:Y TEN COMMANDMENTS See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State :43kall CLOUDY, COLD VOL. LXI, No. 42 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1950 TWELVE PAGES S * * * * * * * * * Student Phoenix a P(.1 ign Will Begin C++>. Williams Trails- In Race by 307 Recount Appears Imminent As More Counties Discover Errors DETROIT-P)-The Michigan governorship race, still a virtual runoff after four post-election days of ballot-bungling, appeared to be reaching the nub of the real margin between Governor G. Mennen Williams and Former Governor Harry F. Kelly. With an ocean of errors wrung out of unofficial election returns in most counties, Republican Kelly had a "paper" lead of 307 votes over Democrat Williams, the 39-year-old first termer. THE LEAD was a "paper" lead, in the opinion of election ob- servers, because it rested on an error in Warren Township of Macomb County which was almost a certainty to produce several hundred more Democratic ballots in a recount. And a recount appeared a certainty. Seventy-four of Michigan's 83 counties have reported semi- officially or officially results of their governorship race canvass of Tuesday's ballots. Korean Reds Drive Back UN Forces KOREA-(P)-A heavy counter- attack by six North Korean bat- talions on the Northeast front halted an advance by the South Korean Capital Division and drove it back five miles, the U.S. Tenth Corps announced yesterday. The Republic of Korea. 18th reg- iment was only 85 air miles from the Soviet frontier yesterday when the North Koreans attacked in a double enveloping movement. The S. Korean regiment was forced to withdraw to the Myong River. FOR THE FOURTH DAY the Tenth Corps reported no fighting contact was made with Chinese Communists anywhere along the front. In the northwest, however, Al- lied troops attacked from their Chongchon River bridgehead in northwest Korea gaining four miles in the first three hours. Red opposition ranged from slight to heavy. The advance broke a five-day lull in ground operations. In the period of quiet, Chinese and North Korean Communist troops had* pulled back to far North Korea af- ter delivering hard shock punches to the Allies. Chinese Reds To Go Before UN Council LAKE SUCCESS - W) - Com- munist China notified the United Nations yesterday she is sending a nine-man delegation here to argue her charges that the Unit- ed States is an aggressor, but that she rejects a Security Council in- vitation to discuss Chinese inter- vention in Korea. The Communist Chinese For- eign Minister, Chou En-Lai, an- nounced the decisions in two sep- arate cables to the UN Secretary- General, Trygve Lie. THE PEIPING regime notified Lie a nine-man delegation will depart by air from Peiping Nov. 14 in response to a Security Coun- cil invitation extended Sept. 29 for the Communists to be repre- sented in council talks on the Peiping charge that sealing off of Nationalist-held Formosa by the U.S. Seventh Fleet constitutes ag- gression against China. The Chinese Communists, in a later communication to Lie. said Four of the remainder-Shia- wassee, Calhoun, Saginaw and Ma- comb-had reported partially can- vassed figures, and only Genesee, Ingham, Kalamazoo, Oakland and Wayne had no official figures yet in the tally columns. There was reason to believe the Ingham fig- ures were close to official. Thus the outcome of the elec- tion lies now in a scant nine coun- ties which hold some of the larg- est ballot boxes in the state. THE HOTTEST spotlight cen- tered in Wayne County, where election officials were prowling through a mass of 586,000 ballots in search of error-of which there had been too much already. The Detroit election commis- sion had two shifts worklag day and night in an attempt to bring the real answers out of the met- \roiolitan vote chaos. Saturday the officials finished checking all precinct tally sheets to make sure all straight ballots had been counted. This was the slip-up which tipped over Kelly's apparent victory Wednesday and started a tidal wave of retabula- tion across Michigan. French Attack In Indochina SAIGON, Indochina - (IP) - French troops slashed out yester- day in a drive to recapture an out- post of Moncay which they gave up Friday to- Vietminh forces of Soviet-trained Ho Chi Minh. The French listed Ho Chi Minh himself as a "possible casualty" of a French air attack Friday at an- other point, the town of Langxa,; but emphasized they had no cer- tain proof. The Communist-led Vietminh troops, in forcing the evacuation of the post, had suffered heavy casualties, a French spokesman said. Fund Pledges To Be Taken Tomorrow Goal Set At $30 For Each Student By VERN EMERSON The student end of the Michigan Memorial Phoenix Project fund- raising campaign will get under way tomorrow. After nearly four years of ex- tensive planning, work on the cam- pus Phoenix drive will begin with the aid of a gigantic crew of stu- dent workers. * * * THE AIM of the student execu- tive committee; which has the job of planning, directing and coordi- nating the drive, is to contact ev- ery University student living in Ann Arbor. Whether the students live in residence halls, rooming houses or fraternities or sororities, they will be contacted by one of the volunteer workers. Mary Lubeck, 51, head of the student campaign, announced that no definite goal has been set for the drive. "We would like every member of the student body to set his contribution at $30," he said. The sum donated may be paid over a three year period beginning the first of the year on any rate of payment the student desires. OVERALL GOAL for the com- bined Project drives, which cover all the globe, is $6,500,000. SEE PHOENIX SECTION Page Nine This sum will go toward build- ing a Memorial research building somewhere on 'the campus, and financing study of the effects and potentialities of atomic en- ergy. Already more than $120,000 has been granted by the faculty plan- ning committee of the Project to University students and faculty for research into the newly discovered force. AND IF THE drive is a success, hundreds of proposed investiga- tions will be made realities under Phoenix sponsorship. * * * The Phoenix Project, which has been hailed around the world as one of the brightest aspects .of the atomic development, is dedi- cated to the University's war dead. President Ruthven, who has termed the Memorial the greatest undertaking in the University's history, urged students to support the drive. "The Project in large part origi- nated with the students," he said. "They hve a particular responsi- bility for its successful accom- plishment." -Daily-Ed Komnie DON DUFEK RACES 54 YARDS FOR THE FINAL MICHIGAN TOUCHDOWN AT THE BEGINNING OF THE THIRD QUARTER - - I Emergency Out of Towne Calls OK'd By The Associated Press Long distance telephone service is back on an emergency basis in Ann Arbor. A resumption of picketing yes- terday after a return to work Fri- day marked the new tactic of "hit and run" walkouts now being used by the Communication Workers of America against the Michigan Bell Telephone Company. IN DETROIT, mediators virtual- ly gave up hope yesterday of set- tling the state-wide strike when faced with such tactics. The scant hope remaining seemed to be pinned on the pos- sibility of a break in the nation-; al strike of employes of Western Electric, a subsidiary of the vast Bell System. Service w a s almost normal throughout the state. How long it would remain that way was a big question, however, because of the1 CIO Communications Workers of America threat to strike without warning in any place where it rep- resents Michigan Bell employes. The company today suspended 17 employes at a Detroit exchange. They were part of a 43-man grew which walked out Friday. Michigan' Bell, accused the 17 of "insubordi- nation"--refusal to accept a "rea- sonable" work assignment. rRoundup By The Associated Press LAKE SUCCESS-Small coun- try opposition broke into the open yesterday against plans for an American-sponsored Korea aid program. The little nations, led by Chile, want to switch top authority from? an agent general to the seven-na- tion UN Commission for the Uni- fication and Rehabilitation )f Ko- rea. The Economic and Social Council already has approved the American plan. * VICTORY WARMS COLD FANS: Dogs, Cheering Highlight Game By PAUL BRENTLINGER Daily City Editor A crowd of 67,379 football fans sat through sub-freezing weather yesterday to watch the perform- ance of two football teams, three dogs, four baton twirlers, 146 mu- sicians and 2,000 cheerleaders. .. 1 Thanks to a lively looking Wol- verine team, local fans were able to leave the stadium with smiling faces after the victory over In- diana's Hoosiers. * S * BUT THE chill of the weather Progress In Football Pools QueryReported by Police By DAVIS CRIPPEN After another full day of in- vestigation on campus student- run football pools, police yester- day indicated that definite pro- gress was being made. Sergeant Walter Krasny of the Ann Arbor Police, who is handling the investigation, said last night, "It is possible that we will have something quite tangible by the middle of next week." THE PROBE followed publica- Cold Weather SweepsState A cold wave with freezing tem- peratures was predicted for lower Michigan last night and forecast- ers said it would rise above freezing level today. Ann Arbor shivered yesterday as the temperature hovered between 26 and 32 degrees. Snowstorms ap- proaching blizzard proportions, however, whipped throughout the1 state, but Ann Arbor escaped its tion of an article in The Daily Nov. 9 which charged that up to $2,000 a week was being bet on football pool cards in the Uni- versity community. As to the definite details of the investigation, Sgt. Krasny would only say that a number of fraternity houses have been vis- ited and that several suspects had been interviewed. Meanwhile Dean Walter B. Rea announced that he would no long- er be connected with the investi- gation in any way. ALTHOUGH THE police refus- ed to comment further, it was learned that one of the spots they were checking on yesterday was the football score bulletin board on the second floor of the Union. At least one student having a pool card in his possession, was questioned by police as he studied the scores at the Un- ion. He explained to the authorities he was not using the card for placing a bet with the bookies, but merely in a competition with his roommate. apparently kept Wolverine boos- ters from cheering their victory with enthusiasm. Except for a half-time show with its accent on yelling, the stadium was rela- tively quiet yesterday. When 2,038 high school cheer- leaders shed their overcoats just before the half-time ceremonies began, the stadium's end zones were flooded with a myriad of colorful costumes. The cheer- leaders danced everything from the Charleston to a vigorous can-can in order to keep warm before going into their act. They came to Ann Arbor from 279 Michigan high schools to at- tend a University-sponsored cheer- leading clinic and to lead between halves cheering at the stadium yesterday. * * * HEAD cheerleader Tom Tillman, '51 Ed, and assistant cheerleader Bill Parrish, Grad, co-ordinated the efforts of the spirited high school group in the half-time show. Prof. William D. Revelli's Michigan Marching Band pre- sented their usual sterling per- formance yesterday as they ac- companied the antics of the massed cheerleaders. Garbed in a full dress drum major's suit, Eugene Waxman, 6 years old, joine dthe band's regu- lar drum major and baton twirlers to help lead the musicians up and down the field. The strutting "drum minor" is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Waxman of 709 Dewey St. The first dog appeared on the field at 2:05 p.m. yesterday, and drew shouts of laughter from the entire stadium as he finally left the field. Jiggs, the Beta Theta Pi English bulldog mascot, managed to inter- rupt the ball game by dashing onto the field at 2:12 p.m. He was fol- lowed by Brandy, St. Bernard mascot of Delta Upsilon, who ap- peared at 2:20 p.m. Hard-Hitting GroundGame Key To Win Bradford Stars In EasyVictory By BILL CONNOLLY Daily Sports Editor Michigan's football team aban- doned their previously indispens- able pass offense ,after finding it unsuccessful in the preceeding two contests, solved a big backfield problem and in so doing effected a 20-7 win yesterday over un- derdog Indiana. The strong ground attack was paced by 155-pound Wes Brad- ford, former fifth-string halfback who ended Wolverine Coach Ben- nie Oosterbaan's search for a re- placement for injured wingback Leo Koceski, by averaging an even seven yards on 15 attempts, for a 105 yard total. * * * MICHIGAN netted 317 yards -on the muddy ground, 95 of them gained on touchdown runs of 41 and 54 yards by Bradford and full- back Don Dufek, respectively. The Wolverines gained only 80 yards on 13 passes. A hearty 67,379 fans, the smallest Ann Arbor crowd in 15 games, weathered below-freezing temperatures to witness the IWolverines' return to winning form which followed last week's loss to Illinois and a tie with Minnesota the previous Satur- day. Playing the toughest schedule in. the nation, the Maize and Blue now have a .500 average, with three wins, as many losses and thie one tie-game. Two of the victories, one loss and the deadlock have been registered in the Western Conference's Rose Bowl inspired competition. Bradford, who ran with the pre- cision of a seasoned performer, tore the game wide-open with his second quarter touchdown scamper which put Michigan ahead, 12-0, and proved to be the game-win- ning play. * * * WITH ONLY 1:40 ticked out of the first quarter, end Harry Allis intercepted a Hoosier Lou D'Achil- le's pass on the Indiana 33, picked up four blockers and expressed the ball into the end zone to lead his team to the victory trail. Allis' attempted conversion was blocked by Ernie Kovatch, but the Wol- verines had picked up a never re- linquished lead. Dufek's six-point run came on Sthe first play from scrimmage in the second half. Michigan quar- terback Bill Putich caught the Hoosier defense napping as he called a direct pass to the full- back from the T-formation. Dufek skirted right end to the 25, was aided by sharp blocking as he outraced the secondary and cut back to midfield to cross the Indiana goal line, after traveling 54 yards without coming into con- tact with a white jersey. Allis converted and Michigan led 20-0, with only 25 seconds clocked out of the second half. On the next series of plays, the Hoosiers marched 65 yards to earn (Continued on Page 6) Tito Breaks Off Relations With Albania BELGRADE -- (AP) - Y u g o- slavia broke off all but token dip- lomatic relations with tiny neigh- boring Albania yesterday as the result of a feud touched off by the Russian-led Cominform's quarrel with Premier Marshal Tito. A Yugoslav information Minis- try spokesman said the Albanian Legation here has been "closed and sealed" and simultaneously made public the text of a note handed the Albanian Representative here announcing both the action and the reason for it. rM- vin.. *....A AII, .. ;- ..V- ONE AND ONE IS TWO: Student Offers 'Simple Brain' for Vote Canvass wrath. The overall picture of how Five deaths were directly attri- the investigation has affected the buted to snow and ice on high- operation of the gamblers was ob- ways, and 18 inches of snow stalled scure, but it seemed fairly certain scores of motorists headed through that one group of operttors-the Charlevoix, Emmet and Cheboy- ones distributing the green cards gan counties for northern deer -had called off operations at least hunting grounds. for this week. Senior Guy Tribble attracted statewide attention yesterday when he offered his "Simpler-than-Si- nion" mechanical brain to state election officials for their guberna- torial ballot canvass. Articles ap- peared in Detroit and outstate newspapers. Several radio news- casts also mentioned his novel offer. While his "brain" takes half an hour to solve the only problem it can do-add one and one-Tribble asserts that it does this-accurate- ly, and therefore is badly needed in the present recount situation. A rhallenge was also made yes- STUDENT STUMPING: * Campus Candidates Begin Race * * * * 0, WASHINGTON - A check showed yesterday that more than one-eighth of the Congress will be lame ducks when the law- makers meet later this month. Because of Republican gains in the recent election, nost of the lame ducks are Democrats, 44 in the House and eight in the - Senate. NEW YORK-Tammany Hall, With all campus elections com- ing up Nov. 20 and 21, candidates for the Student Legislature, Board in Control of Student Publications, Engineering Senior Class president, and J-Hop launched their cam- paigns this week with posters, handbills and open house speeches. More than 100 students are seek- i ? . . : i