N MOVIES AND DISCRIMINATION See Page 4 Y A6F A6F tr4t g-an A4&hr :43 a t t p Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXI, No. 12 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1950 RAIN EIGHT PAGES UN Program Gets Partial Red Support Move Surprises Other Delegates LAKE SUCCESS, N.Y.--P)--An American-supported program to strengthen the United Nations As- sembly as an agent for peace won a partial and strongly hedged en- dorsement yesterday from the Soviet Union. . John Dulles, Republican adviser to Secretary of State Dean Ache- son, introduced the seven-power resolution in the assembly's 60- nation political committee, where it was assured wide support from the start. R * * JUST WHAT provisions Russia liked were not made clear, but Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Vishinsky's statement thAt some of its points were agreeable to him came as a big surprise to the other delegates. The resolution provides for emergency sessions of the As- sembly when the Security Coun- cil is paralyzed by a veto, for UN peace patrols to act as observers at world trouble spots and for nations to pledge troop units to serve under a UN flag to put down aggression. The resolution also calls for a UN survey during the coming year to learn how big a defense pool UN members can build up against aggression. * * * * VISHINSKY was not on the speaker's list yesterday, but he broke into the debate immediately after Dulles finished describing what he called "the key to the door to peace." Vishinsky offered the excuse that he wanted the debate lim- ited only to the four points list- ed In the joint resolution and as originally set forth by Sec. Acheson in the Assembly. Vishinsky first said that his gov- ernment can accept some of the U.S. points but that "amendments and corrections will have to be of- fered for others." THE COMMITTEE voted down Vishinsky's demand to limit the debate, but in the arguments over his point Vishinsky finally defined his stand to say it was "a mistake to assume that the Soviet Union accepted the general tendency of the American proposal except for the fact that it deals with the strengthening of the peace." Then he added: "I can't agree with a large number of practical proposals which it includes." Vishinsky argued that the com- mittee ought to get right down to cases and argue the concrete pro- posals instead of drowning them in a contest of speeches on who . favors peace. Britain, France, Canada, Tur- tey, the Philippines and Uruguay re co-sponsors of the resolution. Fierce Tidal Wave Batters Amboina Isle JAKARTA, Indonesia - (P) -- A great tidal wave battered the island of Amboina last night in the wake of a series of violent earthquakes. A broadcast from the island, center of a bloody rebellion against the government of Indonesia, re- ported casualties and appealed for Red Cross help. DAMAGE WAS reported great in costal villages such as Galala and Halong, where the broadcast reported casualties. It gave no figures on dead or injured, but there were fears here that the toll was heavy. The island, heart of the South Moluccan rebellion against the Indonesian state, is 32 miles long and has an area of '386 square miles. Its population is about 240,000. The Ambionese district includes the islands of Amboina, Saparua, Boeroe, Ceram and the Banda Isles. These islands lie between Dutch New Guinea and the island of Celebes, and are northeast of Java. The United Nations Commission on Indonesia has been consider- ing steps to end the fighting on Amboina Island. Indonesian gov- ernment troops had been driving New Draft Plan Up for Approval Would Defer Superior Students Regardless of Concentration Field By BOB KEITH Worried about the draft? Then keep on crossing your fingers. If things go well in Wash- ington you may soon be assured of seeing your college career through to completion. « * « * SELECTIVE SERVICE officials are currently mulling over a far- reaching scheme which would give high-calibre college men con- tinuous exemption for the full time they are in school. The plan is of great importance to all draft-age students for two chief reasons: 1. It would safeguard all top-bracket scholars from the present threat of getting nabbed between academic years 2. It wouldn't discriminate according to fields of study. Every draftable male student would be eligible for full deferment, no matter what branch of education he is pursuing. Credit for this plan goes to a heterogenous advisory group set up in 1948 by Major General Lewis B. Hershey, the nation's Selective Service chief. GEN. HERSHEY has not handed his final approval to the pro- posed scheme, but he reportedly sanctions it in principle. Apparently Gen. Hershey is waiting for the plan to gain support from other governmental agencies such as the National Security Resources Board. Once the proposal is generally accepted It. will be up to President Truman to turn it into law through the device of an official execu- tive order. Nucleus of the, new deferment system would be a special classification for scholastically eligible students. Technically, this classification would be known as. 2-A. The 2-A category would encompass all upper-level male students whether they are studying in high school, college or graduate school. There would be only two qualifying requirements: 1) the deferment seeker must -e working for some sort of degree, and 2) he must maintain above-par grades. * * .* THE SCHOLARSHIP requirement is probably the new system's most noteworthy feature. For it would make the male student's chances for an uninterrupted college career depend almost wholly on his scholastic capabilities. Just what degree of scholarship would be demanded? In the first place every .student hoping for deferment would be requirred to pass an aptitude test. If successful in this venture the student would then need to maintain healthy grades throughout his entire schooling. For incoming freshmen the pressure would be especially strenu- ous. First year men would need to stay in the top half of their class in order to be sure of coming back the following year. * « * * SOPHOMORES would have it easier, percentage-wise. They would only be compelled to remain in the upper two-thirds of their class to be eligible for their junior year. Juniors hoping to go on to a degree would be required to keep somewhere'within the upper three-fourths bracket. Seniors in class 2-A would be deferred until at least four months after graduation, no matter how they stood academically. But if they wanted to enter a graduate or professional program their senior (continued on Page 7) Freedom Scroll Signature Ca-mpai gn Toi.Begin Today South Koreans In' Wonsan As Reds Hold U.S. In west 0 Reds Claim1 U.S,,Attack On Airbase Say Soviet Field Strafed by Jets LONDON - (P) - The Soviet Union has protested to the United States that two American fighter planes strafed a Soviet airfield about 62 miles from the Soviet- Korean frontier Sunday. This was disclosed yesterday in a bro-adcast from Moscow which said the incident occurred at a Soviet airfield on the sea coast in the Sukhaya Rechka area. The planes were identified as F-80 shooting star jets. Moscow said some property damage occurred but mentioned no casualties. THE ALLEGATION was con- tained in a protest note handed to the American minister-counselor' in Moscow. He refused to accept it on the basis it was a matter for the United Nations to handle. Soviet Deputy Foreign Minis- ter Andrei Gromyko said this argument was groundless as the subject of the note was the fir- ing on a Russian airfield by American planes. The note said Russia had lodged a "resolute protest" with the Unit- ed States and had demanded "strict punishment" of those re- sponsible for the attack. THE NOTE also demanded that the United States give assurance it would take measures to prevent "such provocative actions" in the future. " This is the first Russian claim of U.S. plane attack on Soviet home territory since the begin- ning of the United Nations attack on North Korea. The Moscow radio said that Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko had delivered the protest yesterday to the American embassy in the Soviet capital. In Washington, the State De- partment said it had not received the Russion protest. USW To Ask RAGING INFERNO-The third and fourth floors of Montgomery Ward's Farm Store belch forth flames and smoke as streams of water are shot into the inferno. Ann Arbor firemen fought des- perately to quell the holocaust which broke out for an underter- mined reason at 6:38 p.m. yesterday. Troops from National Guard Company K were called out later in the evening to handle the throngs of spectators who packed the streets and municipal park- ing lot across the street from the blazing structure. Damage was estimated tentatively at $500,000. No injuries were reported. * * . * Ward Warehouse Burned Out by- Spectacularfire Tooth Tale MANITOWOC, Wis.-(P)-As any child will tell you, if you take one of your baby teeth, when it falls out, and put it under your pillow, a good elf will leave you something while you sleep. Six-year-old Nancy Haese knows it's true, too. She left one of her teeth under her pil- low and the next morning she had: two teeth. Nancy's folkshwere mystified until Skippy, the terrier who sometimes misbehaves by sneaking into Nancy's bed, dis- played a smile as gaping as Nancy's. Court Rules On Maryland Negro Case Refuses Review Of Taylor Trial WASHINGTON-(4P)-The Su- preme Court declined yesterday to interfere with a state court deci- sion ordering the University of Maryland to admit a Negro girl to its all-white school of nursing. The University had offered to provide nursing education for the girl at an institution in another state. The Maryland Court of Ap- peals ruled that would not give her equal protection under the laws. The Supreme Court refused to review the Maryland court's decision. In another case involving racial segregation of students, the high tribunal refused to reconsider its decision last June involving the University of Texas. * * s AT THAT time the court ordered Heman Sweatt, a Houston Negro, admitted to the Texas Univer- sity's white law school. The court said it could not find "substantial equality" in a separate school set up by Texas for Negro law stu- dents. In another ruling yesterday the high tribunal denied Senator Glen Taylor (D., Idaho), a review of his conviction on disorderly conduct charges in Birmingham, Ala., May 1, 1948. Taylor was fined $50 and was sentenced to 180 days in jail. Justices Black and Douglas favor- ed a review of the case. Told of the high tribunal's ruling, Taylor said in Pocatello, Ida., that he had no intention of going to Alabama to turn him- self over to "that chain gang." But in Birmingham, police com- missioner Eugene Connor told re- porters: "We are going to send and get him, wherever he is, at once." At the time of his arrest, Taylor was a candidate for Vice President on the Progressive Party ticket with Henry A. Wallace. The charge arose from a scuffle Taylor had with Birmingham police when the Senator tried to enter a Negro youth meeting through a door marked "Negro entrance." Taylor said his arrest would serve as a test of Birmingham's law requiring separation of Neg- roes and whites. An all campus campaign for sig- natures to the Crusade for Free- dom scroll will be conducted today and tomorrow by the Student Leg- islature. Part of a nation wide drive be- gun September 5, the signatures obtained at the University will be permanently enshrined in the base of the Freedom Bell in Berlin. " - -s THE CAMPAIGN on campus will be conducted mainly through an SL booth open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on the diagonal. Freedom Scrolls will also be circulated through all organized h o u s e groups. If you should sign the Free- dom Scroll, what would you be doing? Briefly, it is this: " " Making a basic declaration of faith in the sacredness and dignity of the individual, in the belief that all men possess the right to be free, and pledging to resist ag- gression and tyranny wherever they appear. National Chairman of the drive is General Lucius D. Clay, and it is backed by hundreds of nationally known figures. Local- ly, President Ruthven is a mem- ber of the Michigan Committee. Urging student support of the Freedom Scroll, Pres. Ruthven said, "As one of the state commit- tee members, I have come to ap- preciate what the Crusade for Freedom means. I sincerely hope that the Freedom scrolls will have a good representation of Univer- sity names." Sometime before Oct. 24, United Nations Day, all the scrolls in cir- culation in the country will be gathered up and sent to Berlin, where dedication ceremonies for the 10 ton Freedom Bell will be held. At that time the signatures will be enshrined in the base of the Bell. No statistics are available as yet, but there are enough Freedom Scrolls in circulation within the entire country to obtain 50 mil- lion names, according to Murton Peer, executive director of the Freedom Scroll campaign. By BARNES CONNABLE l For the fourth time this year, fire of an undetermined origin swept through the top floors of the Montgomery Ward farm store and warehouse on the corner of W. Washington and S. First. The blaze, which was discovered shortly before 7 p.m. yesterday raged uncontrolled until 10:15 p.m. when the biggest hose was moved from the flaming southeast cor- ner of the building further to the rear. * * * ESTIMATES of damage caused by the holocaust ran as high as half a million dollars. L. O. Quack- enbush, manager of the warehouse, said early in the evening that Ward merchandise losses alone had run up to at least one hun- dred thousand dollars. The fourth floor of the build- ing was occupied by King-Seeley Corp., local manufacturer of gauges and other precision in- struments. The third floor was packed with Ward merchandise jammed in for the "Ward Week" sale next week. Three blinding flashes at 7:30 WageBoosts p.m. brought screams from the fleeing throngs below. Power lines containing over 23,000 volts were severed by force of water being pumped through them into the building. * * * LIVE WIRES crashed to the ground, crossing over street-lamp wires and causing a short circuit. Firemen yelled at spectators perched on the low-hanging rail- road tressel over W. Washington to run from the rails dampened by showers earlier in the day. Campus area electricity was momentarily shut down several times after the explosions. At least 25 police and over 40 members of the National Guard hurried to the scene and roped off the thousands of onlookers. No injuries were reported, but an ambulance stood by during the course of the evening. * * * FOUR FIRE TRUCKS pumped an estimated 35,000 gallons of wa- ter per hour into the flaming warehouse. For a quarter of an hour, fire- men were stymied in their ef- forts to subdue the blaze by the live wires stretched across the street. Electricians arrived later in the evening to cut the dangerous wires but were forced to wait until the nearby King-Seeley plant turned off their machines before they could go about their job. King-Seeley, which is serviced by the power-lines, was forced to shut down for the night. Communist Resistane Strengthens UN Troops Aim For Pyongyang TOKYO - () - South Korean Third Division troops crashed into the port city of Wonsan yesterday and fought in the streets with Communist defenders, the repub- lican army reported, while in the west North Koreans stalled a U.S. First Cavalry spearhead one mile inside Red territory. An Army spokesman for the Korean Military Advisory Group said South Korean troops had seized Wonsan's airfield. American military advisory re- ports said Communist resistance one mile south of Wonsan was beaten down last night to make possible the reported entry into the key United Nations obJective on the eastcoast. However, U.S. military advisers did not immedi- ately confirm the South Korean army announcement. WONSAN, a fine deep-water port with unlimited anchorage, was a major prize for which the Reds had made a bitter stand. It is 95 air miles east of the North Korean capital at Pyongyang, across the narrow waist of the peninsula. All along a new 120-mile front in Red Korea-ranging from one mile north of the 38th paral- lel on the western end to 90 miles deep on the east coast- Korean Communists were fight- ing back stronger and with more determination than in many days. Nevertheless, some 45,000 United Nations troops on the front ham- mnered out gains, overwhelming and outflanking the Red defenders in tactics the North Koreans once employed effectively themselves when they first invaded South Korea 15 weeks ago. * * * FOUR SOUTH KOREAN divi- sions and some 5,000 U.S. First Cavalry troopers were north of the 38th parallel-in a push designed ultimately to converge on the North Korean capital of Pyong. yang if the Reds refuse to surren- der. The enemy knew that at least ten other United Nations divi- sions were poised within the shadow of the old demarcation line to back up Gen. Douglas MacArthur's final surrender de- mand. That ultimatum-the second by the U.N. military commander- came yesterday. In demanding anew that the enemy quit the war, Gen. MacArthur asked for sur- render now so that the decisions of the United Nations to unify and restore Korea can be carried out with a minimum further loss of life and destruction of property. THE BROADCAST message promised that the North Koreans will be justly treated if they lay down their arms. It asked them to cooperate in setting up an inde- pendent and unified government for their country of thirty million persons. Gen. MacArthur's first surren- der demand, made Oct. 1, was Ig- nored by the Reds. The latest ulti- matum, like the first, was broad- cast repeatedly. Reminder Daily editorial staff tryouts will meet at 4 p.m. today in the Student Publications Building to begin a semester long train- ing program in headline writ- 0 PITTSBURGH-(RP)-T h e mil- lion member CIO United Steel- workers Union squared off yester- day with the first of 35 big and small steel companies which agreed to immediate negotiations on the union's demand for a "very healthy and substantial" wage in- crease. The Union asked 1,400 com- panies across the country to ad- vance the date for reopening con- tract wage provisions from Nov. 1 to today. The union reported it has not yet heard from the mammoth, United States Steel Corporation, producer of one third of all Ameri- can steel, and Bethlehem Steel Corporation, the nation's number two firm. 'SOME ENCHANTED EVENING': Melchior To Perform Here Tonight Red Troops Trap French Near Thatkhe SAIGON, Indochina-(P) -The Communist-led Vietminh snapped a trap on several battalions of crack French troops northwest of Thatkhe, near the China border. The French suffered a defeat of disaster proportions. The encirclement caught by sur- prise the French, garrison with- drawing from abandoned Caobang The French force including screen- ing troops, were outnumbered 10 to one. * * * A FRENCH military spokesman declined to disclosed the actua number of troops caught in the trap. Military security cloaks any plans the French may have to re- inforce their depleted frontier gar- i f f t National News « S * Featuring a diversified program ranging from Wagner to Richard Rodgers, former Metropolitan Op- era singer Lauritz Melchior, will open the 1950-51 season of the Ex- tra Concert Series at 8:30 p.m. to- day in Hill Auditorium. Born in Copenhagen the versa- During his long career the famed tenor has received many commendatiorn including the ti- tle, "Singer to the Royal Court of Denmark" and several medals. Presently on a concert tour, his schedule calls for the completion By The Associated Press NEW YORK-Attorney-General Nathaniel Goldstein, of New York, said yesterday he was investigating at least five organizations soliciting millions of dollars for cancer relief. * * * * DETROIT - The trial of five minor officials of local 600, United Auto Workers (CIO) on charges of Communist subservience opened last night in a peaceful atmosphere. NEW YORK-Trial of William Remington, accused of perjury in denying to a federal grand jury that he had ever been a Communist, was set for Nov. 5 yesterday by Federal Judge William Bondy. rn-rn