THE ROLE OF THE CRITIC See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State A6F SNOW AND COLDER VOL. LXI, No. 51 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, NOV. 23, 1950 SIX PAGES .. .s. Calls American Reds Soviet-Bossed * * * * * * * * * Rail, Air Crashes Jolt Nation on Holiday ve First Action Taken Under Control Bill n U. S. Airmen Report Red Base Ruined Advances Made In Border Drive SEOUL --(P)- United Nations forces pushed closer to the Siber- ian frontier in northeast Korea yesterday and United States air- men today claimed destruction of one anchor of the Red defense line in the northwest. On the northeast coast, South Korean troops advanced under cover of United States planes and naval gunfire to a point within 63 air miles of the Siberian border. The troops were approaching the big port of Chongjin. Meanwhile, on the northwest front, United States bomber pilots reported Huichon "destroyed" by repeated air attacks. Huichon is the east end of defense line thrown up by Chinese and Korean -Reds westward 20 miles to Onjong. ** * StudentElection Seats 24 on SL Confused Count Ends With Perry, Steinberg in Final Seat Deadlock By RICH THOMAS The long count is almost over. With 24 of 25 Student Legislature seats filled, sleepy election of- ficials threw in their ballots at 4:45 a.m. yesterday and turned over the task of selecting the 25th student legislator to Men's Judiciary Council. *' * ** WEARY BALLOT COUNTERS had gotten the tabulation of the votes for the two remaining candidates-Bob Perry '53E, and Bob Steinberg, '53--so jumbled that the SL election officials were unable to untangle the count. Which of the two candidates will be picked to fill the remain- ing SL post will depend on the decision of the Council, which will meet at 2 p.m. Friday to rule on the matter. In explaining the slowness *' * . AIM, IF Disrrnte SL of THERE have been reports of an- ,F v F other Red defense line below the Y/ Onjong-Huichon line-one extend- Vote Trend ing east from Taechon to the Chongchon river. Reports received today from UN patrols probing Leading affiliated and indepen- that sector emphasized contacts with Red troops.dent men on campus expressed United States bombers and varying opinions last night in re- fighters rained explosive and fire gard to the results of the SL elec- bombs on Yalu River bridges con- tion. necting Manchuria and Korea and Intrafraternity Council Presi- on Red battle staging areas all dent Bob Vogt, '51E, saw the out- along the northern rim of Korea. come as having little significance On the northeast front, South as far as independent and affiliate Korean Capital Division spear= SL standings are concerned. heads advanced four to five miles on the east coast to a point about eight miles southwest ofj Chongjin, a big port 55 miles] south of the Siberian-Korean border. The South Korean troops drove aheadunder covering fire from eight-inch guns of the United States cruiser St. Paul. American B-29 superforts bombed Chongjin, where Reds were expected to make a stand. Across a rugged snow-mantled mountain range and 50 miles southwest of Chongjin, the South Korean Third Division's 22nd regi- ment entered the rail and highway center of Hapsu. The Third's 23rd regiment ran into a battalion of Reds seven miles southwest of Hapsu. A spokesman for the U.S. Tenth Corps reported the Red bat- talion is being squeezed between the two South Korean forces. Profit Taxes May Be Paid By Consumer WASHINGTON -(R)- Spokes- men for public utilities testified yesterday that consumers may have to bear the burden of any excess profits tax that is levied on the utilities. Predictions of higher rates for gas, electricity, , telephone and transportation service to offset any such tax were given to the House Ways and Means Committee by spokesmen for the utilities indus- tries. They were the final witnesses as the committee ended seven days of public hearings on the admin- istration's request for an excess profits levy to raise $4,000,000,000 more revenue. The committee will meet again Friday behind closed doors to start writing a bill. It hopes to have the measure ready for considera- tion during the short session of Congress which convenes next Monday. The end of the hearings found comimittee members irk disagree- ment as to what ought to be done. While all consented that more money must be found to foot the I "The election was so undeci- sive," Vogt declared, "that it will make no difference in the IFC's position in campus affairs." BUT DAVE BELIN, president of the Association of Independent Men saw a definite trend in the balloting. "The election ,returns," Belin said, "show that the AIM's pol- icy of encouraging good inde- pendent candidates to run for office is here to stay." Belin pointed out that "nearly 55 percent of the independents running for SL were elected, in contrast to only a 35 percent fig- ure for affiliated candidates." * * * SL PRESIDENT George Rou- mell, '51, sounding a somewhat non-commital and non-partisan note, was "very happy with the turnout." "Despite the weather," Rou- mel said, "we have had the highest percentage of the cam- pus voting in SL history." Despite pre-election attemptsj to make the SL anti-bias clause' resolution the main issue in the election, all three campus leaders agreed that the resolution had not been a deciding factor in the re- sults. f the ballot counting, Jim Storrie, '51BAd, who was in charge of elec- tion night, indicated that inex- perienced personel was a big fac- to* * th ALSO, Storrie blamed the crowd noise and the late start the ballot counters got for the slowness of the tabulation. For the record, the count took morertime thansany other in SL history. It consumed nearly 10 hours. Independent candidates bounc- ed back from their 17 to 9 defeat SL Results The following are the newly elected membersrof thenSL. They are listed in order of their election: Robert Baker, '52 BAd Dave Belin, '51 BAd Alice Spero, '53 Tom Walsh, '51L, Pat Doyle, '53 Susan Craig, '53 Keith Beers, '52E Phil Berry, '52 BAd Jack Rose, '52 Ed Joe White, '53 Harold Herman, '52 Wally Pearson, '53 Alan Berson, '52 Irv Stenn, '52 Ken Babcock, '53 Rosemary Brown, '52E Gordon MacDougall, '52 Kala Aronoff, '54 Lee Benjamin, '52 Gene Bohi, '53 Bill Gay, '53 Joe Savin, '53 A&D Dick Strzelecki, '53 Mary Ummel, '51 (Bob Perry, '53E or Bob Steinberg, '53, will fill the 25th seat.) at the hands of affiliates in last spring's elections to gain a 12 to 12 tie. Since Perry is independent and Steinberg is affiliated, one group will emerge with a 13 to 12 edge when the final results are made known. In the J-Hop elections, however, independents took their usual beating. All of the nine J-Hop1 Committee candidates elected wereI affiliated. Long Island Line Wreck Toll Near'75 Other Disasters Increase Total By The Associated Press A huge train wreck in New York City boosted the death toll to more than 100 in a wave of plane crashes and railway smashups in this country and Canada. The worst of the diasters in- volved a Long Island passenger train, which jammed w it h Thanksgiving e v e commuters, crashed into the rear of another train last night. Police said at least 75 persons were killed. The estimate came from Chief Inspector Joseph A. Curry, in command of rescue work on the scene. The last time an American train wreck took that many lives was in 1944 at Ogden, Utah. It appeared to be the worst wreck in the history of the Long Island, the nation's third oldest road, and by far the worst wreck in New York state history. Rescue operations went on four hours. Dead and injured still were trapped in the wreckage at mid- night-nearly six hours after the crash. s * THE MOTORMAN of the first train said his brakes locked as he slowed his train at about 6:30 o'clock. A second train, roaring in from behind, knifed into the standing train. The front and end cars that took the shock of the impact were telescoped or sliced apart "like a loaf of bread." An estimated 2,100 to 2,300 pas- sengers were crammed on both trains, some standing in aisles. Many were home-bound. Others were going out to Long Island for the Thanksgiving holiday. ABOUT 100 passengers were ser- iously injured in this wreck and scores of others shaken, cut and bruised by flying glass or jagged, twisted metal. Dr. Randy Wyman, a director of the municipal hospital sys- tem, alerted hospitals to "be pre- pared to receive 50 bodies." Queens General Hospital report- ed 15 known dead. It was the second major Long Island Railroad disaster in nine months-31 persons died Feb. 17 in a Rockville Centre crash. The crash scene is 13 miles from Times Square, in the Kew Gar- dens section of Queens Borough. It is on the Long Island's main line from Pennsylvania Station to the Island. Meanwhile, the toll of a head-on collision of a troop train and a passenger high in the Canadian Rockies yesterdaytroseto 20 dead or missing and at least 61 injur- ed, 22 seriously. Fourteen soldiers were known to be dead and two others were listed by the army asumissing and be- lieved dead. Four trainmen were killed. In Wyoming 21 persons were be- lieved dead in the wreckage of a chartered plane which apparently crashed into the side of jagged Mount Moran Monday night. . All evidence pointed to the fact a missing twin-engine DC-3, carry- ing members of the New Tribes Mission, a religious organization, caused a fire spotted 1,000 feet be- low the crest of the mountain. Less than 12 hours later a B36, largest of the world's land based bombers crash landed 25 miles south of Fort Worth, Texas, kill- ing two men. Seven others were injured, and another seven para- chuted to safety. Arrests Delayed In Football Probe Convict Pair In Red Spy Conspirac NEW YORK-(!P)-A Federal Court jury last night convicted Ab- raham Brothman and Miriam Moskowitz of conspiring to ob- struct justice in a grand jury probe of their relations with atom spy Harry Gold. The jury gave its verdict after nearly four hours of deliberation.- BROTHMAN and Miss Mosko- witz were charged with conspiring together with Gold to defraud the The government additionally charged Brothman "urged, ad- vised and persuaded" Gold to give false testimony on July 31, 1947, before the Federal Grand Jury investigating espionage and subversive activities. Federal Judge Irving R. Kauf- man set Tuesday for sentencing. CONVICTION carries a maxi- muf'n penalty for Brothman. of se- ven years in prison and a $15,000 fine; for Miss Moskowitz two years in prison and a $10,000 fine. Brothman is a 36-year-old chemical engineer and Miss Mos- kowitz his 34-year-old business associate. At one time Gold was employed by Brothman. Gold, the chief prosecution wit- ness' and a mild mannered bio- chemist from Philadelphia, is a confessed former go-between for Klaus Fuchs, imprisoned British atomic scientist, and a Russian spy, ring. 'U' Gets $25,000 For Cancer Study By The Associated Press The United States Public Health Service today awarded 17 special grants, totaling $324,525, for can- cer research. Included among the grants was one to the University's School of Public Health for $25,000. The American College of Sur- geons, Chicago, received $12,500 for more frequent inspection of cancer treatment. The grant brought Public Health Service contributions to this work, since 1947, to more than $150,000. UN Dooms Appeal to Probe: Soviet Aid to Chinese Reds LAKE SUCCESS -(M- Strong opposition from Britain, France and Russia apparently doomed yesterday Nationalist China's ap- peal for a UN committee to in- vestigate charges that the Soviet Union has been aiding, the Chi- nese Communists. The United States countered. that the issue could not be buried and suggested the Little Assembly study it next year. World News Roundup 8y The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Senator Bourke Hickenlooper (R - Iowa) yesterday called for the resigna- tion of Secretary of State Dean Acheson and demanded "a thor- ough and extensive housecleaning" of tfie State Department. * * * WINDSOR, Ont.-A shutdown of Ford of Canada manufacturing operations, stemming from an iso- lated seniority dispute on the as- sembly line, stopped work at all four of the company's production plants here yesterday. * * * CHICAGO - A dispute over the CIO's stand on government operation of utilities touched off the first floor fight of the three day old CIO convention late yes- terday. The dispute was settled and a resolution was adopted with only scattered opposition after CIO President Philip Murray "clari- fied" the proposal. WARSAW, Poland-The second World Peace Congress proposed a big five peace meeting to include Communist China, criticized Unit- ed States foreign policy and lec- tured the United Nations in its final sessions yesterday. The congress program, which follows in several respects propo- sals of Soviet Russia in the UN, was approved by an overwhelming vote of 1,655 to three, with two abstentions. No one was obliged to say how he voted but the rebel of the congress, O. John Rogge of New York, reported he was one of the "no's." COULD IT HAPPEN HERE?-A milling crowd of University of Illinois students let go with its jubi- lation over the Illini's upset win over Ohio State. Thousands of Illinois students cut their classes to attend this rally. Seven point underdogs, the football team from Champaign managed in the game to put the Buckeyes down by that margin, 14-7. AUSTRALIA, Canada and mem- bers of the Soviet bloc group team- ed with the three big powers in the UN Political Committee de- bate on Nationalist China's charg- es. Those countries said it mould be a waste of time to deal with the problem any longer; that the evidence was in and the countries could make up their minds with- out further investigation. The committee debate drag- ged on all day with speakers of the Latin American and Middle East groups lining up behind a Syrian resolution which would send the charges back to the Little Assembly for more study. John Foster Dulles, U.S. dele- gate, insisted that the Assembly would bury the hopes of millions if it dropped the charges com- pletely. He urged the committee to accept the Syrian proposal. Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Jacob A. Malik said the "Kuomin- tang libel" should be thrown out of the committee. Elsewhere in the UN the Trus- teeship Council rejected a new Russian demand for seating Com- munist China in place of Nation- alist China. The vote was 2 in favor, 9 opposed and one abstain- ing. Russia and Britain were for it and Australia abstained. Puerto Ricans N a1bbedin NY NEW YORK-(IP)-Two top of- ficials of the Puerto Rican Nation- alist Party in New York were ar- rested yesterday as the possible brains behind a recent plot to as- sassinate President Truman. Two Nationalist gunmen storm- ed Blair House in Washington Nov. 1 but were cut down by guards' bullets before they could get 'to the President. One gunman and one guard died in the duel. Arrested today were Julio Pinto Gandia, a veteran terrorist and New York president of the Nation- alist party, and Juan Bernardo Lebron, a past president of the New York unit of the party. More arrests may be in the off- ing, it was reported. Ask Registration, List of Members WASHINGTON - (R) - The Justice Department yesterday for- mally charged the Communist Par- ty of the United States with be- ing run by the government of So- viet Russia. The department made the accu- sation in filing a petition with the new Subversive Activities Control Board, asking that the party be ordered to register with the de- partment, disclose its financing and list all of its members in this country. THIS IS the first such action under the new Subversives Con- trol Law, which requires registra- tion of all Communists and Com- munist front organizations. The 4,800 word petition, sign- ed by Attorney General J. How- ard McGrath, was filed with the board a few minutes after 6 p.m. At the same time, the depart- ment served copies of the petition by air mail, on the party's head- quarters in New York City. The service was marked for the attention of William Z. Foster, party chairman, and Gus Hall, de- scribed by the department as "a high party functionary." * * * SINCE THE PARTY has refused to take advantage of the opportun- ity to register voluntarily under the 1950 Internal Security Law, it has been freely forecast that it will fight the action before the control 6bfard. Some officials have estimated that the forced regis- traion proceeding, counting pos- sible court appeal, may take two years. The McGrath petition said said that the party "has been and is substantially dominated and controlled by the govern- ment and Communist Party of the Soviet Union," and has tak- en its orders from the Russian government and the Communist International headquarters in l4oscow. The attorney general said that both the Soviet Union and the Communist International have supplied finances for American Communists and that the Ameri- can group "regularly reports" to the Moscow government. * * * "THROUGHOUT its existence" McGrath said, "the Communist Party never knowingly has deviat- ed from the views and policies of the government and Communist Party of the Soviet Union, the Communist International, the Communist Information Bureau and other leaders of the world Communist movement. "Whenever such views and policies have conflicted with the position taken by the govern- ment of the United States, the Communist Party has opposed the position of the United States." Asserting that all Communists owe "primary allegiance" to the Red flag, McGrath said: "In the event of a war be- tween the Soviet Union and the United States, the Communists in the United States have obli- gated themselves to act to defeat the military efforts of the Unit- ed States and to aid and support the Soviet Union. "The Communist Party teach- es its members that in such event they must act to foment a civil war in the United States as a means for impairing the na- tion's military effort and for es- tablishing a Soviet America hav- ing a dictatorship of 'the prole tariat such as exists in the Soviet Union." Since no Communist group has come forward to register on its own motion, the attorney general may have to take similar action against perhaps 100 organizations which he has listed as Communist on his subversive list. Apparently, however, he plans first to obtain a ruling on the Communist Party proper before proceeding against others. HELP FOR NEEDY: Student Aid Fund Gains From Psi Upsilon Fine The information may be no con- solation to Psi Upsilon fraternity members, but their $2,000 fine money has been earmarked for a good cause. All University-imposed student fines are put into the Goodwill Student Aid Fund, according to Dean of Students Erich A. Walter. The fund is drawn on by himself and the Dean of Women to 'aid down-and-out University students, Dean Walter explained. * * * THE BIGGEST addition to the bucket drive, sale of special campus with the fund. highlighted by the papers, was held on proceeds going to LONG WEEKEND? Turkey Day Exodus Empties 'U' THE FUND DRIVE was discon- tinued during the war and has since passed into oblivion. When the war ended The Daily againt inaugurated an annual fund drive, but the proceeds were slated for the March of Dimes. When Dean Walter took over his present position in 1947, $113 w a lft in the. fuind."That was By ROBERT VAUGHN but still had to turd away stu- University regulations, profes- dents with late reservations. sor's instructions, blue books and A nother airline however, who knows what to the contrary,' scheduled only seven flights yes- thousands of students tossed text- terday where 20 are normally books aside yesterday and headed required. This may account for apparently not conscience-stricken about cutting Friday classes. Martha Cook Residence re- ported that three-fourths of its women residents had signed out yesterday, the majority of them i