I XT YEAR'S NTDAR PLANS See page 4 L CIO Sixty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom :43att, " CLOUDY, COLD I No. 58 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1957 FIVE CENTS Artificial Meteors Penetrate Outer Spa 4 . * , w * * w * r Sun )bee )-The Air at artificial tiny alumi- 'ed from an [ew Mexico e moon in 101,001 FANS: OSU Favored In Closing Tilt By JIM BAAD Daiy Sports Editor Ohio State, already the Big Ten Conference Football Champions for 1957, and Michigan will clash at 1:30 today in the Stadium to close out the 1957 season. A sell-out crowd of 101,001 Eans will witness this 54th game of the 60-year-old series. On the surface the contest seems obviously anti-climactic. The championship has been decided, as has been the trip to Pasadena, tso what could the game possibly e moon was not a, however, and ired from the ,bly were drawn hrough,. cist of the Research conference n to believe nian's' first breakthrough into ter space although he implied .t he was not in a position to a what Russian scientists have lced. Themeteorites were fired from ee "shaped charges" in the nose t e rocket, launched on Oct. 16. iey onsisted of fragments re- Ltlng from the force of an ex- sion set to take place at an alti- e of 54 miles. &: "shaped charge" -was defined one that causes a blast to take esired direction. Pellets Counter Gravity Dubin said it was impossible to precisely how large or how merous the frgments were, but 6t photographs of the explosion ifirmied that at least two pieces re headed for space outside the 11 of the earth's gravity. The physicist said the actual mber may ave exceeded 1,000. response to a question at one int he said they were about the e of small' ball bearings and ;iged only a few grams. Durant displayed the section of s erobee rocket from which the plosive-laden nose tip had been sached at a height of 35 miles. was about four feet long, made shiny lightweight metal and ap- ared to be undamaged despite its g drop back to earth. enate Cals JS. Missile nestigation VASINGTON (AP)-Two Senate cders issued a bipartisan call ;terday for a faster United rtes missile program. Infdrmation available to us in- ates clearly that our present get dates are far too modest d not adequate to the needs. of e nation," Sen. Lyndon Johnson -Tex.) said. sen. Styles Bridges (R-N.H.) rcurred ,.. ohnson heads the emocratic licy. Committee in the Senate, : Bridgesjis chairman of the )P Policy Committee there. Investigation Begins Monday rohnson is also chairman of the ate Preparedness subcommittee, ich will operr on Monday a eeping investigation, of Ameii- progress in the missile field. 'We are trying to determine the te of the nation's defenses" nson said. "We are seeking thods of stepping up the target ,es of achievenent fir the missile gram." Bridges, senior GOP member of subcommittee, added that a edup would be the principal ective of the inquiry. Bridges Warns of Danger Uxpressing concern at the strides ng made by Russia, Bridges I don't think there is any cause fear now, but there might come time in the very near future en we might perhaps be in mor- danger." [he Senate leaders discssed the DON CLARK paces OSU attack Picks CollinS As President By RICHARD TAUB mean. Successful Season Possible The best answer from a Michi- gan point of view is that a victory over Ohio State will make the difference between a mediocre and a successful season on the, gridiron. It's been a relatively tough year for the Wolverines. They suffered humniliation at the hands.of Mich- igan State, a bitter sense of fail- ure in tying Iowa, and severe dis- appointment ' down at Illinois. With all this, their record in Big Ten play is still 3-2-1. A vic- tory today would up it to 4-2-1, better than all teams except Ohio State, Iowa, and Michigan State. A victory would prove Michigan as good or better than two of these teams. Victory Remembered Even if the recorl were worse, beating the visitors from Colum- bus would still make for some sal- vage of success. The rivalry is just that strong. The coaches and this year's seniors can still' remember the, 17-0 trouncing Michigan took in 1955 to lose* both championship and Rose Bowl bid. These same seniors have an even bigger stake in today's game. It will be their last in a Michi- gan uniform. These are linemen Captain Jim Orwig, Larry Faui, Jim Davies, Jerry Goebel, Gene Snider, Mary Nyren, Dick Heynan, Bob Boshoven, Tom Berger, and Alex Bochnowski and backs Jim Van Pelt, Jim Pace and Mike Sha- tusky. Team Drilled Haid For these reasons it's obviously not a "nothing" game for Michi- gan. The team has been in secretL practice all week and reports have come from these sessions that they are working as hard as they have all year. Everyone is ii- spired to the task. As for Ohio State, the game has the same meaning in traditiohal rivalry terms as it does to Michi- gan. The Wolverines are generally considered the team Woody Hayes See INJURY, page 3 Sawyeir Gets NewPosition Dean Ralph A. Sawyer of the Graduate School, .s currently a member of the committee to re- vigw the Research and Develop- ment Command of the Air Force, Vice-President of Faculties Marv- in L. Niehuss announced yester- day. New Strife Breaks Out In Mid-East BEIRUT, Lebanon (P)-A series of new incidents from Lebanon southward through Jerusalem to Cairo set the Middle East post to boiling again yesterday. Lebanese security forces refused to permit 17 members of the Sy- rian Parliament to cross the bor- der into this tiny republic on the Mediterranean shoreline. The Sy- rian government . :as reported in- censed. Plane Refused Landing Egyptian authorities refused to let a Jordan airliner land in Cairo with its 20 passengers, includting a seven-man Jordan delegation to an Arab educational conference, a Jordanian airline spokesman charged in Amman. No official explanation was given for either action. At the same time a blockade in Old Jerusalem ad new outbreaks of gunfire sharpened Jordan-Is- raeli enmity. Hussein Suspected High - ranking Israeli officials said they believed Jordan's King Hussein, whose enemies in Soviet- aided Syria and Egypt have been calling for his assassination, had started a new campaign to dis- drove charges that he is soft to- ward Israel. These incidents occurred as an interview with Soviet party boss Nikita Khrushchev was published in Cairo reviving charges that the United States had tried to inveigle Jordan and Iraq, and then Turkey into an attack on Syria. Lebanon's slap at the Syrian Parliamentary delegation was the first hint that an open break be- tween Damascus and Beirut might' be imminent. The Lebanese government, has been trying to avoid stepping on any Syrian toes. UIN Passes Mid-East Allocation UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (P)- The United Nations authorized the spending of an additional 38h million dollars to maintainits Middle East Emergency Force through 1958. By a vote of 51-11 the 82-nation General Assembly decided that the sum should be paid on the basis of the regular scale of UI assess- ments. Nineteen nations abstained. The Soviet bloc announced it would not pay anything toward maintenance of the deficit-ridden force. Its assessed share would amount to about 20 per cent of the total. Soviet Ambassador Arkady A. Sobolev denounced the force as illegal and said it does not guaran- tee peace in the Middle East. N' Rep. R. Carnahan (D-Mo.), a member of the U.S. delegation, told the Assembly there can be no doubt that financial support of UNEF i a United Nations respon- sibility all must share. Of H-Bomb's America " Regents Told Of, Possible and Cooperat Emphasiz I ,S ae Cite Red Gains Possible Contr - Joe Collins, '58, was re-elected' Student Government Council president 'yesterday without op- position. Ron Shorr, '58, former admin- istrative vice-president was elect- ed executive vice-president; May- nard Goldman, '59, former treas- urer was elected administrative vice-president; pnd Scott Chrys- ler, '59BAd, was elected treasurer. Shorr was the only candidate to run against opposition. He com- peted with Chrysler. Goldman ran\ unopposed as did Chrysler for treasurer. Collins noted that he hoped the Council could do something in the area of transferrable football tick- ets and other aspects of the ath- letic program. Chrysler, in his campaign speech, while running against Shorr, noted "two interests" on the Council. He did not see them as affiliate - independent v i e w- points, but rather as different "thought approaches." Shorr told the Council that SGC members were expected to be pro- gressive by an essentially con- servative stugent body. , He noted that students want to see disagreement with the ad- ministration.. By MICHAEL KRAFT Russia's satellite launchings are only one payoff from their educa- tional program, the Regents were told yesterday. Members of the recently ap- pointed Scientific Advisory Com- mittee attended the November Regents meeting and warned that the United States should. expect further Soviet accomplishments. "They will be of far greater, importance, both militarily and economically than the Sputniks," Prof. David M. Dennison, chair- man of the physics department, said. Cites.Nuclear Progress Prof. H. R. Crane of the physics department told the Regents that the Russians are making consid- erable progress in controlling the release of nuclear energy. "If the Russians succeed in harnessing the hydrogen, they probably would export power plants, to any back- ward country they chose and thus strengthen their ties," he warned. Other members of the commit- tee agreed that the Russians would be more likely than the West to consider the political ad- vantages of such a power plant and ignore its higher initial cost when compared to conventional sources of power. Warns of Rocket Prof. Crane also warned that the Russians are ahead of the United States in the field of nu- clear physics research and that they are working on a nuclear powered rocket which "would be a tremendous advance for the first nation to perfect it." Increased financial backing for research and students in the area of science was suggested by the faculty members. Urges Incentive Graduate School Dean Ralph A. Sawyer said it "wouldn't be very difficult to provide the incentive that would make the sciences more attractive, He cited the Legislature's support of driver ed- ucation in Michigan's high schools as an example of the state provid- ing incentive for a desired pro- gram. Britai -Daily-Leonard Cyr' DORMITORY. MODEL - Regent Eugene Powers and-Vice-?resi- dent for Student Affairs Jaines A. Lewis check plans for the North Campus residence hall. Re gents Aprove Plans :For NorthCampus Dorm Another wheel turned yesterday in the machinery needed to build the North Campus Residence Hall. - The Regents authorized the administration to proceed with con- struction plans of the 1,200-student structure. . The building, tentatively scheduled for completion in 1959, will house 600 women in one unit and 600 men in an adjoining 'unit. They will be connected through a central service building containing com- mon dining, study and recreational facilities. "The only thing left to make North Campus a complete enlarged campus is dormitory facilities," Vice-President - for Student Affairs Powe AEA Reports Laboratory R Very Encoura James A. Lewis said in presenting the architect's model to the Re- gents. "This begins to make North Campus more than a dream but an actual reality," he said. In discussing the dormitory, Regent Eugene Powers, of Ann Arbor, suggested that at least one, of the four wings be used to ex- periment with different rooming arrangements. "Students have. had experience with only the standard studying in sleeping quaiters," he said University Vice-President in Charge of Business Wliburr K. Pierpont was authorized to begin plans for financing the new dor- mitory. . ; t World News Roundup By The Associated Press , LONDON (P)--The Atomic a gy Authority said yesterday Bri and American' scientists bel they have harnessed the H-bor power, but it is "seriously misle Ing" to suppose one country outpaced the other. A formal AEA statement scientists of both nations, wort hand in hand, -have made prog in experiments aimed at produ H-power inside a laboratory. Reports British Success ' teferring to recent reporti London newspapers that scien at Britain's Harwell Research C ter believe they are well ahead the Americans in such ex: nients, the statement said: "Temperatures have been res ed in the controlled thermt clear experiments in the two co tries that suggest the achieven of neutrons from thermonuc reactions, but more experime work will be necessary to esta: this as a fact." The AEA stressed that this 1 gress was previously annour after a conference last mopt) Princeton, N. J. between 'Bri and American scientists wor] on civilian uses of atomic ener Nations Co-operate The AEA said all findings British and American scient working on the program "promptly communicated bett the two nations." "Thus," the statement ads the United States benefits fi the research results of the proaches being taken by the B ish, and the results of the work the half dozen or so approache the United States benefits United Kingdom." Communists Publish New Peace Appeal ILONDON (J)--Communist Y ties of 64 nations published m,- de-in-Moscow. peace manif yesterday night.: They appealed to the worl stop the arms race, ban nue, weapons and abandon mil t bloc policies. "We ire extending our hand all people of good will," the mi festo said. "Jointly we will th1 off the burden of armament wl suppresses the people. We will free the world from danger of war, death and dest: tion. Before us is a bright happy future of mankind, whic advancing toward urogress." - The manifesio-like. world c munism's declaration rhuxsda5 unity of aims under Soviet lea( ship-was born of the party c ference held in Moscow Nov. 16 Backers of the manifesto cluded the Yugoslavs, who declined to join the representaL of 12 other Communist nation c6ionite +ifn ,,i+u R w ion TENANTS INCLUDE ATHLETES, PROFESSORS: Landlady Finds Little Rowdyism Among Students in Rooming House (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the fifth in a series of six articles based on interviews with Ann Arbor's landlords and landladies.) By THOMAS TURNER I"- CHESHIRE, England - British scientists manning the world's largest radio telescope reported late yesterday that ,the rocket cairier for the first Soviet satel- lite is easing back into the earth's atmosphere. They said it may come down within hours. Prof. A. C. Lovell,' ditector of the big Jodrell Bank Radio As- tronomy station, said the rocket carrier swerved considerably clos- er to earth yesterday and was running 26 minutes ahead of schedule. WASHINGTON-United States District Judge Edward M. Curran yesterday reversed himself and acquitted Dr. Otto Nathan of con- tempt of Congress charges. But Curran said he disagreed with the Supreme Court ruling which caused the reversal. Nathan, 64, executor of the es-- tate of the late Albert Einstein and an associate economics pro- fessor at New York University, was convicted by Curran May 30 on the charges but never seh- tenced. *, * * LOS ANGELES - Hundred- foot-high flames, wind - driven across 50 square miles of moun- Mrs. Esther Niles runs a rooming house at 325 East Jefferson, which she says is the largest rooming house in the city. The house has 24 rooms and its capacity is 26 tenants; Mrs. Niles adds that it was the largest rooming house in the city when she moved in. "I could write a best-seller about running a rooming house," Mrs. Niles says with a smile, "and some of the funniest things in it couldn't be printed in The Daily." The building is well kept up, with new aluminum siding and windows. "The funniest thing about the whole business is the way I got started," Mrs. Niles said. "I bought this house because the building where I rented my apartment on scribes her reaction as "being petrified." Mrs. Niles has had quite a vz-' riety of students living in her house, from sophomores to visit- ing professors, including varsity football players, Hopwood win- ners, fraternity men and foreign students. She says she'll "stack her boys up against any other group on campus." Mrs. Niles tells hertenants they are responsible for themselves. As a result, she relates, she has never had students break up furniture though others have later;reported some of these same students as havine don e so. I Monroe Street was torn down toj a fraternity house. 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