3.. EDITOePR'S NOTE See Page 2 tC t ait r, ' k Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXII, No. 11 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1951 CLOUDY AND COOLER SIR PAGES r I 4 i .j ' House Votes Record Sum For Defense Military To Get 37 Billions More WASHINGTON - (P) - The largest peace-time military appro- priation bill in history was ap- proved by the House yesterday, making $94,000,000,000 available for preparedness this year. The bill authorizes a defense budget of $56,937,808,030. In addi- tion about $37,000,000,000 carried r over from previous years is avail- able to the military. The House approved the bill by voice vote. * * * IF THE BILL for the total avail- able were shared equally, it would amount to about $600 for every man, woman and child in the country, or about $2,400 for every family of four persons. The measure now goes to the Senate where prompt approval seems assured. Both the House and Senate have approved the measure previously in different form, the present bill being a com- promise. Arguing for the bill, Chairman Mahon (D-Tex.) of an appro- priations defense subcommittee, told the House that recent state- ments about fantastic new wea- pons "are entirely too fantastic," He added that there is no easy and inexpensive road to victory in war. President Truman has been among those officials who recently have talked of spectacular devel- . opments in military weapons. . .. * ONLY YESTERDAY Gordon Dean, chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, said in a speech at Los Angeles that the U.S. now has atomic weapons that can overcome any superiority an enemy may have in numbers of soldiers on the battlefield. The Bill would provide the Army $19,888,032,030; the Navy $15,877,- 891,000; the Air Force $20,642,- 785,000 and the Office of Secretary of Defense $529,100,000. Most of the money is for planes, tanks, guns and other weapons. Mahon said that while the bill would make around $94,000,000,000 x available to the military, only around $40,000,000,000 will be spent in the fiscal year ending nextJune. The explanation is that the Defense Department will be making some contracts for heavy goods that won't be paid for in full until delivered after next June. {world News Round up Board Welcomes Aies Break d'r W%/. UU- u t-- Eligibility Study By BARNES CONNABLE In a brief, two-sentence statement, the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics late last night expressed its willingness to cooperate in a study of-"administration of eligibility rules for athletes. The move came in the wake of a protest by Literary College faculty members against a "double standard" which permits eligibility for athletes with a below "C" average and rests sole control of athletic eligibility with an Athletic Board committee. i t.., .ili. .lll Ulll L Board Chairman Herbert O "F the basis of an investigation of a: - 'b Reds Aided 'b '~lE B Wallace I ' rt ./ V WASHINGTON-(P)-One-time Communist Louis Budenz testified l yesterday that Henry A. Wallace followed the Communist party line P in 1944 "whether he knew it or not" in cabled reports to theg White House criticizing Genera- s lissimo Chiang Kai-shek. I Budenz said the Red line was to d find fault with Chiang's National-- ist regime and thus pave the way c for Communist conquest of China. * * * TESTIFYING before a Senate' Internal Security Subcommittee, Budenz said Wallace's recommen- dations during his 1944 mission to+ China "helped the Communists." The witness, former editor of the Communist Daily Worker, p now a professor at Fordham> university, also declared that h Anerican Communists werel "encouraged" by the Commun- l ist International in Moscow toe boost Wallace for re-election ast vice president in 1944. Wallace lost out of the nomina- tion at the Democratic convention c in Chicago in July, 1944, when t President Roosevelt gave the nod tl to a Senator from Missouri named u Harry S. Truman.S Ten months later, Mr. Roosevelt was dead and Mr. Truman became President.< * * * BUDENZ SAID the Communist International in Moscow became1 "actively interested" in supporting Wallace for high office after Wal-1 lace visited China and Soviet Rus-; sia early in 1944. M cCarthy .Admits gr 'Sla pping'__Pearson p WASHINGTON - (F') - Sena- tor McCarthy (R-Wis.) said yes- terday he "slapped" Drew Pearson g at a Washington dinner party last tl December but laughingly replied s "no" when asked if his action had a lifted Pearson "three feet off the u ground." Reference was made to the Sul- e grave Club incident during a three c and a half hour deposition hear- fo ing which is preliminary to trial it of a $5,100,000 suit Pearson has ca brought against McCarthy and w eight others. p E'ritz" Crisler said any action on thletic eligibility practices would be up to the Board of Regents. THE FACULTY action took place at a closed session Monday when Burton D. Thuma, acting dean of the literary college, was instructed by unanimous vote to dispatch a etter of protest to the Faculty Senate, an advisory committee to the President. Dean Thuma said yesterday that no specific plan for revision of the present eligibility set-up will be out-lined in the etter. Earlier yesterday, University President Harlan H. Hatcher waived comment on the recent grant of eligibility to star defen- ive back Ted Topor, '51 Ed., a be- ow-"C" student. However, Presi- dent Hatcher emphasized that he had not heard the eligibility pro- cedure "criticized adversely." "The rules have not changed," the president said. "If they are not proper, regular channels and rules of procedure exist for considering them." According to Big 10 regulations, participation in varsity sports is permitted unless a student re- eives an "E" or "Incomplete" on is previous year's rceord. Ath- etes whose averages drop below C" may petition the eligibility ommittee for permission to par- icipate. STUDENTS IN all other extra- curricular activities must main- an at least a "C" average hroughout their course of study under regulation of the Office of Student Affairs. Sources close to the Board said that an attempt would be made to show that the number of special eligibility grants by the athletic committee compare favorably with the number al- lowed regularly by the Office of Student- Affairs. Reliable sources claim the num- er of below "C" athletes normally ranted eligibility by the commit- ee numbers from two to four per ent of all varsity sport partici- ants. * * "CASES coming before the eli- ibility committee are studied on their individual merits," Crisler aid. He added that such factors s work programs and family sit- ations are taken into account. The former Wolverine coach mphasized that only a slight per- entage of players who petition or special eligibility are granted . In the controversial Topor ase, he said the gridder's heavy rork schedule was considered im- ortant to the final decision. Front Line Pre-Dawn Attack Succeeds in East U. S. EIGHTH ARMY HEAD- QUARTERS, Korea - (') -- The Allied 100,000-man offensive broke through the main Red line in West Central Korea yesterday and sent spearheads on ahead today against retreating Chinese Reds. In the East, a rare pre-dawn attack today by the Allies won a 3,000-foot peak on "Heartbreak Ridge" which has changed hands many times in three weeks of bloody fighting. OFF THE EAST coast, an Allied Naval force moved 125 miles north', of Parallel 38 yesterday, silenced Communist shore guns and gave the Red-held port of Hungnam a terrific shelling. Maj. Gen. Robert Soule said his U. S. Third Division had penetrated the main Reds de- fenses northwest of Chorwon His troops credited with inflict- ing 1,205 Red casualties in the first two days, moved without op- position toward a vital hill mass from which the Chinese pulled out hastily last night, a pooled dis- patch said. The hill mass strengthens Al- lied control of the Seoul-Chorwon- Kumhwa rail line, a vital front .ine supply artery. * * * "UNDOUBTEDLY THE division hit the main Communist line," Soule told correspondents. "We penetrated it and broke it and forced the Reds to withdraw." On t h e bloody east-central front, Allied armored patrols swept beyond the forbidding crags of "Heartbreak Ridge" to a point 22 miles north of Parallel 38. Ce.'- sorship hitherto had prevented mention of how far into Red Korea UN forces had battled in that sector. Meanwhile there were no devel- opments in the suspended.cease- fire negotiations. Red command- ers, apparently shocked by the Al- lied offensive, remained silent on Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway's invi- tation to them to pick a new truce site anywhere in no-man's land. Mercury T o Drop Slightly for Game After two straight days of rec- ord breaking In d i a n summer temperatures, the Willow Run weatherman yesterday predicted cooler weather for today's temp. In comparison to yesterday's 87 degrees and Thursday's high of 91, fans will be treated to a ten- perature of 62 today. Indians Eye First Victory Over Rivals Stanford's Hopes Ride onPassing By JIM PARKER Associate Sports Editor Michigan and Stanford renew an old but not too well-developed footbal rivalry before an expected crowd of around 60,000 fans at the stadium this afternoon. Two o'clock kickoff time will find the Wolverines facing their West Coast rivals for the fourth time since the two teams met in the first Rose Bowl game back in 1902. * * * THE MAIZE and Blue has never tasted defeat at the hands of the Indians, and despite on the basis of this season's past per- formances the undefeated (in two Starting ineups SAFE AT HOME-Monte Irvin (20), Giant left fielder, steals home in a cloud of dust in first inning of firs.t Series game at New York. Yogi Berra, Yankee catcher, makes tag too late as Bobby Thom- son, who was at bat, falls away from the plate. Irvin continued his hard-hitting yesterday with 3 for 4 off Eddie Lopat, but Giants lost, 3-1, to even the Series. -oard Alte Draft Status WASHINGTON - (j) - Draft boards across the nation will start re-classifying some 500,000 child- less married men next week. Simultaneously the army an- nounced that it will release from active duty by December 20, all World War II enlisted men in the reserve who were called up volun- tarily. * * * IN HIS DRAFT announcement yesterday Selective ServiceDirec- tor Maj. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey said it is doubtful that as many as 200,000 of those to be reclassi- fied will be termed 1-A in the im- mediate future, however. Most married men of draft. age are currently in a deferred class, 3-A. However Mr. Truman issued new regulations last week which removed married men from 3-A deferred category unless they have children. Hershey said many reg- istrants have become fathers dur- ing the past two years, but have failed to notify their local boards. He said that they should notify their local boards immediately, es- pecially since many of them are in the older group-24 or 25 years old-and thus may be inducted quicly if they are re-classified 1-A. *, *>A * THE ARMY announcement was made by Chairman Mahon (D- Tex.) as he read a letter to the House from Assistant Defense Secretary Anna Rosenberg. Mrs. Rosenberg said the Army previously had planned to release all such men-inactive and volun- teer reservists-not later than Jan.. 1, 1952. Barring any major change in the international situation, she said, careful reworking of Army plans will make it possible to get these men out by Christmas. Lopat Tosses Five-Hitter Asi Y'ankees Even Series --* NEW YORK -(A)- The New York Yankees bounced back be- hind easy Ed Lopat's superlative southpaw pitching yesterday to cool the blazing Giants, 3 to 1, and square the World Series at a vic- tory apiece. The chunky lefthander, winner of 21 games during the season, dazzled the National League Champions with his soft-breaking stuff, limiting them to five singles. * * * CASEY STENGEL'S crew wrap- ped up the triumph with a pair of WASHINGTON - (P) - Sena- tor Taft of Ohio said yesterday he will decide whether to run for the Republican presidential nomi- nation only after he has studied a national "sentiment" survey be- ing made by two associates. He has asked for a final report on this study next Wednesday. How soon his decision will come after that is not known. The betting on Capitol Hill is that he will make his third bid for a nomination which went to others on his two tries in 1940 and 1948. ON THE DEMOCRATIC side of the picture, three officers of the 450,000-member Hotel and Res- taurant Employes and Bartenders Union (AFL) invited President Truman and asked that he run again. Union President Hugo Ernst and his associates reported that Mr. Truman told them he had one or two things he had to take care of before he could make any an- nouncement. Taft in his statement yester- day said he has not wished to be a candidate unless he is con- vinced that "a majority of the Republicans really want me to run." runs off Larry Jansen, Giants' righthander, in the first two chap- ters. The winning tally crossed on a solo blast into the right field stands by Joe Collins, Yank first baseman, in the second. Only Monte Irvin, the Giants' sizzling left fielder, found the Bomber southpaw no puzzle. Monte rapped three clean sin- gles into the outfield grass to go with the triple and three singles he blasted in Thursday's opener. If he maintains anything like that pace he will, of course, break every record in the books. After the first two frames, Jan- sen fully matched Lopat's bril- liance until he was lifted for a pinchhitter in the seventh. From the time Collins connected for his 10th of the year with two out in the second, Jansen retired 13 straight batters. George Spencer, his relief, also sat the Bombers down in order in the seventh to run the string to 16 in a row fore the American Leaguers added their final run in the eighth. * * * EXCEPT FOR Irvin's long sin- gle to open the second inning, a two-out walk to Eddie Stanky in the third and a single into left field by Alvin Dark in the sixth, - (Continued on Page 3) Reds Will Try More A-Bombs LONDON -(p)- Soviet Prime Minister Stalin said in an inter- view Russia recently exploded an- other atomic bomb and promised there will be more to come, the Moscow radio declared yesterday. The radio broadcast the inter- view Stalin gave to Pravda, offi- cial newspaper of the Russian Communist Party. It quoted him as having said: "Tests on atom bombs of various calibers will be made in the future under the plan of the defense of our country from attacks from the British-American aggressive bloc." STANFORD Storum Vick Manoogian. Garner Bonetti Broderick McColl Kerkorian Cook - Hugasian Meyers Pos. LE LT LG C RG RT RE LH RH FB MICHIGAN Perry Johnson Kinyon O'Shaugh'y Wolter Stribe Pickard Putsch Oldham Howell Witherspoon starts) Stanford eleven must reign as slight underdogs over the vic- tory-less Wolverines. Leading the Stanford attack in its second appearance on Michigan soil will be the much- heralded triumvirate of Bill Mc- Coll, Harry Hugasian and Gary Kerkorian, the big guns of the Indians' victories over Oregon (27-20) and San Jose State (26- 13). McColl, practically everyone's All-American last year and a sure bet to repeat this season, is kying hailed as one of the greatest ends to emerge from the Pacific Coast in recent years. So far he's lived u to his press notices as his pass re- ceiving has been a lig factor in both Stanford wins this year. * * * ON THE throwing end of Coach Chuck Taylor's T-formation of- fense has been Kerkorian, a quar- terback who can also lug the ball when he has to, as witnessed by a 68-yard dash he reeled off when trapped on a pass play last week- end. (Continued on Page 3) Hatcher U.rges Schools, Press To Be Leaders President Harlan H. Hatcher, last night urged newspapermen and educators to work together to bring new progress to "the heart- land of this nation." Addressing the 34th annual convention of the University Press Club, President Hatcher drew his- torical allusions with the found- ing of the midwest andpresent problems that now confront the region., . "THE GREAT Northwest Pas- sage still Iles out there," he told 'the assembled newsmen. "The two great media of progress, news- papers and educational institu- tions, must continue to show us the way in the search for that passage." President Hatcher noted that the University and Michigan's first newspaper were both found- ed in 1817. "That began an era which still continues,' he said, "of common goals and cooperation between newspapers and the schools." Earlier in the day. the assembled By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-President Tru- man asked Congress yesterday for the cash to carry out a $7,483,000,- 000 foreign aid program already authorized by the Senate and House. * * * ELIZABETH CITY, N. C. - A f3,325-ton freighter, carrying 24 crewmen, cracked in two and sank in the hurricane-churned Atlantic early yesterday. WASHINGTON - Secretary of State Acheson yesterday barred any dickering with Red China on three major diplomatic issues in connection with the Korean truce !talks. * 1. Recognition of Red China. 2. Admission of the Peiping re- gime into the United Nations. 3. Tnrning over Formosa to Communist China. Race issue Erupts 4t Y! Con vention ST. LOUIS-(1P-The racial is- sue erupted behind closed doors * the natinnal Vng Demnratic FEEBLE WAR CRIES GREET STANFORD: Rally Turnout, Ticket Sales Fall as Stanford Team Arrives * * * * * * *M* .