HOUSE RULES BACK-STEP See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State A4&bp 0 0 FAIR AND WARMER. -1 VOL. LXI, No. 76 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1950 FOURTEEN PAGES G UN Retreats; Reds Take Wonju, Osan Allied Warplane. Exact Heavy Tolt TOKYO -(A')- The retreatin Eighth Army abandoned two im portant towns on east and wes sides of the front in South Kore yesterday while Allied warplane took a heavy toll of the invadin Chinese and Korean Commun ists. In the West, Osan, almost 6 miles south of the 38th paralli and 28 miles below Seoul, wa given up without a fight. It i on the old "heartbreak highway down which Americans and Sout Koreans first retreated before th North Korean invaders last July A * * IN THE EAST, UN troops qui the burning road and rail hub o Wonju after a valiant delayin action that brought time for pre paratiori of defenses farther souti More than 1,750 Reds were estimated killed, wounded or captured in ground actions and air strikes yesterday. Pilots reported the roads soutl and southeast of Seoul and nort of Wonju were jammed with Red pursuing the Eighth Army south ward. While B-29 Superforts concen trated on the Seoul area, smash ing the runways of Kimpo Air field with bombs, jets and pis ton-engined fighters and ligh bombers swooped on t r o 0 concentrations near the Han Riv er. ONE 20-MILE stretch of roal north of Wonju was transforme into a death-trap for the Reds.' Maj. Gen. Earle E. Partridge U.S. Fifth Air Force Commander said jet planes alone inflictee more than 1,000 casualties on th Reds. Allied warships on both West and East Coasts also fought to delay the Reds. The American cruiser Rochester and the Brit- ish cruisers Kenya and Ceylon bombarded Inchon, Seoul's port, for the fourth straight day. On the East Coast four Ameri- ican destroyers and two Siamese corvettes shelled road and rai links for a distance of 60 mile, north of the 38th parallel. General MacArthur was using his marked superiority in the ai: and on the sea to give some breathing space to his heavily outnumbered ground forces. Randolph said the fall of Osar "narrowed" the distance betweer the onrushing Reds and the re- treating Eighth Army. Prison Term May Start For Stacy Today Convicted arsonist Robert H. Stacy will leave today for a 5 to 10 year term in Southern Michi- gan Prison at Jackson unless an expected appeal for another tem- porary stay of sentence is grant- ed. Stacy was sentenced last Thurs- day by Circuit Judge James R. Breakey, Jr. Breakey recommend- ed that the former University Steaching fellow be made to serve the minimum term. AT THE SAME time he granted the 30-year-old arsonist a 10-day stay which expiired last night. But Washcenaw County police officials said yesterday that Leo- nard H. Young, Stacy's court-ap- pointed lawyer, would probably ask Breakey to grant a new ex- -tension this morning. Stacy's sentencing, originally scheduled for ' today, was ad- vanced because, "everybody con- nected with the case was ready," r according to Prosecutor Doug- I-. ,r 4 -Daily-Jack Brgstrom RUTHVEN.AND OOSTERBAAN FLASH VICTORY SMILES. JOE WARDLAW, CALIFORNIA GUARD, DROPS MICHIGAN'S DON DUFEK ON THE BEAR THIRTY-YARD STRIPE. * * * * __________________________________________________ lGiant Crowd Welcomes Rose Bowl Champions By DAVE THOMAS Wined, dined and a trifle travel weary, Michigan's 1951 Rose Bowl champions received a warm homecoming welcome from a crowd of 5,000 townspeople and students as their special train arrived early Saturday evening at the New York Central depot. The crowd which swarmed around the ancient stone station and struggled for vantage points on the bridge and surrounding embank- ments, braved a biting wind and temperatures in the low twenties to roar their approval of the gridders' 14-6 conquest of California. . . . * AS THE TEAM MEMBERS filed from their 13 car train to the welcoming strains of "The Victors" played by the Ann Arbor High School Band, they were mobbed by happy friends, appreciative par- 'ents and small children with auto- i, TYjgraph0books. I 1..A. Hayward, 'UT' Regent, in Critical State ,The critical condition of Re- gent Ralph A. Hayward was des- cribed yesterday as "unchanged" by University Hospital officials. Regent Hayward entered the hospital last Wednesday and un- derwent a brain operation Thurs- day to relieve intra-cranial pres- sures. He has not regained con- sciousness since the operation and doctors describe his state as ser- ious. The prominent 55 - year - old Michigan businessman was elected to the Board of Regents in April, 1943. His term expires at the close of this year. A graduate of the University, Regent Hayward was appointed assistant professor of engineering here in 1923 but resigned the fol- lowing year to become general manager of the firm which he now heads. Regent Hayward is a trustee of Kalamazoo College, chairman of the Michigan State Highway Ad- visory Board and a member of several corporation boards of di- rectors. Beaming with victory smiles, University President Alexander G. Ruthven and Coach Bennie Oosterbaan mounted a hastily improvished sound truck to praise the team which had chalked up the University's third Rose Bowl victory. President Ruthven, a tackle on teams at Iowa's Morningside Col- As an extra section of today's paper, The Daily prints a re- vised edition of the 1951 Rose Bowl supplement. The supple- ment printed today is identical with the one distributed free on New Year's Day in Pasadena, with the exception of the first page, which has been revised to cover the game. lege almost half a century ago, happily clutched the gilted vic- tory ball to his chest. Fullback Don Dufek who scor- ed both Wolverine touchdowns al- so made an appearance at the microphone. The welcome exceeded in num- bers, at least, any previous re- ception accorded a Michigan team. Adding color to the Ann Arbor welcome was a set of railroad flares on the enbankment behind the station spelling out the word "Champs." Eisenhower, Top French Officials Talk PARIS-()--Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower got down to brisk talks with the French yesterday on just what they are going to do to help defend the west against any push from the east. American military sources said the answers he got help support the General's belief that the At- lantic community can build an international army to defend Western Europe. There was no of- ficial word from the talks, but it was believed the French pledged immediate transfer of their three divisions now in Germany and Austria to the Eisenhower pom- mand. An authorized source said "all the problems of defending Eur- ope," were discussed.A Men's Judic PositionsOpen Petitions for a one-year term of the Men's Judiciary Council are available from 3 to 5 p.m. any day this week at the Student Iegisla- ture Bldg., 122 S. Forest, Dave Brown, '53, SL publicity chair- man, announced yesterday. Three vacant positions on the council are open to any eligible male student. Petitions must be returned to the SL office by Mon- day. Selection of the Council mem- bers will be made by the council president and the male members of the SL cabinet. Brown also reported that Fri- day will be the last day in which campus organizations can return applications for co-sponsorship of movies with the SL Cinema Guild for next semester. LANSING - (P) - Governor. Williams yesterday requested a sipplementary appropriation for the completion of the Angell Hall addition and the University Hos- pital out-patient clinic. His appealcame as a part of an over-all request for $37,000,000 to clean, up someof the state's un- finished business and' was his first major request of the new legis- lature. ' * * * THE GOVERNOR asked for $2,024,000 for completion of the Angell Hall addition and $1,300,000 World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The Nation- al Security Resources Board yes- terday recommended to President Truman that certain young scien- tists, engineers and others with specialized skills be allowed draft deferment to continue their edu- cation. * * * ALBANY, N.Y.-Gov. Thomas E. Dewey sent to the New York State Legislature last night his potent, unprecedented state defense bill and said the measure made "no effort to mask its repulsiveness." * , * WASHINGTON-A group of self-styled "progressive" Demo- cratic Senators appeared ready ldst night to provide organized backing for President Truman's "Fair Deal" domestic program. * * * WASHINGTON - The Truman Administration reversed itself yes- terday and called for a 60,000-ton "super" aircraft carrier as part of a $2,000,000,000 buildup of the nation's sea fighting forces. _____-__-____._r Williams Requests More Jebb Urges ' U' Funds in Budget Talk Another Try for the completion of the out-pa- tient clinic. Williams asked for the $37,- 000,000 to complete construction projects already committed, to wipe out various departmental and operating deficites and to speed up the highway construc- tion program. $27,000,000 of the total would come from the state's general fund, which was $21,000,000 in the red at the end of the last fiscal year. The other $10,000,000 would be highway money which already has been collected and earmark- ed for road purposes but not yet appropriated by the legislature. The governor asked for a net of $10,400,000 to complete con- struction projects on which some money already has been spent. He contended that the construction outlook is so uncertain 'that all projects should be rushed to com- pletion before building costs rise further or materials become un- available. Pair. Confess Coed Slaying KALAMAZOO, Mich. - (IP) - Authorities wrote "solved" today to the slaying of Carolyn Drown, 19 year old Western Michigan co- ed and turned to questioning two husky farmers about two other similar unsolved murders. "We are sure we have the right solution to the Drown case," She- riff Otto K. Buder said after the arrest and questioning of Valorus (Bud) Mattheis and Raymond Lee Olson. Both men are 22 years old and live in near-by Vicksburg, Michigan. Police Chief Howard Hoyt quot- ed Mattheis as saying he strangled the girl on the night of Nov. 26. To Halt War LAKE SUCCESS-(P)-Britain's Sir Gladwyn Jebb yesterday' urged the United Nations to make one more attempt to obtain a cease fire in Korea. He indicated Britain is not yet ready for a final decision on American demands for UN con- demnation of Red China as an ag- gressor. The American demands are being pushed in behind-the- scenes talks and have not yet reached the UN Assembly Political Committee in a formal document. Jebb told the Political Commit- tee the UN should weigh its ac- tions carefully arid a "last effort" for a cease-fire should be made before more drastic steps are con- sidered. The committee adjourned at his suggestion until Thursday to permit more talks among the delegates. The British delegate warned Red China that a final break with the UN and all the UN repre- sents would have a dreadful effect on the Chinese people. Fine Phi Cli $750 For Illegal Party The University has fined Phi Chi medical fraternity $750 and put it on social probation for hold- ing an unauthorized, unchaperon- ed drinking party. The Committee on Student Dis- cipline said the party was held Dec. 16 at a ranch near Ann Ar- bor. The fraternity will be on social probation until June. Phi Chi President Dick Ham- mell, '51M, the chapter secretary and four members spoke at the committee hearing. Calls for Full Mobilization If Necessary Tells Congress Of State of Union WASHINGTON-()-President Truman told the nation yester- day that "we will fight, if fight we must" to block the threat of world conquest by Soviet Rus- sia. In a rousing 3,500-word speech, heard by millions over radio and television networks, the President called for a vast mobilization ef- fort capable of producing 50,000 planes and 35,000 tanks a year if needed. Solemnly, he pledged that the United States will forsake neither Western Europe nor other free nations in the struggle against Red aggression. THE PRESIDENT said more money, a "major" tax increase and a bigger draft of manpower will be needed to prepare for the possibility of "a full-scale war." Addressing a joint session of Congress in his annual "state of the Union" message, Truman declared, "we are preparing for full war-time mobilization, if that should be necessary.- "The threat of world conquest by Soviet Russia endangers our liberty and endangers the kind y of world in which the free spirit of man can survive. "The threat is a total threat and the danger is a common danger," Truman said. "All free nations arehexposed and are all in peril. Their only security lies in banding together. No one nation can find protetion in a selfish search for a haven from the storm." TRUMAN BITTERLY denoun- ced Russia for waging "an evil war by proxy" in Korea and called it a move by "the Russian Com- munist dictatorship to take over the world step by step." The President said the Uni- ted States is willing "as we have always been, to negotiate hon- orable settlements with the So- viet Union," but he declared, "We will not engage in ap- peasement." Truman went to accuse the So viets of keeping Russia and its satellite nations "in a state of perpetual mobilization." "The imperialism of the czars has been replaced by the even more ambitious, more crafty, and more menacing imperialism of the rulers of the Soviet Union," he de- clared. Specifically, he called for high- er taxes-he did not mention how much higher - changes in the draft law, greater powers to im- pose wage-price controls, and con- tinued military and economic aid to this country's allies. It is going to be "a long pull," he said. Truman Talk Gets Support . Of Congress WASHINGTON -- () - Presi- dent Truman's call for American strength and unity in the face of BIGGEST UPROAR SINCE EARTHQUAKE: Wolverine Rooters Go Wild As Michigan Bashes. " Communist aggression drew strong support from Congressyesterday. Some -of the lawmakers who lis- B ears tened to his message of the state e a I"O sof the union pointed out, however, that cooperation i-z a two-way street and demanded a stronger showing of determination by the' and the crowd swept Dufek off in other nations menaced by Russia the same manner. and her cohorts. The band was on the field in Sam Rayburn, speaker of the an instant, their hats turned House, declared the-message "met backwards in triumph, clanging the present world situation head- out "The Victors" to the sor- on." By NANCY BYLAN Daily Associate Editor . "We did it," cried a mob of joy-cray students in Pasadena last week, as they tumbled over stands, crawled under railings, tooted left-over New Years Eve' horns, hugged complete strangers, and went generally mad. team if Bennie could find enough adhesive tape. , -Shouting "Let's go out and bury the Golden Bears," out of bus windows from Los Angeles to Pasadena, the Wolverines descended upon the Tourna- sent of Roses Parade in a blaze of noisy glory that brought bemused smiles from curb spec- tators. wild yelling and waving could hardly keep their eyes front. At the end of the' parade some 100,000 people scrambled for the Rose Bowl, where extra seats in the aisles were set up to accomodate the overflow crowd., The band, which only began tol astound Californians at the par- Michigan players. And in the huge bowl, the California band sounded unhappily weak. What the coast school lost-in band competition, however, they made up for in their dazzling display of halftime card stunts, in which they presented every- thing from a golden bear dress- I ed in Superman to a brown Wolverine displayed against a MICHIGAN rooters were so heated, however, that when a lo- comotive was started, they were through it and onto the next yell' before the cheerleaders had half begun. With the score seven to six, another spontaneous cry of "More yet, more yet," arose from the stands, more optimis- tic rooters supplementing it rowful-eyed Californians, while Michigan rooters pranced beside} them. . And the goal post-it is now slivers in the rooms of the lucky fans who "rnt there first." and "No one has any ^;rounds on which to say they don't under- stand the United States position as expressed through the Presi- dent It is a strong message, but