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December 04, 1955 - Image 1

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Michigan Daily, 1955-12-04

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EDUCATION CRISIS
AN ELECT ION ISSUE?
See Page 4

Latest Deadline in the State

:43att

*
SNOW, SLOP

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QT P e d

VOLT. LI.'N. 7

ANN ARBOR, MICIGAN, SUJNDAY, DECEMBR ,1955,i~

s1& rau

e vas. a e+v a

....

_ __

Students Storm' wolverines Stun McGill, 5-3,
Georgia Capitol fith Second Period Strength

Governor Wants No Football Game'TI1
iVJIui. h -u Pi B -.f N P1

Gam

DAILY STEREOTYPER Laird
Detroit strikers hold. Here he
machine to be trimmed and p
from paper mat at Wallace's
Detroit Strik
As Ne otiatio
By LEWIS
Detroit's first newspaper strik
More than six hours of tense
between the AFL stereotypers' un
lishers' Association at an apparen
Pessimism was evidently th
t adjourned after 11 last night. "W
the strike began," the striking loc
Negotiations will resume tom
2,000,000 people in Detroit will pas
No C omics
For Detroit;
T V SeAs On
By VERNON NAHRGANG
Detroiters today are without one
of their most important and be
loved institutions -the' Sunda
newspaper.
For the third day in a row, mem-
bers of the country's fifth larges
city have no newspaper. But to
day is the day that counts, as a
integral part of a Detroiter's life
is his Sunday News, Times, or Free
Press.
Boys and girls in Detroit homes
are without their Sunday comic
sections, as these along with mag-
azine sections, lie bundled an
undelivered in the newspaper
plants.
One Paper Out
However, some of the motor cit
residents will not be without any-
thing to read. There is one news-
paper on the stands in Detroi'
today.
The Reporter, an eight-pag
publication by the Newspaper
Guild of Detroit and the Allied
Printing Trades Council, makes
its second appearance today on
Detroit street corners. Its 100,000
copies are available in the down-
town area and along the city's
main stems.
Doubles Format
Initiated yesterday, The Re
potter has doubled today the four-
page format of -its first issue. Pub-
lishers hope to enlarge the paper
still further.
Detroiters who do not care t
buy a copy of this paper may try
to substitute Chicago or Toledo
papers for their usual Sunday fare
Most people, missing the specia
features of their 'sunday news-
papers, though, will have more
time to watch television.
In Ann Arbor, there are no De-
troit papers today, but New York
Chicago and Toledo papers may
be. had, as long as they last. The
comic and magazine sections o
the Detroit papers remain unheed-
ed at the side of the platform a
the railroad station.

W t l i l t C ecaIuse I1i i eg r I a..
ATLANTA WP) - Gov. Marvin Griffin's official residence and
the Georgia State Capitol were stormed early yesterday by a howlingk
mob of Georgia Tech students angered by Griffin's move to keep Tech
out of the Sugar Bowl.
Demonstrators, who several times burned Griffin in effigy, broke
through a cordon of Georgia Bureau of Investigation agents and
smashed their way into the Capitol.
But'police lines reinforced with 25 cars of state troopers held back
the crowd of. more than 2,000 at the governor's mansion.
The demonstration was touched
off by Griffin's request to the uni- BURMA:
versity system Board of Regents
to bar state colleges from playing e
opponents having Negro players or Soviet Sid e {
" in games where spectators are not
ยข.. < racially segregated.
-Daily-John Hirtzel In Austin, Tex., Athletic Director D ifferent
Wallace demonstrates job which D. X. Bible of the University ofr
takes metal plate from casting Texas emphatically denied a re- MOSCOW ()-Pravda and Mos-k
laced on presses. Plate was cast port that Texas would replace cow radio yesterday gave their ver-
feet. eorTech te Sar Bowl. sion of Nikita Khrushchev's con-
Jack Gallagher, writing from taesa eak rdy i
Texas officials reacted favorably This official Soviet version dif-
Dbfered fiom reports by Western
SP r sa grBo correspondents whom Khrushchev
srg, B massailed in person at the Buddhist
arier, a reserve back, on its foot- wagda s
hAMBURGEt ball squad. And segregation will Swe Daon shingais"pa
e ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ea wilcniu es ni ody offprci cted aoabPiTt' hwiesofficitaloiersm on
bloc of tickets to hean. 2 the exchange, for example, MICHIGAN RIGHT WINi
e debate yesterday left negotiations in the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans. the Soviet Communist party boss the evening in the Wolve
ion and the Detroit Newspaper Pub- However, a few hours after the was quoted by Western writers as assist on the play after he
t impasse. student demonstration broke up, a saying the British regard Burma's The strong first line of Ca
e order when the meeting finally source close to the governor, who peosled s serson andbarbai and helped keep the pres
Ve are no closer together than when declined to be quoted by name, Moscow's autm men - _
al's president George Robinson said. said, "Georgia Tech will be allowed t
orrow at 2 pm., but today nearly to play in the Sugar Bowl." Pavda's acount of infrpal re-enithe
ss a Sunday conspicuously minus The This Griffin admin istration maerkbyn hrse a pterec- pas
Shuge Sunday editions, which are source pointed out that the gover- det-rleaking.aHe andtear Saoy
to many a weetend habit nor's message to Regent Chiran ie ers in t a ye ey The Associated Press
:a'sprsdeP reseRoSien sid Ri, obet0 raoehll C owedinmadetmanystatementsof tecff
f preutl pyepareotpecificamention th"e Sugar to Western reporters, but these artin Predicts...
editions cl r Tes, etPress Bowl. have not been reported in the Soy- GETTYSBURG. Pa. -
hgSudyeiinwihaeI et lprsinels.Rarha epulcnladrJsp
editions clutter Times, Fee Press B -l.h-v t e rpre nth o-Y-GT''SUG a
and News press rooms in huge But in view of the sweeping seg- ltpes Republican leader Joseph
piles, while silence reigns in place regation policy laid dqwn by the -------predicted yesterday that Pr
of humming presses . governor and his call of "an im- Dwight D. Eisenhower will r
The union rejected a manage- mediate called meeting" of the re- eateranother term next year f
ment proposal urging-resumption gents to consider it, the request world's sake.".
of publication as early as possible, obviously was prompted by theb Senate Republican leade
with any wage increase granted t forthcoming bowl game. 'ham F. Knwland said be b
be retroactive. Arnold said yesterday he has . the Presh ent has reached "n
Stereotypers presently receive asked the regents to meet at 11:30 NEW YORK (I"-A bid by the decision" on a second term
- $3.08 per hour for day work and n.m. tomorrow to study the gover- big AFL Teamsters union to join While ?en. Knowland sa
$3.33 at night.' nor's request. . the CIO subsidiary of the newly President would be "the str
Meanwhile, Detroit began to feel_____;merged AFL-CIO was sharply re- candidate" for the Republic
the effects of the strike. News- buffed last night by James B. never did come right, out a
paper guild of Detroit and printing 'Brauer Wi Carey, a, top leader of the former that he personally would fa
craft unions went ahead with their CIO. Eisenhowr bid for reelectio
second edition of the breach-fill- The teamsters were the biggest did he foreclose on a p'os
e ing Detroit Reporter. Leecture Today. single affiliate of the old AFL. that he himself' might an
e Advertisers overwnelmed the Several officials of the 1,300,000- as a candidate in the eve
new-born paper in an effort to Prof. Jerald C. Brauer. dean of member Teamsters revealed their chief executive retiies.
keep the Christmas spirit in the the Federated Theological Faculty, union planned to join the AFL- Republican National Ch
c pocketbooks of Detroit. .will speak on "What of the Future" CIO's Industrial Union Depart- Leonard W. Hall said yes
Business Slumps at 8:15 p.m. today in Aud. A, An- ment. That is a unit intended that things look good for th
S Detroit's business had been run- ell Hall priharily for former CIO unions. in the South next year.
r ning five percent above last year's H
sales but the strike and dismal His talk will iitiate the fourth Carey, asked whether the Team-
weather conditions dropped sales in the annual "This I Believe" lec- sters would be welcome, said flat- G 'D
y in volume so sharply yesterday and ture series sponsored by the dtu- ly, no. J ealelns r iv
- Friday that the week's total will dent Religious Association and the The Teamsters have often been
only equal 1954's week following Campus Religion Council. criticized by both AFL and CIO INets 15,944
t Thanksgiving. "What of the Future" is a series unions for organizing outside $ , 4
Newscasts are being continued at of discussions and lectures deal- teamster jurisdiction and for har- Two days of bad weather
e a stepped-up rate, and out-of-town ing with questions students en- boring alleged racket influences. the total contribution fe
r newspaper circulation is reported counter in facing the future. Lead- The Teamster move appeared to Galens' Society Tag Day 4
I to have jumped considerably. ing theologians of Protestant, Jew- have stirred up the first major considerably under last
s The union maintained its gran- ish and Catholic faiths will lecture quarrel in the reunited labor move- total.
a ite-like demand that overtime be during the week on their views of ment on the eve of its first con- According to Dick Reilly,
p paid for pages set in advance of this subject. vention tomorrow. chairman of the Galens'
- publication dates, and additional Earlier today a panel of students Walter Reuther, who had been i contributions for Friday an
s union men be hired to process and faculty will discuss problem top man in the CIO and is due to terday totaled $5,944. Las
color plates. The work is normally areas and questions to which re- head the IUD, was inclined to the drive netted $6,700.
done during slack periods, at regu- ligion must give attention at pres- minimize the whole situgtion. He Reilly expressed his tha
- lar wage rates. ent and in the future. The group said the IUD won't actually be those townspeople and st'
Speculation concerning the dura- will meet at 4:15 p.m. in Aud. C, established until authorized by the who contributed generousl
tion of the strike has hit the 13- I Angell Hall. convention next week. spite the weather.
r week figure. This is the limit that
publishers are covered by strike. GOV. WILLAMS TO ATTEND OPENING:f

First Line
Resposile
Fo Victt
Maxwell, Dunnigan,
MlacFarland Score
"yDVEGE

'G Dick
rines 5
passe
ptain B
sure on
House
Martin
esident
un for
or the!
r Wil-
elieves
o final
try.
id the
ongest
ans he
nd say
vor an
n. Nor
'sibility
nounce
nt the
airman
terday
e GOP
7e
caused
r. the
to fall
year's
'56M,
Drive,
d yes-
t year
nks to
udents
y, de-

UL. .LA.ll1A- 111 111LLU l,< UkI

13T GREY
Coach Vic Heyliger's hockey
team got off to a flying start last
night with a solid 5-3 win over
-;McGill University.
A sellout Coliseum crowd of
3,700 was treated to an explosive
Michigan scoring spree at the start
4~''"" of the second half that threw an~
otherwise tight game into a rout.~
MaFarland Sprains Ankle
The win was a costly one, how-
ever, as Wolverine Captain Bill
MacFarland suffered a severe
ankle sprain after colliding with
the boards in the third period. It
-Daily-Dick Gaskill is not known, how long the in-
Dunnigan slips past the McGill defense to score his second goal of valuable high-scorer will be lost to
-3 hockey win last night. Wally Maxwell (10) got credit for an the team.
d the puck to Dunnigan coming down the left-center side of, the ice. The scoring was paced by the
lill MacFarland, Dunnigan and Maxwell sparked the winners' offense billiant first line of MacFarland,
i had-wrkedMc~ll gali Heni Lfleu. R Dick Dunnigan and rugged new
hard-worked McGill goalie Henri Lafleur. sophomore Wally Maxwell. The
show seemed to be all theirs.
Ike ' 'F T *xATnFour of the winner's goals came
SIke, Harrma~ ixol from this starting forward wall.
with Dunnigan getting two, Mae-
xa -Farland and Maxwell, one each,.
He predicted that if President as a member of the House and Fifth tally came off the stick of
Eisenhower runs again he will take Senate as well as Vice-President. another promising sophomore, Ed
more states next year than in 1952 These apparently will be used in Switzer,' on the second line,
when he lost only nine, an attempt to show Nixon on both McGill Scores First
The chairman repeated that he sides of some questions, particu- McGill opened the scoring at
thinks the President wild seek re- larly as a so-called "isolationist" 9:36 of the first period when Brian
election "if he feels able' and later an "internationalist"'in McMullan lifted the puck past
-1foreign policy. His congressional goalie Lorne Howes into the upper
karriman Isists *voting record also is reported be- left hand corner of the nets.
OLAHMA ITY Gv inlg coinbea. ' It wasn't long before Michigan
OKLAHOMA CIT"E - Gov. Al - Nxnapaetyhsaknn bounced back. , A bullet shot by"
erell Harriman of New York said Nixonapparensi1i s taken - sophomore center Don McIntosh
ysedyhis name will go in nomi- increasing importance as a targe,- cetrDnMnos
Esnation for president at the 1956 get because a great many Demo- from the blue line slammed off the
Democratic national convention crats seem to cling to the idea stick of MacFarland into the cage
butemontinuedtoinst heisntn that it won't be- good politics to at 15:00. The period ended with
but continued to insist he is not atac the Pedetprnayifhesd'ore at 1-1.
an active candidate. attack the President personally if I1h 4or t11
Harrimandparried a round of he runs again. Michigan then busted the con-
test wide open. In the space of
questions from newsmen on his ---"---'-,-two minutes, 49 seconds, the com-
candidacy at a press conference. - iplexion changed to 4-1 with Swit-
before he was to address the na- 1 Ve r Urges zer lofting a shot past McGill
tional convention of Young Demo- goalie Henri Lafleur at :57 and
crats. M ore Student Dunnigan adding two more tallies
Asked about the candidacy of, on a series of quick-opening plays.
Adlai Stevenson, 1952 nomineeT 1 . " A solo dash by Maxwell later in.
who is the only avowed candidate Ju ie r'etilons the period ended the Michigan
so far this year, Harriman said. scoring at five. It seemed to ma.t-
"It is too early to make up our With petittioning for five Joint ter little to a partisan crowd that
minds on candidates. What's im- Judiciary Council positions due to the visitors were gable to add two
portant " s get the party' to- close Wednesday, only ten appli- more scores.
gether and decde what are the cations have been turned in. Of main concern was what kind
issues."
"Serving on the Council is a of 'overall showing was Michigan
valuable experience inasmuch as going to give. From all indica-
Democras Prepare . '.. you always have to make decis- tions, defending national champ-
WASHINGTON-Democrats arei ions," Fritz Glover, '56E, Judic ions are going to be extremely
reported piling up ammunition to Chairman, explained. "It offers tough again this winter.
center their 1956 campaign fire on you a chance to improve your Heyliger Encouraged
Vice-President Richard M. Nixon sense of judgment and responsi- poach Heyliger was encouraged
if President Eisenhower runs again. bility., by the team's generally fine show-
Should the President step out of Glover is asking that more stu- ing, especially since it was the
the picture, some Democrats figure! dents petition for these posts. The opener. Although ragged in spots,
the ammunition will be even more main eligibility requirements are the three-line offense' 1 0 o k e d
useful. They think Nixon is most that the student must have com- strong. "The power plays were
likely to be the alternate GOP pleted 60 credit hours and that he I good," Heyliger mention in ref-
presidential nominee, be academically eligible. See DUNNIGAN, 1'age 3
The Democratic National Con At least one of the open posts -.
mittee has voluminous files on this semester must be filled by a
Nixon, including speeches he woman, Glover said. The consti--M'Basketball
tution demands a minimum of sex!
^ +^,^. Y * 1

1 represenzaTion

0;
Y
a
,2

insurance-.
The only optimistic note in the!.
situation came last night in a F ree,
Press radio advertisement: Don'tI
worry, Detroiters, the "Tangle
Town" contest will continue when
publication resumes.

'Film-Flam'

'Diversion' F

G roup ' Protests
, 1
e Judic Penalt
Delta Theta Phi, professional
law fraternity, has'been disciplined
.ith n5A fl flfine and warning by

Actually, Glover wenk on, it
#would be preferable to hkve more {
rom Past Union Operas than the minimum of three women
on judiciary.
BHWomen are better equipped to;
+ By ILL HANEY - handle cases involving otherw
"Filmz-Flam may be one of the best Union Operas Governor jwomen, said Glover. He expressed
G "M eWil iamsas en, aordin bto UFred Eas freerance a desire to have a judiciary com-
G.ennen Williams has seen, according to Fred Evans, free lance ;posed equally of men and women.
direcator of this year's show. i "Judgment is best when it is1
The Governor, who has seen four of the last five Operas,.will a body of peers than by arbitrary
attend Tuesday's opening night performance and participate in the decision," the Chairman contin-
usual backstage tour, stopping to pose for pictures with the leads of ued. "We don't want students'
the cast. that don't know students.
the cast.nd it'skvery iteresting work z
Evans feels the show will be a success "because it has novelty. "Ans ery interesing work
It is a pleasant, though experimental, diversion from the beaten path becausoheis definie s
Union Operas have trailed in recent years," .nof cAcoplism ntJ
Though the cast has already been rehearhing for six weeks, Evans are available in Rm. 1020 Admin-
believes the next two days are the most important in determining the istration Bldg., and must be turned
outcome of the production. in by 5 p.m. Wednesday.z
Today and Monday the cast will hold dress rehearsals at the
Michigan Theatre where they will "get the feel" of the band and Q* . Y
scenery.
"If the cast works out 'some of their minor difficulties at these Students interested in apply-
inl n n1 Ivmm-,a la a -n+ ch aham- if nnt,if will he iinf anntheri . ; u --., - - . #

Spener Huined
By Pitt, 75-66
Special to The Dafly
PITTSBURGH Pa. - Michi-
gan's basketball quintet opened its
season on the wrong foot here last
night, bowing to Pittsburgh's Pan.
thers, 75-66.
Pitt, using its deliberate style
of play to good advantage, was
able Ito withstand a .second-half
rally by Michigan and pull away
during the final few minutes.
The Wolverines had a hard time
getting started. They trailed, 9-2
shortly after the game began, anc
had a 14-point deficit late in the
half. Harvey Williams, 6' 8" sub
center, came off the bench and
helped narrow the margin to 39-31
at the half.
Williams Scores 10
Williams was pne of the few
items onnMichigan's credit side.

the Joint Judiciary Council, ittwi
,. learned yesterday.
FC ReceivesReliable sources indicate that'
the group is planning a protest to
the University Subcommittee on
Grand Trophy- Discipline on the penalty levied far
presence of women and intoxicants
Special to the Daily in their house.
ST. ,LOUIS - Interfraternity Asked about the potential ap-
i .4 -- ;+-it--4 r.al ,- efral nitn rffirialk harl 1 n

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