irrar ~aiIA Lb REPORT ON RED CHINA See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXI, No. 102 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MARCH 3, 1951 Vote Due on 18 Year . Draft Plan Senate Will Act. On UMT Issue WA HINGTON-W-By unan- imous consent yesterday the Sen- ate agreed to vote Monday on the hotly debated issue of drafting young men into the armed forces at the age of 1812 instead of 19. The test will come on an amendment to the Universal Mili- tary Training and Service Bill, which Democratic floor leader McFarland of Arizona is trying to push through the Senate as "emergency legislation." A DRAFT AGE of 18 has been approved by the Senate Armed Services Committee. Its bill would provide, however, that 18 year olds nearest 19 be taken first, and that none be taken before all eligible men in the 19 to 26 year category are inducted. Senator Morse (R-Ore) is the author of the -amendment to drop the draft age only to 18 years and six months. But he propodes that those in the 19-26 bracket be called up at the same time, and that boys be- tween 18 and 18 be allowed to volunteer. It is on this amendment that the Senate will vote Monday. THE HOUSE Armed Services Committee has not agreed on a bill yet, but the representatives are thinking in terms of registra- tion and classification at 18, in- duction at 181/, with no waiting until the 19-26 group has been ex-' hausted. Chairman Vinson 4D-Ga) of the House Committee recom- mended yesterday that expan- sion of the Reserve Officer Training Corps be deferred in favor of building up more offi- cer _training schools so that youths who are drafted will have an opportunity to become officers. At a hearing on his committee he expressed fear that college, ROTC units may become a haven' for students trying to avoid the draft. ROTC leaders told the Commit- tee present plans call for expand- ing the number of ROTC college students from about 124,000 to approximately 150,000. The cost of the program would be increased from $8,642,000 a year to $115,- 000,000. ROTC students are ex- empt from the draft under pres- ent law. Support for drafting 18 year olds came yesterday from Sena- tor Cain (R-Wash), who told the Senate "we need every man we ri can get in Korea." "How impractical and how un- realistic can we become in our efforts to sugar-coat this pill-to evade the issue", Cain asked. Franco Said To Be Against Defense Pact WASHINGTON -(P)- Senator Hunt (D-Wyo.) said in the Senate yesterday "the highest authority in Washington" had told him Spain and her leader, Generalissi- mo Franco, don't want to join the North Atlantic Pact. Hunt did not name his authority but said it was not President Tru- man. That appeared to leave the implication it was Secretary of State Acheson. HUNT MADE THE statement in an exchange with two Republican senators over administration plans to send additional U.S. troops to Europe to serve in a combined Al- lied defense force. J Senators Wherry (R-Neb.) and Cain (R-Wash.) had said they wanted definite assurances that forces of Spain, Yugoslav- ia, Greece and Turkey would be used as part of the defense army being formed under Gen. Dwight Eisenhower. They argued against ' sending any additional U.S. ground troops until that is defi- nite. Hunt, acting as Democratic lead-I er, said he also wanted these na- i - New Living Index Sends Wages Up 1,700,000 Workers To Get Pay Hike; Statistics Show 1.5 Per Cent Boost WASHINGTON -- (R) - An estimated 1,700,000 workers were assured last night of an automatic pay increase as the government announced that the cost of living rose 1.5 per cent in January. These employes, including 800,000 automobile workers, have contracts tying their scale of wages directly to the Labor Department's cost of living index. The. auto workers get four or five cents an hour more. Marines Move on CentralFront * * * * HEAVY SNOW, STRONG WNIDS SIX PAGES Marines Battle Past Hoengsong; Push Northward Korean Troops Run into Furious Opposition from Entrenched Reds TOKYO--W)-U.S. Marines today pushed north of captured Hoengsong on the third day of their central Korea attack but South Koreans on their left flank ran into furious Chinese Red opposition. The Marines, who overran war-wrecked Hoengsong yesterday, resumed their drive at 8 a.m. north of that highway junction. The Chinese resisted with small arms from dug-in positions in the hills. * * * * FIVE MILES west of Hoengsong, the South Korean Sixth Division had to use bayonets before ousting Reds from a vital hill. The two hour fight was heavily supported by Allied artillery and planes. The U.S. Second and Seventh Divisions, operating farther east, " made new gains. The Second occupied more hills north of the lateral Pangnim - Hoengsong Prof essors highway. The Seventh sent pa- trols north of captured Amidong to within 26 miles of the 38th Disagree on parallel. On the western front, North Korean small arms and mortars in Red-held Seoul repulsed the lat- est in daily attempts by U.S. By SID KLAUS Third Division patrols to knife into Seoul. One of the most controversial : issues in Ann Arbor's heated mays THE MARINE occupation of orality race-partisan vs. non- HengAonesry unop comments from two University Hoengsong yesterday was unop- comments from two University posed. But the Leathernecks THE DEPARTMENT'S Bureau of Labor Statistics issued a new type index adjusted to changing buying habits. This one, stood at 181.5 for mid-January, compared * with 178.8 for mid-December. The period 1935 to 1939 is considered S eenormal or 100. Investigfates Lustron Fix WASHINGTON - WP) - Testi- mony about a lawyer's proposed $100,000 fee and "the Washington Fix" was laid yesterday before a Senate committee investigating the crackup of the multi-million- dollar Lustron Housing Corpora- tion. Roy Fruehauf, Detroit indus- trialist, told the lawmakers that RFC Director Walter L. Dunham blocked efforts to save Lustron from financial collapse only a few hours after the first $10,000 in- stallment of a $100,000 fee to a Washington attorney had been withdrawn. FRUEHAUF named the attorney as Joseph H. Rosenbaum, one of the central figures in the Senate group's inquiry into charges that directors of the RFC yielded to influence in granting big govern- ment loans. Fruehauf told of meeting Rosenbaum in a Washington hotel room late in 1949, during negotiations to rescue Lustron from threatened bankruptcy, and he testified: "Rosenbaum told me he abso- lutely could save Lustron. He said Dunham and William E. Willett (another RFC director) were in his hip pocket." The witness went on to say that his own attorney, Alfons Landa, had cautioned him against entering into any deal with Ro- senbaum. PTorld NLews Rou ndu p By The Associated Press MOSCOW-Andrei A. Gromyko, first deputy Soviet foreign minis- ter, intends to leave here by plane today for Monday's meeting of Big Four deputy foreign ministers in Paris. * , , ., KEY WEST-President Tru- man came here last night to view the international and domestic problems of his administration far removed from the turmoil of Washington. He flew to Key West after a final pre-vacation conference with his cabinet NEW BRUNSWICK-A blanket plea of innocent was entered yes- terday by the Pennsylvania Rail- road to 84 indictments charging manslaughter in the Woodbridge train wreck, the nation's worst rail disaster in over three decades. * * * LAKE SUCCESS-Russia's Ja- cob A. Malik yesterday proposed that the UN's special committee on atomic control and arms reduc- tion should choose its first chair- man by drawing lots and the name of the United States was then drawn from a book.' i i i I I The point change of 2.7 rep- resented a percentage rise of 1.5. The bureau also issued the old type index. On this basis of cal- culation, the January figure was 181.6, and the December index 178.4, an increase of 1.7 per cent. THE AUTO industry's cost of living, or "escalator," contract, provides for raising or lowering pay one cent an hour for each rise or fall of 1.14 in the index. It has not yet been worked out whether the new index will be ap- plied in figuring out the wage in- crease. Contracts with escalator clauses signed before the wage freeze date of Jan. 25 are al- lowed to go as high as the cost of living can carry them. LEATHERNECKS ADVANCE - U.S. Marines, back in action in the Korean war for the first time since their historic withdrawal from the Changjin reservoir near the Manchurian border last De- cember, move over a cratered bridge as they advance on the Central Front. AFL Union Quarters Hit By Grenade Airplane Crash in Iowa Storm Claims 15 Lives SIOUX CITY, Ia.-(P)-A Mid- Continent Airlines plane, making i 1 1 I i l However, those negotiated since an that date must be submitted for JERSEY CITY, N.J. - () - A in a sudden, heavy snow storm, stabilization agency approval if hand grenade hurled into the crashed into a bordering cornfield they push wages more than 10 headquarters of an AFL long- yesterday, killing 15 of the 25 per cent above the level of Jan. shoremen's union injured five per- persons aboard. 15, 1950. sons yesterday. The twin-engined DC-3 plane AN ESCALATOR contract was The bomb crashed through a burst into flames and was destroy- N EPlate-glass window, rolled under ed within a few minutes. signed Thursday for 1,000,000 non- atess ndowpolled s nerng . oprtn;alodepoe a desk and exploded, scattering operating railroad employes -- a mea rget note iI BUT TEN, survivors were extri- penny an index point, metal fragments into the ceilings BTTNuvvr eeeti and walls of the ground floor cated and rushed to Sioux City hnntnlc nt l nst four in nos- Meanwhile, the Truman ad-I ministration apparently decided on a cooling off period in an ef- fort- to end labor leaders' "re- volt" against mobilization poli- cies. The tip-off was cancellatidn of a statement by Charles E. Wil- son, mobilization director. He had let it be known he would reply yesterday to the attacks the union leaders made on him when they pulled their representatives out of the economic controls setup. The administration appeared to blieve the crisis could be com- promised. President Truman in- dicated this Thursday when he said it is not very serious; just a' disagreement. The unions argue they have not been given enough voice in the program; that the program fa- vors big business, and is unfair. Orders Flood Opera Office Tickets for $1.80 seats at the March 30 Union Opera perform- ance of "Go West-Madam" were sold out last night, less than 12 hours after mail order sales opened. Opera promotions manager Ben Gates, '51, reported a "deluge" of requests. "But orders are still being ac- cepted for remaining seats at the March 28, 29 and 30 performanc- es," Gates said. Tickets sell for $2.40, $1.80 and $1.20. Checks and mail orders should specify the date desired and should be addressed to: Michigan Union Opera, Michigan Union. House groups desiring a block of seats together have been urged to place their orders immediately. room. * I lro IN.REspi a s, awr eastruck p THE INJURED all were struck I by pieces of shrapnel. Police said a dark sedan drove up to the three-story brick building w h i c h houses the# downtown headquarters of the International Longshoremen's Association, Local 1247. "A man got out of the car in the heavily populated area and pitched the grenade through the window of the union office," said Detective Frank Slawsky of the Crime Investigation Bureau. THE CAR bore New York li- cense plates and had been report- ed stolen recently. Police said the desk appar- ently shielded the office occu- pants from more serious injury. The blast shattered the desk and stopped the office clock at 3:45 p.m. (EST). The Longshoremen's Local re- cently has been the scene of bitter intra-union strife and it has a long record of violence. A hotly- contested union election is sched- uled for today. Jessup To Attend Four Power Talks NEW YORK-()-Dr. Philip C. Jessup, chief U.S. delegate to the preliminary Big Four talks in Par- is, left by plane last night for the French capital accompanied by two State Department experts and five secretarial assistants. Jessup said the talks, starting Monday among deputy foreign ministers, are aimed at agreement on an agenda for a meeting of the foreign ministers themselves. Jessup will meet with represen- tatives of Great Britain, France and Russia. Oelid UX 7 d i For Damages By Pearson McCarthy's Attack Given as Reason WASHINGTON -(AP)- Colum- nist-commentator Drew Pearson yesterday sued Senator McCarthy (R-Wis.) for $600,000 damages, and McCarthy and others for $3,- 000,000 or more. The exact amount sought was left open. Pearson said he wanted damages from eight persons, the Washington Times Herald, "John Doe, Richard Roe and other per- sons at this time to your plain- tiff unknown." * * * PEARSON FILED the suit in U.S. District Court. He asked $250,000 for what he said was a physical attack made on him by McCarthy at a pri- vate dinner Dec. 12, 1950, at the Sulgrave Club here. He also asked $350,000 damages against McCarthy for an allegedj "libelous, false and defamatory at- tack" upon him in a 37-page state-' ment Dec. 15, 1950. He said in his suit that McCarthy "maliciously published and caused to be published" a "libelous, false and defamatory attack upon the charaoter, veracity, morality, com- ketence and patriotism of the plaintiff ." In his third count, Pearson said the named defendants made simi- lar statements about the same time and contrived to "hold the plain- tiff up to public scorn and ridi- cule." sibly critical condition, the airline ,officials said. The plane was due at Sioux City airport at 9:12 a.m. (CST) on a scheduled flight from Kan- sas City to Minneapolis. It was the first fatal crash for Mid-Continent in its 17-year his- tory. * * * CIVIL AERONAUTICS author- ity inspectors from Omaha and Chicago arrived here last night to investivate the cause of a plane crash which claimed 15 lives. The two inspectors who ar- rived late yesterday examined the wreckage but declined to comment on possible causes, al- though they said the weather apparently was involved. The pilot of yesterday's ill-f at- ed plane, Capt. James Graham, 34 years old, of Kansas City, was among those killed. At the airport, observers said the plane flew over the field once, went on to make a climbing turn to the left, then was lost to spec- tators in the storm. The crash was heard a few moments later. Quenifle !Given Premiership PARIS -()P)- Georges Bidault gave up yesterday his attempt to form a new French government and Henri Queuille became Prem- ier-designate. Queuille and his Radical Social- ist Party looked to a national ref- erendum on a new election, law as the only solution to the cabinet crisis. Leaders of the Radical Socialist Party, which despite its name is a moderate one representing small businessmen and farmers, support- ed Queuille in his efforts to form a cabinet, but they were not hope- ful for his chances to succeed. The Radical Socialists and the Catholic Republican Movement are the two groups whose dispute over changes in the nation's elec- toral law caused the downfall of Premier Rene Pleven's coalition Wednesday. Queuille headed the longest-liv- ed of France's post-war cabinets. At its fall in October, 1949, it had lasted 13 months. political scientists. Prof. Arthur W. Bromage agreed with Lewis Reimann, the Demo- cratic candidate for mayor, that city elections should be run on a non-partisan level. Prof. Samuel J. Eldersveld sided with Mayor William Brown, the Republican candidate, who is in favor of con- tinuing the present party system for local elections. "NON-PARTISAN nominations and elections in cities assume that the business of municipal admin- istration should not be an issue between Republican and Demo- cratic candidates," Prof. Bromage said. "And certainly municipal gov- ernment is fundamentally a bus- iness of fire and police protection. public works, public health, water supply and sewage." In addition, he said that the party label may automatically result in the rejection of an able candidate in one ward and the election of a weak candidate in another. "Ann Arbor is still small enough for voters to know their candi- dates and follow their records. There is no real need in a city of this size for the party label as identification and ratification of a candidate." * * * PROF. BROMAGE saw no ad- vantage in tinkering with the present Ann Arbor charter to pro- vide for non-partisan elections. "However, ,if and when Ann Arbor creates a home-rule char- ter, consideration must be given to non-partisan nomination and elections," he added. Prof. Eldersveld said that "tak- ing sides" in a partisan political sense is good government and good democratic theory. "I * * "THE INDEPENDENT voter is often politically lazy," he said. "And he is in no way intellectu- ally or morally superior to thed partisan." "Independent candidacies," he added, "produce confusion of responsibility, a disease worse than the cure." "If we believe in parties at all, local party organizations are in- dispensible. For a national and state party which is starved at its base may well become a phantom party. "Political action and opposition are necessary on the municipal level," Prof. Eldersveld asserted. "They can best be provided by our present party system." "The job of voters in Ann Arbor is not to abolish parties but to improve their character and func- tioning," he emphasized. Eccles Attacks TreasuryPolicy CHICAGO - 0P) - Marriner S. Eccles, Federal Reserve Board mrmhor n+&onlroA oanw vac.+n,. av were halted last night by dark- ness and Communist fire at a point within 15 miles of Hong-, chong, a Chinese Red assembly point. Other Friday developments: Marines and South Korean troops east of Hoengsong and British and American troops to the west fought stubbornly to keep the United Nations attack moving forward in the face of desperate local counterattacks. s* s FROM 12 to 15 Russian-made Jets braved the North Korean skies for brief encounters with the Fifth Air Force. No casualties were reported from the air fights, but two U.S. Mustailgs were shot down by anti-aircraft fire. On the east-central front the U.S. Seventh Division met stif- fening Red opposition north of Amidong. An estimated 60 North Koreans wearing South Korean uniforms attacked at close range. The GI's hurled them back at bayonet point, inflicting heavy casualties. Associated Press cor- respondent Tom Stone said the attack was only one of many prob- ing attacks by the Reds against this division. * * * THE U.S. Second Division, west of the Seventh, fought from noon to nightfall for high ground north of the Hoengsong-Pangnim lateral highway. It was described as "the bitterest fighting of the day" by Associated Press corres- pondent Leif Erickson at U.S. Eighth Army headquarters. On the Marines' left flank Bri- tish, Canadian, New Zealand and Australian members of a British brigade pushed north against stiffening Chinese resistance in the Yongdu area, 17 miles west of Hoengsong. The First U.S. Cavalry Division was moving on Yongdu from the south and s uth- east. Elements of the Seventh Cav- alry Regiment held the high ground on the southern edge of Yongdu. From the hills its ar- tillery, pounded the town, which lies on a road to Hongchon, scene of the reported buildup for thv next expected big Communist of- fensive.. Attack Planned OnTa.xdodgers WASHINGTON-(A-Plans for financing a fresh Treasury drive against gangsters who evade taxes were disclosed yesterday by mem- bers of the House Appropriations Committee. They predicted that the Inter- nal Revenue Bureau's budget for the next fiscal year would be hiked substantially with the un- TEACHING MERITS DEBATED: 'U' Professors Discuss Education at Forum By AUDREY MURPHY The humorous side as well as the more serious side of education was included in the first of a series of forum discussions on "College and University Teach- ing" held yesterday afternoon in the library lecture hall. trate my lectures upon them," Prof. Frank X. Braun of the German department remarked. By observance of these students, I am able to tell which groups are grasping the information and whether it is above the un- derstandable level or too sim- important to keep the minds of the student a few steps ahead of the instructor. Concerning the preparation of material for class, Prof. Phillip S. Jones of the mathematics depart- ment remarked that it's a neces- sity to prepare leading questions mer feels that the biggest mistake a person new in the teaching field can make it posing as an author- ity upon every subject. ONE PARTICIPANT from the audience inquired whether the courses are subject-centered or PALMER differed however, say- ing that the teachers are often relied upon, but hardly ever the textbooks. Prof. Algo D. Henderson of the education school is the chairman of the forum and led i) .I