Three days of golf followed his dramatic survey of the battle- front, and intensive conferences aboard the cruiser Helena between Guam and Hawaii. Just before taking off, Eisen- hower told Adm. Arthur W. Rad- ford, Pacific Fleet commander, that "we may be sending for you again to talk over some of the things we have discussed." Radford and a group of cabinet designates and key advisers accom- panied the general to Korea. * * * A PLANE carrying five secret service men, an extra flight crew, maintenance crew and baggage, blew a tire on the takeoff and re- turned to Kaneohe. No one was injured. The party winged toward the West coast amid reports that President Truman's charges of "demagoguery" had cooled per- sonal relations between the two to the freezing point. Ford Fights Free Inquiry Restrictions NEW YORK-(P)-The Ford Foundation has set up an inde- pendent organization, the Fund for the Republic, to combat restric- tions on freedom of thought, in- quiry and expression in the Unit- ed States. Announcement of the new body set up as a membership corpora- tion in New York state, was made by Paul G. Hoffman, president of the Foundation. * * * HE SAID trustees of the founda- tion have outlined the objective as follows:- "The foundation will support activities directed toward the elimination of restrictions on freedom of thought, inquiry and expression in the United States, and the development of policies and procedures best adapted to protect these rights." Hoffman continued: "In the opinion of the Founda- tion, the many controversial prob- lems in this area can best be acted on by an organization that has complete independence. The foun- dation, therefore, has asked a dis- tinguished group of men and wo- men to form such an independent organization and to study the problem and outline a program." Hoffman said that if a satisfac- tory program and organization are achieved, "a substantial grant" will be made to carry on the work. The establishment of the organ- ization follows upon the heels of O The means both Zinchenko and Skvortsov were in position to see some of the most restrict- ed U.N. political documents- from the council's Atomic En- ergy Commission, the Military Affairs Committee, and the Dis- armament Commission, which have held many closed meetings attended by selected personnel. The United States, however, has made clear that it never fur- nished the U.N. confidential mili- tary or atomic information. There was some talk in the U.N. last summer that Lie was restricting Zinchenko's activities then. ACQUAINTANCES of Skvortsov described him as a jovial blond Russian who mingled freely with other secretariat people, an un- usual thing for a Russian to do here.- i 'They said he had served at various times in the past in So- viet embassies at Ottawa, Cana- da, and Tehran, Iran. They said he spoke English and French1 fluently. Both Ottwa and Tehran have been the scenes of Russian under- cover activity. * * * THE U.S. STATE Department said Skvortsov was fired by the U.N. after the department told Sevretary-General Trygve Lie that Skvortsov had "violated a U.S. law." Lie was told in September, a State Department source said. According to U.S. sources here, this is the chronology of the Skvortsov case: For over a year the U.S. has received secret reports on the Russian's espionage. These re- portedly took place outside the U.N. and did not involve Skvort- sov's U.N. job. Last July he went home to Moscow on leave. Shortly thereafter the State Department notified the embas- sy in Moscow to deny him a re- entry permit if he should ask for one. The U.S. notified Lie of the! situation in September and in Oc- tober he terminated Skvortsov's employment allegedly because the Russian represented an "admin- istrative loss" since he was unable to return to headquarters here. A high U.N. official said-be- fore the State Department an- nouncement - that Skvortsov's job had been terminated after heI was unable to get a re-entry visa after his home leave. The State Department denied this. "We never refused a visa as he was fired before the question , came up," 'M' Cagers Drop 85=77 LoopDebut Iowa Gets 16-0 Six Minute Lead Special To The Daily IOWA CITY-For 34 minutes last night Michigan looked like a winning basketball team. But in the opening six minutes of play red-hot Iowa scorched the nets with 16 successive counters while the stone-cold Wolverines were held scoreless. Thereafter the fast-breaking Hawkeyes coast- ed to an impressive 85-77 triumph in the conference opener for both squads. The Maize and Blue first period attack was so futile that when the stanza ended with Iowa on top, 21-12, the visitors had hit the cords on only four of 23 at- tempts from the floor. S * - ~ HAWKEYE CAPTAIN Herb Thompson, high scorer for the home forces with 21 points, and flashy guard Ken Jarnagin ignited the surge which began with a long one-hander after 90 seconds of ac- tion. When Wolverine guard Don Eaddy found the range on a one-hander almost five minutes later, Coach Bill Perigo's charg- es seemed hopelessly outclassed in front of the partisan Iowa crowd. Nevertheless, the scrappy Mich- igan five fought to within five points of the winners midway .through the second quarter and within six points early in the final session before succumbing to its first defeat in three outings this season. * * * . A LAST-GASP drive in the waning seconds of the third per- iod and the opening minutes of the final chukker stunned the ca- pacity 9,000 fans in the Hawkeye Field House. Iowa had gone ahead, 46-26, at halftime, and maintained that advantage for the first two minutes of the third quarter. Then 6-4 forward John Codwell notched six quick markers be- fore fouling out at 7:02 to close the gap to 49-36. Codwell had the tough job of guarding Iowa's high-scoring for- ward Deacon Davis. The Houston, Texas junior held the vaunted Hawkeye marksman to two field See IOWA HANDS, Page 3 Atomic Energy Report Released WASHINGTON-(P) -The use of atomic energy instead of coal or other standard fuels to pro- duce electric power economically still may be anywhere from ten to fifty years away. That wide range of estimates by some of the top nuclear physicists and industrial experts of the na- tion appeared last night in a 400- page report of the joint Congres- sional Committee on Atomic En- ergy. 'Easy There, Boys' -Daily-Bruce Knoll OFFICIALS BREAK UP AN ALTERCATION IN THE COLISEUM LAST NIGHT MUTINY AGAINST THE BOUNTY: Washington Newsmen Kid Politicos TWELVE.PAGES Wolverines Stop Toronto Icemen Matchefts, McKennell, Keyes Shine In 6-3 Win; Thompson Cup Secure By PAUL GREENBERG Michigan's top-ranked hockey squad blasted to its eleventh straight win last night by dropping a rugged University of Toronto squad, 6-3. The Wolverines' first line of Captain John Matchefts at center with seniors John McKennell and Earl Keyes again made the differ- ence, garnering nine points. Matchefts led the scoring with four tallies scored on a goal and three assists. McKENNELL got three counters on a pair of goals and an assist and Keyes got two with one score and one assist. Other Wolverines i WASHINGTON - (P) - Demo- cratic refugees from the "Mutiny against the Bounty"-the 1952 presidential election-are landing from their long boat on a remote island. In the far away Catskill Moun- tains the thunder of last month's election has just awakened Rip Van GOP Winkle from a slumber of 20 years. The electoral college is getting Branch Seen By Detroiter Last Sunday Barry K. Branch, '56, who is still missing from the University was last seen at the Detroit Institute of Arts on Dec. 7 by one of his former high school friends, The Daily learned last night. Branch left his room in Taylor House, South Quad Dec. 5 to visit his father in Flint. However, he never arrived at his proposed des- tination. Police were informed of his disappearance when he failed to return for his classes Monday. ACCORDING to the missing boy's mother, Mrs. 'T. W. Hoov.er, Branch met Brewster Campbell at the art institute last Sunday where they conversed for some time. Campbell informed Mrs. Hoover of this when he heard that a state- wide search had started to trace the whereabouts of the student. "Campbell claims that Barry seemed quite content with school when he spoke with him," Mrs. Hoover said. Although Branch appeared to be alright at the time, she felt that something had happened to him in the interim. In an effort to find Branch the police have checked with armed forces recruiting stations but they have been unable to come up with any further information. Earlier yesterday, Dean of Men, Walter Rea said he had not heard anything further on the matter. SWorld News Roundup By the Associated Press A Republican Spokesman yes- terday flatly repudiated talk of discontinuing the recount and de- manded an immediate precinct audit by adding machine from ev- ery county in Michigan. With 1,053 precincts through- out Michigan finished, Gov. Wil- liams, Democratic candidate seek- ing his third term, yesterday led Alger by 9,223 votes. a new faculty and a new football team, thanks to the voters. f:* * * ALL THIS was enacted last night at the hotel where the Grid- iron Club, an organization of Washington newspaper corres- pondents, held its winter dinner. It was the 67-year old club's first post-election gathering and in tra- ditional style leaders of both par- ties were toasted and then roasted in musical and humorous skits. About 500 guests attended, in- cluding foreign diplomats, mem- bers of the Truman cabinet and of the Eisenhower cabinet-to- be, supreme court justices and leaders in fields of government, journalism and business. Vice president-elect Richard M. Nixon and Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson were speakers. By tradition their remarks were off-the-record. Vice- president Barkley was the ranking guest. The traditional speech made in a darkened room, the "speech in the dark," was by Paul R. Leach, Washington bureau chief of the Chicago Daily News and the Knight newspapers, the 1952 club president. Leach said some people believed Wage Head Designated WASHINGTON-(UP)-President Truman, balked in his quest for business men to serve on the Wage Stabilization Board, yes- terday authorized Economic Sta- bilizer Roger L. Putnam to take over the task of controlling wages. Putnam, in turn, will delegate the authority to the four men now representing the public on the wage board. He said they will tackle a pending logjam of thous- ands of wage raise cases as soon as the necessary documents are signed. The wage board is a three-part agency, consisting of public in- dustry and labor members. It has been paralyzed for a week because seven industry members resigned with a hot blast at Truman's ac- tion in granting John L. Lewis' soft coal miners a $1.90 daily wage raise. Santa Claus had been shot, at last, on Nov. 4 by the voters. But he added Santa Claus merely was in hiding as John L. Lewis soon found out. (After the election President Truman granted Lewis' soft coal miners a $1.90 daily wage increase, overruling the Wage Stabilization Board). As a take-off on General Eisen- hower's campaign "crusade" theme, members of the gridiron chorus were costumed as crusaders and marched solemnly upon the stage to set the 1952 gridiron theme. Four Named To Fill Posts On Judiciary New appointments to the Men's Judiciary Council have been an- nounced by the Student Legisla- ture Cabinet. The four vacant posts will be filled by David Wood, Grad., Stan- ley Weinberger, Grad., Leonard Sandweis, '53, and David Brown, '53. David Wood, who has been ap- pointed for a full year, is a mem- ber of the Executive Council of the Lawyers Club and a student member of the Board of Gover- nors of the Lawyers Club. A grad- uate of Miami University, he par- ticipated in student government on that campus. Stanley Weinberger previously served on Men's Judiciary Coun- cil for one semester a year ago. Now attending Law School, he has also been appointed to a full year term on the council. Leonard Sandweis, who will serve for one semester, is a mem- ber of the Kelsey House Council, a board member of the Students for Democratic Action and has actively participated in the Young Democrats and Students for Stev- enson. David Brown was reappointed to the Judiciary after serving a year's term. Prior to his work on the Men's Council, he was a member of Student Legislature. The four men were selected from a total of 22 who were interviewed by the SL cabinet yesterday.. who hit the scoring column were defenseman Jim Haas with two assists, wings Telly Mascarin and Doug Mullen with one goal each and Bert Dunn and Alex McClel- lan, with one assist apiece. Conspicuous in its absence from the scoring column was the second line of Doug Phil- pott at center flanked by George Chin and Pat Cooney. The unit just didn't seem to click-but fortunately for Coach Vic Hey- liger the first and third lines made up the breech with quite a bit to spare. Toronto, a little road-weary af- ter playing four games in Colo- rado and tying Michigan State, 6-6, at East Lansing on Friday night didn't look much like the Canadian powerhouses that have invaded Ann Arbor in the past. The James Thompson cup, the "little brown jug" of the Toron- to-Michigan ice rivalry never even quavered on its shelf in the tro- phy case down at the Coliseum. S. , EARL KEYES, last year's cap- tain, opened the scoring with only 2:52 gone in the first period when he caged a short shot from in front of the nets after a brilliant passing play by his tnemates Matchefts and McKennell. Toronto came right back as center Bob Primeau picked up a loose puck on a blind pass from Michigan defenseman Reg Shave and beat goalie Willard Ikola at 3:18. But the great Wolverine first line punched out in front again as Matchefts slammed in a pass from Keyes at 14:04, allowing Coach Hey- liger's charges to leave the rink with a 2-1 first period lead. Toronta-born McKennell then skated down the right side in daz- zling fashion and slipped the rub- ber past the Blue's goalie. From here on in, Heyliger began to count more and more on his third line, while resting the first two trios. THE MULLEN-Mascarin-Dunn combination came through too. Defenseman Haas took one along the left Toronto boards and cen- tered over to Mascarin who blast- ed it into the twines at 12:23. Less See 'M' ICEMEN, Page 3 SL Proposal To Be Aired The Lecture Committee and four student representatives will meet tomorrow to discuss and possibly reach a decision on the Student Legislature's proposal to end speaker bannings on campus. At the committee's last meeting Dec. 6, "mutually satisfactory pro- gress" was reported in discussion of the SL plan. Administration of the proposal, which would insti- tute post-judgment of speakers under existing Regents' rules, ap- peared then to be the chief point of contention. As in the last meeting, Dave Brown, '53, and Ted Friedman, '53, will join regular non-voting stu- dent representatives Howard Wil- lens, '53, and Phil Berry, Grad., to discuss the plan with the five- man Lecture Committee. Rose Bowl Pact Still Doubtful By JERRY LISKA CHICAGO-(iP)-There is grow- ing indication the Big Ten will renew its Rose Bowl football pact with the Pacific Coast Conference, a confidential Associated Press poll of high conference officials disclosed yesterday. Three surprising features of the poll were, expressions that: 1. Some league members feel powerful Michigan State will vote for renewal despite persis- tent anti-bowl talk by Spartan President John Hannah. 2. Iowa, both pro-and-con the past year, now has "an open mind" on the bowl. 3. Wisconsin may get bowl "reli- gion" on its Pasadena junket Jan. 1. THE P.C.C. Thursday asked the Big Ten to sign a new three-year contract to replace the current three-year pact which expires with the 1954 bowl game. An answer was asked by next June 5. Despite reports the Big Ten will let- the agreement die with the 1954 game, the AP survey showed the renewal ballot might carry by the same 6-4 vote that approved the present series. It was reported that the Uni- versity will go into the Rose Bowl meetings "with an open mind" and make a decision on basis of discussions. However, President Harfan H. Hatcher re- cently said the University in two Rose Bowl visits found nothing objectionable. Michigan State, Iowa and Wis- consin, only 19 days from a Rose Bowl debut will be the key school in balloting, the poll indicated. * * * WISCONSIN voted against the current pact as did Minnesota, Northwestern and Purdue, all three firmly opposed to renewal. But a prominent Wisconsin of- ficial told the Associated Press: "If the student body finds the Rose Bowl experience good and wholesome, then a favorable vote may come. It's hard to pre. diet now. Indiana stated outright favor of renewal, while Illinois, Mich- igan and Ohio State left the im- pression they haven't changed their previous favoring position. Airport Bus Ducats on Sale Tomorrow Students may sign up from 1 to 4 p.m. tomorrow through Thurs- day in the Administration Bldg, for reservations aboard Wolverine Club sponsored buses to Willow Run Airport on Friday. Buses will leave the Union at 12:15 p.m., 2:45 p.m., 4 p.m. and 5:15 p.m. reaching the Airport in time for major flight departures. The charge will be 75 cents per person and students should allow about 30 minutes for the trip. According to club member Bud Charlip, Spec., two additional buses will be scheduled at 11 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. if enough students want to go to Willow Run at those times. Charlip also announced that there would be buses returning to Ann Arbor at 8:30 p.m., 9:30 p.m. IFC Throws a Party MEN SELDOM MAKE PASSES? Fair Sex Has More Eye Trouble By JANE HOWARD Women have more trouble with their eyes than men-at least on the Universit'y campus. This is revealed in a Health Service report which shows that while 60 per cent of campus wo- is that while in 1920 farsighted- ness was much more common than myopia, or nearsightedness, today the figures for the two eye ail- ments are nearly equal. Since overuse of the eyes in close work is an acknowledged cause of a man's appeal. Doris Bengtsson, '56, commented, "Glasses can make a guy look real intellectual, even if he isn't." * * * FOR COSMETIC and practical reasons, a few students own con- Mi i... . -.--. .