SGC GIVEN CHANCE TO SHOW POTENTIAL See Page 4 C, r Latest Deadline in the State :43 a t I CLOUDY, SHOWERS A, ...... nw.-M. c*TPĀ±um li A C t+l VOL. LXVI. No. 11 ANN ABOR(, MJIHIGAN, FIDLAY, OCTOBER 7, 1955' EIUT r T vY. i French Assembly Called By Faure Premier Asks Policy Approval, Government Existence Threatened PARIS ()-Premier Edgar Faure, striving to save his wobbly government, called on the National Assembly last night to back his moderate policy for French Morocco. "I have faith in my formula as a means of building French- Moroccan friendship," Faure told the deputies. Critics are free to criticize his plan, he said, but if it does not go through they may have to find a program to replace it. Four Ministers Ousted } Faure dropped four Gaullist ministers who refused to accept his plans for Morocco-pegged to the creation of a three-man regency --- council to 'replace an unpopular Sultan now retired in Tangier - o H onor nd parried threats from other who were being pres- sured to quit. Last night Faure opened debate G rid G reats on the government's measures to end the bloody strife in Morocco, where nationalist demands for At Half -TineJ home rule clash with the desire of French colonists to keep close rein on the territory. His Cabinet By BILL HANEY has authorized him to ask a vote Spectacular half-time and pre- of confidence. Defeat on that vote game shows have been planned for - perhaps Monday - would spell tomorrow's Army-Michigan game. the end of his seven-month-old Director of University Bands regime. William D. Revelli has prepared Possibly More Resignations a unique intermission show based After a day of confusion on the on "This Is Your Life" which will political front, the government was honor the election to the Football still in operation. But further res- Hall of Fame of seven Michigan ignations - if they develop - greats. might torpedo the Cabinet. Five All-American football play- Faure himself recognized the ers and two all-time great coaches difficulties. He said the Moroccan will be portrayed by present-day debate will be closed out with a 'M' Club members. session tomorrow and continue Adolph "Germany" Schultz will "until the end of the debate -- be saluted by the band with "My and maybe the end of the govern- Hero." Schultz played center for ment." the point-a-minute teams of Field- At a Cabinet meeting yesterday ing H. Yost from 1904 to 1906. He the Premier was authorized to ask was selected to the All-American for a vote of confidence on the squad in 1907 and is called the Moroccan question. He is expected man who originated line-backing. to use this weapon to try to whip Schultz will be represented by Tom doubtful backers into line. The Jorgenson, '56. expectation is that the vote will Fiery Freidman e toni till The band will then honor Ben- not come until Monday. nie Friedman, the first Michigan quarterback to be named to anF en h r All-American team. Friedman, who played in 1924-26, received his All-America honors in 1926. Quells Rebels Because of Friedman's reputation as a fiery competitor the band RABAT, Morocco (.P)-French has chosen to salute him with military forces seemed slowly "Sout-Hearted Men." Lorne mastering the Riff rebellion yest- Howes, '56, will take Friedman's erday as Premier Edgar Faure part. prepared to fight for his govern- Tom Harmon, who played half- ment's life back in Paris. back in 1938-40, earned Ali-Amer- But while some rebels came in ican honors two years, 1939-40. groups with white flags to surren- As Bob McMasters, 56E, dressed der, French officers reported they in Harmon'sa famous 98 takes the were encountering "reticence" in field, the band will play Holly- other areas. Many of the warlike wood, the city where Harmon now Berber horsemen were just van- The band will form a clock and ishing back into the mountains play "The Dance of the Hours" with their weapons. td commemorate Yost's fabled For the present, Resident Gen. teams. From 1901 to 1905 Yost's Pierre de Latour du Moulin seem- teams piled up 2,271 points to their ed more anxious to gain the opponent's 42. Mike Delaney will rebels' confidence by generous portray Yost. treatment than to pursue them Stein Song for Oosterbaan with reprisals. Those who asked Next to be honored will be pardon were required only to sur- Michigan's coach, Bennie Ooster- render their arms and allowed to baan. Oosterbaan was named to go. the All-American squad each of his three years as Michigan's greatest end from 1925 to 1927. Developmiy en t John O'Reilly, 56, will represent Oosterbaan as the band plays "The Stein Song" which was popular Discussion Set during the famous end's career. H. 0. "Fritz" Crisler will be More than 100 prominent Uni- Alonzouted Sta ,Crisler dPlayfoo versity alumni will return to Ann ball coach Crie olh fot- Arbor today to participate in the bal cac, dubbed him "Fritz". Second Annual Conference spon- after.he made three mistakes in a sored by the Development Council. football game. Stagg gave him rincypal eveomethCee-da. the name "Not cause you're per- IPrincipal event of the three-day fect like the violinist, because series of meetings will be a forum you're just the opposite." discussion at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow During Crisler's tenure as head in the League. Questions from coach Michigan teams rolled to the audience pertaining to Uni- 116 victories while suffering only versify development or adminis- 32 losses and 9 ties. Dick Harrisonytrative policy will be answered by '56,wil tak th par ofthea panel of University and Alumni atletdietr, at f heorganization officials, student Heston Presents Certificates leaders and faculty representa- Then, as the six men represent- tives. ing the all-time greats stand on University President Harlan podiums along the side-lines, an Hatcher, Regent J. Joseph Her- honor guard will accompany two- bert and Joseph W. Planck, chair- time All-American Willie Heston man of the Alumni Fund Board, to the field. will welcome conference members Here the band will play "Mr. at the reception today. Citations Touchdown, U.S.A." of Honor will be presented to stu- Heston played halfback four dent, faculty and alumni advisors years at Michigan, from 1901 to who served the Council last year. 1904, making All-American honors his junior. and senior years. Go r rn Of Certificates to admission and a no permanent place in football's Hall 7 t of Fame at Rutgers University in Won Pay Taxes New Brunswick, N. J. will be pre- sented to the immortals' repre- SALT LAKE CITY OP)--Utah's sentatives. Republican Gov. J. Bracken Lee Honor Army said yesterday he will not pay his An elaborate pre-game show federal income tax for this year What Next? DETROIT (A')-Raining out- side and your windows at home are open? Simply dial your telephone number and the windows will close themselves. This was one of a number of electronic marvels predicted to- day by Roger M. Keys of Gen- eral Motors. Other predictions: kitchen floors washed and dried auto- matically, houses with their own. atomic. or. solar. power and sewage systems. UA W-Circle Truce Talks Collapse NEW CASTLE, Ind. WP)-Truce efforts collapsed yesterday and the CIO-United Auto Workers warned of possible renewed vio- lence at the struck Perfect Circle foundry here. Union representatives walked out of a City Hall meeting after bitterly declaring to company offi- cials, "We are of the belief that you are putting production ahead of the human element and human lives." A company spokesman told re- porters that Perfect Circle intends to reopen its piston ring foundry here as soon as 'the National Guard is withdrawn and law en- forcement authorities permit. Unionists Poised International representative William F. Caldwell told a public meeting that thousands of Indiana unionists are poised to march against the three-story brick foun- dation if it reopens for produc- tion. Eight persons were shot in such a march Wednesday. In reply, Perfect Circle's attor- ney, Clyde Hoffman, told Mayor Paul F. McCormack: "We are just not in a position to close that plant." Police Close Plant State police closed the plant Wednesday as 5,000 angry, shout- ing sympathizers with the UAW- C10 strikers converged from throughout the state on the 100 nonstrikers armed and barricaded inside the foundry. The company admitted it stock- ed the plant with firearms. But it said this was a protective measure taken with the full knowledge of law enforcement authorities. Craig Orders Guard Gov. George N. Craig, at the urgent request of McCormack, sent the Indiana National Guard in here shortly after midnight. About 600 Guardsmen took over this east central city of 18,000. Armed Guardsmen set up road blockades around the plant and surrounded it with infantrymen. Two half tracks with' weapons guarded the entrance. Two tanks were held in reserve. After truce talks broke off, May- or McCrmack told newsmen he intended to keep the National Guard in town over the week end so there would be no attempt to open the plant before the first of the week. "We want to let this thing sim- mer down," the mayor declared. He added he had no immediate plans for bringing union and man- agement together. There was no disorder yester- day. All public gatherings-political meetings, athletic contests, dances -were banned. Liquor sales were halted. Otherwise the city was normally busy. Worst Avi Spll iation Disaster Tragedy For 65 COORDINATING BODY: SGC Members Indorse Deferred Rushing Study' By GAIL GOLDSTEIN Asked for their reactions and ideas concerning the recent pro- posal for a study committee to evaluate the rushing system. Student Government Council members expressed definite interest in the prob- lem. Proposed by Daily Managing Editor, Dave Baad. '56, elimination of pledging for first semester freshmen was specifically called for. Baad told the Council that he would ask for the committee to be set up in a formal proposal at the Oct. 19 meeting. He added that he was informing the council of his impending motion so that they would have tin Nixon Visits Eisenhower~ Tomorrow iDENVER (A')- The Denver White House announced yesterday that Vice-President Richard M. Nixon will fly here tomorrow for a hospital visit with President' Dwight D. Eisenhower at the Pres- ident's invitation. Nixon will fly here with Sher- man Adams, the President's chief deputy; Maj. John Eisenhower, the President's son; and Dr. Paul Dudley White, Boston heart spe- cialist, for the weekend. White House press secretary James C. Hagerty said he did not, know what Nixon would discuss with the President but he added it would not be "a visit where controversial policies" would be taken up. Late yesterday afternoon! brought another cheerful bulletin on the President's condition. Hagerty said that the President' sent an invitation to Nixon to; visit him through Adams at the time he wrote the Vice-President a few days ago to continue pre- siding over Cabinet and National Security Council meetings. The 'conference, Hagerty 'made clear, would be limited to topics cleared in advance by the presi- dential physicians. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles may vis- it the President sometime nextj week for a talk before going to the foreign ministers' meeting at Gen- eva, but this has not been definite- ly determined.' 1,090 Men Sign Up For Rushing A record 1,090 students have signed up for fall rushing, Inter- ' fraternity Council Rushing Chair- man Fred Lyons, '57E, disclosed yesterday. The previous record of 1,019 was set last year.J Lyons expects more than 600 to pledge. Open rushing will begin Oct.z 24th. .It is not necessary to regis- ter in order to rush.I ne to gather data pertinent to the deliberations of the committee if it is set up. Grimm States Position Assembly Association president Jeannette Grimm, '57, expressed the opinion that it is "SGC's place to study the problem, but the groundwork will have to be done by the four housing groups con- cerned." She added that Assembly 'and Panhellenic have set up a rush- ing study committee that met last spring and will meet again after fall rushing is over to study the situation. "We work collectively and share our opinions. Although we dis- agree on some issues, our basis concepts are the same," she con- tinued. In opposition to this view. In- terfraternity C o u n c i l president Bob Weinbaum, '56, felt that SGC should recommend "that the prob- lem be handled by IFC, IHC, As- sembly and Panhellenic as these are the four groups directly in- volved. "I think the problem can bew orked out, and that discus- sion and evaluation of the present system will benefit these groups," he added. Study Greatly Needed Baad presented the opinion that the four housing units couldn't handle the problem adequately. "The need for the study has ex- isted for a long time, but nothing concrete has been done by these organization," he said. Tom Bleha, '56, IHC president, remarked that "much of the basic groundwork will have to be done by the four housing units. SGC Should Coordinate SGC representatives Joel Tau- ber, '57, and Bill Adams, '57, both expressed the opinion that the study is merited and should be done with SGC as the coordinat- ing body for the four housing units. However, Bill Diamond. '56E, agreeing with Weinbaum, thought that the housing groups 'could handle this alone. League president Hazel Frank , '56, indorsed the idea of deferred rushing suggested by Baad. She added that she felt that the prob- lem was one to be handled by the whole SGC body and not just IFC, IHC, Panhel and Assembly. All interviewed felt that this study was merited, with several members saying that their own groups or they themselves have been thinking about the problem. Crash Claims Two Victims From State Officials Speculate On Possible Causes LARAMI, Wyo. (:1-A four- engine United Air Lines DC4 plunged into the face of a sheer mountain peak yesterday and all 85 persons aboard, including a crew of three, were killed. It was the worst commercial air- line crash in United States' his- tory. The crash of a Northwest Air- lines DC-4 in Lake Michigan on June 24, 1950, was the worst pre- vious commercial air line disaster. Fifty-eight were killed. The worst crash of any type was an Air Force C-124 near Tokyo on June 18, 1953, in which 129 perished. Four of the passengers aboard the plane boarded the craft at Wil- low Run Airport. The airline listed them as Law- rence Monk of Fellston, E. Rey- nolds of Flint, and Mrs. Georgie West and Earl West Jr., who were returning to their home in Salt Jake City. Monk, an airman, was enroute to Oakland, Calif., as was Rey- nolds. First rescuers to reach the chill- ed scene atop 12,005-foot Medicine Bow Peak, among them Maj.Ger- ald Downey of the Wyoming Civil Air Patrol and state patrolman Ben Butler, said they found about 50 bodies strewn along a 300-foot course down the face of the moun- tain. -Daily-Hal Leeds LOOKING OVER SOME OF THE BOOKS in the rare book room at Clements Library last night, are Howard Peckham, director of'the library, John Powell, speaker at the fourth annual Adams memorial lecture and Mrs. Peckham. Historian, Vliews Records As Experience In Motion By SHIRLEY CROOG 'History is human experience In motion-it is the discoverable and the knowable," John Powell, Amer- ican historian, lecturer, and writ- er said last night. . Paying tribute to Randolph Ad- ams, Powell viewe dthe first di- rector of the Clements Library as the man who "looked to history as the power to set men free to gov- ern the present." As the family and friends of4 Adams, faculty, Regents and the Clements Library Associates gath- ered for the fourth annual Ad- ams memorial lecture in the im- pressive main hall of the library, Powell's words reminded the group of the life pulsating within the historian's vast records. Epidemic Swept Nation Referring to the great cholera, epidemic which swept the nation in 1832, Powell told how an his- torian's records revealed fear and terror of people caught in a plague which left them no place of refuge. "The records show episodes and events as human beings lived them. Through the historian's in- terest in humanity, the records come to life," Powell continued. He tol dthe group, assembled in formal attire, that the historian today is burdened by the pressure of presenting a "standardized pic- ture of the whole of a nation's past. Suppresses Investigation "The student's reactions to the great picture of American history is one of a uniform nature, which suppresses the desire of the stu- dent to investigate further." Powell asserted his belief that history is not a study of theories or dates, but of movement with a "dignity and purpose." He said that "every phase of history is of questi nable assumption, sub- ject to challenge and necessary to be disputed if students are to be thinkers." Eldersveld Hits At GOP. In YD Speech "I think the cduntry has been standing still and maybe going backwards under the Republican administration," Prof. Samuel El- dersveld of the political science department told the Young Demo-. crats yesterday. "The Democrats have a trem- endous number of wonderful cam- paign issues," he said citing farm prices, the loyalty program, Dixon Yates and the Talbott case as ex- amples. "Many more people are basically predisposed to the Democratic Party," he remarked, but the party has a "terrific problem of voter mobilization." "If we could motivate these lazy Democrats, we could practically count on winning the election on this alone." Speculating on 1956, Prof. El- dersveld described Vice-President Richard M. Nixon as having "his foot in the door" for the Republi- can nomination. His position has put him in the public eye, the pro- fessor said, and he would be-ac- ceptable to most elements of the Republican Party. "I think it's Adlai Stevenson all' the way" for the Democratic nom-: ination, he commented raising the question as to whether the 1952 candidate "can make the right sort of psychological appeal." Homer Cooper of the Survey Research Center discussed opinion polls showing the Democrats with a "huge majority" of voter sym- pathy. "We have to go quite a way to find a Democratic group that has a Republican majority" in party identification he told the YDs. Dry ags Ont "Gargoyle sales day Wednesday was marked by heavy rains, as usual," observed Gordon Black, '58, Garg business manager. "However," added D. H. Kessel, managing editor, "plans are to sell ii I Mail, Wreckage Found One rescuer, Vance Lucas, of Buffalo, Wyo., said he climbed to the top of the peak and there found a bit of wreckage, scattered mail, a man's topcoat and part of the plane's instrument panel. The westbound plane shattered itself against the peak about 50 to 75 feet from the top. The moun- tain is about 40 miles west of here in the Snowy Range. Howling winds, which some offi- cials say may have contributed to the tragedy, caused Sheriff John Terrill of Carbon County, in charge of rescue operations, to call off efforts to retrieve the bodies at dusk. Rescuers Called Off He ordered all rescuers off the face of the steep mountain and down to a base camp slightly more than a mile away. Terrill said the mountain-train- ed parties, supplied during the evening and night with special gear, would start lowering the bodies by winch apparatus today. He said they would be brought to the University of Wyoming's summer scientific lodge about six miles from the scene for identifi- cation. The scene, littered with bits of wreckage, bodies, clothing and cargo, was marked by two huge patches of oil where the plane's engines apparently struck the peak. Glacier Holds Wreckage TV wreckage then slid down the steep incline in two ravines, much of it coming to rest 300 feet down on a small glacier. .Two' bodies were at the base of the crash scene. Twenty-three others were concentrated in one area on a small shelf. Others were strewn along the path of the wrecked plane. Rescuers said the largest sec- tions of the plane remaining intact were a part of one wing and a vertical stabilizer with UAL's red, white and blue colors, half-way down the peak. IFC Requests No Serenades WEATHER PLACES A DAMPER ON THINGS: t Was The Heat AND Humidity No temperatuse or rainfall records were broken yesterday although the combination of heat and humidity seemed to have set some sort of a high for lethargy. During the drizzle of the early afternoon there were more bicycles being wheeled by un-energetic students than ridden. j:?x< ?Pedestrians, too lazy to circumvent the puddles on the Diag, sloshed through them and tried to keep their books out of the rain. Readers Stick to Papers After dinner the lights in the League started to flicker. People noticed, but were too physically attached to their newspapers to bother objects other than newspapers stuck to people. one coed walked into the library with several leaves sticking to her slicker. The secretary's old summer cry of "Cut my salary but give me air-conditioning" became merely the old school try, as University of-, ficials dampened enthusiasm and forecast a long, cold winter. At a meeting Tuesday the In- terfraternity Council Executive Committee decided to discourage serenading of fraternities by sor- ority wounim duiring rushing.