MORNING HEADLINES WHRV MIDNIGHT LiYI rL .fit19Zrn Ask.- 0 0 Latest Deadline in the State CLOUDY, SNOW FLURRIES VOL. LXII, No. 35 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1951 SIX PAGES A I I * * * * U.S. Awaits Ike, Truman Conference 'Strictly Military Meeting Termed PARIS-(P)-Gen. Dwight D Eisenhower, taking off for th United States last night, said h will discuss "strictly military" af fairs with President Truman an other United States leaders. Eisenhower was asked by re porters if any political subjec would be discussed with Mr. Tru man and replied: "Not from my pointit won't." SINCE the White House an nounced Thursday that Eisen hower would visit Washington a the President's direction, there ha been speculation in both the Unit ed States and Europe that th trip might result in a statement o whether the General will bea candidate for president of the U. In Washington yesterday some persons suggested that Mr. Tru- man might introduce the politi- cal factor indirectly by asking Eisenhower if he planned to give up his post as Supreme Allied Commander in Europe. It was argued that if Eisenhowe: wants to step down in order t seek a presidential nomination i 1952, the president undoubtedly would like to know so he could ad vise other nations in the Nort- Atlantic Treaty Organization tha they should begin thinking abou someone else for the SHAPE com- mand. EISENHOWER told reporters al Orly Field here he would answer questions "only on military af- fairs." The General's four-engined Constellation took off at 2:12 Ann Arbor time in a drizzle of rain to fly the Atlantic. With him were Mrs. Eisenhower and a small personal staff. Mr. Truman summoned the General from Paris to Washington with the announced plan of con- ferring on matters affecting the Supreme Allied Command and the North Atlantic defense setup. Officials in a position to give an authoritative outline said yester- day Eisenhower will ask for some drastic steps to create a balanced fighting force in the shortest pos- sible time, say six months to a year. This would be sooner than had beenscontemplated under the long-range view. It is generally agreed that Eisen- hower has not been happy about the progress of the joint defense program. Officers Avert New Eastern 'Shipping Tieup NEW YORK-()-Ships' offi- cers erased a midnight strike deadline yesterday, sparing the snarled East Coast a grave new ship tieup Union president Charles F. May said negotiations will continue and there will be no officers' walkout until strike-bound East Coast ports return to normal.I THE PORTS OF New York and Boston already are tied up by a record 19-day, billion dollar wild- cat strike of AFL longshoremen. A vital defense cargo of nickel was turned away at New York during the day. A Government plea to unload it came too late. A walkout of the 12,000 East and Gulf Coast AFL ships' offi- cers might have frozen Ameri- can-flag vessels in ports from Maine to Texas. Thus far, the ships are free to come and go even in New York, although most of them can't unload any- thing but passengers. The issue hetween the shins' of- KcesongIssue 'Still Unresolved Allies, Red Negotiators In General Agreement on Cease-Fire Position Buffer zone talks in the Korean armistice negotiations narrowed down yesterday to one main issue-the status of Communist-held Kaesong, just south of Parallel 38. Except for minor adjustments, the Allies and Reds appeared gen- erally agreed on the remainder of a cease-fire line stretching in a lazy s-shape northeastward across Korea. * *' * * IN WASHINGTON, Gen J. L BurrrrI Cold Wave Hits City, Michigan Ann Arbor got a good preview of winter yesterday as the long- promised snow finally made an appearance a n d temperatures dropped to well below freezing all over the state. The hardest hit area was the copper country of the Upper Pe- ninsula where 15 inches of snow was recorded, leaving residents wondering if they were in for an- other hard winter. Last year a snowfall of 254 inches was record- ed in some parts of the area. HERE IN Ann Arbor the weath- er man predicted more of the sam- ple of winter that arrived yester- day. Snow flurries and a low of 20 degrees will make today a good one to enjoy the football game by a warm fireside. However, students who trav- eled to Illinois for the game will be out of luck If they didn't pre- pare for the cold wave. The low there is expected to be 15 de- grees with snow. awton Collins expressed belief an ?armistice would be achieved event- ually. The U.S. Army Chief of Staff returned from Korea Thurs- day. In Korea the Reds are insist- ing on keeping Kaesong, which straddles the historic invasion route toward Seoul-the rubbled Korean capital 34 miles to the southeast. An allied spokesman said the United Nations' demand that the Communists withdraw from Kae- song was firm but not final. * * * THE TENTH session of the buf- fer zone sub - committees was scheduled early today. The Communists have agreed tentatively to accept an Allied proposal for a two and one-half- mile-wide buffer zone generally following the present battlefront in central and eastern Korea. That plan provides for Allied withdrawal from about 200 square miles of territory -- to positions south of Kumsong in Central Kor- ea and south of Kosong on the east coast.bThe allies would hold the "heartbreak ridge" area, the hard- won string of peaks in east-central Korea. - * * * THE REDS were still refusing yesterday to withdraw from an equal amount of territory in West- ern Korea-the area of rolling hills dominated by the Kaesong road Sharp patrol skirmishes were re- ported along the snow-mantled front Friday. But it was so quiet in one sector that frontline ser- geants put their men through} close-order drill. Tally-Ho-hum! LONDON - (P) - A red fox sauntered down the main street in London's crowded working class district of East Ham yes- terday and not a single "yoicks" or "tally-ho" went up from the shoppers. Most of the people in that Cockney area know little of the famed old English sport of chas- ing such animals on horseback, wearing red coats and follow- ing the hounds. Most of them today mistook the fox for just another dog. Someone finally recognized the beast as he strolled into a butcher shop. Police killed the bushy tailed visitor from the country after the fox had re- sisted all efforts at capture. 1 Draft Calls For 60,000 In January Deferment Test Deadline Nears WASHINGTON-(P)- The De- fense Department issued a draft call yesterday for 59,650 men in January, ticketing 48,000 for the Army and 11,650 for the Marines. At the same time selective ser- vice announced college students have only until Monday to apply for permission to take the Decem- ber 13 draft deferment qualifica- tion test. Applications must be postmark- ed not later than midnight, No- vember 5. About 340,000 stu- dents took similar exams last spring and summer. * *, * THE DEFENSE Department's call was the largest since March, when 80,000 were inducted. It was also the largest draft for the Mar- ine Corps since it began to dip into the Selective Service manpow- er pool last August. The big January goal, the De- ifense Department explained, "compensates for the low call in December when inductions were suspended for the holiday period between Dec. 21, 1951, and Jan. 2, 1952." In December Selective Service plans to call 16,900. The call for last January was 80,000, the same as February and March. When the January call is com- pleted a total of 794,330 men will have entered the armed services through Selective Service since the system was re-established in Sep- tember, 1950. The Army will have received 746,300 men and the Marines 48,- 030. Neither the Navy nor the Air Corps have called for draftees so far, depending on volunteer en- listments. Court Hears Confessions r Of Teenagers Confessions of the three teen- agers on trial for the Sept. 16 mur- der of Nurse Pauline A. Campbell were read before a Circuit Court jury yesterday morning. Prosecutor Douglas K. Reading, over the objection of the defense, took the witnesschair to make known the wording of the state-. ments signed by the trio in East Lansing State Police Headquarters several hours after they were ar- rested for the fatal clubbing. A SEVEN-MAN, seven-woman jury listened intently to the writ- ten words of William L. Morey,' III, who wielded the murder wea- pon, while the defendant sobbed quietly. "I knew it was wrong but nobody seemed to care," the state- ment read. The two other youths also charged with first degree mur- der for aiding in the crime lis- tener to their confessions with heads bowed. They are Jacob M. Pell and David L. Royal. During the afternoon, the state put more than a dozen witnesses on the stand to corroborate the confessions and identify Morey's1 bloodstained clothing and the; heavy rubber mallet entered as people's evidence. The defense1 hammered away relentlessly at the witnesses but failed to shake them. Scores of spectators including high schoolers stood in line for hours to gain entrance to the chamber. Circuit Judge James R. Breakey, Starting.Lineups MICHIGAN Pos. ILLINOIS Perry .......LE.... Vernasco Johnson .....LT...... Ulrich Kinyon ......LG..... Studley OShaughn'ssy C..:... Sabino Wolter ......RG.... Gnidovic Stribe ......RT..... Jenkins Pickard .....RE....... Smith Topor ......EQB... O'Connell Putich.......LI..... Stevens Bradford ...:.RH......Karras Peterson .....FB..... W. Tate The game will be broadcast o v e r WWJ, WJR, WXYZ, WHRV, and WPAG at 2:15 p.m. British Send Trops into Suez by Air By The Associated Press A fresh British infantry brigade poured into the Suex Canal zone from Libya by airlift yesterday in the biggest RAF transport opera- tion since the Berlin blockade. Troops of the first division's guards brigade, in desert battle dress, landed at Fayid to reinforce the estimated 40,000 British sol- diers holding the Canal against Egyptian threats and harassment. ** * THE OPERATION adds perhaps 4,000 or 5,000 men to the garrisons and consolidates the first division in the zone. One of its three brigades was stationed there when Egypt can- celed her treaties with Britain Oct. 8 in a move to oust the Bri- tish; the second was moved in recently from Cyprus. In London, official sources said backstage moves are under way to settle the-British-Egyptian crisis by direct meetings in Paris. They said Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden will meet Egyptian foreign minister Mohamed Salah El Din Pasha *a4 EDEN is expected to talk first with Secretary of State Acheson and French Foreign Minister Rob- ert Schuman, who support the Bri- tish position. Foreign Minister Salah El Din is leaving for Paris today. After failing to rally immediate support of other Arab nations for his Arab isolationist policies, he is expected to get their foreign ministers to- gether during the Paris UN ses- sions for a final try. Truman Kills Education Bill WASHINGTON - (AP) - Presi- dent Truman yesterday killed a federal aid to education bill be- cause of a provision he said would require r a c i a l segregation in schools located on federal prop- erty in 17 states. Announcing that he would not sign the bill, Mr. Truman hit at a provision he interpreted as re- quiring the affected schools to conform to state laws requiring the segregation of white and Negro students. The bill was passed by Con- gress last month just before ad- journment and Mr. Truman's withholding of his signature meant that it died by a "pocket veto." The measure would have per- mitted areas burdened by defense activities to get money from the government beforehand in time to provide needed schools. -Daily-Roger Reinke GOODBYE!-Ruth Griggs, '52, turns and smiles at a photographer as she boards the Wolverine Special which left for Champaign, Illinois yesterday. The train carried with it a teeming load of University students anxious to see today's big game. Another picture, page 5. S* * NVCAA Reainms Firmn On 'M'-llinoisTBant NEW YORK-f/P)-The National Collegiate Athletic Association has no intention of switching its stand and permitting the Michigan- Illinois game at Champaign today to be telecast for Michigan viewers. That was emphasized yesterday by Ralph Furey, chairman of the NCAA television committee. Approval of the committee would be necessary for a last-minute lifting of the TV blackout in Michigan. In Detroit, traffic to a standstill by streets, but in Ann fall was too night to hazard. was slowed snow-glazed Arbor snow be a traffic Summerfield Hits Moody 'Whitewash' LANSING-(A')-Demanding a further investigation, Arthur E. Summerfield, the Michigan Re- publican National Committeeman, said today he was not satisfied with U.S. Senator Blair Moody's "whitewash" of federal job-selling charges. Moody told newsmen in Wash- ington Wednesday that an investi- gation by his staff showed no ir- regularities in a GOP charge that applicants for postmasterships had been asked for. campaign funds. "What can you expect when the accused investigates himself?" Summerfield asked. Furey's stand was revealed in World NSews Roundup By The Associated Press MOSCOW, Idaho-The Univer- sity of Idaho, with a student body of only 3,047 yesterday claimed a new collegiate record for blood do- nations-1,014 pints in a 3-day drive. WASHINGTON - House in- vestigators asked yesterday for a look at the income tax returns of Theron Lamar Caudle, as- sistant attorney general in *charge of prosecuting tax law violators. WASHINGTON - President Truman yesterday signed legisla- tion tightening the penalties for violations of narcotics and mari- juana laws. RENO, Nev.-Sen. Pat McCar- ran (D-Nev.) is in a "quite serious" condition at St. Mary's Hospital here, his physician said yesterday. m WASHINGTON - President Truman yesterday accused Con- gress of recklessly neglecting civilI defense "under the pretense of economy." The $74,945,000 Congress pro- vided for civil defense, he said in a statement, "is tragically insuf- ficient" compared with the $535,- 000,000 he originally requested. answer to a telegram from Rep. Ford (R-Mich.) urging that the game be telecast in Michigan and claiming it was "discriminatory" to telecast the game to 15 eastern cities but withhold it from Michi- gan. In answer, Furey told a. re- porter: "My only comment is that the telegram arrived at 3:15 p.m. yesterday and the schedule was published two months ago. It's perfectly obvious that nothing could be done at this late hour." The game is a sellout. WHETHER WWJ-TV of Detroit will be permitted to telecast the Michigan State-Notre Damesgame at East Lansing Nov. 10 will likely not be answered until Monday. MSC TV Request Stirs Controversy DETROIT-(P)-Application by Michigan State College for a com- mercial television license stirred up debate today at the fourth an- nual meeting of the Michigan As- sociation of Broadcasters. The association finally instruct- ed its president to name a three- man committee to study the ques- tion at length. Michigan State College present- ly operates radio station WKAR at East Lansing. In defense of the college position on television it was argued that there never has been any intention to use the college station as a com- petitor of commercial radio sta- tions. Conference Title Loomis In Balance Wolverines Eye O'Connell Passes By TED PAPES Daily Sports Editor CHAMPAIGN-Drawn by the magnetic propensity of the West- ern Conference game of the year, the football eyes of the Midwest turn toward this city today like millions of compass needles. At 2:30 p.m. (EST) Michigan's defending Big Ten and Rose Bowl Champion Wolverines will carry their blazing title hopes into bat- tle against Illinois, undefeated and untied in five games this season. UPWARDS OF 70,000 ticket holders will pack historic Memorial Stadium to its capacity. Rivalry between the two schools dates back to 1898 through 36 games of which Mi. chigan has won 25 while losing 11. None has ended in deadlock. Both teams confront each other with unblemished Conference rec- ords, Illinois having conquered powerful Wisconsin and Indiana, while the Wolverines were emerg- ing over. the Hoosiers, Iowa and Minnesota, all second division clubs. IN NON-LEAGUE action the Fighting Illini whipped UCLA, Syracuse and Washington, but Michigan fell prey to Michigan State and Stanford. Today's struggle brings togeth- er two of the finest offenses of their kind, Coach Ray Eliot's precision Illinois T-formation and Bennie Oosterbaan's time- proven single wing. Key to the Illinois attack is sophomore quarterback Tommy O'Connell who will pilot a speedy backfield made up of the scintil- lating Johnny Karras-Don Stevens halfback tandem and driving full- back Bill Tate. KARRAS, the Argo Express, is his team's leading scorer and ground gainer with 412 yards in 79 cracks at the line., His ten touch- downs to date are only three under the Illinois season record held jointly by Red Grange and Buddy Young. Scatback Stevens has done al- most as well and has a hightr average gain per carry. The Wolverines will rely on their familiar backfield of Ted Tppor at, quarter, Wes Bradford on the wing, Don Peterson at fullback and Captain Bill Putich in the tailback assignment. Peterson is the top Michigan ball carrier with 277 yards, while tiny Bradford has the best average, 6.3 yards per try. Bradford, incidentally, will re- main with the Wolverines for the rest of the season. He had been scheduled for induction into the armed forces last month, but a transfer of his papers from Troy, O., to Ann Arbor resulted in a de- la nd his Army life is now set to gin Nov. 29, five days after the season's finale with Ohio State. Illinois, primarily a running team, will concentrate its passing duties in O'Connell, while at least See OFFENSES, Page 3 Royal Couple Leaves U.S. WASHINGTON -- (A') - Eliza- beth and Philip left fo'r Canada yesterday, assured by President Truman that never before had the U.S. been visited by "such a won- derful young couple." The official good-byes were said in the White House Rose Garden, on a cold, misty day. But Mr. Tru- man beamed warmly as he told Britain's Princess Elizabeth and her handsome husband, the Duke of Edinburgh.: "We have many distinguished visitors here in this city, but never before have we had such a wndeg~rful voun~ ninzcule that so Ivy Leaguie' Attempts To Stern Subsidization By GAYLE TALBOT Associated Press Writer NEW YORK-(A)-It is possible' that a lot of the Nation's educa- tors who are faced with serious football trouble will be interested in knowing what the so-called ivy group of colleges in the East are doing to stem the spreading blight of subsidization. When one attends a game at Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Princeton, Yale, Brown or Pennsylvania, he will find printed in his program an article by Prof. Frederick G. Marcham of Cornell setting forth the activities of an "eligibility committee" com- posed of one representative from each of the member schools. committee) know the prominentI students of one another's colleges. They know the high school and prep school athletes who will be looking for colleges next fall. They stand ready to detect and to con- demn any act regarding the ad- mission of a student which lowers the academic standards of the group. "AT THE beginning of each COMPANY MANAGER SAYS:' Gas Cut Would Hurt Loc Jr., set trial resumption for 9 a.m. school year each ivy group foot- today. ball player fills out a card on which he gives in detail the rec- Union1halts ord of his pre-college career. At the fall meeting of the 'W a yer M essages' committee, each member brings & the cards of his college and lit- erally lays them on the table for NEW YORK-()-The Western f i o-f ,f .t..IUnion Telegraph Company yester- i A cut in Ann Arbor's natural gas supply, proposed in Washing- ton last week, would mean a com- plete shutdown of about 30 in- dustrial plants in this area, local gas company manager Charles R. Henderson said yesterday. The proposal, currently being plants were engaged in defense production. Gas supplies to house holders for heating and cooking will not be affected at all if the cut goes through, Henderson emphasized, because this gas is supplied by another pipeline company. al Industry ural gas by using it as boiler fuel, the Associated Press reported. The accusation was made by Panhandle Attorney Harry S. Littman at a Power Commission hearing. He also accused Michi- gan Consolidated Gas. Co. of selling "billions of cubic feet" I