Michigan State . . .47 Penn State *. . . 7! Purdue *. . . . 6 Wisconsin . . . . . 6 Minnesota . . . . .161Pittsburgh . . . . . 27|Texas A&M . . . . .6UCLA . . .,. . 6 Illinois . . . . . . 13 Duke . . . . . . 14 Texas Christian . . .6 California . . 34lGeorgia Tecli . .*28 . . .2OfAuburn . * . . . . 7 Notre Dame .. . 141Ohio State H-Bomb Proposal Indicates Lack of Perspective See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State ~~Iait COOLER, SHOWERS VOL. LXVII, No. 29 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1956 EIGHT PAGES 3 I 4 I INDEPENDENCE: PolishRedChief Renounces Reds WARSAW (P)- Wladyslaw Gomulka, new leader of Polish com- munism, presented the nation yesterday with a virtual declaration of independence from the Soviet Union. Gomulka went before the central committee of the United Work- ers communist party with a 21/2-hour speech denouncing what he called a misrule of the past 12 years and calling on Poland to set its own course toward socialism independent of Moscow. Krushchev Fails His statement broadcast by the government radio said Soviet Communist party chief Nikita S. Krushchev's flying visit to Warsaw Friday had failed to stem the drive toward freedom from Kremlin control. Announcement that Gomulka has been named first secretary of the party-top controlling post-was expected momentarily. The ten- Ssion that gripped the capital for H-bomb Ban Gets Support Of Bulganin I I Ike Supports Polish Revolt' In Speech Offers Moral Aid During Denver Talk WASHINGTON (M)-President Dwight D. Eisenhower threw United States moral support to Poland's dramatic revolt against Soviet domination yesterday with a statement that "our hearts go out" to the Polish people in their struggle. President Eisenhower spoke in Denver while in Washington the State Department summoned Po- lish Ambassador Romauld Spas- owski for a 20-minute conference with Deputy Undersecretary of State Robert Murphy. Ultimatum Discussed This was a diplomatic gesture of deep -interest in the rapidly de- veloping Polish crisis. Murphy asked Spasowski spe- cifically for information on a re- ported ultimatum by Soviet Com- munist party boss Nikita Krush- chev to the Warsaw government to the effect that, "If you don't obey we will crush you."d Spasowski is said to have told Murphy that he knew nothing about the ultimatum report and was unable to comment upon it. Reports of tank and troop movements by Soviet forces were pouring into the State Depart- ment yesterday through diplo- matic channels as well as in news accounts officials said. Department policymakers and experts on Eastern Europe met frequently and conferred with Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, trying to evaluate the truth and significance of the in- formation available. Meanwhile officials were con- fronted with the possibility that if the political upheaval now un- der way, centering on the return to power in Poland of Gomulka, produces independence of action for the Polish government the United States will almost certainly receive a request for economic and financial assistance to Po- land. U.S. Aid? State Department officials re- port there has already been one sign of a Polish turn toward closer ties with this country. The Polish bid to Washington will pose a major issue in U.S. foreign policy. It will raise such questions as whether Warsaw really has wrested control of Po- lish affairs from Moscow, whether the new independence line can be held, whether the whole thing is part of some huge Keremlin "plot" and what exactly are United States interests in the new circum- stances. two days relaxed as it became clear that Gomulka, allied with Premier Josef Cyrankiewicz and party leader Edward Ochab, had won full support of the nation against the "anti-liberalization" faction identified with Defense Minister Konstantin Rokossovsky. Coup Threatens Rumors swept the city earlier kyesterday that the pro-Moscow Rokossovsky f action might at- tempt a coup d'etat if Gomulka's policies wdn the day. Polish troops moved to protec- tive positions in and around the capital. Qualified observers had no doubt they were there as pre- caution against any such Mos- cow-inspired move. Yesterday the troops were re- ported withdrawn and returned to their barracks. The city was com- pletely normal, with crowds in the, streets as usual on a Satur- day night. Attacks Collectives Gomulka attacked the soviet- style economy. He declared pro- duction on peasant farms is 30 per cent higher than on the state- run collectives. Industrial policies, he said, were riddled with mistakes. Millions were spent on imported machinery that Poland had no use for. Pro- duction was stifled in a tangle of bureaucracy. Gomulka went on to assert that Poland's relations with the Soviet Union and with Red China and the other communist countries must be those of equality and in- dependence. Blames Reds He said Polish workers were justified in the protests that pro- duced the June 28 Poznan riots. He blamed the riots squarely on the Communist- party's mishand- ling of workers' complaints and stated attempts to blame the up- rising on "foreign imperialist pro- vocations" were false. Gomulka's -speech made clear that he had rejected the reported demands by Krushchev that Po- land move back to the orthodox, Moscow-dictated communist line for satellites. Violation Impossible States Soviet Premier In Proposal To Ike LONDON Wes} - Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin has proposed to President Dwight D. Eisenhower an immediate U.S.-Soviet agree-j ment to ban H-bomb tests, Moscow' radio said yesterday. Bulganin used an argument ad- vanced by Democrat Adlai Steven- son in the U.S. presidential cam- paign that violation of such an agreement is impossible because science now can detect atomic' tests anywhere. Ike Wants Safeguards "I hope you will agree," Bul- ganin said in a letter to President Eisenhower, "that should such agreement be reached on this mat- ter there will be no particular dif- ficulty in supervising its execu- tion since with the present state of science no atomic or hydrogen explosion can be carried out with- out it being recorded in other countries." President Eisenhower has taken the position there must be ade- quate inspection safeguards before the United States enters into any' atomic test agreement with the Soviet union. Letter Sent The proposal was in a letter Bulganin sent President Eisenhow- er Wednesday. The letter said Bulganin had inj mind "the question of atomic weapons and notably of the tests of these weapons." Bulganin added that, "In some instances, official pronouncements are giving evidence of manifest misrepresentation of the Soviet Union's policy on these matters." "This is, unfortunately, particu- larly true of the statements made by Dulles, who is not stopping short of direct attacks on the So- viet Union and her peace-striving foreign policy," the letter said. Fight Starts After Game A University student and a Whitmore Lake man are in County Jail today as a result of -a fist fight after yesterday's football game. Frederick Kline, 29 years-old, of Whitmore Lake provoked Stan- ley 0. Smith, 157E, and a crowd of returning students, by nudging his automobile through the crowd at dangerous speeds. Both men were booked on a charge of disorderly conduct and are scheduled' to be arraigned be- fore Ann Arbor Municipal Court Judge Francis O'Brien tomorrow morning. Wolverines Gain First Bi TenWin Herrnstein Scores Three Times; Van Pelt Directs Effective Offense By DICK CRAMER Associate Sports Editor Michigan put on an amazing offensive display yesterday against Northwestern's Wildcats to score its first Big Ten win of the season, 34-20, before a high school band day crowd of 81,227 fans at thyr Stadium. . Grinding out a total of 439 yards and 25 first downs, the Wolver- ines won handily, but not without some rough moments from a sur- prisingly strong Wildcat attack. Michigan's Western Conference record, now 1-1, rates the Wol- verines in fifth place. Their opponent for next week, Minnesota, has two victories and a tie in Conference play. Herrnstein Leads Scoring John Herrnstein led the Wolverine scoring with three touchdowns. on a 17-yd. run and two short plunges, while end Ron Kramer and quarterback Jim Maddock contrib- --Daily--John Hirtzei NEGATES NEWTON-Michigan's Ron Kramer defies all the laws of gravity as he outleaps three Northwestern defenders to snag Terry Barr's second quarter aerial for the Wolverines fourth touch- down in yesterday's 34-20 victory. Northwestern players shown are George Gondek (1), Larry Van- Dusen (33) and Wilmer Fowler (41), while Michigan's Charlie Brooks (89) is also in on the play. Game Provides, Bands, Shoes o Receipe for a Michigan football game: Take 70,000 or so spectators, 22 football players, four officials, one large dog. Mix well in a stadium, add a generous dash of water in the second quarter and stew for 60 minutes. Yesterday's Michigan-Northwest- ern contest had all these standard ingredients plus a colorful dressing of some 10,500 high school bands- men to wile away the fourth con- secutive Saturday at the Michigan Stadium. Some stayed away. It was to be, said the sports crystal-ball gazers, nothing more than a dress scrim- mage for Messr. Maentz and the squad he captains. Pace-dance, Kramer-snatch A good time to catch up on studies, or head for the woods to bag a pheasant-hunting season just opened, you know. C Those who went watched morel than the pushover game that was forecast. They did, it is admitted, get wet; but they weren't disap- pointed. Besides the weekly ration of Pace - dancing - the - sidelines and Kramer - snatching - the - pass - from-three-defenders, there was a new step from Prof. Revelli's charges and an eardrum-rupturing halftime concert by his guests from all points of the compass: The Michigan Marching Band reached back a decade or two and resurrected the "Varsity Drag" that Mom and Pop allegedly danced in their younger days, - Canine Capers One coed joined the applause, but noted solemnly to her date, "You know, they're going to run out of dances before the season's over." Coaches Oosterbaan and Parseg- hian then borrowed the field from the band long enough to play 30 minutes of football. Some are beginning to attach a stigma of good luck to the ap- pearance of a dog on the field early in every game. This week's appearance of a droopy-jowled Great Dane seemed to work minor wonders to Michigan's luck, if you subscribe to this theory. With five minutes and 30 sec- onds of the first quarter gone and got larger and finally the clouds releaseda steadyshower on the 82,227 attending. That is, all save the working press, who pressed their noses to the glass of the gleaming new pressbox -- oops, communication center-and smiled in comfortable dryness. The rain threatened to flush the promised halftime extravaganza with its cast, as the movie ads say, of thousands. Tuba players and snare drum- mers mingled with short-skirted baton twirlers in a race for the shelter of the stadium's overhang- ing, and the rain continued. Brassy and Classy But the rains went, the bands- men returned, the half ended and Bennie returned the use of the turf to the visiting players-band play- ers, we mean. Their performance was, to ,be conservative, deafening. Yale men never heard- the Whiffenpoof Song as played by 2,000 clarinets, 2,100 cornets and trumpets, 800 horns, 800 sousaphones and 1,000 trom- bones, plus a few other instru- .ments. Besides a few old favorites, like the Marine Hymn, Mister Touch- down USA .and the Stars and Stripes Forever, the massed bands (they traveled 25,000 total miles to get to Ann Arbor, says the pro- gram) premiered a new march, "Drums and Bells" by composer Paul Yoder. - Back came the players and. on went the game. It was an even ball game, pointwise, for the sec- ond half, as a tired, grimy band of Wildcats matched the Wolves for the final 30 'minutes, seven points each. Cheer McKeiver A Michigan crowd, not generous in their praise for opponents, gave NU's Bob McKeiver the longest, loudest applause of the afternoon as the diminutive halfback was taken from the game in the last quarter. The uniform colors of visiting band members ran together like melting crayons as the game trail- ed into its final minutes, and the crowd left for drier, warmer pas- tures. The band played on In its usual post-game serenade, players troop- ed- to dressing rooms and pint- sized businessmen began combing the seats for empty cider bottles. They're worth a nickle apiece, you know. uted single touchdowns with Kra- ier adding four extra points. But other backfield men were also outstanding in Michigan's "team triumph," as Coach Bennie Oosterbaan, called it. Quarterback Jim Van Pelt shar- ed the spotlight for his skillful signal-calling in the predominately single-wing Wolverine offense and halfbacks Jim Pace, Terry Barr and Bob Ptacek were sensational yardage-gainers both in passing and on the ground. The game was exceedingly hard- fought with no less than six per- sonal fouls called by the referees and three players banished from the game. Ten Wildcats were in- 'ured in the fray and six Wolver- ines were listed as casualties after the game. Maentz, Snider Injured Shaken up in the second quar- ter, Capt. Tom Maentz was lost to Michigan for the remainder of the gameas a precaution against a possible slight concussion. Center Gene Snider- also left the contest in the third period after being dazed in the rugged play. Pace and tackles Al Sigman and Willie Smith with leg injuries and guard Dick Hill with a bruised neck were the other Wolverines who were hurt. All are considered minor injuries and should be re- covered from by next week. Michigan started slowly, but the early shock of a Northwestern touchdown at 7:40 of the first per- iod aroused the Wolverines -into taking over control of the game. While unable to cope at times with the Wildcats' speedy outside running game, the Wolverine line was a success in opening up holes for the Michigan rushing attack and in giving valuable protection to the passers. Center Mike R.o- tunno, especially, made 'the middle of the line a one-way thoroughfare for Michigan. Make Quick Comeback Less than seven minutes after they had fallen behind, the Wol- verines roared into the lead, 13-7, and were never headed for the rest of the game. Will Fowler scored Northwest- ern's first touchdown when he raced around left end for 46 yards on the third play after the Wild- cats had received a punt on their own 35. Bob McKeiver, 162-lb. halfback, who electrified the crowd through- out the day with fast and elusive running, long punting and brill- iant defensive play, converted and the score was 7-0.- Pace set up Michigan's quick comeback with' a 39-yd. runback on the ensuing kickoff to the See NU's, Page 6 Philharmonic Here Today Jordan Vote May Cut Tie With Britain AMMAN, Jordan ()-Jordanian voters, living in an air of crisis, are electing a new 40-seat Parlia' ment today expected to call for abrogation of this desert king- dom's treaty with Britain. British Stock The treaty is a defensive alliance .that has sustained povery-strick- en Jordan since its birth as an Independent nationr10 years ago. It gives Britain three military bases in Jordan. In return, the British pay 25 to 30 mfillon dollars a year for the upkeep of Jordan's 20,000-man army, once rated the Arab world's best; and promise to aid the Jordanians if they are at- tacked. Anti-Western elements among Jordan's 1,400,000 population - stirred up by increased Israeli frontier attacks and the rise of Egypt's President Abdul Gamal Nasser as a professional champion of Arab rights-figure to gain so much ground that even moderate independents will be under heavy fire to join in cutting the last for- mal link with Britain, Iraq Satellite? The election raised anew the question whether Jordan may eventually be tucked under the wing of Iraq, a Baghdad Pact member whose King Faisal II is a cousin of Jordan's 21-year-old King Hussein, or go to the Egyp- tian-Syrian-Saudi Arabian trium- virate headed by Nasser. A third of Jordan's population is made up of Arab refugees of the Palestine War of 1948, an em- bittered group living on meager rations supplied by the United Nations. Politicians expect at least one Communist, Dr. Yacoub Ziadin, to win a seat. He is a highly pop- ular physician. United Nations Week Beg'ins . Today marks the beginning of a week - long program celebrating United Nations Week, co-spon- sored by the Student Government Council and the International Stu- dent's Association. The program, commemorating the twelfth anniversary of the signing of the United Nations Charter, includes an international dinner, a debate and a Consuls Day. The buffet dinner, held at 7 p.m. tonight in Lane Hall, will be prepared by students from Greece, Syria, the Ukraine, Pakistan, In- dia, Japan, China and Korea. Fil- ipino and Puerto Rican dancers will provide entertainment. E National Roundap Adlai, Estes On Stump .. CHICAGO-Adlai Stevenson said yesterday the Republicans suf- fer from a "suffocating satisfaction with, our material well being," and promised that the Democrats, if elected. "will release the gene'- rous, creative energies of our nation in full flood," Stevenson made this assertion in an address prepared for a closed circuit telecast to some 40 cities. * 4 * LOS ANGELES-Sen. Estes Kefauver said yesterday that accumu- lated radioactive fall-out from stepped-up hydrogen bomb testing "means suicide" for the world. Picturing" frightening possibilities" which he said might be im- possible to prevent, Kefauver declared radioactive poisoning of the air could result in bone cancer, injury to human organs and even genetic damage to unborn generations. Red Espionage. . . WASHINGTON-Senate investigators yesterday released testi- mony by a former Soviet secret agent that most Russian cultural and athletic groups visiting other nations are accompanied by Com- QhAlAILTA"" oftcr 3 I ..