INDO-CHINA STRIFE See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State D43adp s - t o' MILD AND WINDY ' . . VOL. LXI, No. 29 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1950 SIX PAGES r . I I- O UN Rebuffs Act to Delay SpainDebate Guatemala. Join Soviet Bloc Vote LAKE SUCCESS - (P) - Th UN special political committee yes terday rebuffed a Soviet bloc mov to delay action on a resolutioi partly removing UN bars agains Franco Spain. Guatemala, one of the Lati American members of the UN joined the five Russian bloc coun tries in support of a Polish motio to postpone further debate o Franco Spain until Monday. Thir ty-four countries were against an six abstained. THE UNITED STATES is back * ing an 8-power resolution whic would permit UN members to sen back to Madrid their top ambas sadors and ministers and woul open the way for Generalissim Franco to join specialized agencie of the UN. The resolution has the effect r of revoking an Assembly resolu- tion of 1946 on ambassadors and specialized agencies but it does not touch another Assembly res- olution, approved a the first UN meeting in London in 1946, barring Franco Spain from UN membership. Bolivia, Costa Rica, the Domini. can Republic, El Salvador, Hon duras, Nicaragua, the Philippine and Peru introduced the resolu- tion and backed it strongly i opening debate yesterday. * * * CHILE, meanwhile, sounded a call in the 60-nation politica committee for the UN to condemn any iron curtain anywhere in th ' world that stands against peace and furthering of information Chile obviously was hitting di rectly at the Soviet Union. Jacobo Schaulsohn of Chile introduced the proposal as an amendment to a six-country resolution which would define aggression as the gravest crime against humanity. Schaulsohn proposed that the Assembly stand out for "the free exchange of information and ideas as one of the bases of good neighborly relations between peoples." * His proposal defined as propa- ganda against peace any measure which tends to isolate a people from contact with the outside world, "preventing the press, ra- dio, andother media of communi- cation from reporting internation- al events, hampering knowledge and preventing understanding be- tween" peoples. The Chilean proposal and the six-country resolution are counter- proposals to a resolution by Rus- sia's Andrei Y. Vishinsky calling *for a Big Five peace pact, a re- duction of armed forces of the Big Five by one-third, a ban on atomic weapons and designation of the first nation to use the atomic weapon as a war criminal. Swedish KinO Critically Ill STOCKHOLM-(P)-King Gus- taf V, Sweden's 92-year-old mon- arch lay critically ill last night in Drottningholm Palace just out- side Stockholm. His heart appeared to be weak- *ening. Fatigue gripped the tall, gaunt man who amazed the world by roaming over the tennis- courts until he was 88, hunting until he was 91 and reluctantly relaxing only when be had to give in to a wheelchair or a pack saddle in the arms of attendants. A bulletin issued at noon by Dr. Halmar Casserman, the King's physician, and two specialists, said coughing and a marked difficulty in breathing had considerably af- fected the action of his heart. The pulse was rather frequent and sometimes fluttering.+ TUG WEEK PROCLAMATION-King Tug, Ed Griffin, '53, reads a royal proclamation to the crowd at Hill Auditorium, officially starting the annual SL sponsoredrah-rah week-end. Jay Mills, '53, right, and Joe Teifer, '52, act as court scribes. Speakers Prepare, Crowd For Annua1 Tug-O War By SID KLAUS An enthusiastic crowd of 1500 students attended the opening of the 1950 Tug Week last night at Hill Auditorium to hear Sopho- more and Freshman pep speakers vow that their team would "drag those other guys right into the Huron" in today's tug-o-war. At 1:30 p.m. today the. Soph- Frosh tug-o-war will be held across the Huron River at the foot of Glen. Those going to the annual rah-rah battle will meet on the Mall near the League, and then parade down to the river lead by the Sigma Phi Epsilon band. . s a DAN BURLINGAME, '53, tug-o- war organizer, called for a large rooting section for both classes. "There are still a few places open on both teams for those men who want to get in on the pull," he added. Judging the big event will be Bill Stapp, '51, president of the 'M' Club. The winner of the tug will be decided by the best two out of three pulls. Burlingame guaranteed that the tug will be over before the start of today's Michigan-Minnesota game. McCarran Act Faces Court Test* Suit Hits Proviso On Registration WASHINGTON-MP)-A suit de- signed to enjoin and nullify the new internal security act was filed in United States District court here yesterday. Brought in the names of 135 in- dividuals, the action attacks the whole law as unconstitutional. * * * STHE CHIEF complaint is aimed at the requitement that organiza- tions regarded by the Attorney General as Communist must re- gister and disclose financial back- ing. One hundred and seven of the plaintiffgroupsought to file the action here last Monday, but the court refused to accept it then because street addresses of the plaintiffs were not in- cluded in the papers offered. The suit was accepted yesterday with the list of plaintiffs en- larged to 135 persons in 32 states. Among those listed as joining in the action were Elizabeth Gur- ley Flynn, executive committee- woman for the Communist party;: Fred W. Stover, president of the Iowa Farmers' Union; and Harold Christoffel, former Milwaukee labor leader who is under a 2 to 6 year sentence for perjury based on a denial before a House com- mittee that he had any Communist affiliation. THE ATTORNEYS did not ask any immediate restraining order against the act, but said a prompt preliminary hearing will be sought to get a temporary injunction against enforcement procedures while the constitutional question is being reviewed by a three-judge1 court establishment of such a court to hear the case was for- mally requested. Named as defendants are At-1 torney General McGrath, William E. Foley, Chief of the Justice De- partment's Internal Security Di-' vision, and all five members of the new subversive activities control1 board headed by Seth W. Richard-1 son. * * * Left- Win ger' Challenges Act DETROIT-(lP)-The internalF security act under which a score of suspected communist aliens1 have been jailed this week was challenged yesterday by Henry Podolski, one of those jailed and { a self-styled "left-wing socialist."r Podolski was arrested Mondayt on orders of Attorney General J. Howard McGrath and is seeking a writ of habeas corpus that would permit him liberty under bond. United States District Judge Arthur. A. Kocinski did not indi- cate when he would rule on Podol- ski's challenge of the internal se- curity act. Podolski says he is willing toI leave the country if given freedomt to make preparations. The govern-s ment insists those against whomf deportation proceedings are pend- ing cannot leave of their own voli- tion. Podolski, a native of Poland, is accused of being a Communistr and with having illegally enteredv the United States in 1930 andl again in 1946.~ the way for the amphibious landings. * * * * UN Troops Meet Stiffening Resistance Near Manchuria Telephone Employes Call Strike WASHINGTbN - (P) - The CIO-Communications Workers of America last night called a strike of Western Electric employes in 43 states and every large city across the nation at 6 a.m., Nov. 9. About 16,685 workers will be in- volved but pickets will be thrown around telephone exchanges in ev- ery sizeable town, union president Joseph A. Beirne said. THE PARENT CWA union, rep- resenting 300,000 workers in the Bell Telephone system, will not cross picket lines, Beirne said. The strike will directly involve 10,000 workers in the Western Electric installation department in all states except Maine, Ver- mont, New Hampshire, Massa- chusetts and Rhode Island; 6,000 distributing house employees in 28 major cities scattered through- 28 m a j o r cities scattered throughout the nation; and 685 manufacturing workers in Ha- verhill, Mass. Beirne said that efforts would be made between now and the strike deadline to reach satisfac- tory settlements . with Western Electric company. He said the in- ternational union had taken com- plete charge of the negotiating ses- sions. The strike call results from a dispute over wage increases de- manded by the union. It seeks what it calls "substantial" in- creases, without naming a figure. I At last night's Tug Week kick- off, Freshmen, Sophomores, and a host of upper classmen heard Tug Week officially proclaimed by King Tug. The Sophomores anq Freshmen then took over for their pep rallies. Jay Mills, '53, was in charge of the freshman rally, Joe Teifer, '52, handled the show for the sopho- mores. The rally included pep talks, cheers and songs. The Chi- cago House Band provided the rah- rah music. Following the rally, "Soph Sa- tire" was presented. The plot of the musical revolved around the romantic capers of a couple of Michigan freshmen. Fran Hanslovsky was director of the "Satire." Petition Deadline Set For Monday Petitions. for all offices in this fall's election are due between 3 and 5 p.m. Monday at the SL Bldg., according to Jim Storrie, '51 BAd., chairman of the SL citi- zenship committee. The request was aimed at candi- dates for -the Student Legislature, J-Hop Committee, president of the senior engineering class and Board in Control of Student Pub- lications. Candidates are also requested to bring a picture of themselves, a one dollar registration fee and the completed application form, Storrie said. MARINES LAND-Elements of the Marines' Tenth Corps are shown landing on the sandy beaches flanking the Wonsan airstrip on the east coast of North Korea. The landing which took place shortly after dawn Thursday had been delayed six days because of heavy concentrations of mine- -fields. An estimated 3,000 floating mines guarded the approaches but Navy "Frogmen" cleared f SEOUL-(P)-American and Al- lied troops hacked out short gains through surprising Red resistance yesterday, while South Koreans pulled back at one point in the drive to occupy Korea to its snow- covered borders. South Korean sources said flat- Study Asked OUn Reserves WASHINGTON - (A') - Secre- tary of Defense Marshall yesterday ordered a policy study to take "un- certainties and inequities" out of the reserve systems of the armed forces. Naming an eight-man commit- tee to work out a long range plan, Marshall said he wanted a strong reserve operated with as little in- terruption as possible to the na- tion and the normal life of the individual reservist. The group, made up of civilians and regular and reserve officers, will recommend policies looking to the future. This follows steps or- dered by Marshall this week to deal with an immediate situation governing recall of reservists to active duty. Marshall told all four services to begin allowing 30 days notice be- fore a man must report, and to in- stall systems which would let men know when they are not on cur- rent recall lists thus giving them a breathing spell of several months. Ikse' Prepared To Take Post WASHINGTON-(R)'-General Dwight D. Eisenhower said yes- terday that if he is named as supreme commander of allied forces in Europe, "I am a soldier and will do as I am told to do." And on the eve of a meeting of defense ministers of the 12-nation North Atlantic Alliance, there was strong support for Eisen- hower. The Canadian defense minister said that no better choice could be made. Eisenhower, victorious com- mander of allied troops in West- ern Europe during World War II, evidently was willing to assume the new responsibility. The five-star general is slated to confer with Army authorities and President Truman this week- end, and it appeared that formal announcement of his selection may be forthcoming soon. However, an American spokes- man denied a published report that North Atlantic Military chiefs voted unanimously for Eisenhow- ly that Chinese Communist troops,' estimated variously from 30,000 to 60,000, had bolstered -the Koreani Red lines as United Nations forces drew closer to the Manchurian border, * * * A UNITED STATES Eighth Ar- my spokesman in Seoul said the South Korean (ROK) First Divi- sion had beaten back an attack by a Communist force composed of "Chinese and North Korean ele- ments" 50 miles south of the bor- der near Unsan. Whether the Chinese had en- tered the fight in overt, organiz- ed fashion was still to be deter- mined. At least some Chinese were fighting against the Allied ad- vance. An American adviser with the South Korean First Division said 62 dead Chinese were count- ed on a battlefield near Unsan in northwestern Korea yesterday. He did not say how they were identi- fied as Chinese. THE ANSWER to the presence of Chinese in the Communist ranks might be found in the statement of a Chinese soldier captured Thurs- day near Unsan. The Chinese, who said he was Pvt. Li Shin-Man, 34, told inter- regators that he and other Chi- nese troops sent into Korea to help the North Korean Reds in the past two weeks were not "old Com- munists," but were former Chinese Nationalist soldiers. Li told American questioners that he understood 40,000 Chinese troops had been sent into Korea in the past two weeks and that he himself entered nine days ago. "We were just following orders," he said. He hinted that most Chi- nese did not relish the assignment. and were not fighting with en-. thusiasm. Winds Lash West Coast; TwoKilled PORTLAND, Ore.--' (R) - The third gale of the week swooped in from the Pacific Ocean last night to batter the debris-laden west coast, taking two lives. Hard on the heels of winds that whipped up to 72 miles an hour. the third storm front hit the coast with gusts up to 66 miles an hour and moved inland. Scores more trees toppled onto already littered highways. The weather bureau warned that high winds would continue through this afternoon. * * *. NO FURTHER storm was in sight after that but the weather bureau warned that conditions at sea were such that still a fourth storm could soon form, Hundreds of trees crashed al- most everywhere in the Far West. Telephone lines were down. Power failed for periods up to many hours. Windows shattered and roofs flew from small buildings as the wind rak- ed over a thousand-mile front at speeds up to 72 miles an hour. A spectacular fire bolt raced through a lumber mill at Cottage Grove, Ore., Thursday night when rain or a power surge blew out the transformer. The mill went up in flames and the oWner said loss was $600,000 to $700,000. A RAILROAD roundhouse Y'oof fell in on workers, injuring eight on the San Francisco Peninsula. Bricks were peeled from a building in Spokane and crash- ed down on an automobile. Spokane's water power company reported it the most troublesome storm in its history. A 160-man force went after-power line breaks. Wolverines Seek Second Big Ten Win Bierman Hopes For FirstVictory By BILL BRENTON Special to The Daily MINNEAPOLIS - Here in the northland, they grow everything big-even the Minnesota football team. The tall firs and lofty pines which surround Minneapolis are strangely indicative of the task facing Michigan's souped-up foot- ball team this afternoon when they take on Bernie Bierman's thus far ineffective, but still hulk- ing Gophers, starting at 1:30. (2:30 p.m. Ann Arbor time) * * * FIELDING THE fastest team in several season's, Bennie Ooster- baan's charges assume the wood- cutter role that Ohio State vacat- ed last week-cutting down the ponderous, but almost stationary, 'Minnesota line, At stake in today's 41st meet- ing of the two Universities is the Little Brown Jug, one of football's traditional landmarks. The Wolverines have taken the symbolic vessel 25 times with Minnesota having possession on 13 occasions. But the Jug has rested in the Michigan Athletic Administration Building's tro- phy room for seven uninterrupt- ed years. Chances that the Michigan- Minnesota momento will change addresses appear slim since the Northlanders are fielding their worst team in a decade. Ski-U- Mah is seeking its first victory of the season today after four losses. Most humiliating was a 48-0 past- ing meted out by Ohio State's Buckeyes last week. * * * THE WOLVERINE cup of over- confidence is far from running over, however. In fact, it's nearly empty. Size alone makes the Gopher a tough customer on any given Saturday. Nearly a ton of beef will face the Wolverines across the line when action starts- 1,545 pounds to be exact, or 221 pounds per man. So far, this sep- tet has permitted 30 points per game, but sheer weight can be stubborn when arousedl especial- (Continued on Page 3) Old Jug Spirit Hits Low Ebb On Eve of Tilt Special to The Daily MINNEAPOLIS - If it weren't for several hardy Michigan fans, it would never be known that the ancient argument for the "little brown jug" will be renewed here this afternoon. Wolverine partisans were greet- ed last night by small groups of their fellow-Michiganders parad- ing up and down Nicollet Ave. boasting their loyalty by loudly harmonizing on "The Victors." ALUMNI, especially the old- timers, seemed a trifle sad that the mighty spirit that once was a part of this famous rivalry was no more. But they were confident that the Wolverines would main-. tain possession of the pottery. Minnesota alumni were a pes- simistic lot, expecting the worst. The Michigan team arrived here early yesterday afternoon and ran through limbering-up drills. It was a far cry from the secret ses- sion the team holds at Ann Arbor. Then 1000 students and several of the Gopher coaches were on hand to observe the last minute prep- 'arations. world News By The Associated Press, LAKE SUCCESS-Sir Benegal N. Rau, India's chief delegate to the United Nations, said yesterday, he knew of no change of Indian policy regarding Red China as a result of the reported invasion of Tibet. * * * * CAREER PLAN VETOED: Coeds Attack Anti-Maternal Stand By WENDY OWEN Motherhood is a top-notch job, according to University coeds. They opposed researchist Ther- ese Benedek, who claimed that 'women who are only mothers and do not have a career have a guilt complex." Harriet Silep, '51, partly upheld psychologist Benedek's theory by agreeing that there was a pull now for women to have a wider range of interests. "But this isn't necessarily for, a career," she claimed. * * * gan, '52 explained that community social work can fill this need. "Women are expected to be companions now, as well as mothers,.so they have to do some work outside the home. Any city has community projects like playgrounds or Girl Scout troops SAIGON, Indochina - France turned toward her air power yes- terday, limited though it is, to plug gaps in her ground defenses against a Communist bid for control of Indochina. * * * U.S. HEADQUARTERS, North Korea-An Army , investivating team yesterday was checking a re- port that 28 bodies of murdered U.S. prisoners had been found north of Kunu on the Chongchon River. WASHINGTON-The Govern- ment yesterday refused to prom- ise that construction projects begun in the future will be al- lowed to go to completion. * * * PARIS-The National Assembly passed yesterday a bill requiring all Frenchmen reaching 21 years of age to serve 18 months in army training instead of the present 12 months. WAS INTON - PPi,. i