Oosterbaan, Vrisler Issue Public Apology toOS By PHIL DOUGLIS Daily Sports Editor In unprecedented public apolo- gies, Michigan football coach Ben Oosterbaan and Athletic Director H. O. "Fritz" Crisler last night expressed their regrets to Ohio State University over the un- sportsmanlike conduct of several members of the Michigan team in Saturday's game. The formal apologies came after two conlferences with the Wolver- ine coaching staff and varsity squad. Widely described in the Detroit papers as the most "shameful inci- dent in Michigan football history," the incident resulted in the widest and most pointed criticism perhaps ever leveled at a University of Michigan athletic team. Crisler's apologies were personal letters to OSU president Dr. How- ard L. Bevis and Richard C. Lar- kins, .the Buckeye's Athletic Director. Oosterbaan's statement "read: "Michigan regrets very deeply the incidents which occured during the final minutes of the Ohio State game. The players ejected from the game-not for any physi- cal act, but for arguing with the officials-have apologized to their teammates and to the coaches and they wish to express their deep re- grets to the Michigan family." Oosterbaan Says "Never Again" Oosterbaan went on to say: "We have always had great pride in our record of sportsmanship and I believe justifiably so. You may be sure that every effort will be made to see that nothing like this occurs again." Crisler, in his letter to Dr. Bevis and Larkins said, "We owe you and your institution an apology for the untimely conduct of one or two Michigan players in the game last Saturday. "I want you to know that we deplore the unharnessed display of emotions which has no place in the relationship between Ohio State and the University of Michi- gan. Congratulates Ohio "Permit me to congratulate you on Ohio State's fine victory. Your team defeated us fairly and squarely and I want to congratu- late you further and compliment you on winning the conference championship, which you boys so richly deserved. "Rest assured we will exert every effort to prevent recurrence of this incident." The incident resulted after Ohio State had scored its final touch- down of the afternoon, upping the score to 17-0. In full view of the nearly 100,000 spectators who packed the giant bowl, the Michi- gan team protested vigorously to the officials that Howard. "Hop- along" Cassady, Buckeye ace,,had' fumbled before crossing the goal line, and that the touchdown. should have been disallowed. In the final two minutes of play eight penalties were called on Michigan, most of them for per- sonal fouls and unsportsmanlike conduct. Free-For-All Erupts Referee Comments From this point on, the game Meanwhile, Detroit newspapers disintegrated into a virtual free- quote Anthony Skover, a Detroiter for-all, with 'Michigan bearing who refereed the game, as saying most of the blame and the penal- that "he and the other four game ties. officials were powerless to stop Two Michigan players, Ron the free-for-all during the last Kramer and Al Sigman, grew so two minutes of the game." vehement in their protests that Skover declined to state the they were ejected from the game. exact reasons why Kramer and Sigman were ejected, but he added that "in seven years of conference officiating, the last fwo minutes were the most out-of-hand" he had ever seen in a conference game. Skover went on to tell how "the boys. were 'so keyed up on botl sides I really can't blame any of them for what happened." When asked why he didn't call off the game when things got rowdy, Skover said "There was more at stake than just a game See REFEREE, page 7 FOOTBALL IS GAME OF GLORY See Page 4 Y 1Mw 4lat a4Ot 4:D t VOLD, CLEARER Latest Deadline in the State ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1955 VOL. LXVI, No. 50. Cafe Moves To Attain Brazil Post Government Imposes National Censorship RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (R)- Joao Cafe Filho moved last night to reclaim the presidency of Brazil-posing the nation's third government crisis in two weeks. But a congressional leader pre- dicted Congress will approve a resolution barring Cafe's return. With tension mounting in the capital, armed troops surrounded the presidential palace, the Cham- ber of Deputies, the War Ministry and other key points. Troops pass- ing through the streets en route to their posts were applauded by by- standers. Censorship Imposed The government also imposed censorship on political news in newspapers, radio stations and * outgoing news cables. The area around the presidential palace was sealed off by troops. Provisional President Nereu Ra- mos, the second of Cafe's substi- tutes, presumably was inside the building. Cafe made his bid late yesterday afternoon after he was discharged from a hospital where he under- went treatment for the heart at- tack~ that forced him to take a leave of absence from the presi- dency. He sent Congress a mes- sage announcing he was taking over the post from Ramos. Resolution Declared But the House of Deputies has under debate a.resolution designed to block any such move and Viqira de Melo, House majority leader, said its approval was assured. The resolution declared an extension of Cafe's disability to hold office. The opposition to Cafe's return stems from the belief of some con- gressmen that he favors a coup aimed at keeping the winner of the October presidential election, Jus- celino Kubitschek, from taking of- fice Jan. 31. The majority of con- gressmen are Kubitschek support- ers. Shaw Chorale To Perform a Today In Hill Two Me Grocery Fr" -i -W" *1-- 75 rr r alr r"M n1r r r r n Rob Store Ike, Defe"s Indian Parliame Chiefs View F'.U a " 7 " /"i f 'Toy Gun Holdup Third in Ten Days; Disguised Bandit Escapes By Car By VERNON NAHRGANG Ann Arbor's third holdup in ten days occurred last night when two men robbed a Kroger store with a toy gun. One of the men entered the store at Jackson and Maple Streets about 9:10 p.m. yesterday. Holding his hand in his overcoat pocket as if he held a gun, he handed the cashier a note demanding all large bills. Trembling, the cashier was forced to scoop $10 and $20 bills into a paper bag. The bandit, wearing dark-rimmed glasses with his hat pulled down over his face, made his escape into the parking lot where his accomplice was wait- ing. Used 1950 Olds The two drove off on Stadium Blvd. in a 1950 light green Olds- mobile. Detectives found a gray, metal toy gun in the parking lot where the escaping bandit dropped it. They also looked for the note which the robber had taken with him, but were unable to find it. Description of the gunman ap- pears to be similar to that of the man who held up the National Food Store Nov. 12. Police have been unable to find any trace of the Food Store bandit or of the man who held up the State Theater Nov. 13. Some time early Sunday morn- ing the rear door of Slater's Book Store washbroken into. Police- man on the beat found two rear doors open and a window knocked out of the inner door. Nothing has been reported missing. 'No Connection With Resignations' Capt. Rolland Gainsley of .the uniformed and plain clothes forces sees no connection between the string of holdups and the resigna- tions of 11 officers who have now left the force. "We've still got the same num- ber of men working that we al- ways have working," Capt. Gains- ley said yesterday. All members of the police department .are now working 12-hour shifts, with the exception ,of a few officers on traf- fic details. Police have no description of the accomplice who waited in the car, but they describe the gunman as being about five feet, two inches in height, with pock marks on the part of his face that showed be- neath his hat. This description is close to that of the man who fig- ured in the first holdup. Until Nov. 12, there had been no holdups in the Ann Arbor area since early 1954. in the past ten days, since the police resignations were announced, there have been three robberies. Nations Meet For Defense Organization' BAGHDAD, Iraq () - Britain and four other members of the Baghdad Pact took the first steps yesterday to set up a permanent defense organization along the Soviet Union's southern border. The premiers of Iraq, Iran. Pak- istan and Turkey met with British Foreign Secretary Harold Mac- Millan for the inaugural council meeting of the newly formed alli- ance. They also set up a military com- mittee of high officers of all five nations to draw up proposals for a permanent military structure binding members into a NATO-like organization. The defense organization being, set up ties the Middle East with NATO in the west through Turkey and to SEATO in the east through Pakistan, a member of the South- east Asia. Treaty Organization. MacMillan and the four pre- miers-Nuri Said of Iraq, Hussein Ala of Iran, Adnan Menderes of Turkey and Chaudrhi Mohammed Ali of Pakistan-met for the first time under the alliance in Al Zahour Flower Palace on the out- skirts of this ancient city. Premier Said of Iraq opened the conference with a pledge to aid any Arab state threatened by Is- rael. His statement was regarded here as intended to help soften the op- position of Egypt and some of the other Rab League members of the Baghdad Pact. MacMillan said the pact mem- bers welcomed "the massive in- fluence and support of the United States." U.S. Power Top Strategists Air Security, Diplomacy THURMONT, Md. (M)-President Dwight D. Eisenhower and his top defense strategists-who flew in from Washington in helicopters- met yesterday at secluded Camp David in the snow-covered Catoc- tin Mountains. The President drove 22 miles from his farm home at Gettysburg, Pa., for his first meeting with,his top defense plainers--the National Security Council and about . 15 experts in defense and diplomatic strategy-since before his Sept. 24 heart attack at Denver. Dulles Attends The first Air Force helicopter landed with Secretary -of State John Foster Dulles; Sherman Ad- ams. the President's chief deputy; Chairman Lewis Strauss of the Atomic Energy Commission; Un- dersecretary of State Herbert Hoover Jr.; Budget Director Row- land R. Hughes; and Robert R. Bowie, director of the State De- partment policy planning staff. Vice-President Richard M. Nix- on and Dillon Anderson, President Eisenhower's special assistant for national security affairs, came in another 'copter. The meeting was the President's first opportunity for a full-scale review of the nation's military strength and diplomatic position since negotiations for a peaceful solution of cold war differences with Russia collapsed at the Four Power Geneva conference of for- eign ministers. As is usual, the! meeting was private. Other 'Copters Land The third 'copter brought in Secretary of Defense Charles, E. Wilson; Secretary of the Treasury George M. Humphrey; Harold Stassen, special assistant to the President on disarmament; Atty.- Gen. Herbert Brownell; Theodore Streibert, head of the United States Information Agency; and Gen. Nathan F. Twining, Air Force chief representing the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The fourth plane brought Nelson' Rockefeller, presidential assistant' for psychological strategy; John Hollister, head of the Internation- al Cooperation Administration; Ar- thur S. Flemming, defense mobil- ization director; James S. Lay, ex- ecutive secretary of the NSC; and S. Edward Gleason, his assistant. The landing field is located about the length of a football field from the President's lodge. Ike to Return to Gettysburg Today the President returns to Gettysburg to meet with his Cabi- net. The President walked the 300 yards from his lodge to Laurel Lodge for yesterday afternoon's session stopping to look at the heli- copters hovering overhead. He was with Allen W. Dulles, a brother of the Secretary of State, who flew into Gettysburg yesterday morn- ing to brief the President on in- telligencenreports in advance of the meeting. Dulles is director of the Central Intelligence Agency. Plane Bomber, 41 Indian Reds Lead Riots In Bombay Join, Socialists To Fight Plan BOMBAY, India (W)-More than! 200,000 rioters led by Communists and Socialists of -the extreme left turned this big industrial port into a smoking battlefield yesterday.: Ten persons were reported kil- led and 250 wounded and 1;000 were under arrest when uneasyf quiet was restored. Police and army units stood on the alert last night. There was ; sporadic violence even after dark- ness fell. The worst riots in Bombay in the eight years of India's inde- pendence grew out of demonstra- tions of protest against the decis-, ion of the central government of Prime Minister Nehru to make a separate state of Bombay, India's second largest city. The state of! which it is now capital would be# split into two new states at the same timp - )aiy-Esther Gouasmit THE DEANS OF WOMEN received loud cheers and applause from the audience as they and the housemothers presented a skit on the housing shortage at the 22nd annual Fortnite held last night in the League. Martha Cook took first place with their presen- tation of "A Fall (Staff) Tale." Adlai Claims Su pport;0 BuIgaim, Kh Western EIGHT PAGES ant Hears. rrushchev Hit Reactionaries' I It was the first time under an ~ e s I ti~~ independent Indian governmentJohnson Sees Vctory that troops had to be called to! help police quell disorder in Bom- i ---- CHICAGO OP)-A smiling Adlai 1 Red Chiefs Blame West For Tension Say A-Weapons Made As Defense NEW DELHI, India (M) - The two high men of the Soviet Union lashed out at "Western reaction- aries" in speeches before the In- dian Parliament yesterday, .- Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin told the 700 members of Parlia- ment that the Western Powrs are to blame for "settIng the problpm of disarmament back 10 years," Nikita Khrushchev, first secre- tary . of, the.- Comunst party,. charged that "reactionary circles" tried to intimidate Russia with atomic bombs and "as a result we were forced to create atomic and hydrogen weapons." "Spirit Causes Indigestion" "The spirit of Geneva causes indigestion to certain persons," who are still "trying to follow the notorious policy of 'from a posi- tion of strength,'" Khrushchev said. Both Khrushchev and Bulganin, who were interrupted frequently by cheers df Parliament members, declared. Russia and India are united in an "unending battle for peace." Both vowed respect for India's right to choose its own path of development. The Soviet leaders, who are on -a goodwill tour of India, Burma and Afghanistan which is expect- ed to last about a month, an- nounced no change in their sched- ule which calls for a visit tomorrow. to Bombay where rioting yesterday resulted in 10 killed and 250 in-- jured. Nehru Warns Soviets At a state banquet Sunday night Bulganin and Khrushchev were told by Prime Minister Nehru that India does not intend to be beguiled by their visit into stray- ing from. her chosen path of neu- trality. India is "in no camp and no military alliance," he said, and only wants to be in the camp of "peace and goodwill." His words seemed to deny the Soviet claim to heading the only true forces for peace. Former Daily Editor Lunn-. To Visit Asia Harry H. Lunn, '54, former Daily Managing Editor, left Hol- land last week. to visit Asia as a member of an international dele- gation of university students. President of the United States N a t i o n a l Student Association, Lunn joined students from Scot- land, Guatemala and the Union of South Africa in preparation for the four-month tour of Asian col- leges and universities. As a member of the five-man The Robert Shaw Chorale and Orchestra will give the fifth con- cert in the Choral Union Series at 8:30 p.m. today- in Hill Auditor- ium. Sponsored by the University Mu-1 sical Society, the group of 30 sing- bay. Communist leaders raced about' the city on motor scooters flying hammer and sickle flags, egging on the frenzied mobs and ordering them to "capture" the state legis-' lature, which was meeting to dis- cuss the city's future under the new state plan. Snowed! Danny Ziegler was driving down Main Street at 10 p.m. Saturday night when he saw someone following him, police reported. Ziegler stopped his car in front of a store to see what the man wanted. The person fol- lowing him jumped out of his car, ran up to Ziegler's and stuck a rifle in the window. 'Bystanders threw snowballs at the rifle-toting man and he ran off. to "greatly increased" support in his bid for the Democratic nomi- nation. Stevenson's statement was made in connection with the formation of the National Stevenson for Pres- ident Committee to coordinate the efforts of volunteer workers in his behalf. He visited the new headquartersx of the committee in the Board of Trade Building. Co-Chairmen Listed The committee will have as co- chairmen Barry Bingham, presi- dent of the Courier-Journal and Louisville Times Co., and Mrs. Edison Dick, wife of a Chicago industrialist. Archibald Alexander, Democrat- ic national committeeman for New Jersey, will serve as director of the committee. Newsmen talked briefly with Stevenson at the new headquar- ters. E. Stevenson yesterday laid claim Meanwhile, in Whitney, ' Tex., Senate Majority Leader Lyndon Johnson (D-Tex) said last night President Dwight D. Eisenhower is the best the. Republicans have to offer but that "is hardly a compli- ment, and even the greatest men in our history could not have borne the dead weight of the pre- sent Republican party." . Smells Democrat Victory He went on to say there is "the smell of victory in the air and it is keen and unmistakable" for the Democrats in 1956. But he warned "the next elec- tion is no pushover..It would still be possible for us to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory." Johnson said he has never ques- tioned the patriotism or integrity of his friends of another political faith.' "But even the most rock-ribbed Republican will admit that Eisen- hower's party responds a little faster to the fat cats than to the folks," he-said. ers will present Bach's "Magnificat in D major for Orchestra" and Honegger's "King David Symphon-I ic Drama."w There engagement here.- is one of more than 90 coast-to-coast appearances which mark the Chor- ale's tenth American tour. The; By The Associated Press singers have appeared in every H V state of the Union except SouthlPope Has Vision of Christ... Dakotand NevaP p 'i Shaw and the Chorale are best known nationally from tours, re- cordings and appearances with Arturo Toscanini and the NBC Symphony in broadcasts of Beeth- oven's "Ninth Symphony" and - VATICAN CITY-The Vatican said yesterday it is true Pope Pius XII had a vision of Jesus Christ during his illness last winter. IA brief announcement from the office of Vatican press director Luciano Casimiri said, "This press office has been authorized to con- firm what has been announced by the weekly illustrated Oggi in its issue of Nov. 24 about the vision of the Holy Father in the course of IGLOOS AND KAYAKS? PentagyonHonors Two Heroic Eskimos. By The Associated Press Most people are aware by now "The walrus is good eating," I TATA cvTTTrR+l11.s t_ _s 7 fhat mACf Ti'clriwne 1--94- 1;-- 4- 4 'Missa Solemnis," as well as for his illness of December 1954." vvmWAHINGTOLN - A couple o 'm s ut .kimuos dont live in performances of the Verdi operas The current issue of Oggi, a picture magazine of wide circulation R ecognized heroic Eskimos are in town, shat- igloos, and Walunga drove that "Aida," "Falstaff," and "The which appeared on newsstands last Friday, said the vision occurred tering illusions right and left point home neatly. Masked Ball." when the Pope's illness reached a climax on Dec. 2, 1954 and he was DENVER UO-A store proprietor The Eskimos, both members of "Igloos? Sure, I've seen an ig- Tickts or he cncet ae Ireciting the prayer "Anima Christi (Soul of Christ) ." picked John Gilbert Graham, 23, 1teAak ainlGad ee10 h aepaeyuswa available at the offices of the out of a line of seven prisoners honored at the Pentagon yester- igloo, in a geography book." University Musical Society in More Ra yesterday as the man who bought day for leading a party to the Dressed in their warm winter Burton Tower. *us*A*"Tests?.20 to 25 sticks" of dynamite three speedy rescue of 11 members of a costumes, they dropped by the TOKYO-A Japanese scientist said yesterday he believes the days before a dynamite bomb blew Navy patrol plane shot down by Smithsonian Institution for a look - sion ctaffenm atirtnin + te ia as riaon. a m1afin Siberia h ina . TTr~a A irinph an the Russians over the Bering Sea at how scholars think Eskimos live. Walunga said. "Walrus liver is better than cow's liver." They were talking through that incredible maze of inner corridors in the Pentagon when a reporter asked Walunga, "Which way is north?" Without even bothering to look for moss on the Pentagon virll m70111 Cr ic~a -hi fh-m ,1