Ci L Sir na I~ait6j U V ,, EDITOR'S NOTE See Page 3 Latest Deadline in the State SHOWERS VOL. LXII, No. 43 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1951 SIX PAGES I I I AI III I Streamliners Crash in Wyoming; Report 20 Dead * * * * * * J. -.Daily=Jack Bergstrom HIT 'EM HIGH-And hit 'em low too. That seems to be the idea with Wolverines Merritt Green (left) and Ted Topor (right) as they combine talents to stop an unidentified Cornell runner. Number 67 is Michigan guard Bob Timm. , ADDRESSES UN: Eden Asks En Of Name-Calling PARIS-()-British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden yesterday appealed for a truce to "name calling and angry words" in the United Nations. He urged the Russians to quit laughing and study seriously the western big three's arms census and limitation plan as a new start on the road to peace. THE ANSWER to what many delegates regarded as a conciliatory approach by Eden in his first UN speech since the days of the San Francisco founding conference in 1945 was not long coming.. Polis delegate Stefan Wierblowski fired back in the Assembly that the arms proposals laid down by Secretary of State Dean Acheson and backed firmly by Eden are "an- Scores Hurt; Snow Delays Rescue Job Train Rammed At SignalStop EVANSTON, WYO. - (A)-Two Eastbound streamlined passenger trains crashed in a driving snow- storm yesterday, piling up wreck- age in a giant junk heap. Union Pacific authorities said 20 were known dead and six miss- ing. Eight were seriously hurt and hospitalized. Scores more-some sources, estimated more than a hundred-were treated for minor injuries. * * * THE CRASH occurred at Wyuta, on the Wyoming-Utah border sev- en miles west of Evanston, about 80 miles northeast of Salt Lake City. The Union Pacific's City of Los Angeles halted for a block signal. It was bashed in from the rear by the City of San Francisco. The three-unit diesel power plant of the second train crushed five cars of the halted train. Cars of the second train left the tracks in a zigzag fash- ion, but remained upright. - Show on the ground at the wreck scene averaged a foot deep, but was drifted deeper in places. A creek ran nearby but bulldozers quickly filled it in to make rescue work easier. Snow eased up during the after- noon hours but began again at nightfall. Workmen rigged flood- lights. The temperature was be- low freezing. * * * STANDING ON A passing track as the streamliners crashed was a freight train. Several of its cars were pushed off the track by the jacknifing cars of the City of San Francisco. Some of the freight cars tipped over. Ambulances were summoned from communities as far away as Salt Lake City. One from Hill Air Force Base near Ogden, Utah, cracked up 30 miles from the wreck scene. It smashed into a rock cliff alongside the highway but there were no in- juries. Bodies were brought to an im- provised morgue at the Evanston city hall. Most seriously injured were brought to the Uinta County Memorial Hospital here. Other injured went to the American Le- gion Hall. For hours, officials made no ef- fort to identify the dead and in- jured. They waited until as many as possible of the injured were cared for. - Curious Brave Bad Weather To See Wreck EVANSTON, Wyo.--()-Curi- ous persons braved a snowstorm and hazardous driving conditions for a look at the wreckage of two' Union Pacific streamlined passen- ger trains which smashed up three miles west of here yesterday. U. S. Highway 30-South paral- lels Union Pacific tracks at the site. Literally hundreds of per- sons tramped the 200 feet from the roadway to the wreck scene. SEVERAL HOURS after the smashup, cars were parked bump- er to bumper for a mile either way from the scene. Doctors on their way home from a west coast medical con- vention assisted local physicians today in treating the scores of injured in a Union Pacific train wreck. Alex Henetz of Cheyenne, Wyo., a postal clerk, said he was riding Allied Security Expect Verdict Today in Trial Of 3 Youths The fate of three youths charged by the state with murder in the first degree is expected to be deter- mined today. With testimony completed in the trial of William L. Morey, III, Jacob Max Pell and David L. Royal, Circuit Judge James R. Breakey, Jr., said yesterday he ex- pects pre-verdict jury delibera- tions to begin early this afternoon. MOREY has been accused of fatally clubbing Nurse Pauline A. Campbell Sept. 16, Pell and Royal with aiding in the brutal robbery- slaying. The trial will resume at 9:30 a.m. today with Prosecutor Doug- las K. Reading and the three de- fense attornies expected to finish their summations by noon. Judge Breakey will then charge the jury and deliberations will begin. I Commumsts Charge New Violations other maneuver . . . masqueraded in a cloak of peace initiative." Soviet Foreign Minister An- drei Y. Vishinsky also served notice he will speak at the end of the debate, perhaps late this week, to answer Eden, Acheson and others. Eden said Vishinsky's "cataract of abuse" against the big three proposals "saddened me, as I think it must have saddened and discouraged the millions through- out the world who read or heard of it." "IN ALL our actions we seek peace," he said, speaking firmly while Vishinsky who has said he could not read the Western pro- posal without laughing, set back and listened. "Yet our proposals are laughed to scorn. I must admit that I do not understand or accept such methods. I do not believe-or ask you to believe-that in any dispute one party is one hundred per cent a black villain, and the other one hundred per cent snow white. That's against the law of aver- ages." Anglo-U.S. ! Conference TopicsSet LONDON--()-Prime Minister Churchill indicated yesterday by his choice of three ministers as traveling companions that he wants to talk about atomic secrets, Britain's feeble economy and a meeting with Stalin when he visits President Truman early in Janu- ary. A wide range of Anglo-Ameri- can foreign policies and western strategy will enter into the talks, it was indicated in a 48-word statement from No. 10 Downing Street. . * * * IT SAID Foreign Secretary An- thony Eden; Lord Ismay, Secre- tary for Commonwealth Relations, and Paymaster General L o r d Cherwell would go with Churchill to Washington "in the first days of January." Lord Cherwell long has been a personal advisor to Churchill on scientific matters and is in charge of- Britain's Atomic En- ergy program. Churchill is eager to restore the war-tihe Brtish- American partnership In atomic development. He is reported to have ordered Cherwell to test Britain's first bomb within six months if pos- sible in order to restore sinking British prestiege among many smaller countries of the world. He likely will take steps to reassure Americans of Britain's security ar- rangements in a bid for greater sharing of atomic secrets. Lord Ismay was Churchill's right-hand man during the war in drawing together the many strands of military and strategic policy. Churchill is expected to seek a closer Anglo-American partner- ship within the sprawling Atlantic Alliance. Russia Urged To Keep Word About Austria WASHINGTON - (A) -- The State Department called on Soviet Russia yesterday to fulfill its war- time pledge of freedom and inde- pendence for Austria. In recognition of Austria "as a member of the community of na- tions," the United States also raised its minister to Vienna to the rank of ambassador. France and Great Britain have followed suit. WHEN Walter J. Donnelly be- comes United States Ambassador and High Commissioner, Austria's representative in Washington, Dr. Ludwig Klein-Waechter, will also assume ambassadorial status. Under Secretary of State James E. Webb assured Klein-Waechter that this government will continue its efforts to conclude an Austrian peace treaty and arrange for the withdrawal of all occupation forces. "It is the constant hope of this government," Webb said in a note to Klein-Waechter, "that Austria's full freedomrand independence may be restored as provided in the Moscow declaration." Austria's President, Theodor Koerner appealed to the Big Four Sunday to end the occupation. I'Burma Surgeon' I Verdict ReversedI MANILA - () - Fighting be- tween the Philippines Army and Communist Huks flared north of Manila today as die-hard Reds made fresh attempts to disrupt to- day's Philippine elections. There are some 4,000,000 regis- tered voters throughout the Is- land. Most are expected to go to the polls under the protection of more than 66,000 Philippines army regulars and reservists. Thousands of volunteer non-partisan poll watchers also were on hand. NATIONAL DEFENSE Secre- tary Ramon Magsaysay pledged the aid of the Army to prevent intimidation of voters by armed gangs, a common practice in the past. The critical off-year election will decide the seats of nine senators-at-large, 46 provincial governors and all city mayors and councilmen. The campaign since mid-Sep-i tember has been splattered by vio- lence both by the Communist-led Huks and gun-toting followers of rival candidates. The death toll: alone stands at 96 persons, while others including poll watchers and. election officials have been ab- ducted and injured. Early yesterday at Santa Ana, less than 30 miles north of Man- ila, a woman and a soldier were killed and four soldiers and four children wounded by Huks. Seven Huks were reported slain by a defending force of police and a small army unit before the rebels retreated. The Huks burned the Santa Ana City Hall including 30 ballot boxes and registration lists. Army reinforcements and some 300 Huks still battled around Mt. Ara-yat, 12 milts northwest of Santa Ana, late yesterday. -Daily-Mike Scherer PARTISANS SHOUT, WAVE TORCHES FOR THEIR STUDENT LEGISLATURE CANDIDATE K * * * * Huks Fight ld-Time Political a As Filinos Features Torches Band Go to Polls By MIKE SCHERER Th d nn ld rJr~rm ii dla of Abe incnln brtiefl return d to t I ncgood ou ca paignsa ys rsji o1 zAn n y r. e L ou uw Ann Arbor last night. A torchlight political rally, featuring band, posters, and all thae trimmings, was staged for a Student Legislature candidate at 9 p.m. yesterday on the corner of Hill and Oxford streets. * * * * CAMPAIGN SPEECHES, interspersed with music from the Fiji Marching Band, started off the rah-rah program. The racket man- -' aged to attract the Ann Arbor Ra yburn Asks South To Stay Loyal to Party HOT SPRINGS, Ark. - (AP) - House Speaker Sam Rayburn of Texas pleaded with southern gov- ernors last night to remain loyal to the Democratic nominee in next year's presidential election-or see the South's position crumble in Congress. The Texan fired a hard-hitting broadside against states righters who have been talking of revolt if Mr. Truman is the party's presi- dential nominee. "I'm going to support the Demo- cratic nominee whoever he is," Rayburn declared. He said a southern revolt would only elect a Republican president and could not elect an independent candidate. Then he added: "and every southern man who holds a re- sponsible place in Congress will lose his position." Rayburn added: "I don't have great patience with those people who go around trying to create a lack of faith in the honesty, in- tegrity and efficiency of our legis- lative and executive branches of government in days like these." Rayburn first outlined the theme of his address at a news conference shortly before he car- ried his plea to the Southern Gov- ernors Conference. police, but the local gendarmes didn't interfere. Pictures were taken by a pho- tographer from McCall's maga- zine, to be used in conjunction with a photo feature on young voters of the United States. According to Henry Ehrlich,{ managing editor of the magazine, the political rally photos taken yesterday will be used to illustrate the experience American youth get working in campus politics. Ehrlich, who is directing pro- duction of the feature, said it will comprise four or five pages in an early spring issue of the magazine. BAD TYDINGS: Clever Faker, Joe Declares MILWAUKEE -(IP)- Senator Joseph McCarthy (R-Wis.) said yesterday former Senator Millard E. Tydings is a "clever little faker" for offering a reward for indict- ments of the Communists Mc- Carthy alleges have worked in the State Department. In a "Dear Joe" letter to Mc- Carthy Sunday, the Maryland Democrat said he was doubling his reward offer to $10,000 for anyone obtaining indictments against Mc- Carthy's "205 or 57" Communists. "Dear Millard: You clever little faker," McCarthy's reply letter said. Flights Over Panmunjom Slow Truce UN Planes Blast Red Fortifications By The Associated Press Allied and Red negotiators re- newed their cease-fire talks yes- terday in a tense atmosphere whipped up by new Communist charges of security violations, as Allied warplanes roared out in the clearing skies, to pound Com- munist transport and new air- fields last night. The implied threat of a new snarl in the peace negotiations cast its- shadow over the circus tent at Panmnunjom where the joint subcommittee met at 9 p.m. yesterday. THE CHINESE Communist ra- dio at Peiping broadcast' a new charge that UN warplanes flew over the Panmunjom area Sunday and yesterday. Both sides agreed that such flights should be pro- hibited except under "weather or technical conditions beyond co- trol ." In Toyko, Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway warned that the out- come' of the Panmunjom talks can not "be accurately foretold." Tokyo Headquarters of the Al- lied Commander in Chief released Ridgway's statement a few hours before the 20th meeting of sub- committee members was scheduled to open at Panmunjom. Ridgway's statement declared it would also be difficult to predict what would follow the "success or failure of these discussions." His message was sent to a meeting of the National Association of Radio News Directors in Chicago. A semi-official Communist com- mentary, broadcast by the Peiping radio, lashed at the United Nations Command for failing to accept a Communist proposal for drawing a buffer zone across Korea im- mediately. ON THE battle front the Fifth Air Force claimed at least ten locomotives destroyed and three damaged. Warships bombarded the Red Korean coasts and shelled Won- san port for the 270th straight day. On the ground, Allied units yes- terday seized two hills on the cen- tral front in a. three-quarters mile advance forging during an all-day drizzle. All-weather B-29 superforts fly- ing from Okinawa and Japan also hit the new fields at Saamcham and Namsi. Peron Absent After victory BUENOS AIRES --(R)- Presi- dent Juan D. Peron, jubilant over his reelection to a six-year term, was still on leave of absence from his office yesterday and there was no official indication when he would return. With 75 per cent of' the vote counted from Sunday's national election, the presidential race showed: Peron 3,341,333; Ricardo Balbin, Radical 1,756,960. None of the other six parties' presidential candidates was close. When he vacated his office Nov. 1 with the avowed intention of freeing the voters from any pres- sure, Peron said he would be back the day after election. I World News Roundup I I 1' By The Associated Press ANKARA, Turkey-Turkey told Russia last night that an exam- ination of her own conscience should be enough to provide a reason for Turkey's joining the North Atlantic Defense Pact. This was contained in a Turkish reply to a Russian note of . Nov. 4 protesting Turkey's adherence to the Western Defense Com- munity. Russia had complained that the U.S.S.R. considered Turkey's action one fo hostility and aggression. * * * - ii LONDON-Prime Minister Win- NORFOLK, Va.-The 28th In- ston Churchill's Conservative Gov- fantry Division, last of six commit- ermnent last night won its first ted to Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhow- vote of confidence in the new house er's Atlantic Pact Forces, began z of commons by a 39-vote margin. sailing yesterday for Europe. MOSCOW-The Soviets yesterday told Norway that her ad- herence to the North Atlantic Alliance will seriously damage Russo-Norwegian relations and that the Norwegians must assume full responsibility for such a policy. A Russian note was handed by Deputy Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko to Norwegian Charge D'affaires Lars Jorstad. WILLIAMS TO SPEAK: Party TodayTo Fete 21-Year-Olds By ALICE BOGDONOFF Reaching the age of 21 usually means a free mug of beer to Uni- -;i - - - - + In addition to a few brief words on the importance of the ballot, the governor and state auditor McCALLS, a national magazine, will havephotographers at the party to take pictures in prepara- I h ยข S v _ x