DAC Offers Top-Notch Dancing, Comedy See Page 2 Y Latest Deadline in the State :4Inait PARTLY CLOUDY, RAIN VOL. LXVI, No. 56 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1955 FOUR PAGES Detroit Allies. Take Firm Stand In Germany Say Determined To Stay In Berlin B E R L I N (P)-The Western Powers served notice on the Rus- sians yesterday they will hold their bridgehead in divided Ber- lin until all Germany is unified. United States Ambassador James B. Conant came from Bonn to reiterate this pledge before a crowded news conference in which he also spoke for the British and French, saying: "The position of our govern- ments in regard to the status of Berlin is unchanged. We insist that the quadripartite status of Berlin remains unaltered." Confers With Staff Conant conferred with the United States Berlin staff and with German city officials during his one-day visit to explore the inci- dent which stirred the latest East- West conflict here-the detention of two United States congressmen and two other Americans by Com- munist police and Russian guards in East Berlin last Sunday. The ambassador said he was, like the United States Comman- dant in Berlin, Maj. Gen Charles L. Dasher, amazed at the stand Soviet commander P. A. Dibrova took toward the incident. Dibrova said the radio-equipped Army car used by the congressmen and their escort violated the laws of the East German Communist repub- lic. He emphasized that the Rus- sians regard their occupation of East Berlin as ended. Earlier yesterday, the Commun- ist newspaper Neues Deutschland declared the four-power status of Berlin is "nonexistent." To the Russian and the German Communist statements, Conant re- plied: "I should never have imagined that the Soviet authorities would s allow their agents, the Volkspolizei people's police, to take such a discourteous and arbitrary action against a member of the United States command here in Berlin and his guests." Safe Driving Day Results Disappointing By The Associated Press Despite all the advance cam- paigning Safe-Driving Day from the, viewpoint of deadlines was just another date on the calendar. Sixty-nine persons died in street and highway crashes during the 24 hours of Thursday, the target day chosen by safety campaigners to point up the benefits of cau- tion. - This was the identical number of persons killed on Thursday, Nov. 17. The Associated Press selected that date at random to gther statistics for comparison with S-D Day. ,Thursday's toll was far above the 51 reported on the nation's first observance of S-D Day. That was Dec. 15, 1954. S-D Day was one of special con- centration on the highway traffic death problem. President Dwight D. Eisenhower urged caution and his plea was echoed in special campaigns of newspapers, radio stations, civic groups, advertisers and others. In many cities police wore arm- bands and used banners urging safety. Many cities ' conducted special community - wide cam- paigns. H. B. Miller, director of the President's Committee for Traffic Safety, termed the toll "disappoint- ing" but ?said he hoped it would be a lesson for the future. The Messiah' At Hill Today Handel's famous Christmas ora- Papers Still GM Leader Hi By Auto Dealei Industry Accused of Higb Press In Testimony to Subcommittee WASHINGTON (M)-President Harlow Curtice of General U Corp., raked over the coals in public by some GM retail dealers, fied yesterday that the-giant auto firm plays fair with everyboc No management organization he knows of, Curtice told the S Antitrust and Monoply sub'committee, has "a more general rega the equities of the various groups with which we have contact-t mers, employers, suppliers, dealers and shareholders." Sen. Joseph C. O'Mahoney (D-Wyo.), chairman of the sui mittee, let Curtice take the stand four hours after he showe First the senator called for testimony in which three dealers ac GM of treating them like "pawns and vassals," putting themi "alhost diabolical" sales pressure \and forcing them to buy equip they did not need. Hears Testimony Senator O'Mahoney said Curtice and other GM officials s Crippled Editors Join To Continue rS News Flow ure Newspaper Guild To Publish Paper DETROIT-A four hour meeting between representatives of the AFL Motors stereotypers' union and the Detroit testi- Newspapers Publishers' Association dy. last night failed to settle the enate strike which shut down the city's rd for three daily newspapers. Gusto- Dissent apparently punctuated the session, midway through the bcom- meeting federal and state media- d up. tors present told reporters the only ,d up. agreement they anticipated was cused "maybe one to meet again Sunday under or later." Thirty minutes later a pment decision to reconvene at 2 p.m. today was announced. hould Newscasts Increase d Meanwhile, efforts to feed news testi-to the nation's fifth largest city m to continued. At the Fort Shelby Hotel newspaper editors from the erence Times, News, and Free Press, kept id say their news-gathering headquarters taxes humming for the second straight! year. day, as extra newscasts took up1 th 72 some slack. The Detroit News management Cur- has still made no announcement have concerning layoffs and reporters over continue to turn out stories, de- educt- spite dim prospects of seeing them alaries in print. The Associated Press has been greatly aided by the News ess staff,. however, in its nationwide four ( service, it is the only one of the suc- three papers not belonging to the$ of the newspaper guild. The Times and rapid Free Press issued layoff notices ustry, to their staffs yesterday. e and New Paper Out Khrushchev's z r. 7 - Blast 0 Viewed As I1 ilunde- Red Leader Hits WesterE Colonialism Levels Charges In Burma Visit By The Associated Press Top American officials viewe Nikita S. Khrushchev's remarks ' Nationalists Hint at Veto Of *Satellites UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (A)- Nationalist China yesterday assail- ed a proposal to admit 18 nations to United Nations membership in a package deal as "unconditional surrender" to the Soviet Union. Ambassador T. F. Tsiang, Chi- nese delegation leader, said a reso- lution approving the package- including 13 Western-sponsored countries and five Soviet satellites -represented a . turn-around in the UN in the face of Soviet vetoes. "This is blackmail," he told the Assembly Special Political Com- mittee. "The United Nations, after all these years of struggle, is asked by the joint draft resolution to pay the blackmail demanded by the Soviet Union." Canada Backs Resolution The resolution before the com- mittee was sponsored by Canada and 27 other nations, including the African-Asian ,loc, Latin- American, and British Common- wealth countries. Canada's Paul Martin has said he is certain at least 45 countries in the committee will approve the 18-nation package deal. Tsiang poised a veto threat over Soviet-supported Outer Mongolia in his statement to the committee but did not state specifically that his delegation would veto the Out-' er Mongolia application when it reached the Security Council stage. Hints at Veto Tsiang even hinted at vetoing the four other Communist satel- lites included in the package. He said the countries-Albania, Hun- gary, Bulgaria and Romania-were enslaved by Moscow, adding: "My delegation is not prepared to share in the responsibility for admitting these states to the United Nations and thereby casting a halo of ap- proval on them." The 13 Western-sponsored coun- tries are Finland, Portugal, Ire- .land, Jordan, Austria, Ceylon,. Ne- pal, Libya, Cambodia, Laos, Spain, Italy and Japan. Fgr Halts Flights At 5 p.m. yesterday a thick fog curtain caused Willow Run offi- cials to cancel flights for. the eve- ning. The Michigan - MacGill hockey game was cancelled for this reason, when a similar fog ground- ed the MacGill team's plane in Toronto. "have the benefit" of this iony and he directed the listen to it. Curtice made no direct ref to the dealer criticism. He di dealers' net profits before are now 415 million dollars a He said this compared wi million dollars in 1940. During the postwar period tice continued, GM dealers had profits before taxes of five billion dollars, after d ing one billion of owners' sa and bonuses. Four Reasons For Succ Curtice said there were principal reasons for'GM's cess. The dynamic growthc country, the even more growth of the automobile ind GM's management structur GM's approach to problems GM's approach to problems tice said, "is really an attiti mind. It assumes that every and anything-whether it be uct, process, method, procedi social or human relations C improved." One of the recurring comp the subc mmittee has heard dealer witnesses is that the sometimes arbitrarily depriv their franchises to sell GM IPubli~c Gir Farm Ide WASHINGTON () - Seci of Agriculture Ezra T. Benso received nearly 2,400 letters sponse to his recent request the public write him its ide the farm problem. Reporting this yesterday Agriculture Department sai plies ranged from strong en ment of the secretary an policies to demands that her They came from all sectic the country, from city fol well as farmers and women a as men. A few came from bers of Congress. DAILY REPORTERS CAROL PRINS AND SUE JESSUP SELL COPIES OF THE DAILY IN DOWN- TOWN DETROIT YESTERDAY. 1 2t Y ,Cur- ude of ything prod- ure or an be )aints lfrom y are ved of cars. 'es is retary n has in re- that as on , the d re- dorse- d his esign. 'ns of ks as s well mem- The Detroit Reporter, published ' ti by the newspaper guild of Detiroit, a made its bow on Detroit news- Surprises Detroit with Papers stands early this morning, in a new effort to provide local news to a city choked off from what had been a daily habit. Out of town papers also increased Detroit allotments, although the extent was not known. Overtime Sought Working conditions, not wages,j are the'cause of the strike. Stereo- typers are asking that work norm- ally done during slack periods well in advance of the day of publica-, tion, be done after their regular shift, at time and a half for thej overtime,. This is aimed notably at Sunday issues, a bulk of which is set up in advance to clear the way for spot news Saturday night. . . * Ah*! NEW YORK (A')-Santa Claus has been blamed as a prime causer of bad colds. H. J. Ban- non, research director of Grove Laboratories, Inc., said the year's. big'gest. cold. epidemic always starts up right after the hectic Christmas shopping per- iod. America Not Discovered By Columbus - Corteseo "America was not discovered by Columbus!" Dr. Armando Cor- teseo, of the University of Coimbra in Portugual. conmmented yester- day in a University Lecture at Clements Library. Dr. Corteseo, who isiamong the foremost authorities of the world in the field of history of Portugese maps and Portugese navigations of the 15th and 16th centuries, spoke on the topic "America in Maps before Columbus." Much of the lecture, which was co-sponsored by the Departments of Geography and History, was based on an Italian map printed in / ,1 A r 'IA m . rn.. h .ns'cr.L Ato 6 A Special to the Daily{ DETROIT -- The man smiled,4 amused, at the paper the coed was selling, and hurried through the revolving doors of the Fisher Building to his day of office toil. Suddenly he was back, saying, "I think I'll take one of those." He handed over a nickel for a paper the girl, a staff member of The Daily, was advertising as "the only morning newspaper in De- troit today, with details on the newspaper strike." Evidently having steeled them- selves to proceeding through the day without a local newspaper for the first time in their lives, De- troiters were taken by surprise by the appearance of The Daily on the streets. Some bought out of curiosity; another said, "Have to have some- thing to read." Many wondered what it was and listened to ex- planations of the student news- AID Seeks ew Farm Pltan WASHINGTON (A'-Sen. Homer E. Capehart (R-Ind.) proposed yesterday that hungry people of the world be fed with the food stacked up in America's storage bins. He said he knows of no better way to,use the surpluses that have accumulated, to the benefit of the needy at home and abroad as well as the American farmer. Capehart coupled with the char- ity program a proposal that pro- duction quotas be imposed on American farms until the surplus is cut down to a reasonable bal- ance with consumption needs. ' The Indiana Republican, who owns a 2,400-acre farm himself, told a news conference that Sec- retary of Agriculture B e n s o n "should have been more bold" in attacking the problem of falling farm prices. "He should have asked for more action on the part of congress," Capehart added. At the same time he said he was not singling Benson out for criticism. Capehart said he knows some- thing personally of the farm situa- tion. He said that last Monday he sold some hogs for $11.25 a hun- dred pounds, the lowest level in paper by reporters-turned-news- boys. Others said, "I'm John Smith, '38" or "Used to be on The Daily," or "Is that The Daily? Do you know so and so?" The Daily had left its press run- ning a few minutes longer yester- day morning and took 2,400 extra copies into. Detroit for sale 'at the Fisher Building and in the down- town area. Reaction was varied. Some snorted. Others thought it a good idea. "Opportunist," someone sneered. The chief of police bought a copy. Local newscasts told De- troiters The Daily had been there with a "comprehensive coverage of national and international Ikse Confers With Top Aids, GETTYSBURG, Pa. (P)-Presi- dent Dwight D. Eisenhower talked over the nation's defenses for 75' minutes yesterday with his two top nilitary advisers, who had. narrowly escaped injury on the slippery, 80-mile drive from Wash- ington. The conference, with Secretary of Defense Charles E. Wilson and Adm. Arthur W. Radford, took place in the President's newly bul- let-proofed office here. Today President Eisenhower will have separate meetings wtih Re- "ublican leaders of Senate and House. His 11 a.m. date with Sen. William F. Knowland of California takes top place in speculation in view of the Republican Senate leader's repeated efforts to get the President to give an early "yes or no" on whether he will seek re-. election. news," and that it wouldbe back again today Q with 3,000 more copies. But, because other papers, es- pecially the suddenly formed De- troit Reporter, will be published today to fill the void left by the strike of Detroit's three dailies, The Daily is staying home today, while staff members catch up on their sleep. :labor Unions Vote Merer NEW YORK (gP)-CIO conven- tion delegates, singing "Solidarity' Forever," yesterday ended a 20- year 'split in union labor by ap- proving a long-awaited merger with the AFL. CIO delegates voted 660-3 for the merger, which the AFL had approved unanimously a day ear- lier. Separate AFL and CIO con- ventions came to an end and both groups prepared to meet Monday in a week-long joint session. The historic merger action, weld- ing 140 unions into a 16-million- member federation, climaxed two years of active negotiations. The basic merger agreement was reach- ed last February in Miami Beach, Fla., and it took until now to complete it. The new organization is called the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organ- izations-AFL-CIO. The CIO was formed into a rival labor group over two decades ago by AFL unions which seceded be- cause they wanted to' organize workers in whole industries. The AFL unions are organized along craft lines. Burma yesterday as a shocking blunder which would backfire against Russia. They said Khrushchev's bitter remarks could wipe out much of the good will he and Soviet Pre- mier Nikolai Bulganin have built up during their Asiatic tour. .Khrushchev's earlier b 1 a s t against the West while touring In- dia, they believed, already had embarrassed Prime Minister Nehru in his efforts to keep his country neutral in the East-West conflict. Blasts Western Traditions In Rangoon yesterday Khrush- chev broke through a devout silence among meditating Budd- hists with an outburst. against American, British and French people and traditions. The setting was the Shwe Dagon Pagoda, 2,500 years old and the foremost of Birmese shrines. Wor- shippers traditionally preserve silence there. Khrushchev stormed against what he called the stupidity;. . the western nations as lie sat down after his climb. At the end of his outburst the Soviet Communist party boss was gasping for wo*s. Bulganin Silent k Soviet Premier Nkolai Bulgan- in, touring Burma and India with Khrushchev, sat silently as the party chief unleashed his barbs during a conversation he started with the Burmese ambassador to Russia, Maung Ohn, and into which he drew accompanying for eign correspondents. At one point Khrushchev's fade was a strong pink. Pointing wildly with a stubby finger he declaimed on colonialism, a favorite subect of his. "We Russians are the only ones that are always fighting for the cause against colonialism." Questions Red Leader "What about Latvia and Es- tonia?" asked a French news- man. "You don't know what's going. on inside East Germany," Khrush- chev replied. "What the East Ger- mans are doing you would not un- derstand because you are a paid slave writer of capitalism. If you wanted to write something good about Russia, you would starve to death-because the capitalist press would refuse to print it." "Russia always tells the truth," he continued. "But when we tell the truth, the colonizers don't like it. They don't like the naked truth. We will always be doing and say- Ing the truth because we don't like colonialism." The Burmese ambassador broke in to say, "we in Burma are able to sift the truth from propaganda." He did not pursue the point. State Department Holds Fire The State Department, while carefully n o t i n g Khrushchev's words, declined to comment on his remark that there are "soige very stupid people in America." Likewise, th department held its fire on his accusation that Am- ericans tried to persuade a visiting Soviet architect to defect to the United States. Galens' Drive Below Quota Yesterday's bad weather caused the intake for the first Galens' Society tag day to fall below its quota. " Dick Reilley, '56M, chairman of the Galens' Drive, said the total intake was $3,100.00. He said on 14m4. This map, brought to Ann SE T TLE DIFFERENCES: Arbor from Minneapolis for the lecture, showed what Corteseo be- lieves to be the first cartographical Gov.W illiamsStevenson representation of America ever C s iopictured. Corteseo pointed out two islands / on the map, one of which was An- tilia, an ancient mythical "Island of the Seven Cities" located by OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)-Adlai Stevenson and Gov. G.. Mennen Europeans in the unknown west Williams said yesterday they are willing to talk over their differences and later identified with certain of opinion as to the type of presidential campaign the Democrats islands discovered by Columbus. should conduct in 1956. The University of Lisbon gradu- d ate believed that the Portugese Stevenson, 1952 Democratic nominee, is an announced candidate reached America when, by at- for renomination next year while Williams is being boomed as a tempting to avoid the trade winds possible nominee. blowing south along the coast of Stevenson's statement at Chicago Nov. 19 calling for a program Africa, they were carried too far World News Roundup MOSCOW - The Supreme Soviet Parliament of the U.S.S.R. was summoned yesterday to meet in special session Dec. 23. Western diplomats believe it is intended to provide a forum for Premier Nikolai Bulganin and party boss Nikita Khrushchev to re- poit in a full blaze of publicity on their current jaunt to India, Burma and Afghanistan. PARIS - The French Cabinet yesterday set Jan. 2 as the date for general elections to name a new National Assembly. The announcement came after a day of intense political maneuv- I ering over constitutional interpretations in an effort to avoid voting on Christmas or New Year's Day. The Council State apparently gave the Cabinet the l4titude I