PROBLE SOLVED? Y I Lw i~;rn Urn I RAIN COOL See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State OL. LIX, No. 27 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, OCT. 21, 1948 PRICE FIVE CENTS U, Regents Remove Elder from WES - e c' evolt Flares n U.S. Held outh Korea Red-Led Troops Seize Two Cities SEOUL, Korea-(A)-Loyal Ko- ean Army forces began to win ack control of the southern rea ripped by a bloody revolt- escribed as Communist led. Possibly 4,000 Korean troops in he U. S. occupation zone were in- olved in the revolt. KOREAN ARMY headquarters n Seoul reported othat while the eaport of Yosu-focal point of the ay old uprising-presumably was n rebel hands, the larger city of unchon 20 miles northeast had ot fallen. Four army companies t Sunchon are intact, a spokes- an said. Headquarters received an un- confirmed report that fighting had extended as far as Na won, 50 miles north of Yosu. This in- formation said only a few insur- gents had reached Namwon. There was no indication of large-scale fighting. Army sources said it was possi- le the main body of insurgents ad taken to the hills Northeast f Sunchon. The spokesman ex ressed confidence the small, merican-trained army would be ble to prevent the insurrection rom spreading. * *' * SOUTH KOREA was under artial law. Strong troop and po- ice detachments were ordered to he scene of the revolt which lared up yesterday. It is the first stern test for the -epublic, founded only Aug. 15. he ievolt came as Russia an- ounced it was pulling troops out f North Korea. MTere have been frequent predictions South Korean Cor- nunists would revolt when the Russians begin leaving North Korea. In fact, Moscow report- ed Sunday a revolt had broken out in Southeast Korea.) (This report later simmered own to a small fight in Ulsan, outheast Korea. The current rouble is in Southwest Korea.) As far as is known, no U. S. oc- upation troops are involved. THE REVOLT broke with stun- iing suddenness early today at he port of Yosu (Reisui) and pread swiftly to Sunchon (Jun- en). Sunchon is 100 miles south f Seoul. Yosu is 20 miles south- est of Sunchon. The rebels last were reported speeding toward Kwangju (Kashu). They may be there now. Kwangju is the capital of South Cholla Province, the southwest corner of Korea. It was here that a battle is ex- pected. Korean army and police au- horities agreed on this version of hat happened: * *; ~ A COMMUNIST cell in the 2,- 00 Korean soldiers base at Yosu ;tarted the revolt, apparently tak- Ing advantage of Rhee's absence n a courtesy visit to MacArthur n Tokyo. (This visit was punctu- ted by the uncovering of a dyna- mite plot against Rhee just before ie left Seoul.) Maj. Gen. Orlando Ward, Com- ander of the Sixth Division sta- tioned at Pusan told the Asso- ciated Press by telephone he is "reasonably sure" no Americans ere caught in the fighting. Gopher' Special chedule Clarified The time schedules for the Wol- verine Club's special to the Min- nesota game this week-end were clarified yesterday by Don Green- field, publicity chairman. Tlie special train will leave Ann Arbor depot at 8:45 a.m. tomor- row; arrive Chicago 1 p.m. CST; leave Chicago 3:15 p.m. CST; ar- rive Minneapolis 10:30 p.m. CST. Students will leave Minnesota at 7:30 a.m. CST Sunday; arrive Chi- ago 2:40 p.m. CST; leave Chi- cago 4:15 p.m. SCT; and arrive ~in Ann Arbor 9:39 p.m. VOICE OF CAMPUS? Debaters Swap Words On Partiality of 'Daily' By DICK MALOY (Daily City Editor) The Michigan Daily was verbally dissected before some 500 stu- dents and faculty members gathered for the first Speech Assembly of the year in Rackham Auditorium yesterday. FOUR MEMBERS of the varsity debate team took part in a spirited discussion on the question, "Resolved: The Michigan Daily is not representative of student opinion." Bob Russell and Jack Wirth spoke on the affirmative and Bill Joselyn and Duane Sunderman took the negative. Each speaker presented a four minute case and was then sub- jected 'to questioning by his opponent. The questioning was marked by wisecracking which brought laughter from the audience. Affirmative. . LEADING OFF FOR the affirmative Russell said The Daily tends to overevaluate news of certain small groups on the campus and neglects representative organizations. He said the AVC and the Olivet College issues had received heavy play while the formation of a new Business Administration School Council and imposition of higher scholastic standards on fraternities had been neglected. Russell charged that the editorials were of a destructive rather.. .than of a constructive nature. * * '. '. ALSO SPEAKING for the affirmative Wirth claimed The Daily has failed to adequately and fairly represent student opinion, citing a straw vote last year as proof that 66 per cent of the campus favored conservative Republican candidates. He said the Student Legislature and the IFC had been forced to issue their own newsletter because these groups failed to get adequate news coverage in The Daily. Wirth said the majority of the editorials appearing in the paper this year were written by a small group on the staff and were liberal instead of conservative. * * * * Negative... SPEAKING ON THE negative,'side of the question Sunderman made three points endeavoring to show that The Daily was represen- tative. Sunderman said every member of the staff is eligible to write editorials for the paper and that any student may express his opinion in the "Letters" column. "No bias is shown in the selection of these letters or editorials for print" he declared. The Daily aggressively seeks student opinion through polls and interviews for news items, Sunderman concluded. The final negative speaker was Joselyn who said The Daily should not be criticized for minor mistakes but evaluated on its overall performance as a newspaper. * '* *~ * HE SAID the 200 members of The 'Daily staff were chosen andj promoted on the basis of literary merit and not ideological beliefs. This staff represents every shade of opinion, according to Joselyn. He pointed out that The Daily is the only college newspaper in the Middle West which solicits editorials from every member of the staff. And he emphasized that the only basis of selection of these editorials is from a literary standpoint. KOREAN PARALLEL? Police Arm in Red Zone UN Neutrals Have Plan for Berlin Crisis Western Powers ApproveSolution PARIS-()-A new formula for settling the Berlin crisis was sub- mitted to the Big Four powers by the six "neutral" members of the United Nations Security Council. Authoritative quarters said the new resolution appeared "eminent- ly satisfactory" to the Western powers. Russia's Andrei A. Vish- insky promised to send the draft to Moscow for study. *. * * ONE NEUTRAL source said Vishinsky had approved the res- olution conditionally, but there was no confirmation of this from the Soviet delegation or from any other source. Some Western sources, while agreeing that the plan offered a possible way out, were cautious about itschances of success. One high Western official said: "THE POSSIBILITY of a settle- ment remains, but I would go no farther than that." The resolution was reported to recommend that Russia lift the Berlin blockade within 48 hours after the Security Council ap- proved the proposal. The Western powers, on their side, were asked to agree to a meeting of the Council of For- eign Ministers on Berlin and the whole German problem imme- diately after the blockade is lift- ed. One neutral source said the framers of the proposal were hope- ful of winning Soviet support by making the points recommenda- tions and not submitting them as demands on the big powers. THIS development followed a series of UN actions in which the Western Powers' plan for world atomic controls extending behind the iron curtain won overwhelming approval in the General Assem- bly's Political Committee. Then Latin American and Arab nations joined in forcing post- ponement of UN debate on Pales- tine. The Russian bloc charged it was a move to delay consideration until after the Nov. 2 presidential elections in the United States. Meanwhile fighting continued in Palestine despite a new Security Council order yesterday for a cease-fire. Israel Fighting Flares Anew Cease-Fire Order Is Unheededby Cabinet (By The Associated Press) Fighting flared with new vio- lence in Southern Palestine as the Israeli cabinet met without act- ing on the United Nations Secur- ity Council's cease-fire order. (All Arab countries will join in the present Palestine warfare as the result of Israel's continued "aggression" against Egypt and disregard of the cease-fire order, Abdul Rahman Azzam Pasha, Secretary-General of the Arab League, told newsmen in Cairo. A 35-minute air-raid alert was sounded tonight in the Egyptian capital.) The cabinet adjourned for a re- cess tonight without reaching a decision on a cease-fire order, al-I though earlier the foreign office' had told UN representatives the time and date an Israeli cease- fire would be effective. The cabinet and its military ad- visers still were in session at mid- night. It appeared most members were in accord on acceptance of the truce but the ministers con- tinued deliberations on the terms of their answer to the Security Council's demands. Honest Woman Found ...Twice! "Ay, sir; to be honest, as this world goes, is to be one man picked out of ten thousand." Calling Card Criminal it was almost the perfect crime ! The thief entered the Ypsi- lanti High School and stole several items from the football players' locker room. But the culprit left only one small clue behind him: An Air Corps Battle Jacket with the name and Army Ser- ial Number Henry Raliki ASN 460 422 37. Judic Posts Go To Rees The appointment of George Meyer, '49, and Gerald Rees, grad- uate student in the education school to fill vacancies in the Men's Judiciary Council was an- nounced yesterday by president Ev Ellin. Meyer, who is president of Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity will serve for a year and Rees, former president of the Inter-Cooperative Council and now on its board of directors received a semester term REUTHER TESTIFIES-Walter P. Reuther, president of the CIO- United Auto Workers testifies at examination of Carl Bolton in Detroit, Mich., on a charge of assault with intent to kill. Reu- ther still wears his arm in a cast as a result of the shooting which occurred last April 20. Recorders Judge Christopher Stein presides. Special SL Meetin Passes Motion on NSA Cooperation I Four motions involving Student Legislature cooperation with the National Student Association were passed last night at a special SL meeting held to hear the NSA report of their National Congress, held early this fall. The Legislature gave the NSA committee a go-ahead to carry out plans to provide University stu- dents with privilege cards which would allow students generous discounts at certain stores, movie County GOP Members To Hear Sigler BERLIN - (P) - Guns were being handed out to Moscow- trained police throughout the Eastern zone and anti-Commu- nists said red rebellion in Korea should be a warning to Germany: "Korea offers a parallel of what would happen in Germany if the Western Powers , should accept Russia's proposal that all occu- pying forces withdraw from Ger- many," said Franz Tausch, chief editor of the newspaper Sozial- demokrat,, when asked for his opinion of the situation. * * *W "THE PUTSCH in Korea is a warning to American policy," add- ed Jacob Kaiser, chairman of the Christian Democratic Union, a conservative party. Karl - Hubert Schwennicke, chairman of the Liberal Demo- cratic party, another right wing group, commented that if Western troops are pulled out of Germany "It can be expected that serious unrest would de- velop-as in Korea - which would give the Soviet Union a chance to re-impose its occupa- tion 'in the interest of peace'." The Germans noted that the South Korean uprising in the American Zone broke out the very day Moscow announced Russian troops were beginning to leave North Korea. Dispatches from Seoul in the American Zone of Korea said bands of soldiers, al- leged by Home Minister T. Y. Soon to be Communist-led, staged up- risings at two towns. * *. * THE GERMANS recalled that the Communist foreign ministers of Eastern Europe at the recent Warsaw conference proposed that all occupying powers quit Ger- many. Gov. Kim Sigler will speak in Ann Arbor tonight. He will appear at a Washtenaw County Republican dinner at the Masonic Temple with other county candidates. A special effort was made to get the Young Republicans to the dinner at a meeting last night. The. group has been specially invited to attend. Gerry.Ford, Republican Con- gressional candidate from the fifth district, will be featured speaker at the last pre-election Young Republican meeting, it was also revealed. It will be held a week from today in the Hussey Room of the League. Ford, a University graduate, '32, is a former football star. The AVC petition on political speakers was sent to a committee for revision after debate. Jim Schoener, chairman of the group said that students wishing to have absentee ballots notarized should see him at 104 Cooley House sometime this week. Conclude Special Union Registration Men who have not yet registered as members of the Union, campus men's organization, may do so from 7 to 9 p.m. today in the Stu- dent Offices of the Union. Tonight is the last of the special evenings set aside for the con- venience of men unable to reg- ister during the regular hours of 3 to 5 p.m. every weekday. theatres, cleners and restaur- ants. * " ' PROPONENTS of the plan cited its success in a pilot project set up by NSA at the University of Buf- falo where 1,500 students partici- pated in the plan. Reaffirming it's affiliation with NSA the group voted the national and regional dues, and set up a temporary definition of NSA scope and relationship with SL. Under this definition, subject to change by the National NSA board, only actual delegates to the Congresses will vote on national matters, with Legislature NSA committee members voting with the delegates on local issues. (All NSA decisions affecting the campus are subject to a veto by the Student Legislature as a whole.) NSA REPORTS on discrimina- tion, exchange students, Euro- pean tours, planned "NSA cul- turale," and relationship with the International Union of Students were also heard. The Legislature tabled a motion which would give NSA delegates a voice, but not a vote, on the Leg- islature, and passed a motion in what was tantamount to a closed session. The latter motion will be released at a later date, according to SL president Blair Moody. Plan BigToot For U' Band The trumpets will be turned on the Michigan Band today when the Wolverines leave for Minne- sota and that all-important game with the Gophers. As part of the rousing send-off the Wolverine Club has planned for the nation's number one team, the Fiji Marching Band will give the train-bound musicians a taste of their own type of music. Students will gather from 4:15 to 4:30 p.m. in front of the Union where they will be met by the 10- piece Phi Gamma Delta band. And a Fiji version of "Varsity" will move the entourage down State Street to the station for the send-off. of office, Ellin said. SECOND INTERVIEWS for the two posts had to be given to sev- eral candidates because of the "difficulty of choosing from among well qualified men" Ellin added. Yesterday's appointments were made under an amendment to the Men's Judiciary Council con- stitution which was passed at a Student Legislature meeting,last week. The amendment provides that the appointment board, consist- ing of the male members of the SL cabinet and other SL mem- bers make a total of five, shall fill any vacancies that appear during the year. Normal time for petitions for positions on the seven-man Coun- cil is onemonth before the end of each semester. THE APPOINTMENTS were made under the new amendments, pending approval by the Student Affairs Committee. Ellin said that over twenty-five men had petitioned for the two posts and that seven of them had been interviewed by the student legislature cabinet. Prof. Dawson BeginsSeries Lecturer To Speak On 'Greek Dilemma' Prof. John P. Dawson, of the Law School, recently Foreign Trade Administrator for the Greek Government, will speak on "The Greek Dilemma" at 4:15 p.m. to- day in Rm. 100 Hutchins Hall. The lecture by Prof. Dawson is the first in a series of special lec- tures to be presented by the Law School on timely topics of interest to law students and the legal pro- fession. The lectures are open to the public. Other lecturers in this series will be presented throughout the year at times to be later an- nounced. Several of the speakers now in- cluded are: Harrison Tweed, President of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York, Randolph E. Paul, formerly Gen- eral Counsel of the U. S. Depart- ment of the Treasury and one of the country's leading tax experts, and Philip C. Jessup, Professor of International Law and U. S. Dep! uty representative on the United Nations Security Council. ost Reuther Hits Board's Vote In Dismissal Soop Will Assume Control of Program By PHIL DAWSON An administrative shift has abolished Arthur A. Elder's posi- tion of director of the University Workers' Educational Service, President Alexander G. Ruthven announced yesterday. Under the new plan the pro- gram of workers' education will be part of the general program of extension courses. * * * THE CHANGE drew quick fire from Victor G. Reuther, director of the UAW-CIO educationde- partment, and August Scholle, president of the Michigan CIO Council. In a joint statement they said the Board of Regents "killed the Service . . . no amount of double-talk can now conceal the complete submergence of the Board of Regents and Gov. im, Sigler to the 'General Motors Corp." The program was attacked last May by Adam K. Stricker, a Gen- eral Motors employe. He said an economics class he attended for three hours presented "the Marx- ist idea of class economics." THE PRESENT reorganization is the initial step in carrying out the Board of Regents' decision at its last meeting Saturday. Under Elder's direction It functioned as a special unit of the Extension Service which is headed by Everett J. Soop. The new set-up gives Soop sole administrative responsibility; the courses are now called the "ex- perimental program in adult edu- cation for workers." PRESIDENT RUT HVEN would not comment on the changes. Former director Elder was notified of his dismissal Tuesday by Provost James P. Adams. "I had a twid-hour con- versation with Provost Adams," he said, "the gist of which was that the Regents apparently have decided to change the em- phasis and direction of the serv- ice." Elder, who is president of the Michigan Federation of Teachers (AFL), said, "The Regents appar- ently want the workers, who at- tend these night courses in their own union halls, to learn all about; fine arts, music, literature and his- tory rather than industrial eco- nomics, collective bargaining pro- cedures and other such non-cul- tural subjects." THE REGENTS votedd7-1 for his dismisal, Elder said. Their statement after the meeting Sat- urday said the program's purpose "is to offer to workers additional opportunities for general educa- tion, and to equip them more ade- quately for the exercise of the rights and responsibilities of citi- zenship in a democracy." The statement by Reuther and Scholle: "The Board of Regents ... has abolished the Workers' Education- al Service at the command of the General Motors Corp. "THE METHOD by which the Regents killed the service is one of the rawest pieces of double- See 'U REGENTS, Page 3 Campus UN Begins Drive Sparking its United Nations Week activities, the United Na- tions Council is manning member- ship drive booths on the Diag to- day and tomorrow. Climax of the week's activities will be on United Nations Day, this Sunday, when the UN Coun- cil will co-sponsor a symposium, "It's Your UN," with the National Students Association and the Uni- tarians. The participants in the sym- posium include a distinguished list of faculty members and students. Dean Maynard Keniston, of the Litrarvchool will srneak at the'' HOLD THAT SHAPE: Prof. Adelia Beeuwkes Says Gir'lsMust, Avoid 'Track' Die(ts __________ Men are better losers than women-at least when it comes to weight. That's what Prof. Adelia Beeuwkes of the Public Health nu- trition department told the Amer- ican Dietetic Association Conven- tion in Boston yesterday. "MEN ARE MORE business-like about reducing," she said. "They nearly always see a physician and to discipline the sweet tooth by avoiding whipped cream, candy bars, pastries and gravy. MAJORITY of fad diets don't contain enough proteins, she said. "Give up meat, eggs, butter and milk, and you may improve your figure but you ruin your health." Fortunately the unbalanceddiet addicts get so irritable and un- happy, they can't keep at it very DAR K PICTURE PAINTED: Deutsch Criticizes Post-War Aamerica ,n By AL BLUMROSEN A dark picture of an America three years after the war, para- lyzed by panic and fear, and fac- "A WORLD which desperately wants peace is now tottering on the brink of a so-called inevitable war .... and the diplomats, sup- Contradictions in foreign policy, including U. S.-USSR currying of a fallen Germany so soon after the war and our policy of agreeing