MMMMMMM'm 1952 PRESIDENTIAL FORECASTS See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State 41P :43 a t I CLOUDY, WARM VOL. LXI, No. 21 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN THURSDAY! OCTOBER 19, 1950 SIX PAGES Red Capita EnteredBy U.S. Troops Victory Climaxes 13 Mile Advancel TOKYO - () - United States First Cavalry troops fought their way yesterday into the deserted Red Korean capital of Pyongyang, a field dispatch reported. This would make a 13-mile final advance against fiercely resisting Reds seeking to protect the flight of Premier Kim Il Sung's govern- ment and army northward. United States Eighth Army Headquarters at Seoul received word that elements of two regi- ments had battled into the ancient ' city. THE FIRST CAVALRY ran into the Red rear guard opposition yes- terday while engaged in a race with the South Korean First Di- vision for the honor of being the irst into Pyongyang. Striking out yesterday morn- ing from the town of Hukkyo, the troopers powered their way through Chunghwa, 10 miles out, and then drove on into the city, the field dispatch said. Strong armored reinforcements were rushing up to support the advance. Captured Pyongyang civilians told a South Korean Army spokes- man that Premier Kim Il Sung's Red government had fled to Hui- chon, 80 miles north of Pyong- yang. They said the Red army had moved military headquarters 10 miles north of the capital to Sun- chon. "We will launch a new attack as. soon as we can spread out and hit the enemy positions," said a Unit- ed States Eighth Army spokesman. He added, "We have overwhelm- ing force at our command and, as soon as we can get set, nothing can stop us." THE STIFF Red defense was strictly a rear guard action. Pyong- yang itself was deserted. Main Red forces and civilians stirred up clouds of dust in their headlong flight north of the capital. South Korea's Pusan radio had said, without confirmation, that the Republic's forces entered Py- ongyang. On the west end of the surg- ing Allied battle line, the U.S. 24th Division sliced westward to- ward Chinnampo, the port for Pyongyang. Right behind the First Cavalry, a British Commonwealth Brigade of Scottish Highlanders, English Midlanders and Australians stamped out the last resistance in Sariwon, 35 miles south of Pyong- yang. There were no fresh reports from the northeast end of the Al- lied line since South Korean troops captured the twin industrial cities of Hamhung and Hungnam, 110 miles south of the Korean-Man- churian Border. The United States Far East Air Forces said bombers and fighters pounded North Korean Reds in the Pyongyang area with "excel- lent results." Greenglass Pleads Guilty To Spy Charge NEW YORK-(P)-A 28-year- old former Army sergeant, who worked on the atomic bomb, Ipleaded guilty yesterday to con- spiring to slip secret government information to Russia during war- time. David Greenglass, the chunky former soldier, stood with bowed head and clasped hands before Federal Judge William Bondy as the charge against him was read. Greenglass, who worked on the atom bomb at Los Alamos, -:- Mex., originally was indicted in New Mexico. Thin he was named in a superseding indictment with four others, including former Russian Vice-Consul in New York, Anatoli A. Yakovlev The latter is now be- lieved to be in Russia. In tne light of Greenglass' plea it was expected he would turn government witness to escape the death penalty. He was the third American to plead guilty to atom spy charges. When arrested last June Green- SL Votes Closer Ties With NSA Plans for Thanksgiving Holiday To Be Sent to House Groups Student Legislators last night received copies of the Thanks- giving Holiday plan to distribute to house groups and voted to bring the National Student Association into a closer relationship with the SL. The Thanksgiving holiday plan, calling for a four day vacation, was turned down for this year by the University's Conference of Deans Tuesday. * * * * HOWEVER the student body should become familiar with the plan and begin working on its approval for next year, Dave Belin, Anti - Aggression Proposal Passed by UN Committee 0 French Flee Indochinese Border Post SAIGON, Indochina - (AP) - Screened by typhoon weather, French troops menaced by Com- munist-led Vietminh Nationalists have abandoned the frontier post of Dong Dang, on a traditional in- vasion route from Communist China.I The withdrawal, the fifth by frontier garrisons within a month, was announced by a French mili- tary spokesman yesterday. He said it was carried out in good order and without unusual pres- sure from the Vietminh guerril- las, who are directed by Moscow- trained Ho Chi Minh. * * * AGAINST A background of military reverses, Premier Tran Van Huu of the French-supported Vietnamese government proposed in an interview that the United States help him build, up a na- tional army of 40,000 troops im- mediately, plus a navy and air force. "I ask friendly nations to as- sist me in placing the projected army under purely Vietnamese control," he said. The State Department said the major part of all American funds earmarked for arms shipments to the Far least would go to Indo- china to pay for arms, munitions and newly requested light bomb- ers. An official estimated Indo- china's share at about $500,000,- 000. High American officials said France, a key partner in the North Atlantic pact, is likely to get up to $6,000,000,000 in American mili- tary aid during the next three years. Reports Hint Wake Accord WASHINGTON - () - Gov- ernment officials spread a report yesterday that President Truman and Ge. Douglas MacArthur had reached general agreement on the hot issue of Formosa-and a Re- publican critic of administration policy, immediately demanded that the report be checked up to Mac- Arthur. Senator Knowland (R-Calif) de- clared that the public should re- ceive the facts directly from the General and President Truman rather than through "second hand leaks" The developments followed Pres- ident Truman's return home from his dramatic Wake Island confer- ence with MacArthur, during which they discussed Korea and other major matters. One of these was Formosa, on which the Presi- dent and the General have vot seen eye toeye. >'51, originator of the plan, em- phasized. Copies of the plan will be post- ed in all houses, and Belin re- quested that house presidents inform SL of their groups re- sponse to it. Under the revised NSA struc- ture, the work of the association will be done by the standing com- mittees of SL, instead of the sepe- rate NSA Committee. "This will result in a close affiliaton between SL and NSA and prevent dupli- cation of committee work," legis- lator Dorarinne Zipperstein, ex- plaine The present NSA committee members willbe redistributed to other SL committees. The Legis- lature will consider the actual or- ganization of the new set-up at its next meeting. THE STUDENT Legislature also heard report on this summer's Third National Student Congress held here at Ann Arbor. The dele- gates reported that, contrary to a report in Life Magazine, many concrete proposals had been dis- cussed and accepted at the con- vention. ' Included in the results were a revamping of the Student Dis- count Service with purchase cards to be given away. The delegates also reported that the University's system of faculty evaluation was the most advanced at the congress. FOLLOWING the report on the NSA Congress, a representative of the Japan International Christian University asked that the SL con- duct a fund raising drive on cam- . pus for that university. The re- quest was turned over to the Cul- ture and Education Committee for study. Also distributed to Legislators last night were petitions drawn up by a special SL committee protesting the expiration of rent control in Ann Arbor. The peti- tions will be circulated by SL members and then presented to the Ann Arbor city council, which has authority to act upon rent control in the city. Audrey Smedly, chairman of SL's Michigan Forum also an- nounced last night that any stu- dents wishing to work on the com- mittee should meet with her at 4:30 next Tuesday in the Union. The Forum will sponsor discus- sion groups and lectures by promi- nent speakers throughout the year. At another meeting, also held last night, the Engineering Coun- cil announced that a special elec- tion will be held in conjunction with this fall's SL election to choose a successor to Ned Hess, ousted Engineering School presi- dent. The election will take place Nov. 21 and 22. Petitions for botf the SL and engineering president are available at the SL office. Walter Oberreit, chairman of SL's Crusade for. Freedom Cam- paign, reported that 3200 names have already been collected with the final total not yet compiled. Because of the great response throughout the country, the drive will be extended a full month until Nov. 16. Hurricane Diminishes In Florida Damage Amounts To Five Million MIAMI-(I)-A tropical hurri- cane degenerated into widespread gale winds in central Florida yes- terday after it had ripped up south Florida's Atlantic coast, killing two persons and causing several mil- lions of dollars damage. The Weather Bureau ordered all hurricane warning flags lowered late today but kept storm warn- ings flying from Stuart, Fla., north to Cape Hatteras, N. C. AT 4:30 p.m. the Weather Bu- reau said the "remains of the hur- ricane, greatly reduced in force" were blowing about midway be- tween Daytona Beach and Ocala, 95 miles inland. The storm was moving north- ward at 17 to 18 miles an hour. The American Red Cross re- ported 128 homes destroyed and 13,464 damaged to some extent by the tropical storm's 125-mile winds in Dade and Broward Coun- ties on the peninsula's lower east coast. ONE WOMAN was killed, her husband critically injured, and their four children hurt when the hurricane smashed their home at West Hollywood. Sixty-five per- sons received hospital treatment for injuries in the two counties. Forty of the injured were in the Miami area. The other fatality was an un- identified man whose body was found in the wreckage of his home at West Hallandale. Damage was tentatively esti- mated at $5 million in Dade, Brow- ard and Palm Beach counties by Grady Norton, chief storm fore- caster. He said the estimate un- doubtedly would rise as more com- plete reports were received. News- paper estimates ran as high as $8 million for the Miami area alone. Company C of the Florida Na- tional guard was called outto pro- tect property and prevent looting in three hard hit communities- West Hallandale, West Hollywood, and Davie. The towns, each with about 2,000 population, are 12, 16 and 27 miles north of Miami. Prof. Knappen Hits MSC Ban EAST LANSING--(P)-A Uni- versity professor joined in a pro- test meeting of Michigan State College faculty members against the college's ban on partisan poli- tics for staff members Tuesday. "Naturally we are concerned at Ann Arbor," Prof. Marshall Knap- pen, a member of the University's political science department said. "Every college professor should be concerned about the restrictions imposed on any fellow professor." "When you concede one of these infringements now others will fol- low," he told a group of MSC fac- ulty members. -Daily-Jack Bergstrom ATOMIC LECTURER-David E. Lilienthal, who delivered the first lecture in the 79th oratorical series last night takes a quick look at his notes before ascending to the Hill Auditorium stage. * * * * Lifienthal Ridicules AEC Atomic Information Policy Eye Say By The Associated Press LONDON-O. D. Rasmussen, who has been gazing into women's eyes the world over for years, says womenof Brit- am's upper middle class have the most beautiful orbs in the world. Optician Rasmussen sizes up women's eyes this way: French-Their eyes have a certain hardness. German-Too staring. American-Too Intelligent. Russian - Not intelligent enough. Controversy Rages over Hlanley Note By The Associated Press NEW YORK-The Hanley letter controversy spread yesterday as politicians wondered what effect it would have on New York's 6,000,000 registered voters in the elections Nov. 7. The World-Telegram and Sun quoted "unimpeachable Republi- can sources" as saying that Rep. W. Kingsland Macy tried to use the letter to high-pressure a Sen- ate candidacy for himself. MACY WOULD not comment on the report, but his friends said a copy of Hanley's letter was shown at the GOP State Convention 12 hours before Macy receivec it. In his letter to Macy, Lieut. Gov. Joe R. Hanley, the GOP Senate candidate, said that in conference with Gov. Thomas E. Dewey he received "unalter- able propositions" which would enable him to pay off his debts in 90 days if he ran for the Sen- ate. Hanley had wanted to run for Governor but stepped aside and Gov. Dewey was renominated. - Dewey denied making any mon- ey deal with Hanley and Hanley himself denounced as a "new low in political smears" Democratic charges that he was paid off to make way for Dewey to run for reelection. Rep. Walter A. Lynch, Demo- crat-Liberal candidate for. Gov- ernor called for impeachment and prosecution of Dewey. He said the letter showed Dewey had violated the state criminal code forbidding the bartering of public office. FCC Defends Color Choice WASHINGTON-()-The Fed- eral Communications Commission yesterday struck back at the crit- ics of its color television decision of last week. Breaking silence on the pro- tests, including court actions, which followed its selection of Columbia Broadcasting System color as the nation's official color system, FCC issued a statement de- signed to refute a charge by' RCA in the Chicago suit that FCC was influenced in its decision for CBS by a commission engineer who in- vented a device useful to the Co- lunbia system. By WENDY OWEN The Atomic Energy Commis- sion's policy of keeping all atomic information top-secret was ridi- culed by David E. Lilienthal open- ing the 1950-51 lecture series last night. "The government decides who can think, by default who can't and about what," he declared. "I'm not 'agin' government, in fact my years of public service on the Ten- nessee Valley Authority should World News roundup By The Associated Press JERUSALEM - Outgoing Pre- mier David Ben-Gurion asked President Chaim Weizmann yes- terday to have someone else form a caretaker government pending the national elections called to solve Israel's political crisis. WASHINGTON - The Natiunal Production Authority last night proposed to the construction in- dustry a possible shutdown on the building of amusement places such as race tracks, dance halls and amusement parks. LONDON-Britain's Labor Gov- ernment won approval of the House of Commons by a 12-vote margin last night for its man- agement of the Nationalized Transport industry. *. * * PARIS - Preffiier Rene Pleven indicated last night his govern- ment will resign unless the Na- tional Assembly supports it fully on Indochinese policy. prove I believe that government can do some jobs well." * * * BUT DEVELOPING and per- fecting industrial use of atomic power, 'he maintained, is some- thing that only industry can do and do well. On the security side, Lilien- thal reportedthat the United States has a "formidable" stock- pile of atomic weapons, in con- trast to 1946 when he became AEC boss. "Information on atomic wea- pons must be classified," he add- ed. But he condemned the haze of fear that has surrounded any- thing atomic since the first bomb was detonated over Hiroshima. "Such projects as the Michigan Memorial Phoenix Project, which. sponsor independent investigation of peaceful uses of the atom can be the, center for breaking this awesome hold that fear has over the people."4 TO GET through this fear-rid- den period Lilienthal made four suggestions: 1. The American public must get the right frame of mind about atomic weapons, and learn to see the whole picture clearly. 2. The public must see that the atomic bomb is neither the absolute weapon with no possi- ble defense, nor the complete cure for Communism. "The value of the bomb is over-rated," he- commented. 3. Create a secrecy* policy which makes more sense. 4. Rely on the faiths that have put America on top: faith in the power of many men with ideas, unbreakable courage; and sense, not sensationalism. Action Hits At Russia's Veto Power Program Seen. As Far-Reaching LAKE SUCCESS-(P)-The UN Assembly's Political Committee overwhelmingly approved yester- day a veto-free plan to combat ag- gression anywhere in the world, by armed force if necessary. The vote was by paragraphs and sections, and no vote was taken on the resolution as a whole since all sections were approved. The vote in all cases was well over tlie two-thirds majority neded for final ratification later by a plen- ary session of the general assem- bly. THE PROGRAM was described by, the United States and other sponsors as the most far-reaching ever brought before the UN. It provides for: 1. Emergency sessions of the 60-nation general assembly, call- ed on 24-hour notice, whenever the security council is prevented by a veto from acting against aggression. 2. A peace, patrol system to check on the world's trouble spots. 3. Designation by member nations of specific units of their armed forces to be placed at the disposal of the United Nations in times of crisis. 4. Establishment of a commit- tee to blueprint collective securi- ty plans. A number of soviet amendments designed to emasculate the pro- gram were defeated in the section by section and paragraph by para- graph votes. A week and a half of debate preceded the balloting. * S S BASIC AIM of the entire plan is to prevent a security council veto by the Soviet Union or any other major power from paralyz- ing United Nations machinery when the peace is breached. Indian Move May Result in Ouster of Lie LAKE SUCCESS -()- Russia, Nationalist China and Egypt lined up today behind an unexpected Indian move which in effect would throw Trygve Lie out of office next Feb. 2 and select a new Secretary- General for the UN. , Russia suggested the new man should come from Latin America or Asia. The Security Council met in secret session for two hours today without reaching a decision and without bringing new names open- ly into the issue. The council will meet again tomorrow after mem- bers have heard from their home governments on the Indian pro- posal. A MEETING of the General As- sembly called for today to act finally on an extension of Lie's term was cancelled. It cannot be held while the council still is con- sidering the question. The United States stood by Lie during today's session. The Russians are reported to be talk- ing about Luis Padilla Nerv, Mexican Delegate, Sir B. N. Rau of India, or Sir Ramaswami Mudallar, India, as possibilities. The Council meeting was called at the request of Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Jacob A. Malik, but Rau took the leading hand in the session. He proposed that each of the 11 members nominate two men for the post of Secretary- General. THESE NAMES would be put in a secret ballot box and turned over to the five permanent mem- bers of council - Russia, United States, France, Britain and China. Pa.. ni of.; *4!. ior n.69V.. nrnild 4 an I I AND IT ALL STARTED FROM ADAM'S RIB: Pro's and Con's of Women's Rights Aired in Debate By MARY LETSIS Cropped hair, blue jeans and the emancipation of women were thoroughly aired by the combined British-American debate teams yesterday. Altering the topic, "Women's Rights," to "Resolved, that this house deplores the emancipation of women," both teams were divided in common," he continued, "the more you give away to a woman for herself, the less you have for yourself." , "In this country, women are su- preme. In giving freedom to your women, you have enslaved your- selves. Succumbin'g to the evils of women you have lost your integ- rity, your liberty," he asserted. women, Lloyd Kaiser, graduate student of the speech department, declared that insecure men are afraid of competition when they say "no women wanted in the field of work" "Women are somewhat frustrat- ed because they are not allowed to channelize their energies and make proper use of them. They are not the speech department, declared that women are responsible for the dangerous aggression into the male domain because they ftel they must assert themselves. "We've agreed that women are a particular kind of humanity," he pointed out, "and their cropped hair and blue jeans are examples of their asserted aggression." the most important function of civilization to perform. But they are ignoring their responsibility as home-makers and mothers to enter the domain which should be reserved for men alone," he emphasized. Gwynn Williams from the Uni- versity College of North Wales be- lieves that free competition be- +_- " m .6"A 11-nma" ha. irn like to see sheep in wolves' cloth- ing," Williams quipped. Following the debate, the audi- ence asked questions pertaining to the controversial statements made. Alwyn Smith when questioned declared he would refuse medical help from a woman doctor in a moment of emergency because "In another'year, I shall be a doctor