Y Sfr C~ ~ 14Ia itii STUDY GROUP See Page 4 CLOUDY AND WARMER Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXII, No. 24, ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1951 EIGHT PAC EIGHT PM S Truce Talk Delay Seen Near Finsh Tanks Raid Kumsong Hub as Allied Infantrymen Assault Nearby Peaks Harem Scarem There were three indignant young coeds for every self- satisfied and smug male at a Harem party given by Univer- sity students yesterday. Arriving clad in scarves, bangles and oriental costume, the womefi discovered as they gazed at their rivals that the term harem really meant com- petition. For almost three strained hours the usual University ra- tio was reversed in favor of the men. The thought of this irN justice sent one of the women home to her house-mother two hours before curfew time. PANMUNJOM, Korea-(P)-Sc lution to the one issue blocki resumption of the Korean armis tice talks seemed imminent toda United Nations and Communi liaison officers failed to agree of the wording of an agreement C flights over the neutral zone a: recessed after an hour and a ha session last night. But an afternoon session toda; was scheduled at which both sid hoped to solve the matter. MEANWHILE, Allied infantry men assaulted two peaks befor Kumsong on the central Korea front in the wake of a spectacuh tank raid on the former Com munist bastion. AP correspondent Sam Sum merlin reported the United Na- Dock Strike Threatens N.Y. Port NEW YORK-(AP)-Wildcattin longshoremen, heady with thb growing success of their rebellio moved yesterday to close down th vast port of New York. But even as striking dockwork ers shouted approval of a genera strike, the federal government an nounced it would intervene in th five-day-old dispute. * s " FRANK BROWN, regional di- rector of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, named a special panel of governmen mediators "to look into and ge the correct facts concerning th waterfront dispute." The dock strikers 'poised a threat at the Queen Mary, giant Cunard liner due today. Police said they had learned the Queen would be picketed if any effort is made to unload her. f The strike caused the liner America to go to a Staten Island dock earlier in the week. * * * THREE THOUSAND wildcatting members of the Internationa Longshoremen's Association, AFL incensed at a contract recently negotiated for them, jammed a meeting hall yesterday. So far, they have tied up more Sthan 90 piers, shutting down most of Brooklyn's bustling wat- erfront, including the Brooklyn army base, and immobilizing some 55 ships. Without dissent they voted a general strike in the port "to pull out everybody." P resumably this would include midtown piers still working in Manhattan, and all of Staten Is- land the long Hudson River-New York Bay coastline of New Jersey. Senate Passes A, N ew Drug Bill WASHINGTON--(M)-A bill call- ing for stiffer fines and prison sen- tences for drug peddlers went to the White House yesterday after quick passage in the Senate. An" outgrowth of the old Senate. Crime Committee's reports, the measure would set penalties of two to five years in prison and fines up to $2,000 for first offenders against the narcotics and marijuana laws; five to ten years for second of- fenses, and 10 to 20 years for- sub- sequent offenses. It also declares that first offen- ders may not receive suspended sentences or be freed on probation. 'A - ' _-T! __Y' - tions foot soldiers met fierce re- sistance from the deeply-en- - trenched Communist defenders southeast of the smoking city. One of the peaks is the highest i in the sector. i Earlier reports said the back of the Red's Kumsong defense was not broken as the Communists , fought from three peaks Presum- ably it was two of those three that were under attack. Southwest of Kumsong, Allied units mopped up in hilly terrain a scant two miles from Kumsong, Ssituated 30 miles from Parallel 38. THE U.S. FIFTH Air Force re- ported American F-86 Sabrejets damaged six Communist MIG-15S in a dogfight raging between Sin- aniu and Pyongyang, the Korean Red capital. Thirty-four Sabrejets tangled with more than 50 of the Rus- sian-built Red 'jets in the first such dogfight since Monday, when nine MIGS were shot down. The Air Force said all the U.S. jets returned safely to base. B-29 Superforts flew through bad weather to bomb troop posi- tions and an airfield at Pyon- gyang. THE ALLIES patrolled in the West. On the rugged eastern front, tank patrols probed the en- emy defenses and infantrymen brushed off a Red counterattack 50 miles deep in North Korea. Eighth Army officers believe the Communists are badly hurt; that ceaseless air strikes at their sup- ply lines are isolating the Red troops in the line, and that the North Koreans and Chinese really want a truce. Wolverine Tickets To Remain on Sale Tickets for the Wolverine Spe- cial to Illinois will remain on sale at the Administration Building this week. The football special will leave for Champaign at 9:30 a.m. Fri- day, Nov. 2 and return Sunday evening, Nov. 4. In addition to offering inex- pensive transportation, the Wol- verine Club also offers to provide housing and tickets for the game. Tickets for the Cornell game will be available until November 6. Steady Rain Fails To Halt Victors Wolverine Defense, Bad Breaks Combine to Halt Hawkeye Offense By JIM PARKER Special to The Daily IOWA CITY-A drizzling rain made it a dreary homecoming for a record crowd of 53,050 fans here at Iowa stadium. But a driving Michigan team made it even drearier by outplaying the Hawkeyes, 21-0. Actually Iowa won the battle of statistics by a wide margin over the Wolverines. But bad breaks and a heads up defensive game by Michigan when the chips were down stymied Iowa completely. DESPITE AN edge of 310 yards total offense to Michigan's 227 anA 15 first downs to the Wolverine's eleven, the Hawkeyes were able to penetrate Michigan territory only four times and only three of these were real threats. But they all failed to materialize. Michigan, however, made the most of its opportunities. The Wolverines scored once in each of the first three quarters. only six plays were necessary for Michigan to score first on a 47-yard drive. In the second quarter eight plays went 54 yards for the second touchdown. Clark Tolie U.S. Envoy -To Vatican WASHINGTON -- ( ) -- Gen. Mark Clark, an Episcopalian whc liberated Rome from the Germans in World War II, was appointed by President Truman yesterday to be the United States ambassador tc the Vatican. The selection brought a prompt blast of criticism from many Pro- testant church leaders on the ground that the church should be kept separate from the state. * * * PRESIDENT Truman, in an- nouncing the appointment, said he acted in the interests of "diplo- macy and humanitarianism" and to coordinate the struggle against Communism. Clark disclosed that he had agreed to take the post several weeks ago after the President had called him to the White House. Mr. Truman told him, Clark said, at Fort Jackson, S.C., he con- sidered the position a "highly im- portant one." * * * THE APPOINTMENT was an- nounced a few hours before the Senate adjourned until next Jan- uary. It took no action on the nomination. An' interim appoint- ment would enable Clark to take the Vatican post in the meantime. The reaction of some of the Protestant leaders to the sending of an American ambassador to the Pope was sharp. As the protests mounted, Dr. Franklin Clark Fry, president of the United Lutheran Church in America, said in New York the appointment gave "preferential status to one church over all others." 1 s t ; k 1 E 1 -AP News Photo IOWA CITY-HE'S OFF-Michigan back, Ted Topor (arrow) trots through nest of players as he gains 25 yards in first quarter yesterday against Iowa. Michigan men are: guard, Pete Kinyon (68), guard, Jim Wolter (66), center, D. O'Shaughnessy (58). Iowa men are: end, Arnold Caplan (77). guard, Bill Kersten (74), back Duane Brandt (38), back, Don Riley (45), guard, Austin Turner (78). FALL CANDIDATES REVEA LEfl: Race To Open for SL Posts; -4,) Fullback Don Peterson, th( A roster of 45 candidates for 25 Student Legislature seats in the impending fall all-campus elec- tions was announced yesterday by SL. Competition for the seats will be considerably less keen than last TALENT PARADE: Varsity Night Tickets Available This Week Daily, To Air New Midnioht RadioSeries "This is 'Morning Headlines,' a five-minute summary of the latest local news direct from the editor- ial office of the Michigan Daily." With these words, The Daily will branch out into the realm of radio reporting tomorrow in the first in a regular series of mid- night news broadcasts. Aired di- rectly from the publications build- ing, the program will be one of the few air shots transmitted from a college newspaper. UNDER THE supervision of As- sociate Editor Bob Vaughn, '52, The Daily will take to the air promptly at midnight tomorrow with campus and city news plus late bulletins of national and world.events hustled in from the Associated Press teletype. The program will be written and broadcast by Daily editors and reporters with an emphasis on first-hand accounts of cam- pus affairs from the student newsmen who cover them. Morning Headlines will be transmitted to its listeners by means of a special telephone cable which will speed the broadcast to Ann Arbor station WHRV and on to the public. PRIMARILY aimed at giving Daily readers an inkling of break- fast-time reading eight hours be- forehand, Morning Headlines will also function as an addition to the reporting and editing training program now offered by The Daily, according to Vaughn. Although it will be initiated on a five-minute Monday through Friday basis, the show may be expanded to a fifteen-minute round-up of local, state, national and international news if it is suc- cessful. It will be followed by a regular WHRV disc-jockey pro- gram. Pasha Claims fall when 60 candidates scrambled for 27 seats. Last spring found 51 going after 25 seats. * * * FOR 'THE other vacant campus elective positions, there are five candidates for three seats on the Board in Control of Student Pub- lications, two would-be senior en- gineering class presidents and three fighting for the sophomore engineering presidency. For the SL candidates, an am- bitious training program gets underway with a meeting at 4 p.m. Tuesday, with further ses- sions scheduled for Wednesday, World News Roundup By The Associated Press JOPLIN, Mo.-Organization of the first Eisenhower-For-President Letter Club in President Truman's home state was announced yester- day. MONTREAL-Canada yesterday sent off the first of its ground fdrc- es for General Dwight Eisenhow- er's European Defense force, with 330 officers and men sailing aboard the S.S. Columbia. VANCOUVER, B.C.-A vision in red charmed Canada's third city yesterday. Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip arrived yesterday and drove through eight miles of crowded streets following their arrival. NEW ORLEANS - The Raft Lethargia tied up at the Avondale marine works last night, only eight miles from its destination- New Orleans. Thursday and the following Tuesday. Attendance at the meetings, to be held in the third floor of" the Union, are required of all SL can- didates. The first will deal with the scope of student government its place and functions on campus, the next two with committee re- ports and the final one with par- liamentary 'procedure and the Hare system. Of the 25 candidates, the first 21 elected under the complicated Hare system will have full-year terms, while the last four will only have a half-year in office. NAMES OF SL CANDIDATES: Bob Baker, Phil Borad, Paula Bargeman, Phil Berry, Keith Beers, Bert Braun, John Buck, Valerie Cowen, Shirley Cox, Ken Cutler, Karen Fagerburg, Lee Fib- er, Sally Fish, Joan Fried, Ruedi Gingrass, Gerald Gleich, Bob Goodwin, Ellie Haar, Dick Hawley, Fred Harwitz, and Jack Des Jar- dms Lee Johnson, Sam Kriegman, Lian Kuncz, Louis Mazzanella, Mike McNerney, John Messer, C. A. Mitts, Alan Morgan, Gene Mossner, Audrey Murphy, John Ostrominski, Bill Patterson, Wally Pearson, Bob Perry, Tom Ricketts, Art Rosenbaum, Jim Snead, Bob Steinberg, Marvin Stevens, JoeWhite, Barb Wild- man, Rog Wilkins, Charles Wil- liams, and Barb Young. BOARD IN CONTROL OF STU- DENT PUBLICATIONS: Dave Be- lin, Al Blumrosen, James L. Brown, Al Friedman and William McIn- tyre. SENIOR ENGINEERING PRES- IDENT: Ronald Modlin and Har- vey Newmann. SOPHOMORE ENGINEERING PRESIDENT: Chuck Clarke, Bob Kuenz and Howard Nemerowski. Huge Money Bills Passed B Congress, 82nd Session. Comes to Halt WASHINGTON-VP)-The 82nd Congress quit for the year last night, voting $13,133,150,952 in ap- propriations as its swan song. It, had been in session since last Jan. 3, barring recesses, and will meet again next Jan. 8. IN THE sometimes busy and sometimes idle final day, Congress completed action on: a $7,328,- 903,976 bill to finance military and economic aida for non-Com- munist nations, a $4,128,000,000 military construction bill and a $1,676,246,976 supplemental bill to help run the economic contrels agencies and various defense ac- tivities: In the meantime, President Truman signed the $5,691,000,- 000 tax increase bill that Con- gress sent him Friday, but said it wasn't enough. He said he would a'k Congress in January to come up with better tax leg- islation. . Most congressmen have been figuring that this was a $91,000,- 000,000 session of Congress, the freest spending of any year when the country was not formally at war. Sen. Ferguson (R-Mich.) came up yesterday, however, with an estimate of $97,678,326,891. Ferguson told the Senate that the smaller estimate did not include more than $6,000,000,000 of "fixed" appropriations, mostly interest on the public debt. This kind of heavy appropria- tions has got to stop, Ferguson said. "The Government can not spend money as fast as we are ap- propriating it," he said. Wolverine's biggest offensive gun, with 85 yards gained in 24 tries, rushing and two of three passes completed for .72 yards, sparked the methodical Michigan machine to its two first half touchdowns, scoring the second Himself. THE RACINE, Wisc. senior hit Lowell Perry on a pass covering 36 yards to the Iowa three-yard line setting up the first touch- down and'unleashed anotheru3ยง- yard heave to Fred Pickard on the Hawkeye 18 to pave the way for the second score. In the second half, with thf rain falling at a heavy clip, the Wolverines chose to play a con- servative game, waiting. for Iowa miscues. Just a few minutes before the end of the third quarter the stra- tegy paid off when end Tim Green recovered an Iowa fumble on the Hawk's 21. Peterson drove through the center of Iowa's line on the next play for the final touchdown of the day. THE WHOLE game boiled down to the fact that Michigan the de- fending Big Ten champion, ktad the scoring punch when it countgl most. The Wolverines made their own breaks and successfully capi- talized on them. The result was the widest margin of victory ever recorded in the series between the two schools since Michigan ruined Iowa, 107-0, in 1902. y Iowa on the other hand couldn't do anything right when, a possible - six points was staring it in the face. With fullback Bill Reichards personally accounting for more rushing (152 yards in 25 carries) than the whole Michigan ground attack combined, the Hawkeyes moved like champions until they got into Michigan territory. * * e, THE FIRST TIME they had a scoring drive going, Iowa moved (See 'WOLVERINES', Page 6) Atom Tests Sc heduled For Today LAS VEGAS, Nev.-(P)-Atomic test directors returned yesterday to the Yucca Flat site to make fin- al preparations for a nuclear blast set for early today. The weather forecast indicated clear and calm conditions, favor- able for the first explosion in the Atomic Energy Commission's new- est test series. ALL ELECTRICAL circuits in the complex detonating mechan- ism, were carefully rechecked to prevent a recurrence of Friday morning's dud. Dr. Alvin C. Graves and his scientists don't want that empty feeling again. The first blast will be un- leashed from the top of a 100- F .. ,w.,.. By ROBERTA MacGREGOR Tickets are now on sale for the trational Varsity Night program which will usher in Homecoming weekend at 8:15 p.m. Friday in Hill Auditorium. The tickets may be purchased at Harris Hall, the League, the Un- ion, local music stores and at 1021 Administration Bldg. as well as from any band member. JOE GENTILE and Ralph Bin- gay, a comic team for nineteen years, will appear again in a spot- light role as they co-emcee with Paul "Dizzy" Trout and add a little clowning to the show. Accompanying Gentile and Bingay from WJBK-TV will be vocalist Robert Murphy. Another professional act includ- ed in the show will be that of Tommy Roberts. A Michigan alum- nus of the class of 1904, Roberts will narrate the story of the "Lit- band numbers will 'be the "Mich- igan Rhapsody." Included in the six . student acts will be songs by the Vaugh- an House Trio, organized when Vaughan House was still a men's dormitory. The trio, composed of Stanley Challis, William Brehm and Donald Srull will harmonize on such numbers as "Michigan Medley" and "Old MacDonald." Phyllis, Seput,dConwell Carring- ton, Edward Skidmore and Robert Elliot will present, in dance style, "You Came a Long Way from St. Louis" and "Daddy-O." A GERSHWIN medley will be performed by Joan Robinson who "throat" whistles and sings with her own piano accompaniment. Another student act featured on the show will be the Michi- gan Singers, under the direction of Maynard Klein, singing ex- PREMIERING NEW SYMPHONY: Munch To Conduct at Hill Once again the Boston Sym- phony under Charles Munch will spark both the Choral Union Ser- ies and the Extra Concert Series when it appears here at 8:30 p.m. today and tomorrow at Hill Audi- torium. Highlight of the Sunday night performance will be "Symphony T%.Tt 5"hib Art~hnr Nnn tr ,,i,'h cert will be "Symphony No. 4 xn D minor, Op. 120," by Schumann. This symphony, composed in 19- 41, is a noteable example of symphonic Schumann abandon- ing customary formal procedure to let his romantic imagination take hold. Also in the Monday program will. round of guest engagements that have made him a world traveler. During the war period he suv- ceeded Philippe Gaubert as con- ductor of the Paris Conservatory Orchestra. Before succeeding Serge Koussevitzky as regular conductor of the Boston Symphony Orches- tra in 1948, Munch had made a I