EDITOR'S NOTE See Page 4 i I I: 4c Sir tian Latest Deadline in the State A4&1p :43 a t I t0 CLOUDY, COLDER VOL. LXI, No. 59 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1950 EIGHT PAGES C S A * * * * * * * * * ,- Underdog Navy Scuttles Army, 14- n 1 I Fighting Mad Middies Stop Cadet Attack Zastrow Paces Aroused Sailors By The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA - An under- dog Navy team which had tasted the football dregs all season rose o majestic heights yesterday to' crush Army's glamorous forces, 14 to 2, in one of the greatest upsets ever registered in the 51 meetings between the two service rivals. A thundering crowd of 103,000 including President Truman, shook Municipal ptadium wth its roars as the fired-up Middies, winners of only two previous games this year, took command from the start of the contest, scored twice in the second period and thot- tied every effort by the nation's no. 2 team to get back in the ball game. THE STUNNING defeat, largely engineered by Navy's 209-pound Quarterback, Bob Zastrow, who scored one touchdown and passed for a second, snapped a streak which had seen the Cadets batter their way through 28 games with- out defeat. They were three touch- cdown favorites at the kickoff yes- teday. The lat team to defeat the Black Knights was Notre Dame, in 1947. They were tied by Penn, 7-7, the same year and also deadlocked by another fighting Navy eleven, 21-21, In 1948. This victory today was a tremendous personal triumph for youthful Eddie Erdelatz, who took over as Navy's head coach only this sea- son. There was nothing in thena- ture of a fluke about it, either. The Middies were much the bet- ter team from start to finish. They rattled the Soldiers' teeth with the ferocity of theiir tackling, holding the West Pointers' vaunted attack to a single first down in the open- ing half. * * * THEY PLUNGED and passed their way for amazing yardage through Army defenses which had yielded only four scores in eight previous games this season. To- ward the close, when the Cadets finally got their bearings and threatened several times, the Tars rose up and tossed them back on (Continued on Page 2) National Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The United States last night ordered strict controls-effective at midnight to- day-on shipments of all goods destined for Red China, Hong Kong and. Macao. KALAMAZOO-Six Civil Air Patrol planes covered every square mile of Kalamazoo coun- ty yesterday but failed to dis- cover a clue to the disappear- ance of attractive 18-year-old Carolyn Drown, Western Mich- igan College coed who hasn't been seen since Nov. 26. WASHINGTON - Sen. Joseph McCarthy (R-Wis.) told Presi- dent Truman yesterday that Con- gress ought to "immediately im- peach you" unless the Adminis- tration sanctions use of Chinese Nationalist troops against the Communists in Korea. WASHINGTON-Gen. J. Law- Symington 'Asks for No Price Curbs WASHINGTON-(A')-A top ad- ministration official, W. Stuart Symington, has told Congress pre- sent economic controls ought to be given more time to work "before' we strait-jacket" the nation with wage-price curbs. He added, however, that future world ,developments could change his opinion. SYMINGTON, who heads the. National Security Resources 'Board, predicted that the "real impact" of the huge new defense program on American consumers will be felt about April 1. And the impact "will grow from there on," Symington de- clared. He expressed his views to the Senate Banking Committee at a closed meeting Wednesday in urg- ing a stop-gap extension of the Federal Rent Control Law. Wheth- er developments since Wednesday have changed his mind could not be learned. The committee made Syming- ton's testimony public yesterday as: 1. Talk increased in Congress that wage-price controls on at least some goods and in some in- dustries ought to be invoked soon. Senator Byrd (D-Va), for exam- ple, said selective controls should be applied as quickly as possible. Outside Congress Americans for Democratic Action issued a state- ment calling for "all-out mobili- zation," including price controls. 2. The Senate planned to call up for debate tomorrow a bill which would continue federal rent controls through Feb. 28. Under the present law, controls expire Dec. 31 except in communities which vote to extend them through June 30. AT THE Senate hearings, Sena- tor Capehart (R-Ind) asked Sym- ington whether the administration plans to put wage and price con- trols into effect within the next 60 days. Truman has authority to impose them at any time. In calling for more time for pre- sent controls to work, Symington said he was alluding to existing consumer credit controls, real es- tate credit restriction, allocation of scarce essential materials and tightening of bank credit. Galens Drive Tops $5,000 The two-day Galens Christmas Drive topped its goal of $5,000, according to Don Griffith, '51M, into these and other problems which the Korean war dumped be- fore it. Meanwhile the legislators are going ahead with a more limited tax bill, designed to tax corpo- ration profits considered excess. The House begins debate tomor- row on a measure designed to raise $3,400,000,000 in this way, while the Senate Finance Com- mittee, which George heads, will start hearings on the subject the same day. The House appropriations com- mittee already is working on Pres- ident Trumaii's request received Friday for $16,800,000,000 in mili- tary and $1,050,000,000 in atomic funds. Senators will get down to brats taks on the problem early in the week. Speedy approval by both houses is expected. Chairman Connally (D - Tex) called a Senate Foreign Relations Committee meeting for tomorrow to take up a presidential request for $38,000,000 outlay to provide food for drought-stricken Yugosla- via. Colic p Unions Hold Parley The common problems of un- ions throughout the state were discussed yesterday at the Con- ference of College Unions held at the Michigan Union yesterday. The various union programs were compared and suggestions were made for improvement. It was agreed that the union should function as the student center of activities on the campus, and that it must offer programs aimed to develop interest in its extra-cur- ricular activities. The group de- cided that - the union program should also be coordinated to offer' the best possible services to the students. George Predicts SharpTax Rise Individuals, Corporations Will Be Hit ity New Increases, Senator Warns WASHINGTON-OP)-A sharp increase in federal taxes next year "all along the line, on corporations and individuals," was predicted yesterday by Senator George (D-Ga). Similar belief was expressed generally on the House side where the tax-writing Ways and Means Committee expects to start work early in 1951 on an overall tax bill that may dig deeper into incomes, as well as raise excise (sales) levies. * * * * THE TAX PICTURE was darkened by the suddenly worsened military crisis and huge new costs ahead. Congress got ready to plunge UN Will Stay In Session for Crisis Action Acheson, Austin Plan Meeting NEW YORK-(IP)-The United Nations Assembly yesterday was reported preparing to stand by during the winter and spring so it could act quickly on the Chinese Communist-Korean crisis or any other world problem. This was disclosed by a high source at the UN as Warren R. Austin, chief United States dele- gate, made a flying trip to Wash- ington to confer with Secretary of State Acheson. Chen Chiao, a Communist Chinese representative, also talked here with Secretary- General Trygve Lie for 30 min- utes. Various delegates met in sec- ret huddles during the day. * * * "NO SIGNIFICANCE should be attached to the morning meeting between Lie and Chen Chiao ex- cept as evidence of continuing con- tact which will, no doubt, continue this week," a spokesman for Lie said. The Korean crisis is expected to go before the full Assembly some time this week but there has been no announcement yet in what form it will be put up. The Chinese Communists are slated to repeat their charges against the U.S. tomorrow in the Assembly's Political Committee which will take up the Formosa is- sue. John Foster Dulles, U.S. delegate who will speak for this country in the Political Committee debate said yesterday in a statement he twould urge the csommittee to clear its decks of the Communist Chinese charges and get ready to act on the real issue-"the full scale en- try of Chinese Communists into Korea." Britain, France Seek Early Peace LONDON---(JP)-War-shy Britain and France agreed yesterday to press for an early settlement with Soviet Russia and Red China of the Korean warfare and -ther dan- ger-packed quarrels. Qualified officials said the ac- cord came in a five-hour meeting of French Premier Rene Pleven with Prime Minister Attlee, on the eve of Attlee's flight to Washing- ton for face-to-face talks with President Truman. Allies Start Retreat North ofPyongyang Twin Red Pincers Cause Withdrawal; Space for Time Swapped in Move TOKYO-(P)-Overwhelming Chinese Communist armies closely threatened the entire United Nations forces in North Korea with twin entrapments yesterday. UN forces today began withdrawing from a new defense line 30 miles north of Pyongyang before the imminent peril of thousands of onrushing Chinese Communist troops. SIMULTANEOUSLY, U.S. Seventh Division troops who had reach- ed the Manchurian border in northeast Korea were ordered to pull back before the gathering menace of the Chinese legions to the south. A spokesman at U.S. First Corps headquarters declared, "we are trading space for time." Time is needed to cover the Eighth Army's withdrawal in the north- 4 * * * The scramble for Rose Bowl tic- kets will begin tomorrow as the athletic department begins ac- cepting applications for the pre- cious ducats. "The rush has been going on ever since Michigan won the trip to California," ticket manager Don Weir said. "Since then our office' has been swamped with phone calls, letters, and telegrams re- questing tickets." * *' * BUT applications for the tickets Students Plead 'No Contest' Lee Setomer, Grad., and Robert McGuire, '53A, pleaded nog ocon- tendere to charges of registering bets yesterday in Circuit Court. Judge James L. Bleakey, Jr. set the sentencing for Dec. 17. The two face a maximum penalty of one year in jail or a $500 fine. The two students were arrested Tuesday after an investigation of over two weeks by Ann Arbor po- lice. Authorities said they were the ringleaders of the football pools which operated for five weeks this fall on campus. The investigation was started after a series of articles in The Daily which exposed the activities of the pools. will not be officially accepted un- til tomorrow, not after Thursday. Students may apply for their tickets at the ticket office in the A thIe t ic Administration Bldg. "They must present their ID cards and pay for the ticket then," Weir explained. The tickets are priced at $5.50. Students and faculty members may order one ticket only, although they can obtain two if they are married. * * * WEIR stressed that students and faculty will get top choice when the orders are filled. "When the student applies for his ticket he is assured of getting a Rose Bowl seat," Weir said. In 1947 1,300 students and fa- culty members applied for Bowl tickets and all received them. The tickets can be picked up in Pasadena the day before the game or the day of the game upon pre- sentation of the student's ID card and ticket purchase receipt. Written applications are being taken from alumni, but they will have to take any tickets that are remaining. Drive Progress The Michigan Memorial Phoenix Project yesterday re- ceived contributions from 80 per cent of the members of the following group:, Zeta Beta Tau BIG SQUEEZE-Chinese Communist armies threaten to trap United Nations forces in North Korea with twin smashes to within 25 miles of both Pyongyang, former Red capital in the west, and Wonsan, key port in the east. Rose BowlV TicketSale WillBegin. Tomorrow west before the overwhelming masses of "Communist troops. "We are gradually pulling back south of the Sukchon-Sunchon arc 30 miles north of the former Ko- rean Red Capital," the spokesman said. # * * THE NINTH Corps on the right flank also was withdrawing from the Songchon Sector 30 miles northeast of Pyongyang. An esti- mated 18,000 Chinese Reds were massed west of Songchon for a drive on Pyongyang. A field dispatch said that the status of all three towns was not clear. UN forces were believed to be holding Sukchon. The Chinese pressed toward Pyongyang despite swarms of Al- lied fighters and bombers attack- ing them through a snow storm. THE FORMER Red capital itself echoed to the roar of Allied-set demolition charges. Military units and civiian refugees fled the city. There were rumors that ene- fy mortar shells were falling in Pyonnjang's outskirts. But these repors mayhase stemmed from the explosions set by UN troops destroying military stores and equipment. In northeast Korea, UN troops also were in a fighting retreat to escape entrapment by the Chinese Reds. THE 17TH Regiment of the U.S. Seventh Infantry Division was or- dered to pull back from the Yalu River boundary of Manchuria and Korea. AtFirst Corps headquarters it was not known whether the 17th -first American outfit to reach- the border, had completed its pull-out. About 80 air miles to the south- west of the 17th's border position another element of the Seventh Division was overrun by the Reds yesterday on the east side of the great Changjin power reservoir. RED REGULARS were last re- ported 25 miles from Wonsan with guerrillas about 13 miles away. Both ports supply the Tenth Corps area. U.S. Marines still were battling their way south along the shores of Changjin Reservoir to- ward Hagaru at the south end of the big hydroelectric instalation that serves both Korean and Manchuria. Hagaru itself was not under at- tack. Neither was Koto, six air miles to the south. The road be- tween the two towns still was cut by the Reds. Some 600 Seventh Division and South Korean troops crossed Changjin's ice and joined the Ma- rines. Stragglers of the Seventh also were filtering into Hagaru. Phoenix Drive Makes Gains To date the student Phoenix drive has collected $72,130, cam- paign officials announced yester- day. Mary Lubeck, '51, drive chair- man expressed pleasure in the to- tal jump. "We had been afraid that there Chinese Total 500,000 in Korean War TOKYO -(R')- General Mac- Arthur declared yesterday that the Chinese Communists have commit-. ted 500,000 soldiers to an unde- clared war on the United Nations forces in Korea. "In addition," he said, "100,000 to 150,000 North Korean Red rem. nants are being rebuilt and reor- ganized under Chinese auspices. MACARTHUft-said the half-mil- lion Chinese were in "two great echelons," more than one half of the total now being engaged in attacking the Allied forces "with the rear echelon rapidly moving up from the Yalu River bases." "Witt the North Koreans," he said, "the total enemy strengt is about 600,000 men" "Whether additionral forges will be brought up cnnot as get be de- termined," he added. The General declined to give an estimate of Allied ground forces, but previous unofficial estimates have run about 200,000, approxi- mately half of which are South Koreans. AIR AND NAVAL superiority were described as furnishing in- valuable assistance" to the Allies, but MacArthur reiterated that limitation of their operations to Korea "narrowly limited" their ef- fectiveness. The UN reverses he attributed "entirely to the overwhelming strength of the enemy, who com- pletely outnumbers us on the ground." MacArthur asserted he knew of no way this could have been avoid- ed, as it was now evident that the North Korean Reds were assured of just such Chinese Red support before they invaded South Korea June 25. Students Seek Signatures for Peace Petition A petition addressed to Presi- dent Truman asking for Big Five negotiations and restraint from using the atomic bomb was circu- lated amonn a Main St. theatre crowd last night. The letter was sponsored by seven individuals, mostly officers of campusreligious groups. It said: "Dear Mr. President: We are afraid of another war. It must be prevented!!! 1. We want Big Five negotiations. 2. We do not want the atom bomb used." The idea behind the petition was formulated Thursday, according to one of ; the sponsors who was cir- culating the manuscript. He saId that a group of students had seen an advertisement in The Daily for "All Quiet on the Western Front," GROUP HOUSES INVOLVED: Council To Hold Zoning Hearings By CHUCK ELLIOTT Tomorrow night, the Ann Ar- bor. City Council will give final consideration to a proposal which may eventually drive many group houses (fraternities, sororities and co-ops) out of the top zoned areas east and south of the campus. It is the latest in a long series of petitions to the Council from householders of the vicinty, all aimed at getting the houses clear- ed out of the "A" and "AA" zones of Ann Arbor. These zones (see map) cover most of what is known as the "fraternity area" and con- tain some of the highest priced real estate in the city. * * * IN FEBRUARY, 1949, a similar proposal was defeated in the Council by a close six to five vote. At that time, the landholders ask- ed simply that group houses be Y # # sb < rrJJffl.!1,,, n:: ? -%X::fi',s.,^ยข%n.:r_:5{:}. >:,SF: X:?F, %::r:<::u>':rr:"rr -$:2=E :':?v,'* s::. _: : -: ,. ,.* ' y=' +:--.: ice;- "}} :v: .. :.. - {.:.:+>, .: ' c:"y":riu'..: - r-+i.: ..:5?ra: < i:o:;c'i ' S:?i : ::v>:.}:": a..; "r.;. it<"'. ; '\:: .r}-.;": : #c+ +yi :; . .; r. .:r ":}:4 : o->: :ri .;sxy.. }Y - v a:. rom .......... Sr>= ,-S }. .....::::. is ,..... r$r .......: ::. _ tt$ _ .x.."-::. } -.:......i.. -.:. .-.... r:: ...... .,.:: J:}:: ::. ... is - , - {rr a :.:...... . :::.::::.::.. .r ................... ux: ra. .:. ;:i$i}"::"?:{sir:: r:.i::: :-rri ,,:: {.:: :: q; '-ii '- - - -: + - 3. Council to get the group houses1 out of the "AA" zones. This pro- posal was also downed. IFC PRESIDENT Bob Vogt, ,51E, pointed out that many groups were liable to suffer if the new amendment is passed. Seventeen fraternities and eight sororities are planning building totaling about $1,500,000, all of which will have to be dropped. He urged fraternity and sor- orities in the areas in question to send representatives to an open hearing on the re-zoning question before the Council meeting tomorrow night. The hearing will be held at 7:15 p.m. in the Council chambers in the City Hall. Extension of rent controls may also come up tomorrow night on