I :NT. COULD :AID IiJ jl~ I,~I i POLICYMAKING Sixty-Seven- Years of Editorial FreedomCODRE 78 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 7, 1958 FIVE (CENTS VTI1E~hmReot1Ianned Soviet ocke tI SNOW SIX re * * * Williams To Fill -Daily-David Arnold PLUS TWOS-Michigan guard Jack Lewis prepares to sink two points over the outstretched arms of a badgered Badger. Watching the basket in the background is Michigan's Pete Tillotson (33) who paced the scoring with 23 points. Second Half 'M' Surge Beats Wisconsin, 70-49 By RUDR DIFAZIG With Pete Tillotson showing /the way Michigan exploded in the second half to take an easy 70-49 Big Ten basketball win from Wis- consin before 4000 partisan fans at Yost Field House last night. The win put the. Wolverines atop the young Conference race with a 2-0 record. The loss was Wisconsin's second in league play. Trailing 31-30 at intermission the Wolverines unleashed their fast break to pump in 40 points while 0 holding the Badgers to a meager 18. f ddI- 1 Totals 4 Points Tillotson, held to a bucket and a free throw in the first 20 min- utes of play, carried the attack for the Wolverines in the second half with 20 points. The men from Madison visibly wilted before the barrage in the second half. The tight zone de- fense which completely stymied Tillotson and his teammates in the late stages of the opening stanza was a poor facsimile when the Wolverines once began to move. Burton Scores 17 Michigan received scoring bal- ance from M. C. Burton, 17; George Lee, 12; and Jack Lewis, 10. The top scorer for Wisconsin was Guard Brian Kulas with 18 points, 17 coming in the first half. The Wolverines were hot and cold in the first half. They jumped off to a five point lead, 11-6 with five minutes gone but the Badgers fought back to go ahead 13-12 at 12:24. See "WOLVERINES", Page 3 Army Size MOSCOW (A) - Soviet Russia announced yesterday it is with- dirawing and disbanding 58,000 troops 'in Hungary and East Ger- many as part of a slash of 300,000 men in the Soviet armed forces. More than 41,000 will be pulled out of East Germany, the an- nouncement said, and 17,000 from Hungary, where they have been on guard since the revolt of 14 months ago. Deputy Foreign Minister V. V. Kuznetsov told a specially sum- moned news conference the cuts would start immediately and be completed this year. He also told reporters the So- viet Union was considering "posi- tively" the idea advanced by Brit- ish Prime Minister Harold Mac- millan Saturday for a nonaggres- sion pact between East and West. WORLD'S SECOND LARGEST: Universit To Erecet Ra+'dio Te lescope in June ;::..3, ..By JOHN AXE jointly by the University's astronomy and. electrical engineering de - Ipartments sometime next June. tiAccording t Prof. Fred to Haddock of the astronomy and elec ,: :..,.:.::;: ::;,>}:,}::?:will be the second largest steerablerdotlsoe11tewrd Stadin ovr 10 fethigh and having a solid "dish" reflector 85 } _ day and catch signals from outer space by night, Prof. Haddock* ex- -.-}:;::;, ' :t- :::;r:.....?:::". lained. Instrument Could Track Sputniks _ _ :"h::">}:::::::r .. "In fact, he. added, "the instrument is so versatile that it could .,.;..{: ::::>: .:1::;>:::::;:1:::: : ;:::easily uue used t track ftr'Sputniks' if minor changes were made' X .n.the radio receiver" The new telescope, which is being paid for largely by fund from rs ::: :.the Office of Naval Research. is ripcipll eing bit fr hpnr