AEC DECONTROL Bee Page 4 W- Tn Cl Latest Deadline in the State 4 6r 9 -'E S IK L Y' r yr ter,. v r SHOWRS LKEL rid'%v VOL. LXI, No, 11 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1950 0 £& A9lt~ I 1I I I Daily Staff Poses With First Issue i UN Forces Prepare For' FinalDrive South Koreans Continue March TOKYO - (R) - Three South Korean Divisions advanced in North Korea today as the bulk of the United Nations forces massed below the 38th parallel awating orders to start the push north to crush the remnants of the Com- munist army. The South Korean Sixth Divi- sion struck across the arbitrary boundary into Communist North Korea yesterday, making a total of three UN divisions north of the parallel. * * * FIELD REPORTS said its lead elements had entered the hydro- electric center of Hwachon, seven miles north of the mythical boun- dary and 50 air miles from the east coast. The South Korean Third Divi- sion, advancing up the East coast highway, was reported near Tongchon, 32 miles south, east of the big East coast port of Wonsan. I '1 I 1i FL l I' MOVING NORTH-Elements of three South Korean divisions advance in North Korea as the bulk of the United Nations forces mass below the 38th parallel boundary. United Nations headquarters in Tokyo reported that the South Korean Sixth Division was the third unit of the UN forces to cross the mythical boundary. Young Says U.S. Papers Careless, Lack Initiative Staff members of the first Mich- " '92L; W. E. Griffin, '91; E. O. Hol-the University from 1924 to 1940 Igan Daily published in 1890 land, '92; H. M. Butzel, '91. is retired president of the Detroit are shown in a memorable pho- Third row: A. H. Covert, '93 Trust Co. Travis, a former justice Thgrird D.rJ w :'L;A. . Chapman.of the Indiana Supreme Court, is tograph. D. Jewell, '91L; G. L. Chapman, a member of a law firm in Indian- Front row, seated (left to right): '92. Top row: L. G. Whitehead, apolis. Butzel is a Michigan State R. Stone, '92; J. C. Travis, 94L; ,93;E. L. Mason, '93; L. I. Abbot, Supreme Court Justice. Abbot W. P. Parker, '94; A. W. Tressler, 91; L. Southmayd,91; W. B. 0 (wearing 'M' shirt) was captain of '91; C.. W. Ricketts, '93. Second ' ' the baseball team that year and. row: F. B. Tibbals, '91; M. B. All but Stone, Travis and Butzel hurried in from the practice field Hammond, '91; H. B. Shoemaker, are deceased. Stone, a Rlegent of to get in the picture. t 3 +> * s s . * " * Pledge Not to Invade China NEW YORK-(P)-The United States and Britain gave solemn as- surancos yesterday that United Nations itces will not cross the Korean border into Communist China or the Soviet Union. These pledges were made as several influential delegates sug- gested privately that the Presi- dent of the Fifth General Assem- bly, Nasrollah° Entezarp, sound a Call for the North Koreans to cease hostilities. If Entezam consents, this is expected to be made im- Wediately after passage of the right-bower Korean peace plan to- day Warren R Austin, United States, tad Kenneth Younger, Britain, spoke for the eight-nation plan in the, final stages of the Assembly debate. YOUNGER TOLD the Assembly the UN- had taken a historic de- eision in June to resist aggression by force. He said if anyone outside the Assembly-for instance Commu- nist China - feared that UN forces might carry hostilities on beyond Korea or remain in Ko- rea longer than the UN, objec- tives demanded, ."I give them my solemn assurance . . . that their fears have no foundation." Austin endorsed the British pledge in his speech. He said also the quicker Korea is permitted to live its own life without foreign Interference, the better. THE EIGHT-NATION plan was approved by the Assembly's po- litical committee. By a vote of 47 to 7, more than enough to over- come the two-thirds vote barrier In the Assembly. The plan calls for a reorganized * UN commission on Korea to con- duct elections and take necessary steps for setting up a unified, in- dependent Korean government. UN forces will remain in Korea long enough for the Commission to carry out its assignment. The plan also calls for immediate steps for rehabilitating the country. P .il E U 4 -. Old-time Staffers Meet As, Daily Hits 60th. Year The Daily's past is showing. Alumni who remember when the Daily was five columns wide and reportsed only local news began to drift into the Student Publica- tions Building last night to help celebrate their old paper's 60th anniversary. * * * PRESENT staff members re- garded them with curiosity and paused from their reunion prep- arations to ask: "When were you here?" This question launched a flow of memories about the Daily staffs of yore. Many of the alumni had never seen the Publications Building before and exclaimed that days State Phone Strike Looms DETROIT - -(R) - A state- wide strike of the Michigan Bell Telephone Co. was threatened yes- terday for Nov. 6. The CIO Communications Workers of America said its 16,00 members would walk out at ex- changes in 104 cities and villages unless a contract dispute is settled in the next month. The strike threat followed union rejection of a company offer which would have provided raises of up to $5 a week. Herbert F. Lange, Michigan Bell vice-presi- dent, said the offer was "very fair to employes." in the old Ann Arbor press build- ing were never like this. One former Daily business man- ager recalled moving the press into the new building in the sum- mer of 1932. - * *; * THE DAILY'S new rotary press drew most of the visitors down- FOR STORIES, PICTURES See page 5, 6. stairs, where they had -a chance to view the Daily's $300,000 shop. Other alumni busied them- selves hunting up their names in the files of old Dailies on dis- play in the Ensian office. Letters from alumni unable to attend the affair have been posted for them to read. THEaREUNION, which com- memorates 60 years of continuous publication, a record among col- lege newspapers, officially gets underway this morning with an open house at the Publications Building. While coffee and cigarettes are served, aalumni will have a chance to revive memories and explore the building with their present-day successors who will act as guides. Though most of the alumni will attend the Dartmouth game, the highlight of the program will come this evening when more than 110 alumni and current staff members gather in the Union for the re- union banquet. - The South Korean Capital Divi- sion was reported to have occu- pied the villages of Yongdae and Inje in the rugged mountains east of Hwachon. * * IT WAS REPORTED that all three divisions were advancing against light opposition. A cloak of military secrecy was wrapped around the re- grouping movements of most UN forces-but a spokesman for Gen. MacArthur said that this did not mean necessarily that the big push was imminent. There were many indications that the remnants of the Red army would make a last ditch stand. Supply convoys have been reported rolling into North Korea from Manchuria. One was re- ported heading eastward toward Wonsan. Other supply caravans were spotted on roads leading south from the Communist capital of Pyongyang toward the 38th parallel boundary. - * * * ALLIED PLANES blasted these convoys day and night as supply lines on both coasts were being bombarded by American, British, Australian, Canadian and French warships which were operating in the dangerously mined waters. Meanwhile, American Marines and the U. S. Seventh Division continued advances north from Uijongbu, captured Red commu- nications hub 12 miles north of Seoul. The American units in this sector were about 15 miles south of the border and out of contact with the enemy which has scampered across the border back into North Korea. General MacArthur's head- quarters in Tokyo announced that the North Koreans had suffered 200,000 casualties, including 40,- 000 men. captured, since their June 25 invasion of the South Korean Republic. By PAUL BRENTLINGER Daily City Editor Michigan editors last night heard the president of the Ameri- can Society of Newspaper Editors sharply criticize modern news- papers for their "carelessness, in- difference and lack of initiative." Dwight Young, editor and pub- lisher of the Dayton Journal- Herald, expressed this view at a banquet held by the University Press Club of Michigan, now hold- Press Club Hears Panel Doctors Discuss Medical Progress "The atomic age has given a feeling of insecurity to many children that necessitates closer bonds between the members of the family," Dr. Ralph Rabino- vitch, professor of psychiatry, said yesterday. Dr. Rabinovitch was a member of a panel which discussed "Ad- vances in Medical Science" yes- terday in Rackham Amphitheatre before members of the University Press Club. The panel discussion was part of the three-day pro- gram comprising the 33rd annual meeting of the Press Club. Dr. Rabinovitch claimed that 80 per cent of the juvenile delin- quents could be rehabilitated if we had the proper facilities. "Much of the work in this field is being held up because of lack of funds," he said. In a discussion of the uses of antihistamines, Dr. John Sheldon noted that "as far as we know, a University faculty member was the first person in the world to take an antihistamine substance." Dr. Sheldon, professor of in- ternal medicine, said that the an- tihistamine effect on the common cold was only to relieve some of (Continued on Page 2) ing its 33rd annual convention here. s " s YOUNG described the mainte- nance of "an efficient, intelligent and hard-hitting editorial staff" as the toughest problem facing present day editors. He suggested a careful, periodic check of staff member's merits as a means of meeting this problem. The Dayton . editor . blamed such things as excessive con- cern over a 40-hour week an(I overtime pay for the flaws of today's newspapers. He contrast- ed today's reporters with the old timer who wanted only the "op-. portunity to' demonstrate to the boss and to himself that he had what it took to succeed." A firm believer in personal jour- nalism, Young disapproved of those papers which frown on any expression of personality by mem- bers of their own staffs. "Yet these same papers will carry such per- sonalized columns as those writ- ten by Pegler, Winchell and Pear- son without batting an eyelash," he said. PUTTING his views into prac- tice, Young himself writes a col- umn three times a week for the Journal-Herald. Although his pa- per is owned by a former Demo- cratic governor of Ohio, Young de- clared that his column "has a slant that is Republican because I am a Republican." An expert on Ohio political affairs, Young was asked before the banquet about Republican Sen. Robert Taft's chances for re-election. "The election will be very close but I believe that Taft is going to gain strength from now on," he said. AFTER YOUNG'S SPEECH, Press Club members presented a citation to President Alexander Ruthven, in an expression of their "affection and respect." Because President Ruthven will begin his retirement furlough July 1, he made his last official Press Club banquet appearance last night. Presented by Mike Gorman, (Continued on Page 2) World News Roundup. By The Associated Press SIOUX CITY, Ia.-Vice Presi- dent Alben Barkley said in news conferences yesterday that he was misunderstood or misquoted in his comments at Milwaukee, Wis., on the Brannan farm plan. "I never said the administra- tion" was not committed to the plan, the vice president told re- porters. "I said I was not and the Democratic party was not commit- ted to it." * * * CALCUTTA, India-Tibetan sources here said yesterday that some 50,000 Red Chinese troops and dissident Tibetans are in Communist China near the Ti- betan border awaiting a green light from Peiping to invade. * * * WASHINGTON-A government research official said yesterday Russia is spending an estimated $45,000,000,000 a year on its mili- tary program. VIENNA, Austria - Reliable sources said last night Austrian Communists are badly split be- cause of their party's dismal failure in this week's Russian- backed campaign of strike and disruption. CHICAGO, II1.-The Senate crime committee yesterday was told that Paul Ricca, a member of the old Capone gang, got two big bundles of money from race track operators. RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil - Brazil's former dictator, Getulio Vargas, last night was leading his nearest rival for the presi- dency by more than 300,000 votes, on the basis of incomplete unofficial returns from Tues- day's election. WASHINGTON-Gen. George Marshall said yesterday the coun- try's great danger today is the lack of a reserve of trained man- power. WASHINGTON-Formal appli- cations have been received for purchase of seven war surplus ships to reestablish package freight service on the Great Lakes, the Maritime Administration re- ported yesterday. Hanover Foe May Provide RuggedTest Passer Clayton SparksIndians ByBOB SANDELL Associate Sports Editor An expected breather might turn into a major gridiron battle for Michigan's Wolverines this after- noon when they seek the scalps of the Dartmouth Indians and their first victory of the 1950 sea- son. Some 75,000 fans, including a host of high school bands and stu- dents, are expected to witness the tussle, the first between the two teams. Proceedings in the Sta- dium will begin at 2:00 p.m., with the weather expected to be cloudy and warmer. FOR THE invading Indians it's the big game of the season and they go into the fray with little to lose and a lot of prestige to pick up if they can knock the perenial kingpins of the Big Ten. For Michigan the contest is. a "must." After,their relatively poor showing against Michigan State they are out to make amends and begin living up to their high pre-season ranking. They must, however, do it with- out their offensive star, Charlie .Ortmann. The versatile Wolver- ine tailback is definitely outof today's game, and his absence could conceivably make the out- come much closer. * * THE EASTERNERS boast of a terrific passing attack featuring their quarterback, Johnny Clay- ton, and the game could turn into an aerial duel between him and Michigan's Bill Putich. Clayton has been one of the brightest stars in Dartmouth's long.gridiron history. He was fifth in the nation last year Last week against Holy Cross he had 12 of 21 for 105 yards. Included were his 20th and 21st touchdown passes of his college career. Along with him, are three other experienced backfield per- formers. TWO OF these are from Michi- gan, Ed Isbey, a wingback from Grosse Point, and Bob Tyler, a left half from Niles. At fullback Coach Tuss McLaughry has Bill Roberts, the leading ground gainer in the Ivy League last season. In the Wolverine camp Oos- terbaan expressed the belief that he would string along with the same backfield combination that played most of the State game. This will mean that the Wol- verines will probably continue operating more from the "T" for- mation to make full use of Putich's passing. There is also a possibility (Continued on Page 3) Doctor Draft Re istration Starts Oct. 16 WASHINGTON-()-The .doc- tor's draft machinery starts oper- ating Oct. 16. President Truman yesterday or- dered the registration on that date of medical men who got either government financing or selective service deferment for their studies during World War II but did not see 21 months of national service. dentists and veterinarians will come later. The date is yet to be selected but it must be before Jan. 16. That registration will take in men who have had long active duty though they are at the bot- tom of the list for actual call to service. Men in the reserves are exempt from registration. So are men over 50, though a man registered be- fore his 50th birthday may be call- pri in + the.a m~r nrocn fn +. a ~Continued on Page 2) NOCTURNAL CHEERS ROCK WEEKEND SCHOLARS: Throngs Provide Noisy Prelude to Grid Duel, Band Day M * T . * * * * F 4 R .a' First Pep Rally Draws .2,000 The thundering voices of 2,363 bandsmen will boom through Michigan Stadium during half- time today marking the Univer-I sity's Second Annual High School Band Day. Bigger than ever before, 37 high school bands will join with day's game, all major hotels re- ported full houses last night. Two football special trains will arrive from Detroit before game time and bus companies are doubling their service from De- troit during the day. From 20 to 2 93 a arAe nmenhi(c'1 n t+ About 2,000 students turned out for the first pep rally of the season last night and shouted, sang and danced their way through a rollicking evening. Meeting in front of the Union songs got the once over, not too lightly. Time was called for a moment while George Roumell, '51, Stu- dent Legislature president, and Julie Franks, former All-American guard for the University, said a