. SENATE CENSURE HEARINGS See Page 4 Y Latest Deadline in the State Dai41 ,,:: d , RAIN, COOLER VOL. LXV. No. 53 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1954 'FOUR PAGES I osU * * * * * * * 'HOPALONG' CASSADY ...flashy halfback BOB WATKINS . high-scaring Buckeye 2,000 Coach Lauds Enthusiasm. Of Students University Seats Completely Sold By LEE MARKS More than 2,000 cheering stu- dents gave the football team a rousing send-off yesterday at a last minute rally in front of Yost Field House. Planned only a few days ago by Dick Balzhiser, '55E, former Michigan grid star, the rally start- ed at 2 p.m. when students con- verged on the Union. Led from the Union by Phi Gam- ma Delta's Fiji Marching Band and the Taylor House Marching Band, they marched en masse to the Field House. Enthusiastic Rooters The enthusiastic rooters were led by cheerleaders perched on a ledge over the Field House en- trance until Master of Ceremonies Howard Nemoravski, '55E, mount- ed the platform. Chants of "Hold that line," were sent up as a bus came up State St. towards the Union. Aft- er a few minutes, the line gave and the big bus lumbered up the street. Tackle Art Walker, '55, was in- troduced first. "Bennie said vic- tory will go to the team that wants to win most and has the courage," he said, adding, "We've got the courage." Oosterbaan Thanks Crowd Finally, in answer to continued yells of, "We want Bennie," the head coach appeared and "Rolled- em-up." Oosterbaan thanked the crowd for its spirit. Introduced by Nemoravski as "A small fellow," six foot three inch Ron Kramer, '57, Michigan's bid for All-American honors, said "I'm just scared." Lou Baldacci, '56, following Kramer, told the crowd. "After Ron's great speech, I haven't got a word to say." Sold Out An estimated 1,000 students will invade Columbus, Ohio for today's climactic battle. OSU's Director of Ticket Sales George Staten said Michigan's entire allotment of 6,000 seats were sold long ago. Scalpers are reported to be get- ting .$20 and $30 for tickets. Excitedstudents talked contin- uousy about Michigan's Rose Bowl chances, largely dependant on to- day's game. Some appeared opti- mistic while others said, "We're hoping, but it's an uphill fight." One enterprising student capi- talized on partisan feeling by bet- ting on Ohio State and getting a point spread of up to six points. Michigan will be two touchdown underdogs at game time. An exasperated teacher told her class yesterday morning, "Why is everybody talking so much? The game doesn't start for a day and a half." Panel Discusses Desegregation It is difficult for many students to adapt themselves to the inter- racial society which exists, Dean of Women Deborah Bacon said at a Canterbury panel discussion last night. Dean Bacon continued that in a large university such as our own, students are primarily concerned with their own existences, and adapting themselves emotionally to the problem is a big step for 0r te Spirite Sacked PITT SURGH OP)-- Two sad sacks from Penn State will be in the bag for the University of Pittsburgh today when the schools renew their traditional football rivalry here. They're two luckless lads who invaded the Pitt campus last Monday with paint brushes in hand for a little pre-game dec- orating expedition. Trouble is, they got themselves caught by the brothers of Pitt's Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity. They've been held captive at the fraternity house since. Today at halftime they'll be wrapped up in a big burlap bag and dumped in front of the State cheering section. Their captors refused to re- veal the identity of the pair.f Rooters Attend Millions To View Televised Contest 82,000 Expected at Scene of Finale As Michigan Faces Unbeaten Bucks By DAVE LIVINGSTON Daily Sports Editor Special to The Daily COLUMBUS-Coach Bennie Oosterbaan and his Michigan grid- ders moved into this football-mad town late yesterday afternoon in- tent on stopping Ohio State's rampaging gridiron machine A capacity crowd of 82,600 will jam the Ohio Stadium at 1:30 this afternoon when the Wolverines and Buckeyes square off in a na- tionally televised struggle that will determine the Big Ten Cham- pionship and possibly a Rose Bowl berth. Today's contest promises to be one of the greatest in a series in which it has been the exception rather than the rule when the tra- LHears ditional season finale didn't help decide the Conference laurels. Freed Smith Ohio Undefeated Coach Woody Hayes' Bucks have A Vi T i' 1 swept through eight games, in- Act ViolaRtor cluding six in the Big Ten, without a scratch, and a victory today Regina Frankfeld, convicted un- would give them their first perfect der the Smith Act, visited Ann Ar- season and undisputed Conference bodetery and spe A t A crownsince 1944. bor. yesterday and spoke with Ohio, currently rated the top members of the Labor Youth team in the country, is generally League. given a two-touchdown edge over Mrs. Frenkfeld explained that a Wolverine team that has fought she came to the University be- an up-hill battle all year. cause of an interest in attacks In contrast to the Buckeyes, on academic freedom. She is also Michigan has everything to gain and comparatively itetls, seeking amnestyBforrpolitican h little to lose. y f tcl Before the season started the Wol- DANNY CLINE ... senior halfback * * Rally Court Convicts Army Officer For Cruelty AUGUSTA, Ga. (R)-Second Lt. Charles C. Anderson, 24-year-old Korean combat veteran, was con- victed by court-martial yesterday of mistreating Army trainees at Camp Gordon and dismissed from the service. A general court-martial also or- Aered him to forfeit all allow- ances. A 10-man court found Anderson guilty of charges that he mnal-1 treated trainees by ordering one man hung from a tree by the ankles and ordered excessive physical ex- ercise for others as disciplinary ? measures. Anderson. a native of St. Louis who won an officer's commission at Ft. Benning, Ga., after return- ing from Korea, testified he used tough measures to "shape up" Co. A. of the 1st Regiment, which he described as "slovenly." He said he was given only 11 days in which to get the company into shape. The charges against Anderson' resulted in removal of Col. James 0. Wade as commanding officer of the camp's replacement training center. Detroiters Refuse To Give Testimony WASHINGTON (A) - All five witnesses called before the House Un-American Activities Commit- tee today refused to testify when asked for information about sus-: pected Communist activity in the Detroit and Dayton, Ohio, areas. They invoked either the Fifth Constitutional Amendment, which protects persons from testifying against themselves, or the First Amendment, guaranteeing freedom of speech. { 1 c RON KRAMER ... mammoth sophomore, awaits Buckeyes German Cabinet P'asses : ' u A AP d // .~Eb L' l "- W W BONN, Germany (Al-Chancellor Konrad Adenauer's Cabinet over- ART WALKER ... protects 'M' line rode a rebellion by five ministers yesterday and approved the Paris prisoners" and intends to talk with various people here about the two agreements to bring West Germany into the Western defense alliance. probl prbems, Bills to ratify the agreements were sent immediately to Parlia- ment amid predictions ,by Adenauer and his party leaders that ratifi- Iwhere she served 20 months of a cation will be completed by mid-January. But there were indications two-year sentence, Mrs. Frankfeld of rough sailing ahead. described her trial as one in which Four Cabinet ministers of the Free Democratic party-West Ger- ideas, and not actions, were tried. man's third largest-and a member of Adenauer's own Christian Comments on McCarthy Democrats stood up and said "No" when the Cabinet voted. In regard to the censure proceed- This made the vote 13 to 5 for the r> -- --- -ings against Sen. Joseph McCar- agreements with one minister ab- A thy, Mrs. Frankfeld said, "It's a sent. Senator s ArI real warning to the American peo- Open Rebellion ple when a committee that is elect- First'Open Rebel.ion . ed by the Senate itself is subjected This was the first open rebellion i 1y Br to such abuse." in Adenauer's Cabinet on a major However, she felt it is "not only Michigan Line-up OHIO STATE vs. Dugger ..LE Hilinski LT D. Williams LG Thornton C Reichenbach RG Machinsky RT Brubaker RE Leggett QB Cassady HB Watkins' HB Bobo F R MICHIGAN Kramer Walker Cachey Snider Meads Geyer Maentz Maddock Shannon Cline Badacci HUBERT BOBO ... jarring fullback foreign policy issue and it made the Cabinet decision a questionable" victory for the 78-year-old Chan- cellos. The opposition of the five minis- ters was directed against the con- troversial French-German agree- ment to make the German popu- lated Saar a "European" terri- tory. This agreement is one of the Paris accords. f Fear Loss of Saar The Free Democrats maintain the strategic industrial Saar will be lost to Germany permanently if this agi'eement is ratified. They approve the other Paris agree- ments to restore German sover- eignty, create a West European Union and admit West Germany into NATO. WASHINGTON UW-The condition! of Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy. (R- Wis.), whose ailing arm is holding up Senate consideration of a move to censure him, was reported "a little improved" yesterday. There still was no definite word from Bethesda Naval Hospital,' however, how soon Sen. McCarthy will be well enough to leave the hospital. The Senate called an 11-day halt in the censure debate Thursday on the basis of a medical report say- ing McCarthy's elbow injury had resulted in "traumatic bursitis" and treatment would keep him hospitalized until Nov. 29. Senators split sharply on wheth- er there now will be any final ac- tion on the censure move at the1 now-interrupted special session ofj the Senate, which must end Dec. 24. a question of McCarthy, but what McCarthyism stands for today. "Attacks which appear to be at- tacks on people with progressive ideas are more than that," she commented. "It has become a stepped-up process . . . right now the right to knowledge is under' great attack." Accompanied by Mrs. Wellman Mrs. Frankfeld was accompan- ied by Peggy Wellman, wife of Saul Wellman, who has been con- victed under the Smith Act and is appealing his case. . She has been ordered deported to Canada under the Walter-McCar- I ran Act. Mrs. Frankfeld will speak Sun- day at the A. C. Williams Memorial Church in Detroit and will leave , for New York Monday. JOHN DOS PASSOS: verines were given slight chance of . figuring in the title fight, and aft- er Army walloped them, 26-7, in their second game, they were wit- ten off by many as second-raters. 'M' Bounces Back The next week Michigan bounc- ed back to stun Iowa's high-fly- ing Hawkeyes, 14-13, and since have knocked Minnesota out of the title race with an amazing 34-0 win and added victories over Northwestern, Illinois and Michi- gan State, with a surprising 13-9 loss to Indiana sandwiched in be- tween. The net result leaves the Wol- verines, as the, only team with a chance to share the title with Ohio State. A Michigan triumph would give both teams a 6-1 Big Ten rec- ord, with the Rose Bowl entry to be decided late tonight by a vote of the ten Conference athletic di- rectors. Should Michigan lose it could fall to a tie for third place -in the standings, depending on the out- come of the Minnesota-Wisconsin game. Aim for First Title Since '50 The Wolverines will attempt to bring Michigan, its first football crown since .1950, a year that marked the end of a four year string of championships that be- gan with Fritz Crisler's great 1947 team and continued for three vears under Oosterbaan's tutorship. The Wolverines, since the in- ception of the Big Ten in 1896. have won outright or shared 18 football titles, while the Buck- eyes can claim eight. In the all-time Ohio State- Michigan series the Maize and Blue has won 33, lost 13, and tied four. Tn +he ast+ nine en +h th rink. LOU BALDACCI .. . sparks Wolverines Novelist Discusses Writing Career DAVE LEGGETT ... OSU sharpshooter- By PHYLLIS LIPSKY You can always tell when people care about something, according to novelist John Dos Passos, because "they scream in unison." Today, Dos Passos believes, they scream when someone steps on the toes of the managerial, or bureaucratic class.' What's happening in this country, in the creation of a new mana- gerial class, Dos Passos said, is the same thing that has happened in a more extreme form in Russia. Spoke on "Jefferson's Times" The novelist, who came to Ann Arbor to give a speech Thursday evening on "Jefferson's Times," declared "when I was a kid" big business was a vested interest, which couldn't be attacked. Since his trilogy, "U.S.A.," was written in 1936, "the whole picture has changed," he said. Dos Passos, who "hadn't intended to do it as a business" started writing professionally when he came out of the army after World War I, because "I had a lot of things on my chest." ED HICKEY *.. speedy Wolverine ..... srem> to the Droblem is a bi~si:r. ... ....... .. '..a+:t...1; :fori, g... . ;::