* BASEBALL: A PROPOSED REMEDY See Page 4 -.a Ait qrnt iI + t Latest Deadline in the State CLOUDY, SHOWERS VOL. LXV, No. 9 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1954 SIX PAGES GiantsWin,5-2, On Rhodes'Blast Dusty' Lofts Fly Ball into Stands; Crowd of 52,751 at Series Opener Special to The Daily Seng. Jenner Plans More Questioning Seeks Review Of Some Phases WASHINGlTON(R)-Sen. Jenner Student Legislature Protests Nickerson Dismissal- of Prof. By WARREN WERTHEIMER Associate Sports Editor On the wings of Dusty Rhodes' three-run homer in the bottom of the 10th inning, New York's Giants toppled the Cleveland Indians, 5-2, before a crowd of 52,751 and jumped oft to a 1-0 lead in the 1954 World Series. Rhodes' blow, hit off loser Bob Lemon, was a lazy fly ball which barely made the short right field. stands, and endedone of the most exciting and nerve-rocking World Series games ever played. Willie May, who had walked and stole second, andd Hank Thompson who was intentionally passed, preceded the Giants' clutch pinch-hitter across the plate. Mays not only tallied the winning run, but it was his sensational Scatch two innings earlier which saved the game for Leo Durocher. SquilareWertz Gets Fourth Hits With first and second occupied , and nobody out -except Giant~ S e R p starter Sal Maglie, who had just? U Srenus I ~ :7-1 (R-Ind) chairman of the Senate Rules Committee, disclosed yes- terday he intends to review cer- tain phases of the inquiry which resulted in a recommendation that Sen. Joseph McCarthy (R-Wis) be censured for some of his official conduct. Sen. Jenner said in an interview that Sen. Watkins (R-Ukah) , head , . t i , French Reported- Near Agreement. (ioifreeeMay End TodayasUS BofritisOerTas U.S. Sft.British, Offer 'Threat and Promise' Vote 2 t 4 To Approve C&E Motion German Student Needs Lodging By MURRY FRYMER . ti. f r Li 1IAU UIl DETROIT OP-The violence-rid- den, 107-day strike at the Square D. Co.'s Detroit plant was settled unexpectedly yesterday. It came less than 24 hours after three leaders of the striking inde- pendent United Electrical Workers had been sentenced to 30 days in jail and fined $250 for. violating an injunction against mass picketing. Terms of the settlement were not announced and still are subject to ratification by the 1,200-member Square D local of the UE tomor- row. of the special Senate group 'which LOO passed judgment on Sen. McCar- and a p thy, would be called before the agreem Rules Committee to explain, among attack. other things, why he "conducted a one-man hearing" at one point in Firs the probe. nationc Four Changes have to Sen. Watkins will also be asked about four changes the special committee proposed be made in the rules for conducting Senate In- vestigations, Sen. Jenner said. After word of this latest move Del reached Sen. Watkins, he told news- men he would have nothing to say about it for the time being. Adlai Sen. Jenner, a good friend of feature Sen. McCarthy, says "many words rally to will be spoken" after the Senate day at convenes Nov. 8 to decide whether tioit. the Wisconsin Republican merits an official and public rebuke. The1 Closed Door tial can Mennen The special committee was made aspirant up of three Republicans and three speakin Democrats. Democr Sen. Jenner's reference to a licity ci Issues Settled j"one-man hearing" concerns a public E. M. Sconyers, federal media- ]. closed door hearing at which Wat- rally. TI tor, and George E. Bowles, chair- ' kins questioned Charles L. Watkins, charge. man of the state labor mediation WILLIE MAYS Senate parliamentarian and no rel- board, announced all issues in dis- ... fleet fielder ative of the Utah senator, about Stever pute .had been settled, following a the validity of a Senate Elections approxii series of secret company-union ne- been replaced by Don Liddle, Vic subcommittee which investigated broadca gotiations today. Membership rati- Wertz, who was to go four for five, Sen. McCarthy's finances in 1951- out Mic fication under such circumstances came to bat. i 52. The A usually is automatic. The big Inidan first sacker One of the grounds advanced by Jefferso Only a few hours earlier the un- socked off of Liddle's curves into the Watkins committee for cen- Isle Bri ion had announced it would submit deep center, apparently good for suring Sen. McCarthy was that he - to its membership tomorrow the a triple and two runs. But the Gi- treated the subcommittee contem- major stumbling block dividing the ants' amazing center fielder whir- tuously. Defending himself, the !Se company and strikers over the last led, raced at top speed away from Wisconsin senator challenged the week. That was whether 27 strik- the plate and with his back to legal status of the subcommittee. edr ers the company accused of picket home caught the ball over his ______ line violence would be rehired; or shoulder, two feet from the bleach- their fate left to binding arbitra- er wall. S 1e. tion. It was one of the most spectac- U S,. vrant e Sen. C Wage Dispute ular catches ever made, not only .Leonar Dispute over wages and working in a Series contest, but in any IP an Indochina governo conditions to be written into a new game. at an " contract caused the walkout June Marv Grissom then came into ty" give 15. The old contract lapsed a month huil for the New Yorkers and aft- can Clu earlier. A major company demand er walking Dale Mitchell to fill the was a no-strike clause, bases, he struck out Dave Pope -WASHINGTON (J)--The United The The company initiated a back-to- and got Jim Hegam on a fly to I States and France announced by the left which Monte Irvin caught at agreement late yesterday on a which i work movement Sept. 2. Violence, the base of the wall. ;broad new plan to save Indochina Locke ax flared quickly. Several were hurt, but none seriously, in picket line Grissom Retires Rosen from further Communist conquest room of skirmishes. More than 150 Detroit Grissom had to work out of two American officials said it called scene of policemen were assigned to keep more tight spots before he could for more than 700 million dollars New o order, but sometimes lost control. See LONG BLOW, Page 3 annually in United States. .re: M The French agreed they would deit; M keep militray forces in southern vice-pre 4LJ~Dev lopm nt onci Viet Nam for the time being, with- BAd, t drawing troops from their 10 di- '57, secr visions only gradually-as native forces are built up to fill the gap. To Hold Alumni Con"Lference l eea em najitcm 1 The agreement was announced in general terms in a joint com- 1 The University's Development Council will be spotlighted this munique by France and the Unit- week-end when more than 100 alumni will be on hand for the first ed States, capping three days of f annual Conference of Advisory Chairmen for the Council. cials said reresentatives of the+ The Chairmen were appointed in alumni centers all over the three Indochinese states - Viet country in order to facilitate the Council's long-range program Nam, Laos and Cambodia - had Ren for the University's development. been consulted and were "very schools The conference will open officially at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow in the much pleased" with the new ar- ruling b Union when Development Council functions and the role of advisory 1 rangements. The chairmen will be discussed. Among' -- - - -- -'- ------- special the speakers will be President- Alabama Emeritus Alexander' G. Ruthven It I and Vice-President Marvin L. Nie- srk huss strike f schools Regent Roscoe O Bonnisteel will and Ne address tomorrow's dinner meet- Actio ing with President Harlan H. contemp Hatcher presiding. Citations of Hon- ss si. or wvill be piresented at this tune tox Virginia Voss, '54 and Dick Balzhi- to ask ser, '54, former student Develop- gradual ment Council members, and oth- Negro c ers who served with the Council The C last year. Dec. 6. NDON {P)-The United States and Britain, with a threat promise, last night brought jittery France near a long sought ent to rearm West Germany in defense against Communist 1 st Secretary of State John Foster Dulles warned the nine- conference discussing the problem that American troops may be pulled out of Europe if France rejects plans to line -- _{?up German land, air and sea forces within the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. l P aBritish Offer " Next Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden announced a British offer r to keep four divisions, plus a tac- tical air force, on the European E. Stevenson will be the mainland indefinitely provided the d speaker at a campaign conference agreed on bringing a1 be held at 8 p.m. Satur- rearmed Germany into NATO. the Naval Armory in De- The British - American broad- side appeared carefully timed to assure the success of the confer- 1952 Democratic Presiden- ence, which had been called to ndidate will join Gov. G. figure out ways of freeing West Williams and Senatorial Germany and rearming her as a L Patrick V. McNamara in full and equal 15th member of g to the Wayne County NATO. at Club. According to pub- Westa German Chancellor Kon- sairman John Murray the rad Adenauer, as soon as the nine is invited to attend the, foreign ministers ended their ses- 'here will be no admittance sion, confidently told newsmen he thought the conference would end Anson s address will begin at in success tonight. imately 10 p.m. and will be Adenauer, 78, told the newsmen: st and televised through- .I think we can take a deep higan. breath if the rest of the confer- Armory is located on East ence takes its expected course." )n one block from the Bell That course was unofficially in-' dge in Detroit. dicated by officials attending the talks: t 1. The United States, Britain .iU!Fo IP ot e andFrance probably will an-, nounce their intention to end the S peer occupation of West Germany, re- storing to the federal republic vir- 1 tually full control over its internal Charles Potter and Donald and external affairs. The Germans , Republican candidate for in turn will issue a counter-decla- )rareschduld t apearration offering to ,join NATO and; r, are scheduled to appear a new seven-nation European al- Eisenhower Birthday Par- fiance-where they will be allowed en by the Young Republi- .to rearm within clearly marked b on October 13. limits. progm .2. The Brussels alliance of 1948; program will be executed - a 50-year British-French-Bel- new board of the club gian - Dutch - Luxembourg pact ncludes Bill Hanks, Jim against aggression-will be revised id Lw Engman. The ball- to admit West Germany and Italy, f the Union will be the both enemies of the Allies in the festivities. World War II Experts of the sev- officers elected by the YR's en nations will be assigned to alcom Schlusberg, presi- write a protocol-or supplement- Seymour Greenstone, '55, to the treaty giving the alliance sident; Donald Nissle. '55 some powers to control the arms easurer and Tim Richard, and armies of its continental; etary. members. The Student Legislature voted 22 to 4 last night to issue formal pro- test over the University dismissal of Prof. Mark Nickerson. Seven representatives abstained from the voting. The protest motion, read to the floor by Joan Bryan, '56, for the Culture and Education committee of SL, stated that the professor's dismissal was, in essence, due to his political beliefs. "Communist in Spirit" Miss Bryan stated that only one of three committees investigating --aly-MarjCrozier the Nickerson case recommended -Daiy-Ma croier disinissal. This, she said, was on GOV. WILLIAMS SPEAKS AT YD MEETING grounds easily reduced to the ar- gument that he was a "Commu- nist in spirit and would repudiate. no part of the Communist pro- gram. WilliamsorEmphascize read, "Prof. Nickerson was guilty of believing an unpopular and ob- jectionable ideology." By LOUISE TYOR The motion continued: "It is par- "In the future, our ability to educate our people will be of greater ticularly reprehensible that such importance than even the atomic bomb," Gov. G. Mennen Williams action should have taken place at, a great university whose tradition told a meeting of' the Young Democrats last night at Rackham and responsibility has always been Auditorium, to encourage freedom of thought Speaking on one of the less "spectacular" of the political issues and diversity of opinion as the best of the campaign, the Governor emphasized the fact that not only ways of attaining truth. state, but the entire nation, does not have "the necessary skilled per- -. SL believes that the dismis- *onnel to reduce unemployment." sal, . .. is in direct opposition to H sea toeunc unmployet. sthe best interests of this university SHe sees_ as the only answer to, this iadti onr. LBproblem an increase in appropria- tions for education. . Debate on the motion was brief, Contradicted Supports Protest Iju ImI W"v Gov. Williams contradicted a statement made by his guberna- Senate Seat torial opponent, Donald Leonard,: who said that "there is only onel RENO, Nev. (Ni-A legal battle issue in this election, and that is] broke out yesterday over the nam- I the existence of a stalemate n ing of a successor to Democratic Lansing." The Governor explaineds Sen Pa Mcarrn, venas em that the many appropriations Sen. Pat McCarran, even as mnem-which have been granted to the bers of the veteran lawmaker's various institutions of higher family planned burial rites for Sat- learning in the past five and one urday. half years could not be "the fruit of a stalemate." State Democratic Chairman Keith Lee challenged Republican Gov. As to his recoi:d of appropria- Charles Russell over whether he tions, Gov. Williams pointed to has the right to appoint 4 succes- funds granted for the construe- sor to fill the remaining two years tion of 25 major college and uni-l of McCarran's fourth term in the versity buildings, in addition toj S . . manysmaller projects. oena ue. ill~l'y J'11C4141 .+l JVLUi. Dies Suddenly "More than $33,000,000, has thus The senator suddenly collapsed been invested in an expansion of and died Tuesday night minutes this most basic of our public re- after he made a strong plea before sources-the education of our a Hawthorne Democratic rally for young men and women." unity in the state Democratic Out-Patient Clinic party. ama Plans Bypass Segregation Ruling I t. I ioving all reference in their state Constitution to public is how Alabama intends to get around U. S. Supreme Court anning separate schools for Negro and white children. proposed constitutional amendment was suggested by a legislative committee and a segregation .committee of the l a Bar Association. would open the way for state-subsidized private schools and rom the state constitution the historic mandate that separate Lee, insisting that Nevada law clearly provides that an election! be held in November, called his State Central Committee to meet tomorrow and name a candidate. Russell, meanwhile, asked Neva- da's attorney general for a ruling. The governor's office said the law "appeared to be lazy and filled with Supreme Court decisions from past cases." Legal advisors to the governor said privately, however, there was no legal provision for electing some? one to fill McCarran's unexpired term. They said the governor's ap- pointee would hold office until Jan- uary 1957. He called attention to the new out-patient clinic and the Angell Hall addition as examples of the legislation at the University. "Because of this five-year ex- pansion program, our University and colleges are able to meet, with a reasonable degree of adequacy, the demands of a college popula- tion which' has increased 24,000 since 1940," he declared. However, according to statisti- cians, the number of people de- siring to attend college in 1970 is estimated to be between 150,000 and 170,000 (The present enroll- ment in institutions of higher learning in the state is 86,000.) 'Supporting the protest, Paul Dor- mont, '56, said, "Even supposing nothing could be done now, if Pres- ident Hatcher, the Regents and the people of Michigan know our feel- ing, they may hesitate to do it again."r Jane Germany, '56, said that "if we strongly believe in academic freedom, we should support the mo- tion." Chuck Skala, '55 BAd, opposed the motion saying, "I feel the man was fired after due consideration by people who know more about the issue than we do. If there was a mistake, the mistake has been done and there's nothing we can do about it." Bart Cowan, '55, a newly ap- pointed SL member also took op- position. "It involves more than academic freedom," he said, "it involves Communism. One of the Commu- nist aims is to repudiate academ- ic freedom." Room Wanted In other SL business, Mrs. Janet Neary, former International Com- mittee head, explained the plight of German exchange student Heinz Kohler who arrived on campus last night. Kohler has as yet no place to stay, Mrs. Neary said. Campus fraternities who would be willing to donate room and board for this semester were requested to call her at NO 8-7436. Most of the SL business con- cerned appointment, elections, and replacements. New Members John Donaldson, Ben Uchitelle, '55, Bart Cowan, and John Mona- ghan were approved as new SL members filling openings devel- oped through resignations. Joan Bryan was voted 'Culture and Education Committee head, and Sandy Hoffman voted to head the Public Relations committee. Jane Germany, '56, present NSA coordinator was voted to fill the vacant Member-at-large post. TV Show Plans Okinawa Report Problems involved with United States military occupation of Oki- must be provided for white gro students. n of this sort has also been lated by Georgia and Mis- st six states are preparing the Supreme Court for mixing of white and hildren in classrooms. Court will hear arguments on means of putting its' ruling outlawing public egregation into effect. sas, Florida, North Caro- ryland, Kansas, and Okla- will appeal for sufficient, Resistance Expected Sas Henderson Resistance by the South to the U.S. Supreme Court ruling which made segregation of white and Negro children in public schools unconstitutional, is to be expected, commented Prof. Algo Henderson of-the School of Education. Student Members Not Appointed Student members of the Devel- oprment Council for the coming year have not yet been appointed. The President will appoint two mem- bers on te recommendation of the Student Affairs Committee, but the status of that organization has been uncertain. The Board of Directors meeting May 17 school s Arkan lina, Ma homa w SIGHTED OFF COAST: SCommunist Fleet Revives SRumors of Pending Attack! ti ti of me and some degree of local op- TAIPEH, FORMOSA UP) - A menacing Chinese Communist ges- However, the rapid progress that i on in working out the problem the border states have made to- ture toward the Matsu Islands opposite Formosa today revived re-i f complying with the ruling, wards integration would have been ports the Reds were preparing to attack some of the Nationalists' Some states such as Louisiana, considered impossible five years offshore islands. Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia ago, he continued. A defense ministry communique said 40 Communist craft were i,