TION PETITION rs THOUGHT See page 4 Y Sir46 Sixty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom *nl e ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1957 FIVE CENTS SI [XT] Il p Braun Project~ P)-Rocket ex- raun yesterday United. States r project for a tin, in the race foothold in the be handled by agency with a about one and ars a year over n space scien- orking for this ith Maj. Gen. that Pentagon ered and de- ans aim e." ate Senate tte, von 3 10-year ear pro- iting the ,sis." -Daily-Fred Shippey "OUCH, MY LEG"-This seems to be the cry as Michigan's Pete Tiliotson (background) and Billy Wright (foreground) struggle for the ball with several Washington players. Two By JOHN 3L HIGHTOWE Associated Press News Analyst PARIS - The North Atle Allies are badly split over on the major issues facing theml On another, they seem t afflicted by' deep worry anda fusion. The result is likely to be h pressure on the United State revise its basic political policy ward the alliance and to go in its drive for establishmen nuclear missiles bases in Eurc Fundamental Problems The two fundamental prol before the NATO summit col ence opening tomorrow ca: summed up in the followingq t ions: 1) How much does the All actually ally? Should the 15 n ber nations, with their somet conflicting interests, agree on policies all over the world? Should the United States France in North Africa? 5] the European nations back United States in the Far East 2) From the European poi view, is it a good thing to, in American missiles and the clear warheads that go with t Would this increase or dim: Europe's security against S attack? Would it make atomic in Europe more or less likely Atmosphere of Urgency These questions will, be del during the next four days, h atmosphere of urgency suc] NATO has not.experienced sing beginning eight years ago. reason for this is a wides: impression among allied les that the alliance is losing its. -and is becoming outmoded time when Russia has forged a of the United States in the .( oping arts of pushbutton wax To deal with this situation, ident Dwight D. Eisenhower come to Paris with a proposed gram of action which is esseni military. This is in line with A ican interests in two vital ries Must Be Near Russia In its race with Russia to del missiles capable of deliverin bomb warheads, the United S has concentrated initially on. ets with a range of around' 'miles. Such weapons can reach Soviet targets if the: fired from forward positioi Europe, the Middle East 'or East. With Russia concentratini intercontinental missiles, havi range of 5,000 miles, foreignl have become more than eve: portant to American and. security. At the same. time the U States has commitments to European regions of thev which many of the Europeans do not have. It belongs to Main Communist alliances covering the On this issue, therefore, the and agreement in NATO on prob- Some of the Europ Western Hemisphere and the Fat- United States position contradicts lems of North Africa and the here now feel they h East. In the Middle East it is as- that of many of the European na- Middle East. lever in their argumen sociated, with the Baghdad Pact. tions here. In more specific terms, Italy as United States over pc President Eisenhower and Sec- Italian Foreign Minister Gisuppe a Mediterranean power has inter- sultation. retary of State John Foster Dulles Pella voiced the European view pests which reach beyond NATO. They reason that Fur are known to feel that American yesterday in a talk to newspaper- France wants NATO backing for tary cooperation has be commitments in Europe cannot be men here. Italy, he said, favors its Algerian policy and particularly more important to A allowed to unbalance American in- consultation among the allies, even, seeks to avoid any more British or cause of its need for i terests in other areas. on some issues which lie beyond American arms shipments to Tu- range missile bases. This is a barrier, in the Ameri- the territorial limits of NATO. nisia *tend to merge the mi can view, to transforming NATO The French government of Pre- . The Nietherlknds has consulted and the political issue I into a broad political alliance as mier Felix Gaillard has a similar with NATO allies about its angry position for bargaining well as a military coalition. positioi, calling for consultation dispute with Indonesia. dent Eisenhower and I - e - Ie Arrives inPa AT Urges Uit ; nbing, fencesWolvermeCage1 prke mentalovrieCgers prl and high speed ndled through Post Offices? s picking up and they 11 of In 88-58 Win Over Bears . y RUDE DIFAZIG Displaying a strong defense and a hot' offense the Michigan. basketball team easily turned back Washington (Mo.) before 4,000 fans at Yost Fieldhouse last night, 88-58. The win was the third straight win for the Wolverines, who drop- ped their opening game to Pittsburgh. Washington now is 2-3. for the young_ season. Despite the score the game actually was a battle of defense-a tight zone put up by Washington, and the smooth-working shifting man-to-man defense of Michigan. Technically both of them were in the world out of d there is no doubt ave developed the it where they, can zydrpgen warheads Dn of argu- out with a Nodaks Top Michigan Ice Sextet, 4-0' lans now have mgines "many il", than those es and are at powerful de- rt Symington (D-Mo.) Braun if it is correct have been told there big speedup of mhissiles y there has been none lack of funds. correct, sir," the wit- int Von Braun said: nites got into the sys- J.S. Might ask UN Talks )n Hungary UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (l)- he United States declared yester- y it will request a special session the United Nations Assembly on angary "if the situation war- United States Ambassador Henry bot Lodge made the statement the 82-nation General Assembly st before it wound up its 12th Special to The Daily GRAND FORKS, N. D. - The North Dakota Sioux reversed the tide of Friday night's encounter and outplayed the Michigan hock- ey squad last night, handing it a '4-0 defeat. The Nodaks took the lead early in 'the first, period on a goal by Joe Poole which fired the Sioux up and provided the impetus which . turned the tables on Michigan. The game. was highlighted by fast and vigorous action similar to the game the preceding night. The Sioux played a hard checking game which the Wolverines were unable to crack. Ten minutes after the first goal was registered, the Nodaks scored again. This time the goal was made by Ed T;iomlinson., In the second period an early goal by Joe Armbruster - ain aroused the Sioux and the Wol- verines weri unable to catch them. Michigan definitely 'showed the loss of two star performers in the game. Captain Neil McDonald who was injured Friday night when he See NORTH DAKOTA, page 9 C, of-C.Official Sees- Big Drop bra Business worked to a, near-perfection for' this early in the season by the two teams, but Michigan's offensive shooting proved the difference. Hitting a torid 45 per cent of their shots, the , Wolverines con- stantly sunk jump and get shots. from outside of afoul circle. These. are the type of shots that a zone defense has a hard time stopping, and Washington couldn't stop them. Michigan earned the hot per- centage from the field by sinking 31 of 69 shots. As in their last two games the attack was highlighted by balanced scoring. Four starters and one reserve, guard Terry Mil- ler, hit double figures.. The top scorer for Washington was substitute forward Art Obrock who tallied 13 points. He garnered See BEARS, page 3 Air} Force Clamp-Down Uncovered Investigators Find 'Space Talk' Banned WASHINGTON ')- House in- vestigators have uncovered a pre- Sputnik Air Force order clamping down on talk about space flight projects, especially anything that might be considered an effort to "fly to the moon." The directive said news stories aboq space projects caused "un- favorable reaction" at the Penta- gon and. in Congress, which con- trols the purse string. Visionary to Crackpot . Apparently the fear was that Congress might consider such ideas visionary if not crackpot. The order was issued July 29, a 'little over two months before Russia launched its first Sputnik Oct. 3. A spokesman for the Govern- ment Information subcommittee headed by Rep. J. E. Moss (D-- Calif) said today he knew of no cancellation of the order. Committee to Retort The committee, which has chal- lenged what it calls excessive gov-' eminent secrecy, is expected to contend in a forthcoming report that no-talk orders on new de- velopments actually retard needed congressional and public support for such projects. The 'directive went from Air Force Research, and Development Command headquarters at Balti- more to "all commanders" in its research and development units. U Establishes New Bureau The establishment of a Bureau of Hospital Administration within the School of Business Adminis- tration was approved by the Board of Regents Friday. Director of the Bureau will be Prof. Walter J. McNerney of the business administration school present director' of the program in hospital 'administration. The Regents acted upon the recommendation of Prof. Russell A. Stevenson, dean of the business administration school, and the executive'committee of the school. The Bureau will supplement teach- ing and instruction now provided In the school's program in hospital administration. World News Roundup By The Associated Pres MOSCOW -'The Moscow News said yesterday Soviet scientists are working on two projects ,to reach the moon. They are called Boomerang and LVM. The article1 lso carried a pre- diction by President A. Bakulev of the Soviet Academy of Medi- cal Sciences that the Russians will get to the moon first. Another scientist, Prof. P. Isa- kov, a master of biology, predicted: flights to the moon in five to 10 years. ~* * WASHINGTON-Sen. Estes Re- fauver (D-Tenn.) said yesterday, he is drafting a proposed constitu- tional amendment which would permit a Congress-Cabinet com- mission to determine a president's inability to discharge the duties of his office. Sen. Kefauver said the Senate Constitutional Amendments sub- committee he heads will begin hearings shortly after Congress convenes on proposals to deter- mine the conditions under which a vice - president might take over for a disabled President. * * * TEHRAN, Iran-The death toll in west Iran's disastrous earth quake reached 1,287 yesterday in- cluding 1,100 inhabitants of a single village near the temnbler's center.. The figures were announced by the Ministry of Post and Tele- graph as rescue. workers dug through the snow covered ruins of towns and villages for more vic- tims of Friday's great earth shock. One village, Farsang, became an immense tomb, the ministry said. The ministry said 210 bodies had been recovered and that the rest of the villagers were buried "and therefore considered dead." odge was accueed immediately the Soviet Union of trying to e a "hullabaloo" over the Hun- -ian question. odge called attention of the embly to reports that Commu- t , ungary 'now is putting on 1 for their lives top leaders of anti-Communist revolt of last r, including Gen. 'Pal Maleter; The people of the United States test with all the vigor at their imand What the Soviet Union,. I its puppet government are ng in Hungary today," Lodge ' Lodge spoke just after the As- sembly had approved by a vote of 77-0 a resolution calling on the countries of the world to encour- age friendly relations and settle all disputes by peaceful means. Nationalist China abstained. Mail Delivery ~~ for Tniv WASHINGTON )--A business recession "at least as severe as in 1949 and 1954," with unemploy-' ment possibly topping five mil- lionwas foredast yesterday byre- search director of the United States chamber of commerce. Dr. Emerson P. Schmidt, basing his appraisal partly on a survey of trade associations, suggested the recovery may come "before 1958 closes," but that demands for, tax relief may come earlier. Spokesmen for 14 industries who participated with Schmidt in a business outlook symposium here were divided but in generaj re- flected somewhat greater opti- mism. . I CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTOR: God of Love' Worth Whatever It Costs to Horst By SUSAN HOLTZER. Peter Horst, '58, is not sure what it will cost him to uphold his prin- ciples, but he feels it is worth it. Horst's appeal for Selective Service deferment as a conscien- tious objector was upheld by a it might cause a change in the interpretation of the law in the future." The principles that caused such controversy Horst characterized as "belief in the God of Love. This means the seeking of knowledge. took shape, and it remains a 'come would be. He explained the wholly personal one. board is under no obligation to "I considered some of the var- defer him, or even to consider the ious organized religions," he ex- court's decision at all. plained, "but I haven't found any Expects CO Classification totally in accord with what I be-- "They are free-to mke the same lieve." He mentioned specifically "Tae ree to make the Quakers, Unitarians and "a mistake over again, or to make some new mistake,.the said. How-