SPEED LAWS EFFECTIVE - PARTLY (See Page 4) Y Latest Deadline in the State Iai*t t PARTLY CLOUDY, COOLER VOL. LXVI, No.31 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1955 EIGHT PAGES I .0 Ask Egypt, Israel To Halt Attacks UN Warns of 'Grave Consequences' In. Offensive Action in Middle East UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (A- The United Nations called on Egypt and Israel yesterday to halt reprisal raids and warned that grave moral responsibility would rest on the country that takes of- fensive action in the frontier hostilities. UN Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold joined Maj. Gen. L. M. Burns, Canadian supervisor of the UN truce setup in Palestine, in a strong appeal to both countries to avoid - action "which may result in the gravest consequences." The action came after new flareups in the El Auja-area and at the end of a series of urgent diplomatic conferences here. They were climaxed by a meeting here yesterday that included British and United States representatives. Consulted Governments In a statement Hammarskjold said' he and Burns had consultedj with the "interested governments" on measures that would prevent Benson Gets IKe Support on Program. DENVER (P)-President Dwight D. Eisenhower gave embattled Sec. retary of Agriculture Ezra T. Ben- son's flexible support program his 100 per cent backing yesterday and made it clear Benson is remaining in the Cabinet. With President Eisenhower's ap- proval Benson outlined this pro- gram to help solve the admittedly poor plight of the farmers in re- lation to current prices:. 1. A stepped-up program of sur- plus disposal and expansion of ex- ports. 2. A vigorous purchasing pro- gram to remove market gluts where ever they occur andkassist farmers adjusting to market de- mands. 3. An enlarged program of soil conservation and incentive pay- ments to divert crop lands into grass, trees and forage. 4. Expand our rural develop- ment program for our low income farm families. 5. A stepped-up program of re- search emphasizing lower costs and expansion of markets. 6. Actively pushing forward the Great Plains program in cooper- ation with the ten states involved as part of a better use of the land and a better balancing 'of pro- grams. Ghosts-at-heart Get Chance On Halowe'en By ROBERT F. JONES "Death," said the hollow-eyed young man, "gets the horselaugh tomorrow." A cold wind flayed the clean brick angles of South Quad, and the hollow-eyed youth and his friendrshuddered slightlyat its whisper. The second youth put the finishing touches on the left eye of a mammoth jack-o'-lantern and wiped the blade on his trous- ers.; "You mean Hallowe'en?" he asked. "Yes," answered the first. "It's completely out of character, but every year they do it. Skulls and ghost-type things. Little kids run- ning around, laughing ghoulishly. I don't know. It bothers me." "You're nuts," said the carver, jabbing his knife in to the orange flesh of the pumpkin. The hollow- eyed young man winced. "You don't have to be so vicious about i," he said. "Anyway, what I mean is, why do they avoid it all the rest of the year, and then on Hallowe'en make a show of it?" The Carver pried with his knife, and a vegetable-orb popped out of t h fl'lmni,3 1c. tPvp--fif rfl'TU-n. fo deterioration of the situation, es-' pecially in the El Auja area. How- ever, no Security Council meeting was planned. Sir Pierson Dixon, British chief delegate, and James Barco, United States minister-counsellor, took part in the final talks at which the appeal was outlined. The United States and Britain, along with France, have a special man- date under UN agreements to safe- guard the security of the Arab- Israel area in the Middle East. The French were consulted ear- lier in the week. So were Israel, Egypt and officials of the eight- nation Arab League. Exchanged Charges Sunday's high - level meeting came after Israel and Egypt had exchanged charges of new truce violations in the El Auja demili- tarized zone m'in the Israeli-Egyp- tion frontier and an Egyptian spokesman in Cairo announced, "We are ready for any eventual- ity." adding that it was up to the UN to ease the tension in the zone. In Jerusalem, an Israeli Foreign Office spokesman said that Israel had again asked the UN truce officials to take immediate act- ion. The spokesman charged, that the Egyptians were spreading their "deliberate and unprovoked exten- sion of hostilities" to the Gaza area. Gaza has been quiet for some time. At Gaza, however, a UN spokes- man said he found no evidence that an Egyptian force had ad- vanced, as the Israelis charged, into the Nirim area east of the Gaza frontier. British Protest In Geneva, meanwhile, British Foreign Secretary Harold Mac- millan protested informally, to Russian Foreign Minister Vyaches- lav M. Molotov yesterday Soviet bloc arms sales in the Middle East tinderbox. The British statesman's com- plaint was directed specifically at t h e d e a 1 between communist Czechoslovaki and Egypt under which undisclosed numbers of MIG fighters, submarines, tanks and heavy arms are being supplied. Soviet Pact Is Rej*ected; Anti-NATO Molotov Under Heavy Criticism GENEVA WA)- The Western Powers yesterday rejected Rus- sia's anti-NATO pact for "collec-' tive European security" as a peril to the West. Soviet Foreign Minister Vyache- slav M. Molotov came under heavy criticism at the Big Four foreign ministers conference on the charge his proposals would "deceive the hopes of the world." United States Secretary of State John Foster Dulles told the Rus- sian diplomat to push through a security pact while delaying any effort to achieve ,erman reuni- fication violated the directives the summit conference laid down three months ago. Pinay Protests Pact Foreign Minister Antoine Pinay of France protested that Molotov's security pact continues to be aim- ed at the disolution of NATO, the Atlantic defense alliance. Despite seven and one - half hours of debate in three sessions since Thursday, Russia and the West have made no dent in Eur- ope's status quo: Russia will not roll back from the Elbe line-the cold war front in mid-Germany for 10 years. The West will not bargain on the dismantling of the Atlantic Alliance, in which more than 400,- 000 United States troops and air-1 men are committed overseas. Will Not Risk Election Russia will not risk a unifying German election that could put anti-Communists in control of that powerful nation of 70 million. The West will make no deal for German reunification that would concede in advance the military neutralization of -all Germany. Wants .Return To High Parity~ DULUTH, Minn. (A)-Adlai Ste- venson said yesterday the United States "must return to 90 per cent supports" for farm commodities to boost agricultural income. He declared that "restoring 90 per cent price supports to meet the present emergency is not to say they are a solution, but only that it is a better program than sliding supports that slide only one way." "While firm price supports keep income up, they don't keep sur- pluses down, and we Democrats must press on, with Republican help, to develop the much broader national farm program which is required to restore full parity of total farm income," Stevenson said. Passing Humbles Hawkeyes, 33-21 Maentz, Kramer, Maddock Branoff Star Before Homecoming Crowd By PHIL DOUGLIS Daily Sports Editor Unleashing one of the greatest rallies in Big Ten history, mighty Michigan yesterday smashed Iowa, 33-21, and established itself beyond a doubt as the finest football team in the nation. Striking through the air with the most devastating pass barrage seen in recent years, the fired-up Wolverines churned a homecoming crowd of over 72,000 into frenzy and chalked up their sixth straight victory of the season to remain unbeaten and still on top of the Big Ten conference. Tops in Thrills It was perhaps the most thrilling game eyer to be played in the Michigan Stadium. The Wolverines opened up for 33 points in the second half to catch and pass an Iowa team that had at one time led, 14-0. Poised, magnificently cool Jimmy Maddock fired spectacular passes of 65 and 60 yards, and Tony Branoff raced 30 yards in the' closing seconds to tumble the -Daily-John Torncho MICHIGAN'S JIM PACE (43) DRIVES TO THE IOWA TWO YARD LINE TO SET UP THE WOLVERINES' FIRST SCORE IN YESTERDAY'S GAME. Wolverine Fireworks Enliven Fans By JIM DYGERT Daily city Editor It was certainly cold and damp, and dreary in that first half, but the Wolverines warmed things up with fireworks in the second. Michigan's second-half display of gridiron aerial artistry that overcame a two-touchdown deficit electrified not only the 72,096fans in the rain-soaked stadium but also more than 60,000,000 television viewers across the nation. Stevenson Urged to Run' CHICAGO (P)-Harry S. Tru- man and Adlai Stevenson con- ferred here yesterday and the for- mer President said afterward he had "advised" Stevenson to an- nounce his candidacy for the presi- dential nomination. Stevenson ,the 1952 Democratic nominee, brushed aside newsmen's questions regarding his political intentions in 1956. He left Truman's hotel suite af- ter a short visit, telling reporters he had dropped in "to pay my re- spects." He added they had a "pleasant chat" during which poli-: tics had entered the conversation "once or twice." Stevenson and Truman posed' for photographers before Stevenson left for Duluth, Minn., to address a party rally. After telling newsmen he had advised Stevenson to declare him- self a candidate for the presidency, Truman said: "If he is the nominee of the convention this coming summer, I . would support him. I didn't promise to support him before the convention." W I' in jin sc A bi ai AA, It was the TV "Game of the 'got consolations that the nation Veek." "It was the greatest game had seen the Marching Band put seen," agreed several fans on another great show before the ye eversTV color cameras. exhausted elation afterwards. They forgot everything except "They didn't deserve their rat- that Michigan hadn't been beatenj ig before, but they do now," I yet. There was slapping of backs, meone exclaimed, waving of arms, and yelling of First-Half Despair voices to the utmost as the game The alumni who poured into unfolded into the most thrilling nn Arbor to see their alma mater comeback in years. in it's sixth straight game, even This was the story of the day. ringing with them their own band Nothing else happened of impor- nd Louis Elbel to conduct the tance. If something did, no one cared. Mvarcing "ana n nrb compus o u, "The Victors," were shivering in the stiff, cold wind while watching hopelessly as the Hawkeyes were making fun of the homecoming displays. Iowa was ahead by two touch- downs when the Marching Band followed the Hawkeyes' marching Adeiauer Is Out Until '56 band onto the field at halftime. BONN, Germany ()-West Ger- And they hadn't missed the extra many will be without the leader-- point, like they did last year and ship of ailing Chancellor Konrad the year before that. Adenauer until early next year. One student was already trying Government leaders plan to set to sell his ticket for next week's up a special inner Cabinet to worry against Illinois. handle his responsibilities during Noise Tells Story the months he is convalescing Then the second half came, and from bronchial pneumonia. disgusted students back on the The 79-year-old Chancellor has main campus heard the stadium been ill for more than three weeks. erupt twice in a bedlam and knew His doctors predict he will make Michigan had scored. a complete recovery but hint at The west side of the stadium a long convalescence. was back in the game. They for- Yesterday Chancellor Adenauer's Christian Democratic party post- poned its annual convention -- 01 originally scheduled for November WASHINGTON (A--There's -until "early next year." The aewaugToimp)-tncereispostponement was requested by a new gauge of importance in Adenauer so he could take part. Washington since President The well-informed newspaper Dwight D. Eisenhower became Frankfurter Allgemeine said the ill and officials have been go- possibility of Adenauer running ing to Colorado to see him. for a third term in 1957 was di- It was illustrated by .the of- minishing. ficial's wife who dropped her This revived speculation in head and commented: "My hUS political circles over his successor. hand's not important enough to I Several newspapers criticized what be invited to Denver. they call his failure to train a successor. Hawkeyes into defeat and keep intact the Wolverines' perfect season. It was the vaunted All-Ameri- can candidate Ron Kramer who set up the storybook finish by grabbing a Maddock pass, with only eight minutes left, for a touchdown, and then converted to pull Michigan to within one point of the Hawkeyes. The play cov- ered 65 yards. Maentz Gains Lead Then, as if in a script, Michigan proved to the millions of TV fans who watched throughout the na- tion yesterday that it was un- doubtedly of championship calibre. Only three minutes and 24 seconds remained on the big blue clock, when Tom Maentz sprinted down the field, broke into the clear and grabbed Maddock's pinpoint, last ditch pass for a 60 yard touch- down play. Minutes later Branoff raced into the end zone for the final tally, and Michigan had scored 20 points' in the final nine minutes to justi- fy its claim as odds on favorites to snare the Big Ten title. The dead-game Iowans had played solid, hard-hitting football for 50 minutes, scoring two quick ones in the first half, and then countering a desperate Michigan third quarter rally by tallying their third touchdown, and apparently dashing Michigan hopes. Evashevski Disappointed Forest Evashevski had pointed his team for this game such as few teams had ever been pointed before. It was to no - avail as the Wolverines roared from be- hind to smash his hopes into smithereens. Iowa started out like it did in the two seasons past by rushing to a two touchdown lead. Only this time they made both extra points, and the huge homecoming crowd was plunged into despair. Using straight power football, the Hawks moved in for the kill as soon as they touched the ball. Cutting the Big Blue line for 62 yards in 13 successive ground See MICHIGAN'S, Page 7 Odd Camera Sp ins, Takes Field Photo By JIM DYGERT Daily city Editor If you were at the game yester- day a few minutes, before it began, you probably saw a man walk out to the middle of the fifty-yard line and raise a camera above his head. He stood there for a few seconds while nothing happened. Suddeily the camera spun in a circle, photo- graphing the entire stadium. He lowered the camera and walked off the field. The camera was taking a pic- ture on 35mm film at an angle of 360 degrees. It was mounted on a small box with gears, a spring and a' timing mechanism that opened the shut- ter as the camera was released to spin in a circle. The film re- volves through four and a half frames, allowing eight shots on a, roll. The picture he took will pbe a view of the stadium as seen from the middle of the fifty-yard line and as if you could see the whole stadium at once from there. Doctor Invented Camera The man who took the 360 de- gree angle picture was Dr. Eugene Trachtman, who invented the device. Dr. Trachtnian is an optome- trist from New Jersey who does not enjoy 'photography as a hob- by. "The idea of mounting a camera so that it could revolve and take a 360 degree angle pic- ture just came to me one day," he said. After "tinkering" around with the idea for a while, he found how to make it work. So, yesterday, he found himself in the middle of the Michigan Stadium taking pictures for Life Magazine. Prefers Optometry "I like optometry better," he explained. "Some people may like the glamor of flying from New York to Ann Arbor to Chicago taking pictures for Lie, but not me." Dr. Trachtman was not around for the second half because he rushed off in a taxi to catch a plane to Chicago at Willow Run Airport. This was really too bad. He said he hadn't seen a football game in twenty years. His -camera aroused much in- terest arhong the sideline photo- graphers. The idea of taking a 360 degree angle shot sounded preposterous to some of, them. Ike's Resignation Wanted - Kefauver MUSKEdON, Mich. (') - Sen Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn.) said yesterday a "segment of right- wing" Republicans is "scheming tn t M Pe-.nDwiht D. Eienhow- FESTIVITIES NOT DAMPENED BY RAIN: Ci1i Phi, Sigma Kappa Take Home coming Display Honors By VERNON NAHRGANG! Hawks, whales, an octopus, and other animals seemed to dominate yesterday's homecoming displays. Winning display in the men's all-campus division was Chi Phi's octopus. Captioned "20,000 Leagues to the Rose Bowl," it had Army and MSU well within its grasp, and was reaching for Iowa. Beta Theta Pi's bird that "Got it in the End Zone" and Tau Delta Phi's "Anyone for a Fourth?" tied for second place. A pinball machine, complete with sound effects and blinking lights, won third place for the men of Scott House. Rains Didn't Spoil Fun Although the rains came during the night and morning, the displays seemed to hold up well, at least until the judges went by. "Confucius says, 'Great is Man Who Reaps Roses by Plowing Corn'" was the title of Sigma Kappa's winning display in the women's division. Second place went to Kappa Delta's "Scare Those Hawks Out of Our Victory Field." Mosher Hall's twin-carrying stork won third place for the women. SAE Wins Mud Bowl Game .iV:::::: 0 . . _ .;