Y it i~au Dati ( 7;p 0 ;,, TEN CENT PROGRAMS See Page 2 Latest Deadline in the State FAIR AND WARMER c VOL. LXI. No. 17 ANN ARBOR. MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1951 FOURFAGES U.S. To Ease Italian Pact Despite Reds- Soviets Charge Aggressive Ideas WASHINGTON-(AP)-The State -= Department, brushing aside Soviet" objections as propaganda, gave notice yesterday that the West is going ahead with plans to ease the peace treaty with Italy. Moscow charged Thursday that in proposing to revise the terms of the 1947 settlement the Wet wants to make use of Italy for purposes of the "aggressive At- lantic bloc. A SOVIET note said Russia would go along.only if the treaties with her eastern European allies; also are revised and Italy pulls out of the 12-nation North Atlan- tic Alliance In advance of a formal reply the State Department published a translation of the Soviet note and declared "the U.S. Govern- ment does not propose to be deterred by such propaganda from its effort to find the way to recognize Italy's new stature and its right to participate with the other free nations in work- ing for international peace ahd security." The department at the same time rapped Russia for vetoing re- peatedly Italy's membership in the United Nations and charged Moscow wanted to put Italy in "a staus o subjugation compar- able to that of its satellites in Eastern Europe." * ,* WESTERN PLANS calls for lifting such restrictions as those which now keep Italian shipyards from building warships, and the1 300,000 man ceiling that was ' placed on the Italian armed forces. Just what changes are contem-1 plated and how the treaty can be revised without sanction of Rus-1 sia, one of the World War II big- four powers, has not been made plain. Government Cuts Civilian GoodsOutput WASHINGTON-(A)-The ov- ernment is going to cut down on the manufacture of many civilian items, but believes there will still be enough for normal needs. This report came yesterday from Manly Fleischmann, head of the Defense Production Administra- tion (DPA), who announced that the use of metal in making house- hold appliances and other con- sumer goods will be reduced by about 11/ per cent beginning January 1. "The outlook is that produc- tion of such civilian items as re- frigerators,hstoves, radios, televi- sion sets and home appliances of all kinds will be reduced," Fleisch- mann told a joint meeting of four Congressional committees. "But because generally ample supplies of these products are now on dealers' shelves the sup- ply should be sufficient to meet normal consumer needs." Because of the increasing need for metal in the defense produc- tion effort, manufacturers of washing machines, refrigerators, etc., already have been limited to 58 per cent of their pre-Korea use of steel, 54 per cent of copper and 46 per cent of aluminum. Stassen Defends Hinself on China * * * * * * * a+' Ailies Gain in Fierce Korean Battle Truce Talk -Daily-Malcolm Shatz THE CULPRIT-The aluminum sash, framing several idle wheelbarrows, was the cause of a juris- dictional dispute which halted work on three University construction projects yesterday. Carpenters, iron workers and sheet metal workers were involved in a squabble over which trade should get the Job of installing the sashes. * * * * * * * * * Strie Hats '' Costrutio - m.. By JERRY HELMAN Further construction work on three University projects halted yesterday when carpenters of AFL local 512 walked off their jobs and began picketing after a jurisdic- tional dispute. The walkout forced the lay-off of around 350 buildings trades workers and stopped the construc- tion of the Angell Hall addition, the University Hospital's Out-Pa- tient Clinic and the Kresge Medi- cal Research Center. * S: A TOKEN one-man picket line was placed at the entrance of the Angell Hall project, and although it was reported that members of the Iron Wt orkers union Crossed it, na work on the jobs was attempt- ed. No solution is in sight, as both labor and management have de- cided to wait for a ruling from Washington. A disagreement between car- penters and iron workers, stem- ming from the question of which union should install aluminum window sashes, was the cause of the strike. The construction com- panies gave the job to the iron workers and, when the carpenters union objected, the projects were closed, pending a settlement. *, * * THE CARPENTERS Union Lo- cal 512 claimed that the contrac- tors had no right to award the sash installation job arbitrarily, and that their action was contrary to provisions in the Taft-Hartley Act governing such jurisdictional disputes. They further maintained that, since the dispute has been one of 'long standing in the build- ings and construction industry, the contractors should have waited for a decision on it from the Joint Board for Jurisdiction- al Disputes, an AFL organization in Washington, D.C. A trade law which states that any work involving a plumb and a level is to be done by carpenters is the basis for Local 512's appeal. * *. *; CHARLES SEGAR, superinten- dent of the Angell Hall addition project, pointed out that jobs were usually assigned to particular trade groups according to past practices in the particular area. In the South Quad, the sashes were installed by the iron workers, so the job was given to them again. Company officials also claimed that they had asked the National Labor Relations Board for a rul- ing on the issue several months ago, but no decision was handed down. The contractors, however, again certified the dispute to the NLRB yesterday andThursday. There were also several reports circulating yesterday as to other factors pertaining to the dispute. One was that the contractors hired the iron workers because their scale wage was lower. Another in- Hopes Fade As Reds Balk Say U.S. Plan es Hit Neutral Zone E By 7The Associated Pres Three Allied divisions opened an attack today along a 22-mile front in Central Korea and gained up to a mile against feeble Chine Red resistance. The whole Korean front ex- ploded in the heaviest fighting since last May, with Allied units suffering reverses at points in the > East and West Friday. MEANWHILE as the fighjing raged an Allied team today inves- tigated a Comimunist charge that U.S. planes strafed the Panmun-. jom-Kaesong neutral zone, a charge that has jolted hopes fo resumption of the suspended Kor- ean truce talks. A radio message received here at noon (10 P.M. yesterday, EST) said only that the inves- tigating party for the United{ Nations Command was return- ing from Kaesong to Panmun- jom, six miles to the east. It gave no other details. Allied liaison officers made a preliminary investigation of the charge as soon as it was reported last night. The Reds asserted that U.S. planes in' a strafing attack killed a Korean boy. ON THE BATTLEFIELD to-; day's limited objective attack in the center was south of Kum-, song, a Red stronghold 29 miles; north of Parallel 38. The U.S. 24th division scored the mile advance.; -The other two divisions in the attack were the South Korean second and sixth. The heavy stab was made in the direction of Kumsong, which has been under air and artillery fire since last August. FIRST REPORTS on the pro- gress of the assault were frag- mentary. The attack struck an area where the Chinese Reds only a week ago had launched unusually heavy counterattacks. These were beaten off by South Koreans. As the Allies surged forwrd in the center, the Communists struck back in the East. AN EIGHTH Army communique announced that a Communist pla- toon had recaptured a dominating peak on Heartbreak Ridge, scene of more than a month of bloody conflict.t Yesterday's tragedy was the de- feat on the Western front of the First battalion of the Seventh Cavalry-Custer's historic regi- ment. The Seventh has been try- ing since Oct. 3 to take a bitterly defended series of hills, with the help of the Fifth and Eighth regi- ments, all of the U.S. First Cavalry Division. Wolverines Eye Victory Over Indiana D'Achille Set To Flood Air Lanes * By JIM PARKER Associate Sports Editor. Michigan will get anoth'er chance to break into the evasive win column when the Wolverines open the defense of their Big Ten title against Indiana at two o'- clock today in the Stadium. The Western Conference crown is an interesting topic of nonver- sation, but-the big thing on Coach Behnie Oosterbaan's mind will be whether his twice-beaten Wolver- ines can keep a five game victory streak over the Hoosiers intact. MICHIGAN'S big improvement in last week's losing cause against Stanford may mean that the Woe' verines will find themselves today and "explode" for their first vic- tory. But Indiana's Clyde Smith is in somewhat the same boat as C-sterbaan. His squad, generally rated as the best Indiana has had since the Hoosiers won the Big Ten title back in 1945, has bee anything but impressive in tO outings this year. The Hoosiers were squashed by Notre Dame, 48-6, two weeks ago and last week they eked out a 13-6 decision over Pittsburgh. Not much can be said about the Notre Dame HISTORIC MOMENT -- President Harlan H. Hatcher goes through the traditional "roll-'em-up" routine for the first time, as master of ceremonies Corky "Garterless'' Gibbon, Wolverine Club prexy, stands by. * * * Fair Sky, Fair Turnout In Store for Game Today ~~~~ ~~~~ ~~~ ~~ ~~ ~ ~~~ ~~~ ~~~- ~~~ B Iy CRtAWFORDI3 YOUNhG Fair weather and a 70 degree sun are in store for the 60,000 football fans who are expected to make the weekly pilgrimage to the Stadium for. the Michigan-Indiana tussle at 2 p.m. today. This will mark the second straight week of sub-normal crowds. Prior to last week, when NO EMPTIES: Beer Bottle Theft Takes Plce in .rb Approximately four cases of empty beer bottles were reported stolen from a University green- house Thursday night in the Nich- ols Arboretum. Four cases is only a drop in thes bucket to the "two or three" truck- loads taken out almost every Mon- day by University employees, de- clared Superintendent of the Ar- boretum C. L. Moody yesterday. "After a week end of good wea- ther it takes two men, a tractor and a good size wagon an entire day to clear away all the empty bottles and cans," Moody said. The robbery was apparently committed in order to enable the thief to claim the deposit on the bottles. Possibly the robber him- self had left them in the vicinity sometime previously. r Garg, 'Ensian, Daily Positions Filled; Hope Heads Generation Donald Hope, '52, 24-year-old English major from Grand Rapids, was named managing editor of Generation last night by the Board in Control of Student Pub- lications. The Board also appointed two night editors and three assistant night editors to the editorial staff of The Daily. THE NIGHT EDITORS are Al' Connable, '53, 19 years old, and Sidney Klaus, '53, 20 years old.. Connable, a political science ma- jor and member of Sphinx, hails from Kalamazoo. Klaus, a pre- medical student, is a native of Detroit. Assistant night editors are1 Jerry Helman, '54, eighteen years old from Detroit; Gayle Greene, '54, nineteen, from De- troit; and Harriet Tepperman, '54, eighteen years old from Windsor, Canada. The new business staff appoin- tees are: classified accounts man- ager: Inge Wolff, '52, from Chi- cago; assistant layout manager, Virginia Gillespie, '53, from De- troit; assistant circulation mana- ger, Bert Kwasman, '53, from Rochester, New York: local adver- tising assistant, Alvin Green, '53, fram Chica a tdisnav accounts I mnr os~r Tomnc T T. hnc ' t tn iuei, d iUJa games r. iaes,0rm eamvolved an alleged letter presented Chicago. to the contractors by the unions Meanwhile two students were involved in the dispute saying that named to the Board in Control of all parties had agreed to allow the Student Publications to fill out iron workers to install the sashes. the unexpired terms of Phillip I But the letter was apparently a Dawson and B. S. Brown, who had hoax, or at least it is no longer resigned. I recognized. The two new board members, No University action is pending both of whom were nosed out in on the strike, as labor problems last spring's board election are are taken care Of by the contrac- Ronald Seavoy, '53, and Al Fried- tor, according to Walter Roth, ;man, '52. Plant Superintendent. only 57,000 braved a void drizzle, it had been five years since at- tendance figures dipped this low.' * . a LAST NIGHT pep rally atten- dance took a turn f'r the better. as almost 1,000 students turned utj for the "Beat Indiana" gathering' The Marching Band, playing at half strength, even with Band Di- rector Jack Lee playing a trumipet in the last row, led the students down to a roaring bonfire on S. Ferry Field. Feature of the evening was the first address by President Harlan H. Hatcher to the stu- dent body. Sporting a blue gab- ardine jacket with, maize trim, which he claimed to have owned for nine years, President Hatch- er dismissed Michigan's first two defeats as "warm-up games," pointing out that the Big Ten campaign opened today. The crowd rose to their feet to applaud President Hatcher as he smounted the wooden speaker's platform. He appeared bewildered by the crescendo" of "Roll 'em utp" from the crowd, and first fumbled with his jacket. After a knowing whisper from master of ceremonies Corky Gibbon, Wolverine Club president, he finally rolled his pants cuffs up, revealing a snappy pair of garters. RIGHT ON the heels, of last week's deluge of cheerleaders, the' Stadium will this week be flooded with high school bands. This year's band show will dwarf the previous two Band Days. 95 bands will cover the field at halftime, as compared with the 37 that performed last Syear. A total of 6,104 musicians, drum majors and twirlers will be on display, almost three times the numerical strength of last year. The. joint bands, coming from all over Michigan, will pound out the."Anvil March," with 95 anvils echoing through the Stadium. Al- so highlighted will be "On Top of Old Smoky," "I've Been Working on the Railroad," "On the Mall," and as a grand climax, Sousa's im- mortal march, "The Stars and Stripes Forever." bus Ad Studets E lect Coun cilmn Starting Lineups INDIANA Pos. MICHIGAN Zuger.......LE.,.. Perry Russo ...,.... L,, ..,.. Johnson Thomas.....LG..... Kinyon Becket;......C O'Shaughn'sy Svyantek ....RG...... Wolter LRoth.,....RT...,, Stribe Luft........RE..... Pickard D'Achille ....QB......Topor Robertson , . I......Putich Ellis....H..RI. ... Bradford Gedman ,,..FB... Peterson game, but the score of the Pitt game doesn't tell the whole story about Indiana's latent power QUARTERBACK Lou D'Achille, the Hoosiers sensational passer, threw only four passes against the Panthers, and D'Achille is one of the best throwers the Cream and Crimson have ever had. The 168-pound junior holds the all-time Indiana record for passing with '76 completions in 163 tries last year. He also was second to Ohio State's great Vie Janowicz in the Big Ten. total See INDIANA SET, Page Student Draft Exam Passed By Majority WASHINGTON - (R-- Sixty- three per cent of the 339,000 stu- dents who took the Selective Serv- ice College Qualification Tests this year passed with scores of 70 or better. Announcing this yesterday, Se- lective Service Director Lewis B. Hershey reminded college students that another test will be held Dec. 13. Those who score 70 or better may have their military service deferred if their studies are found to be necessary to "the mainten- ance of the national health, safety or interest." The new series of tests, .er- shey said, will be given Dec. 13 and April 24, 1952, at more than 1;000 centers throughout the country. Applications for the Dec. 13 test must be postmarked not later than midnight Nov. 5. Those for 4 COAiL MIYiN1G 'AUTHOR JOINS UP:_._ Sigma Nu Pledges 50 Year Old Grad i By SID KLAUS Jock Wilson, Grad., 50-year-old author of "The Dark and The Damp," last night became a pledge of Sigma Nu fraternity, The former coal digger ex- plained he had once been a Sigma Nu pledge at a small Indiana col- lege. "But I had to quit school and start earning a living so II never had the chance to be in-; world wars) and the Los Angeles police force. In 1947 he decided to finish his college education. Some friends on the west coast recommended Mich- igan. So Wilson enrolled in the Uni- versity as a freshman. He grad- uated last year and he's now working for a master's degree in English, In the past three years he has won three Hopwood Awards. _ _ _: 9