MANGElL LEGEND' See Page 4 L Latest Deadline in the State Drn t RAIN, SNOW VOL. LXV, No. 68 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1954 TWELVE PAGES UN Secretary Asks Direct Talks on Fliers * * * * * * * Wolverines Win Cage Game, 71-56; Icers Tie * * Cable Seeks Montreal (~) Court Team Easily Downs Butler Squad Barron, Eaddy Lead 'M' With 16 Points By DON LINDMAN Michigan guards Don Eaddy and JimBarron scored 16 points apiece last night to lead the Wolverine basketball team to an easy 71-65 win. over an outclassed Butler squad. Although playing listless ball dur- ing most of the encounter, the Wol- verines gained an early 6-0 advan- tage and were never headed. Scoring Honors Butler guard Wally Cox took scoring honors for the night with an 18-point total, scoring 14 in the second half as the Wolverines were unable to halt the 6'-3" Bulldog star. Obviously not emotionally up for the tilt, Coach Bill Perigo's crew played exceptionally well when they had to, but Butler failed to press the Wolverines during most of the game. A fast-breaking offense and a vir- tually airtight defense built up 10- 4 and 27-12 leads in the first half, which ended with Michigan holding a 32-16 advantage. As the half was drawing to a close, however, the Wolverine offense became slipshod at times and continued to be so in the second half, which was an en- tirely different story. Outscore 'M The Bulldogs outscored the! Maize-and-Blue squad by a single point during the last 20 minutes of action, but the Michigan lead was never seriously threatened. The visitors managed to come withinF 10 and 11 points of Wolverines on two occasions, but Perigo's menc were equal to the challenge -andt quickly increased their lead bothr times.t Eaddy, netting five baskets int the first half, led a Michigan at- tack which had the Butler squadf completely befuddled. The fast- breaking Wolverine guards caughta the Bulldog defense napping timei and time again as Eaddy scoredf on four driving layup shots ande Barron netted one.s Guard Jim Shearon, whose speeds and ballhandling ability seems to fit right in with Perigo's running style of offense, drove through and around the Butler defense although failing to net a fieldgoal.d Spectacular DefenseI Even more spectacular during the first half was the Wolverinea defense, which bewildered the visi-t tors. Butler tried elaborate criss-n cross patterns to no avail, often- times failing to get even one shot See SPARKLING, Page 3 b Hockey Squad Rallies Twice To Draw, 3-3 Montreal Netminder Guevremont Stars EFFECTIVE ACTION? Sen. Knowland Praises UN Move on Captured Airmen WASHINGTON (A-Sen. William F. Knowland (R,-Calif.), Repub- lican leader, commended the United Nations yesterday for its prompt -Daily-John Hirtzel UP FOR TWO POINTS-Don Eaddy, M' Geard, went up in the air to sink two points as the Wolverine cagers disposed of the Butler Bulldogs, 71-56. Three of the Bdiier squad-Dave Sheetz (41), Wally Cox (21), and Don Holloway (44)-watch as Eaddy scores.- e Word News Roundup 1 ASSISTANT *TO IKE : Dodge Named to New Foreign Ai;d Policy Post WASHINGTON (R-President Dwight D. Eisenhower called on his financial adviser of European days yesterday to organize and coordi- nate this country's world lvie economic struggle against the spread1 By SOL ROSENIcondemnation of Red China's impri Michigan's out-manned hockey , called for further UN action if nec squad continued on its unbeaten The Californian, who initiallyc path by coming from behind twice of Communist China, said the "fi last night to tie the highly-touted byteUIeealAsml i Montreal Carabins 3-3, before 2,- by the UN General Assembly "is 000 screaming fans at the Colis American fliers released." um. He said it would be "a great mis- After handing its opponents three take" for UN delegates to think goals on momentary lapses, the "they have discharged their full Maize and Blue sextet finally obligation" by passage of the reso- caught up to Montreal early in the lution condemnNg Red Chna ald third period when forward Dick instructing UN Secretary General Dunnigan rammed home a goal. Dag Hammarskjold to make "un- Only the stellar netminding of remitting efforts" to get the fliers Montreal's Cy Guevremont, who released. continually mace seemingly im. Misjudged Temper possible saves, prevented the Wol- If any of them so think, Sen. verines from capturing both games Knowland said, they have "mis- of the weekend series. judged the temper of the American Scoring Divided people." Michigan's scoring was divided. Sen. Alexander R. Wiley (R- as Captain Bill MacFarland, Bob Wis.), chairman of the Senate For- Pitts and Dunnigan beat the Mon- eign Relations Committee, said a treal goaltender. Roland Landry, blockade of Red China such as who beat the Wolverine's Larne Sen. Knowland had proposed might Howes twice last night, added an- lead the United States into a Com- other goal to his scoring record.,I munist trap. Montreal wingers Lameroux and "A blockade is probably the very Roneck rounded out the Carabins thing the Soviet Communists want scoring, us to do in order to precipitate us Dunnigan's tying goal ended two. into an endless, bloody and futile and a half periods of futility for battle with the Peking govern- the Maize and Blue pucksters. Tak- ment," he said. ing a perfect pass from MacFar- 'Act of War' land, the rookie winger from Ed-! In opposing a blockade, he said monton, Canada, skated around it would be "very definitely an act the lone defenseman, and closed in of war." He said it might mean im- on Guevremont. mediate death for the imprisoned Faking with his shoulder, Dun- Americans, could ignite World War nigan made the goalie commit him- III and would possibly bring this self, and easily blasted the puck country into conflict "With the ships into the open corner of the net. of neutral nations." Roneck Scores Sen. Wiley took his stand in a The spectators had hardly been 1 letter to the Brown County, Wis., seated when Roneck broke the Council of the Veterans of Foreign scoring ice with a goal at 1:56 of Wars. the first period. Leading a three In making the letter public, Sen. man rush, he carried the puck be- Wiley said he was replying to a hind the Wolverine cage, skated up resolution adopted by the council eeDUNNIGAN, Page 3 asking that Red China be block- SeeUaaded and any other "military URVEY-forces be used'if necessary to ob- S tain the release of the Americans." Sen. Knowland, asked if he still Children 'Too favored a blockade, replied that he didn't know just what other ac- .D stion the UN itself contemplated if . $$ it got a negative response from Peiping. E f l , sonment of 11 American airmen but essary to free the fliers. called for a United States blockade nal test" of the resolution adopted how effective it is in getting the 0, By The Associated Press Mail Speeded Up WASHINGTON - Delivery of "regular" letters bearing three- cent stamps has been speeded up by from 24 to 48 hours between major Pacific coast cities during the first 17 days of operation of the experimental West coast air- lift, Postmaster General Summer- field said yesterday. "Much business mail is being advanced 24 hours in delivery and in some cases 48 hours," Summer- field said, and reports show deliv- eries of residential mail "show similar advances in most in- stances." * . * Premier To Visit . . LONDON - The Red China ra- dio said yesterday Burma's .Pre- mier U Nu plans a trip to Wash- ington soon in an effort to bring about an understanding between the United States and Commu- nist China. U Nu is winding up a good will tour of China. Friday night he told a banquet he felt it would such an understanding as is gen- not be as difficult to bring about erally supposed. * * * UN Censure .. . UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. - The United Nations General Assembly voted 50 to 5 yesterday to approve a report blaming the Soviet Union, Red China and North Korea for the breakdown of the Korean peace talks at Geneva last sum- mer. The five opposing were the So- viet bloc. India, Indonesia, Syria and Burma abstainea. of Communism. In an action parallelling in soi military services, the President nan a new Cabinet-level council on for Russia Sends New Message On Fightd4s MOSCOW AP)--Soviet Russia in a note warned the American gov- ernment today that providing; fighter 'coverage for reconnais- sance flights'near Soviet territory would increase the danger of loss of American life. The warning was contained in a new note on the shooting down. of a United States RB29 photo- mapping bomber near the north- east tip of Japan Nov. 7. The note was handed the American ambas- sador'yesterday and was broad- cast by Moscow radio early today. The incident took place near the northeast tip of the Japanese island of Hokkaido. The 11 crew- men bailed out. One was found dead and the other 10 suffered mi- nor injuries. The United States has sent Russia two notes over the inci- dent. One note, immediately aft-; er the shooting, charged the plane was shot down over Japan byi Russian MIG fighters. The second rejected the Soviet contention that the plane in-, truded over Russian territory and called on the Soviet Union to prevent further incidents. me respects the unification of the med Joseph M. Dodge chairman of eign economic policy. Assistant to President Dodge, 63-year-old Detroit bank- ers and Pres. Eisenhower's first budget director, will have the non- salaried title of special assistant to the President. One of his primary jobs will be to try to pull together the conflicting views that have been reported in the President's official family on how best to block Moscow's bid for cold war con- quests. In a letter made public by the White House, Pres. Eisenhower told Dodge he was designating him to "assist and advise me in accom- plishing an orderly development of foreign economic policies and pro- grams and to assure the effective coordination of foreign economic matters of concern to the several departments and agencies of the executive branch." Proper Relation "Because the formulation of for- eign economic policy in many in- stances is an integral part of the formulation of national security policy or of international financial policy," Pres. Eisenhower said, "I want you, as quickly as possible, to establish appropriate working relations with the National Advi- sory Council on International Mon- etary and Financial Problems, re- spectively, to the end that in those instances referred to the desired integration will be effected." Republican Unity Asked WASHINGTON (AP)-Sen.' Wil- liam F. Knowland (R-Calif) call-E ed yesterday for Republican unity behind the Eisenhower legislative program. He asserted that the GOP re- cord in the 84th Congress will have direct bearing on the out- come of the 1956 presidential elec- tion. Sen. Knowland, the Republican Senate leadet, himself has differ- ed from Pres. Eisenhower on some. foreign policy issues, notably in calling for a blockade of Red Chi- na. But the California senator said these and other differences among Republicans . "have been overemphasized and exaggerated." 'Hold Party Together' He said the first task of Re- publican congressional leaders and the President is to "hold the par- ty together and make a construc- tive record of accomplishments in, the 84th Congress." "We have first got to cross the! bridge of 1955 before we get to 1956," Sen. Knowland said. He declined fresh comment on an attack by Sen. Joseph R. Mc-' Carthy (R-Wis) on President Eis-I enhower. Sen. McCarthy accused the President of displaying "a, shrinking show of weakness" to- ward Red China. Immediately af-! ter that attack, Sen. Knowland had said he did not believe the Eis- e n h o w e r administration had shown any softness toward Com- munism. Third Party Talk Sen. Knowland today dismissed talk of a third party movement drawing out of McCarthy's criti- cism of the President.' "I don't think the problem ofI getting the party together is goingI to be as great as some people make it out to be," he said. He went on to point out that in the first year of the 83rd CongressI he personally had been credited' with support of 88 per cent of Pres. Eisenhower's legislative pro- posals, He said this year he had supported 91 per cent of the Pre- sidential proposals. At Peiping Request Parley December 26 UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. OM ~- United Nations Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold has asked Prime Minister Chou En-lai of Red China for direct talks on the case of the 11 American fliers held as spies. He suggested a meeting in Pei- ping around. Dec. 26. The UN released late yesterday 25 hours after it was dispatched to Peiping by Hammarskjold, the text of a brief cable asking for a meet- ing. Hammarskjold said in the message: UN Command Personnel "The General Assembly of the UN has requested me to seek the release of 11 UN Command person- nel captured by Chinese forces onr 12 January 1953 as well as of all other captured personnel of the UN Command still detained. "Taking into consideration all facts and circumstances the sec- retary-general must, in this case, take on himiself a special respon- sibility. In the light of the concern I feel about the issue, I would ap- preciate an opportunity to take this matter up with you personally. For that reason, I would ask you whether you could receive me in Peiping. I would suggest a visit soon after26 December and would, if you accept my proposal, ask you what date at about that time would be suitable to you." Full Weight of Office Hammarskjold thus threw the full weight of his office into what he regards as the greatest assign- ment so far handed the secretary general. He dispatched the cable at 5 p.m. Friday-within minutes after the General Assembly ap- proved 47-5 a resolution condemn- ing Red China for jailing the avia- tors and calling on him to act for their release. - A diplomat in the Soviet bloc in- formed of Hammarskjold's dra- matic and quick action, said he did not expect much to come from it. This diplomat pointed out that the Assembly resolution entrusting Hammarskjold with the assign- ment also condemned Red China for imprisoning the men and hold- ing the other prisoners who desire repatriation. He said this was exactly the wrong way to go about getting the men out and he added that he wondered just how anxious the West was to have the men re- leased. If they really wanted ac- tion, he continued, they would have left out the condemnation. Malik Comments Hammarskjold was reported to have informed Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., chief American delegate, and Anthony Nutting, British minister of state, of his plans. He also was reported to have told, in separate conference, Arthur S. Lall, India's permanent delegate to the UN, and Jacob A. Malik, Soviet delegate, who had maintained throughout heated Assembly debate that the resolution would not have any ef- fect. Malik said the men were spies and they were handled by China as spies and got what spies usually get. Hammarskjold was believed here to be placing reliance on India and Sweden for direct help in his task. Both have recognized Red China. A former official of the Swedish Foreign Office, it was believed he had drawn on the resources of the ~Stockholm government to assist him in communicating with the Reds. Slnderground War' Topic of Lecture Leland Stowe, news and infor- mation director of Radio Free Eu- rope, will speak on "Moscow's Un- derground War for Germany" at 4:10 p.m. tomorrow in Rackham Amphitheater. Stowe has won three awards for foreign reporting, including a Pu- litzer Prize in 1930. He covered the Pan-American Peace Conference of Survey Tells Housing Costs, Discrimination Excessive costs end discrimina- tion are two'chief problems of Ann Arbor housing, according to a re- port by the Citizens' Housing Com- mittee. Based on a survey conducted during the winter of 1953-54 by the Committee and the University's Survey Research Center, the re- port gives no recommendations. Florence Crane, committee chair- man, said the purpose of the report is to give an over-all picture of lo- cal housing. Ne Cost to City The survey was made at no cost to the city. Procedure used was similar to that followed by the Cen- ter in its standard operations. Interviews were taken at 324 households selected at random. Of those interviewed, 72 per cent con- sidered the cost of local housing too high. Forty-two per cent of the sample sensed discrimination in local housing on racial, religious or other grounds. Mobile Population An important part of housing nrnhlrnc nnnnrc AnnA ,..r nv t s Xi 1 4 s Y7 By The Associated Press Today's children are too big for their benches, says the National School Service Institute. The Institute's 90-page report! of a study conducted by Prof. Frederick P. Thieme, of the an- thropology department at the Uni- versity, and former Ann Arbor school teacher Dr. W. Edgar Mar-; tin, also revealed that the old' style bench-desk type of school furniture used by previous gen-; erations is on its way out. Last summer, the two educa- tors took 55 separate measure- ments of 3,318 pupils in ten ele- mentary and secondary schools in the Wayne-Washtenaw countys area. They found that present day adolescents undergoing the char-' acteristic "growth spurt" average the height and weight of those two years older a quarter century ago. Martin attributed increased' weight and growth tendency to improved nutrition, control of# communicable diseases, great ad- vances in medicine, wider diffu- sion and acceptance of nutritional knowledge and standards. AFROTC Chorus To Sing arols Air Force ROTC band and chorus will play and sing Christmas car- ols tomorrow night in Ann 'Arbor. The 55-member band, under the direction of Cadet Lt. Col. John Dudd, will begin its instrumental caroling at the women's residence halls on the hill. The cadets will also visit University and St. Joseph Hospitals, Newberry - Barbour houses and South Quad. They will end their plaving at the Law Quad Raps NationsI But he said that he did not be- lieve Congress or the country would be "satisfied merely by the passage" of the resolution of con- demnation if the American fliers continue in jail. While Sen. Knowland commended the UN Assembly for its prompt- ness of action, he rapped the na- tions that abstained from voting. He said their abstention seemed' hard to comprehend because "they are all nations" that did not fur- nish troops for the UN forces in Korea and yet secure certain pro- tection from collective action by the UN. Student Architects Build'i Modern' Christmas Tree By CAROL PRINS Object of astonished looks of I FOR ATOMIC PLANES: Supercarrier 'Forrestal' Launched NEWPORT NEWS, Va. (R) - T h e United States yesterday launched the mightiest warship of any navy, the supercarrier For- restal, in a ceremony marred by the crashing of a fighter plane. This huge, steel airdrome of the sea-built to carry atomic bomber planes to the far corners of the earth - becomes a "weapon of great potency," Navy Secretary Charles Thomas told the thous- an.n nP o n1-asn..nrc nvi oenP-, of that arched above her. Whistles shrilled, a band played and, under, the power of winches, the great ship inched slowly astern a few feet, symbol that she had come to the sea. Backed Clear Today the Forrestal will be backed clear of the building spot- a yawning chasm like a huge canal dock-and towed to an outfitting pier for another year of finishing tal a little before--glanced from a collier ship moored to a pier, tore apart and plunged into the water. Plunges Down The collier was just arriving and crewmen were making lines fast to a pier when the jet plunged down, in inverted position, and tore to pieces. Fragments of the shattered plane rained around crewmen, but there were no in- iuries among them. The pilot's passing pedestrians is the "Christ- mas tree" erected on the Monroe St. side of the Architecture Bldg. The unusual 'tree," constructed by architectural students of steell uni-strut, has been painted pink, red, orange and white. The 25- foot-tall object is described by Al-1 exander Pickens of the School of Architecture and Design as 'a new concept of Christmas decorations using new materials." It is formed by three pyramids which, when spotlighted at night, .give the im- pression of an object suspended in air. The "tree" will remain up un- til after the holidays, and is dec- orated by ornaments made of black' mi maamiliillmanassammieli