FOOTBALL PROGRAMS See Page 4 Y Latest Deadline in the State I A6F 46AW ar t SNOW VOL. LXI, No. 41 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1950 SIX PAGES II Kell * yli * * * * * * * ' Takes Lead in Chaotic ace 41 Red China Withdrawal AskedIn UN Malik Demands End of Hostilities LAKE SUCCESS-(P)-The Uni- ted States and five other countries called on the United Nations Se- curity Council yesterday to order the immediate withdrawal of all Chinese Communist troops from North Korea. Russia's Jacob A. Malik prompt- ly served notice anew that the. Korean conflict can be settled peacefully only if U.S. and all UN troops get out.of Korea. "A peaceful settlement of the Korean question can be secured only by a cessation of the fighting and withdrawal of the foreign in- terventionists," Malik told the Se- curity Council in a vain attempt to prevent the Council from dis- cussing the Chinese Communist action. * * * HIS MOTION to knock out the Korean question was defeated, 10 to 1, as he cast the lone dissent- ing vote. The Council then voted 9 to 0 to put the question of Chin- ese Communist intervention ahead of the Palestine case. Malik re- fused to take part in this vote and Egypt abstained. The Council was called to meet on Palestine but the United States, France and Britain ask- ed it to discuss the Chinese Com- munist action' instead. Malik ac- cused the three of making a "sneaking attempt" to bring up the Korean question and said it is impossible to discuss Com- munist China here without re- presentatives of the Peiping re- gime. The United States, France, Brit- ain, Cuba, Ecuador and Norway sponsored the resolution calling for withdrawal of -Red troops. It notes that Gen. Douglas MacAr- thur, UN commander, has reported that Chinese Communist forces are deployed for action in Korea against UN troops. The resolution affirms that the UN policy is to hold the Chinese frontier with Korea "in- violate and fully to protect legi- timate Chinese and Korean in- terests in the frontier zone." The Security Council last Wed- nesday invited Peiping to send re- presentatives here to discuss the charges lodged by the United States and based on the report of MacArthur, but so far has not re- ceived an acknowledgement of this invitation. Secretary-General Tr- ygve Lie sent another message late yesterday calling attention to the invitation. Warren R. Austin, U. S. delegate to the Council said that interven- tion cannot be excused and that it must cease. He added that the at- titude of the Council may save the Peiping regime from a grave and tragic miscalculation. Republican~s Predict Drive Zo BarReds WASHINGTON - (A') - Re- publican Leaders today forecast a new drive to root Communlists out of government when the 81st Con- gress returns for its "lame duck" session. The lawmakers, scheduled to re- convene Nov. 27 unless President Truman summons them back ear- lier, face a number of other con- troversial proposals. These include strengthening and extending the rent control law, lirna Pt'. nrR nrnfif.n~zr.fnvoc nn nr- i Student Bookie Tells of Trade Describes Pool Card Distribution, How Newspaper Polls Aid Betting By DAVIS CRIPPEN (EDITOR'S NOTE-This is the third of a series of interpretative articles dealing with student-run football pools here on campus.) He looked just like an average student-which was what he was --but for a time he had also been a novice bookie, the lowest rung in a vice ladder which; stretches no one knows how far up into the. country's gambling hierarchy. It all started for him quite simply. "I was sitting in the living room of my house the Monday after the State game, when this guy I knew came in and asked me whether I'd like to distribute some pool cards to the guys in the house. "He said there was nothing to it. All I needed to do was give them out at dinner, and then collect any bets that were made and turn the money over to him. For this I was to get 15 per cent of the bets made and 10 per cent of any winnings in the house. "I thought about it momentarily, then said yes. The guy gave me the-cards-about 30 of them-on Wednesday and I passed them out,.Just as he said. Some of the guys bet, a couple of them won. "That first week I made about $5. But I lost it all again." "You mean you bet on the cards too?".I asked him. "Yeh. The guy I got my cards from gave me a few tips on the good games." "But you still lost?" I said. "The tips were lousy. None of them won. After that I was smarter. "Well anyway, things went on like this for a couple of weeks. Each cards a few more guys bet. "They even had me covering the sorority across the street. The girls weren't so interested though. They didn't seem to understand the cards very well., "Some of them took to betting on two cards, picking three games in one column on one card, and the opposite three games on the other card. That way they thought they'd have to win. They didn't realize the number of possible combinations." "Well, anyway, this went on for four- weeks. Then my contact called me up and told me that if I didn't increase my sales, he'd take the cards away from me. Well, I didn't need the money so I told him where to go, and to take his damn cards with him. "About a week later. the guy called me up and asked me to take the cards back, even offered me a raise-all the way up to 16 per cent. But I turned it down. "For the risk I was taking and what I was making on them, they just weren't worth it." Then the interview turned to the morel theoretical facets of gambling. "You know who encourages this? The newspapers. They run those football contests every weekend where you pick up all the winners alid get prizes. Main difference between the newspapers and the pool cards is that the cards are easier. You only need to pick three games right on them. "I've been betting on these newspaper contests since the eighth grade. My parents used to encourage it. It gave me something to do. They still send me the contest blanks from the papers back home. "No wonder these cards have gone over so well on campus, because once you start it, that gambling instinct is a hard one to root out. "And it's really not wrong. I don't think anyone condemns gambling morally, it's just the people who run it. "Yeh, once you start a guy gambling it's hard to stop him," he repeated quietly. "I'll gamble on anything now." Police BeginPool Investigation Error Gives Republican Slim Margin Macomb Blunder Causes Reversal DETROIT-P).-Discovery of a major election error in Macomb County last night tossed Republi- can Harry F. Kelly back into the lead in Michigan's fantastic gov- ernorship election by a margin of 319 votes. LouiseLuchtman, Chairman of the Macomb County Board of Can- vassers, reported the error which gave Kelly 381 votes more and subtracted 525 from the total for Gov. G. Mennen Williams, the first-term Democrat who once was considered beaten and then pulled into the lead late yesterday in the midst of a maze of election errors. With 32 of 52 Macomb County precincts canvassed, the state to- tals changed to give Kelly 934,851 votes and Williams 934,532. LUCHTMAN said the remaining precincts would not be canvassed until Monday. Thus Michigan's most chaotic and' closest election in history reached almost an absurd stage as county after county reported continual changes in their elec- tion figures. Luchtman said he "had no al- ternative" but to certify the new Kelly gain in Macomb County al- though he implied that it did not agree with other election figures. LUCHTMAN said that the bulk1 of the Macomb County change' occurred in one Warren Township precinct which had gone heavily Democratic in all other contests this week. Luchtman said he understood1 after a study of the tally books that the precinct had '70 "straight" Democratic ballots and 221 straight Republican bal- lots, but that the tally sheets showed only 504 votes for Kelly and 209 votes for Williams. The implication, was that the election board had failed to count all the ballots. Any correction of the suggested1 error would have to come in a re-i count.; BEFORE THE Macomb muddle was discovered, Williams had a lead.of 587 toveeovrs itangled lead of 587 votes over Kelly in a state-wide tally which was a maze of mistakes and errors. Wayne 'County election offi- cials, producing their first vote totals for both candidates late yesterday afternoon, said they had included all known major errors, but had not yet tabulat- ed discovered errors in arith- metic. The possibility of more errors was heightened by the fact that no reports had been received from' the official canvassers in such large counties as Genesee, Sagi- naw, Calhoun, . Ingham, Macomb, Monroe, Oakland and Wayne. A recount appeared certain. Attorney General Stephen Roth conferred with State Police Com- missioner Donald Leonard and Secretary of State Fred Alger and asked them to notify all local elec- tion authorities to guard carefully the ballots in their possession. ON THE WAY OUT??-Rumors circulating around the nation's capital say that the President is having a hard time deciding whether or not to fire Secretary of State Acheson (left) and Sec- retary of Agriculture Brannan (right). New Policy Sends Phone Workers Back to Posts C(*-) By The Associated Press Workers of the Michigan Bell Telephone Company returned to their switchboards, at least tempo- rarily, yesterday after the CIO Communications Workers invoked their new "push button" or "hit- and-run" picketing policy. The union admitted that the "push button" strikes were design- ed as plague tactics. The new strategy means that "the people may leave their jobs at unexpected moments and re- turn when' not expected. World News .roundup By The Associated Press CINCINNATI - S e n. 'Robert Taft (R-O.) declared yesterday that he would not run for Presi- dent, but admitted he is open to a draft. NEW DELHI, India - Tibet has appealed directly to the United Nations to intervene in the Chinese Communist invasion of that little Himalayan coun- try, usually reliable sources said yesterday. WASHINGTON - The nation's railroads yesterday got orders from the Interstate Commerce Commis- sion to drop segregation of white and Negro travelers on interstate dining cars. * *' * DETROIT - United States District Judge Thomas Thorn- ton ruled yesterday that Attor- ney General J. Howard McGrath showed no abuse of discretion in ordering the jailing of suspected alient subversives without bail under the new internal security act. ISLIP, N. Y. - Rep. Kingsland Macy (R-N. Y.), the "Dear King" of the famous Hanley letter, was defeated for reelection, a recheck of Tuesday's election vote revealed yesterday- HOUSTON. Texas - General Dwight Eisenhower today said there is no such thing as preven- tive war. U.S. Grand Jury Straffon To Fill Jinx WingbackPosition D'Achille Passes, Robertson's Runs Pose Main Hoosier Scoring Threats By BILL CONNOLLY Daily Sports Editor On paper, Indiana looks definitely formidable. But what will happen when the Hoosiers appear on the field of the Michigan Stadium at 2 p.m. tomorrow will depend largely on the weatherman-who predicts snow flurries-and the effectiveness of the short-pass defense drilled on by Wolverine gridders this past week. In black and white, the Hoosiers boast a record that reads in part: QUARTERBACK LOU D'ACHILLE-leading offensive player in IN DETROIT, about 200 long distance operators in the com- pany's Detroit headquarters walk- ed out a few hours after they had returned to work. A call to the Bell Telephone Company's Ann Arbor office re- vealed last night that it is still possible to make long distance phone calls from Ann Arbor to all points. Governor Williams yesterday re- fused to appoint a special com- mission to mediate the strike on the Michigan Bell' Company on the grounds -that the firm is engaged in interstate commerceover which the state can exercise no authori- ty. * * *r IN NEW YORK; the Federal Government yesterday launched its first try at ending the three- day-old strike as federal mediators met with company and union ne- gotiators. One session between t h e CWA's Division 18, representing the 5,000 striking warehouse and distribution workers, and the Western Electric Co. ended with- out results. In another session between the American Telephone and Tele- graph Co. the Union's Division six, representing 11,000 striking in-I stallation workers also ended in a deadlock. A prime issue in the Union walk- out is the demand for an unspeci- fied "substantial boost" in wages that now average $1.55 to $1.62 per hour. Air Attacks Blast Reds On Border arines Seize Power Plants SEOUL, Korea -(R)-- Furious Allied air blows knocked out two border bridges in the supreme ef- fort to choke off the stream of Chinese Red troops and arms pour- ing into North Korea, official ac- counts said today. Aground, the U.S. Marines in a five-mile dash on the northeast front seized the last of four big hydroelectric plants which supply power to North Korea and parts of ,Communist Manchuria. On the northwest front, air ob- servers said units of the U.S. 10th Corps from the east coast linked up with the U.S. Eighth Army from the west coast at Tokchon, 60 miles northeast of the fallen North Korean capital at Pyong- yang. * * * AN EIGHTH ARMY spokesman said, however, there was no ground confirmation of the report and it could be in error. Villages were set afire by ceaseless fighter and bomber at- tacks on enemy movements in this sector. It appeared efforts were being made to keep the Chinese Com- munists from striking south and turning the flank of the Eighth Army in the northwest or the 10th Corps in the east. THE ARMY in Washington re- ported that two B-29 Superforts in a series of raids yesterday were so badly shot up by enemy fighters that one ditched at sea and an- other was destroyed in landing at its base. The U.S. Air Force said enemy jet planes were believed to have used rockets for the first time yesterday in an air battle with U.S. jets near Sinuiju. Neither side suffered damage in the dog fight between four U.S. jets and seven swift enemy MIG-15s. One Russian jet was shot down. A U.S. jet fighter was damaged I but got back to its base. the Western Conference, who has run and passed for a total of 571 yards in three games; END CLIFTONANDERSON- A Conference record-breaker last season, he has hooked 11 passes for 147 yards to date in three Big Ten contests to rate third-best in that department; HALFBACK BOBBY ROBERT- SON-Who ranks second in kick- off returns, fourth in punting with a 41.2 yard average, and who has averaged an impressive 5.4 yards per carry; and, A PASS DEFENSE that has li- mited six opponents to 407 yards on aerial gains this season. * * . * WITH DON PETERSON, Michi- gan's best defensive halfback on the bench with a knee injury suf- fered a week ago, Wolverine Coach Bennie Oosterbaan was forced to' experiment in mid-week drills. Two sophomores with limited experi- ence, Don Oldham and Tom Wit- herspoon, will be called on to fill in .for Peterson, defensively at least. Oosterbaan has shifted back- field men from slot-to-slot, searching for a replacement for injured Leo. Koceski, regular wingback. Koceski will dress for the game, but will probably not start and whether he will see action at all is still doubtful. QUITE LIKELY, second-string fullback Ralph Straffon will get the starting nod at wingback, with reserve speedster Wes Bradford likely to receive a share of offen- sive assignments. Bradford, who's number 19 didn't even appear on the pro- gram, made several eye-opening end sweeps on muddy ground in last week's losing battle against Illinois. Michigan's attack will be led as usual by Chuck Ortmann in the air, and Don Dufek on the ground. Pre-game dopesters have for a week been predicting a high-po- wered battle-between Ortmann and D'Achille if the day is clear, but featuring Dufek and Robert- son if the turf is slow. (Continued on Page 3) Faulkner Wins Nobel Prize In Literature STOCKHOLM, Sweden -(R)- The 1949 Nob1 literary prize, with- held last fall was awarded today to William Faulkner of Oxford, Miss., author of the best-selling "Sanctuary," "Intruder in the Dust" and other novels of the South. Bertrand Russell, 78, British philosopher, mathematicianrand moralist who is now on a lecture tour in the United States, received the 1950 literary award "in re- cognition of his many-sided and significant writings, in which he appeared as a champion of hu- manity and freedom of thought." Prof. Cecil Frank Powell, 46, of Britain's Bristol University, won the physics prize for his develop- ment of a simple photographic method to probe the secrets of the atom nucleus and his discoveries regarding mesons, the particles that are believed to hold the nu- cleus together. A German teacher-pupil team- Prof. Otto Diels. 74. and Prf Police, accompanied by Asso- ciate Dean of Students Walter B. Rea, conducted a day long inves- tigation of student-run football pools on campus yesterday, but would not comment on what re- sults-if any-they had achieved. However a spokesman for the police did say, "The investigation will be continued until an arrest is made or the situation is other- wise cleared up." Dean Rea would not comment on the investigation either except to say that he was not along as an investigator but as 'a "friend of the court." It was learned, however, that the West Quad was one of the spots visited by Dean Rea and Sergeant Walter Krasny, who is handling the investigation. A spokesman on the quad staff claimed that the results , there were nil. "I know that they found nothing," he declared emphatical- ly. The probe, which today enters its third day, was prompted by an article in Thursday's Daily which charged that, unnoticed by Uni- versity and town officials, football pools had grown on campus to the point where they were taking bets totaling up to.$2,000 iveekly. SPIRIT STYMIED: SnOW, Cold Expected' To Accompany Game 'NAUGHTY NIGHTIES': By BOB VAUGHN Gridiron fans may be in for the same kind of football Saturday if weather reports are accurate in predicting snow and continued cold for this afternoon. Today's expected high of 30 to 35 degrees combined with possible snow flurries should be enough to prevent the Wolverine Club spon- sored flashcard section from going into action. THE 1,650 blue and yellow cards will probably never be set up in of spectacular gyrations whether the playing field at half time be covered with crusty snow or not. On the traffic side, an esti- mated 25,000 cars will have con- verged on Ann Arbor by kick- off time. Police will have their usual hectic time even though the traffic load has been eased by chartered buses and a special train from Detroit. * * * AND THE preponderance of the vivid colors of winter clothing will also greatly add to the psycholo- Snag Snarls Pajama Party Plains By DICK EHRENBERG A "Breakfast in Pajamas" party ntannhd by Sigma Ampha Mn fra- were to be worn over warmer gar- ments to prevent everyone from fatchiny eold " "It's a shame," said Lee Schek- ter, '51 BAd. "After I went to all the trmnohla +n oi' nn arit ondl