0 Y L6t0P 4Iati r CLOUDY, COLD Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXVII, No. 85 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JANUARY 12, 1957 FOUR PAGES i Konrad Adenauer Asks World H-Bomb Ban Hungarian ;WorkersI Unrest Flares, 'rote st BONN, Germany ()-West Ger- man Chancellor Konrad Adenauer called yesterday for an interna- tional ban on the H-bomb. He said an agreement to outlaw thermonuclear weapons was essen- tial to clear the way for a final solution of world problems. The 81-year-old statesman also said the creation of a buffer belt through the heart of Europe would eventually improve "the political climate." And he urged an expan- sion of Soviet-German trade as a contribution toward better rela- tions between Moscow and Bonn. No Trade Pact But, he said the time is not ripe for a West German trade pact with the Soviets. Adenauer's suggestion to ban CAA Rules limit Help To Athletes ST. LOUIS (R)-The 51st NCAA convention yesterday passed two new laws concerning recruiting and aid to athletes which put the organization a bit deeper into the enforcement business. One new rule spells out Just how much financial help an athlete can receive from all sources if his athletic ability is considered in awarding part of it. The other permits colleges to pay the transportation for a pros- pective athlete on one visit to the campus but bars alumni groups, booster clubs and all outside or- ganizations from bringing the boys on. "Accepted Expenses" The new section of the amateur rule says that "when unearned fi- nancial aid is awarded to a stu- dent and athletic ability is taken into consideration in making the award, such aid combined with other aid the student-athlete may receive from employment during term time, other scholarships and grants-in-aid, including govern- mental grants for scholarship pur- poses, and like sources, may not exceed commonly accepted edu- cational expenses." Accepted expenses include tui- tion and fees, room and board, books and not more than $15 a month for laundry. The idea was to establish a ceiling so that no boy getting a "full ride" grant could maneuver to show a profit. Reverses Ban This lengthy regulation reverses the previous NCAA regulation for- bidding any college to pay trans- portation costs for a prospective athlete. Henceforth the boosters can collect money if they want, but they'll have to give it to the col- lege to pay for visits. And the col- leges are sharply restricted in what they can spend. Frank N. Gardner of Drake Uni- versity last night was named the 13th president of the NCAA. He succeeds Clarence "Pop" Houston of Tufts University. Announce New ;.Farm Surplus Disposal Plan UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (R)- The United States announced a new plan to grant surplus farm commodities to needy countries so they can set up reserve stocks' against famine or other emergen- cies. The announcement was made by Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D- Minn), U. S. delegate to the 80- nation Economic Committee of the UN General Assembly. Sen. Humphrey said this aid would be granted for "reasonable and realistic programs" in keeping with the principle of avoiding "harmful interference with the normal patterns of production and international trade." The U. S. pledge came as an alternative to a plan for creation of a world food reserve, supplied Layoff s thermonuclear weapons came in response to a news conference question on his attitude toward a demilitarized zone in Europe. He said the creation of a demili- tarized or militarily diluted zone could not in itself end the East- West deadlock over Germany, nor National Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Commercial oil shipments from the United States to Western Europe totaled 28,200,000 barrels between Nov. 1 and Jan. 2, the Interior Depart- ment announced Yesterday. This two-month figure compares with 17,538,000 barrels shipped to Europe during the entire year of 1955. * * * WASHINGTON - The govern- ment reported yesterday that De- cember farm employment was the lowest in many years but non-farm employment stood at a record high for the month. A joint report by the Commerce and Labor Departments fixed the nation's job total for December at 64,550,000, a record for any De- cember but an expected seasonal decline of 718,000 from November. WASHINGTON - Robert Tripp Ross, an assistant secretary of de- fense, announced last night he is "taking a leave'of absence" until congressional committees complete investigations into a government contract held by a firm headed by his wife. Ross made public a letter to Sen. John McClellan (D-Ark.), chair- man of the Senate Government Operations Committee, in which he reiterated that he has no con- nection with the company. * * * ATLANTA, Ga. - President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Vice- President Richard M. Nixon yes- terday were asked to come, South to aid Negro leaders in the fight against segregation. The requests, along with one to Atty. Gen. Herbert Brownell re- questing an interview "at the ear- liest possible date," were made by the Southern Negro Leaders Con- ference on Transportation and Nonviolent Integration. British Cabinet Being Formed By Mac millain LONDON ()-Sharp warnings against giving way to the Tory "old guard" faced Prime Minister Harold Macmillan last night as he worked feverishly at forming a new government. The 62-year-old Prime Minister -known as "Mac the Knife" by some for the way he has slashed red tape and chopped off political heads-confidently predicted his Cabinet would be ready by the weekend. Macmillan dined with Sir Win- ston Churchill, who is believed to have played an important behind- the-scenes role in gaining Mac- millan the prime minister's post after Sir Anthony Eden reigned on Wednesday. Eden made his job easier for his successor by giving up his seat in the House of Commons and bowing completely out of the poli- tical picture. - He told voters in the Warwick- Leamington District he has repre- sented for 33 years he is "not fit and able to give his full time to the task." Queen Elizabeth II offered Eden an earldom, but he is reported to have told her he did not wish to accept a peerage "for the present." The choice of Macmillan over Richard A. Putler, the party leader in the House of Commons, was generally interpreted as a victory for the party's right wing. Suspect Drops Classes at T' constitute a definite solution of world problems. It could, he continued, only im- prove the international situation. Need World Agreement What is needed, he said, to achieve a "definite solution" of world problems is a worldwide agreement to ban thermonuclear weapons. "Thermonuclear w e a p o n s no longer can be considered as a means of waging war," he declared. The Chancellor's statement, lacking any mention of ironclad means of enforcing a ban, caught Washington's policy-making offi- cials by surprise. These officials, who long have insisted on inter- national controls to make sure an agreement is lived up to, have regarded Adenauer as an anchor of United States policy in Europe. Soviets Vague The Soviet Union, -on the other hand, has propagandized the idea of a simple ban on atomic weap- ons, but, has remained vague in the area of controls. Adenauer did not refer to atomic weapons. He did not define any ideas of machinery for banning the use of thermonuclear weapons or enforcing the ban, though it is understood he supports the West- ern powers insistence on iron-clad controls. AltayAlive In Florida Erdogan C. Altay, '58E, missing since Monday, was found yester- day in Jacksonville, Florida. The Turkish student pur- chased a one-way bus ticket to Miami after driving his car to Niagara Falls and writing a sui- cide note. The U.S. border patrol at Tam- pa named despondency over grades as the reason for his ac- tions. According to the patrol, he has lost his status as an exchange student and has been ordered to report to the district immigration office at Miami. Lieut. Tarik A. Batur, head of the Turkish naval officers at the University, said it "was up to the Turkish Embassy" to decide whether Altay will return to the University.' Neither Batur, the International Center, nor University officials have yet been contacted by Altay. Asst. Dean of Men John Bing- ley said that the University would "probably" try to contact Altay today. Altay apparently intended to earn enough money to pay for passage back to Turkey, border patrol officers said. Ann Arbor police have not yet received written confirmation that it is Altay from the border patrol but "assume" that it is. SCHOOL SEGREGATION Virginia Pupil Pflan Declared Unlawful NORFOLK, Va. (P)-Virginia's pupil placement law, designed to maintain the state's traditional system of racially segregated schools, is "unconstitutional on its face," U.S. Dist. Judge Walter E. Hoffman ruled yesterday. The placement plan, enacted by the State Legislature last year as part of Gov. Thomas B. Stanley's "no integration anywhere" program for public schools, provides that pupils shall be assigned to schools by a three-member board. The board's rulings may be appealed to the governor and to the state courts. State funds would be withheld from any integrated schools. In a 12,000-word opinion, H by Virginia to keep the races in GOP Chief Hall Resigns WASHINGTON ('P)-Leonard W. Hall resigned as Republican na- tional chairman yesterday. There were indications he may be offered a White House appoint- ment as a preliminary to his seek- ing the governorship of New York next year. After a brief conference with President Dwight D. Eisenhower, Hall announced his resignation would be effective Feb. 1. Will Name Committee The retiring chairman, who has filled the post since April 10, 1953, said that at a meeting of the GOP National Committee here Jan. 19 he will name a seven- member subcommittee to consider a new chairman. After hearing President Eisen- hower's views, the group will make its recommendations for election of a successor at a Jan. 22 meet- ing of the full committee. If President Eisenhower follows the lead of most presidents, he will in Affect pick the new chair- man. Possible Successors Most frequently mentioned as possible successors to Hall are Ray Bliss, Ohio state GOP chairman and head of the party's Midwest and Rocky Mountain State Chair- men's Association; P. L. Judson Morhouse, New Yo'k national com- mitteeman; Howard Pyle, former governor of Arizona and now a presidential assistant; H. Meade Alcorn Jr., Connecticut committee- man; and Fred C. Scribner, Jr. of Maine, former national committee counsel and now general counsel of the treasury. President Eisenhower said in a statement that after Hall takes an expected six-weeks vacation "I sincerely hope that his wisdom and his long experience as a legislator, judge and chairman, will continue to be available not only to the party but to the nation in the years ahead." Dems To Plan Own Doctrine WASHINGTON (A)-Democrats on the House Foreign Affairs Committee will hold a special strategy huddle Monday on a pro- posed Democratic rival to the Ei- senhower Middle East resolution. Rep. T. S. Gordon (D-Ill), com- mittee chairman, called the meet- ing. Rep. Gordon said he himself still supports the Eisenhower reso- lution, which he introduced in Congress. No Stamp House Majority Leader John McCormack (Mass) said he knows of no "Democratic resolution" getting the stamp of leadership approval. But there was a strong move under way by Rep. C. J. Zablocki (D-Wis), a senior committee mem- ber, for a substitute resolution along lines proposed by former Secretary of State Dean Acheson. No Force It would have no force of law and would give President Dwight offman reviewed the course taken separate schools, and said: "The 4pattern is plain. The Legislature has adopted procedures to defeat" the U.S. Supreme Court decision outlawing segregation in the schools. Hoffman's opinion was contained in a ruling that denied state motions to dismiss desegregation suits against the city school boards of Norfolk and Newport News. At a hearing on these motions in November, state and local authori- ties had argued the pupil place- ment plan provided administrative remedies which should be exhaust- ed before Negro plantiffs turn to the federal courts. The desegregation suits will be tried in Hoffman's courts in Feb- ruary. Plan New Bus System MONTGOMERY, Ala. (JP)-Re- ported efforts to organize a new all-white bus system came"to light yesterday in the wake of racial violence that left Montgomery without public transportation for the second day. The only existing busline, Mont- gomery City Lines, Inc., was or- dered by the City Commission to suspend service indefinitely Thurs- day after four Negro churches and the homes of two prointegra- tion ministers were bombed. Buses have been targets of vio- lent attacks, too, since segrega- tion was abolished Dec. 21 under federal court order. Five buses have been ambushed with gunfire, one of them twice, and a Negro woman passenger shot in both legs. * * * TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (M'-City buses rolled back into service yes- terday or orders from Gov. Leroy Collins who suspended .their oper- ation 11 days ago to head off racial violence. Collins said his action will test "the good will prevailing among. and between the people of both races." Resumption of service came without advance warning and pas- sengers were few. Riders were seating themselves where they wished but Manager Wilbur Turner of Cities Transit Inc., said drivers were prepared to assign seats under a new city ordinance if whites and Negroes attempted to disregard segrega- tion laws in taking seats. 15aily-Stephanie Roumel INDIANA MEET-Jack Marchello, (right) Michigan's 177-pound Big Ten champion, is shown engaged in his match with Indiana's captain Bob Killian during yesterday's meet. Marchello defeated Killian by a 9 to 4 decision. 'M' Icers Defeat Tech, 1.0; Matmen Capture First Win Special To The Daily HOUGHTON - Lorne Howes returned to the Michigan nets last night and the Maize and Blue continued its uphill hockey battle, nipping determined Michigan Tech, 1-0, on a dramatic third- period goal by Tom Rendall. The two teams collide again to- night in the second contest of the important two-game set. Rendall scored at 2:16 of the final period after Dick Dunnigan had stolen the puck and passed to Don McIntosh, who passed to Rendall, 3 to 3 Record The victory gave the Wolverines a 3-3 WIHL record. Tech is 1-2. Howes, whom Coach Vic Hey- liger expected to play in view of rapid recovery from his ankle in- jury, was sensational in making countless goal-saving stops as he bounced back from 'the injury jinx to blank the highly-rated Huskies. In all, Howes made 31 saves to Tech's Bob McManus' 19. Ram the Puck Halfway through the third peri- od, Michigan Tech managed to ram the puck pastHowes, but the goal was 'disallowed because the home team interfered with the, visitors' goalie., The contest was fast through- out, though not too wide open un- til the second period, when Howes became particularly outstanding in his net-minding. And, despite the 12 penalties, the game was quite cleanly- played. No reprimands were is- sued in the climactic third stanza. Heyliger especially commented on Howes, saying that the Wol- v e r i n e s' All-American goalie played a great game and virtual- ly held the team together. Mobbed by Team After the final buzzer, he was mobbed by his teammates for his performance. It equalled his shutout perfor- mance for last season - one. He turned in seven one-goal jobs, but no whitewashes. Rendall, who notched the de- cisive tally, was Michigan's lead- ing goal-getter last year with 21. Howes, who was supposedly so crippled with a pulled tendon in his left ankle that it was a possi- See DISALLOWED, Page 3 By HANK ROSENBAUM ISophomore Karl Lutomski cele- brated his birthday by leading the Michigan wrestling squad to a hard-fought, 19-9 victory over In- diana at Yost Fieldhouse yester- day in the Wolverines' opening Conference meet. The grapplers will face North- western today at 3 p.m. in the Fieldhouse. After seeing a 7-2 lead dwindle down into a 7-7 tie with Indiana's Fred Redeker, Lutomski forced his way out of a predicament and proceeded to turn the tables on the Hoosier, pinning him at 7:59. Out In Front The victory in the 167 pound class moved the Wolverines out in front for good in the team scor- ing. A thrilling finish to the meet came in the' heavyweight contest when Michigan's Rupert O'Brien pinned Walt Carnahan with only 12 seconds left in the match. . O'Brien hounded his man until he was noticeably tired in the final period. In the 177 pound class, Big Ten champ Jack Marchello continued his unbeaten ways as he decision- ed Indiana's captain, Robert Kill- ian, 9-4. Marchello Took Charge After the first period, which ended in a 3-3 tie, Marchello took charge and Killian was able to score one more point, on an escape in the final stanza. Dan Deppe piled up an early 6-1 lead in the first period of the 130 pound match and hung on to win, 6-4. Wrestling Joe Shook, rated the top Hoosier grappler, Deppe nearly pinned his man as the first period ended. Shook hung on however and was looking more impressive toward the end as Deppe tired. Another newcomer to the squad, See SOPHS, Page 3 Restrict Union Studying Area A resolution to prohibit studying in the North and South Cafeterias of the Union has been passed by the Union Board of Drectors. The move also involves the pro- hibition of studying in the Union Snack Bar, but only during rush hours. Rooms 3-A, 3-B, and 3-G of the Union will be open, however, for study rooms starting tomorrow. The rooms will be open every evening until midnight through the examination period. According to Frank C. Kuenzel, General Manager of the Union, the main purpose of the Union "is not its use as a study hall, but its role in providing recreational and social facilities for University students." Studying in the fourth floor lobby of the Union will also be dis- couraged. This lobby is reserved for guests with rooms on the fourth floor. Playbill Given One Worker Known Dead; Others Hurt Kadar Participates In Moscow Meeting BUDAPEST () - Labor unrest flared yesterday at the big Cepe steel works. Communist Hungarian militia- men opened fire on workers pro- testing layoffs. One worker was known dead, but the killings may total as high a five. The number of wounded could not be determined and reports on how many were kgilled varied. Rus- sian and Hungarian forces sealed off approaches to the industrial area on an island south of Buda- pest and it was impossible to get an official casualty count. Fired Into Air Trouble broke out also at the Ganz railway car works and re- pair shops in southeast Budapest. Police said they fired into the air to halt a demonstration. No cas- ualties wer.e reported. Soviet troops were also present at both places but apparently left the action against the demonstra- tors up to the Hungarians. Radio Budapest informed Hun. garians last night that Janos Kadar,' the Soviet-supported Pre- mier, participated in a conference in Moscow Thursday with Kremlin leaders and Red China Premier Chou En-lai. Urged to Remain , Chou now is in Warsaw, where he'urged Poland to remain solidly within the Soviet bloc of Com- munist nations, and blamed "West- ern imperialists" for the revolt in: Hungary. Chou will visit later in Budapest. Reliable sources said about 5,000 of the Csepel plant's 38,000 em- ployes, most of them white collar workers, gathered around the main office about 9 a.m. Militiamen were called to dis.. perse them, but only three could be found at the plant's gate. Those quickly disappeared. Shouted Insults All morning the demonstrators remained at the office, shouting insults at the government man- agement. At 1 p.m. three truck- loads of militiamen arrived armed with tommyguns. According to one version, the unarmed demonstrators rushed the trucks and they pulled away. The crowd pursued them with bricks and whatever they could lay their hands on. This source said the Communist militiamen fired at the demon- strators to defend themselves.' Demonstrators Dispersed The demonstrators apparently dispersed after the killings. There has been persistent unrest at the Csepel plant. Many'workers there supported the anti-Soviet Oct. 23 revolution. There has been further aggrava-. tion because of government at- tacks on the plant's independent workers council and widespread layoffs which the government has attributed to shortages of coal and raw materials. Plan Insertion Of Poliy Sheet Preparations are being made for inclusion in men's housing ap- 'plication blanks of the Residence Hall Board of Governors' state- ment of policy on roommate as- signments. The statement, adopted last March. by the board and intended to be included with applications for rooms, had not been included . with the 350 applications thus far sent out, The Daily discovered HIGH SCHOOL ORCHESTRA: State Department May Back Good-Will Tour ARTUR RUBINSTEIV ... to appear Monday Noted Pianist To Play at Hill Pianist Artur Rubinstein will appear at 8:30 p.m. Monday at Hill Aud. Featured in the evening's pro- gram will be Beethoven's "Sonata in F minor, Op. 57" and "Scherzo By DONNA HANSON The State Department has noti- fied Senator Charles E. Potter (R-Mich.) that it is "now giving very active consideration" to parti- ally finance a goodwill tour of Poland by the National High' School Orchestra of America, based at the University-sponsored National Music Camp at Inter- lochen. Following an invitation from the' within the country. The State De- partment's portion of the tab would cover round-trip transporta- tion from Traverse City to the Polish border. During the eight-week Inter- lochen camp season preceding the proposed trip, members of the group will learn a minimum of 300 words of Polish, enough to com- municate satisfactorily. They will rnnnvn avanil hi fin*r* inA'Pnl*ch