Y SirF :4aii4i~ I,1 SOUTHERN REVOLT See Page 2 Latest Deadline in the State CLOUDY, SNOW FLURRIES VOL. LXII, No. 47 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1951 FOUR PAGES I --I TODAY'S LINEUPS Title Hopes Still A live: r No. 19 24 27 46 53 66 68 75 76 85 89 MICHIGAN NAME Ht. Wes Bradford (RH) ..5'6". Bill Putich (L H) . ,.. .5'9". Ted Topor (QB) .....6'1 ". Don Peterson (FB) ..5'11'. R. O'Shaughn'sy (C) 5'11". Wt. ...147 S. ..170 ...215 ...175 ...190 ...190 . .. 190 ...200 ...227 . ..178 ...190 NORTHWESTERN No. 12 21 33 41 58 61 69 74 85 87 98 NAME Walter Jones (RH) Bob Burson (QB) . Charles Hren (FB) Dick Alban (LH) . Bob Hunt (C) .... Ray Evans (LG) Ralph Jecha (RG) . Ray Huizinga (LT) Bill Kuehl (LE) .. Ht. ..6'0".. .. 6'0". . .5'10".. ...6'0".. ..5'11".. ...5'9".. . . 6'2". . ...6'5''. . . .6'2". . Wt. ..185 ...175 ..187 ...180 ..208 ..185 . .242 ..227 ...201 . .196 ...210 I S FOR CO U EB (K Jim Wolter (RG) Peter Kinyon (LG) Ralph Stribe (RT) Tom Johnson (LT) Lowell Perry (LE) Fred Pickard (RE) . 5'0 ''. .6511".. .. .6'2''. S..6'0''. . . 6'1".2 ".. .6'2".. I TOO YYS CO TEST Norman Kragseth (RE) 6'1". John Young (RT) . . . .6'0". . . Michigan reserves: 14-Oldham; 15-Howell; 16-Witherspoon; 18-Hickey. 23-McDonald; 26-Billings; 28-Zanfagna. 33-Hurley; 35-Rescorla; 37-Tinkhom 38- Balzhiser; 39-LeClaire. 41-Eaddy; 44-Kress; 49-Evans. 51-Popp; 54-Mechoiri; 55-Morlock; 56- Drake; 57-Ludwig; 59-Bowers. 60-Wagner; 61-Dugger; 63-Matheson; 64 -Beison; 65-Kelsey; 67--Timm; 69-Willijams, 70-Zotkoff; 71-Geyer; 72-Bolog; 73- Bartholomew; 74-Rahrig; 77-Walker; 78- Pederson; 79-Bennett. 80-Osoterman; 81-Topp; 82-Dingman; 83 -Stanford; 84-Green; 86-Knutson; 87- Schlicht; 88--Veselenak. 90-Dutter; 91-Ray; 96-Pella. Northwestern reserves: 11--Johnson; 15-Lau- ter; 16-O'Brien; 17-Meyer. 22-Thomas; 24-Rondou; 25--Frank; 26-- Maurer; 27-Springer; 28-Weber; 29-Vanek. 30-Ewald; 31-Iverson; 32-Proska; 35- Hansen; 37-Athan; 38-Paulik; 39-Skemp. 42-Hilt; 43-Tote; 45-Israels; 47-Ben- nett; 49-Hren. 50-Riley; 51-Searcy; 53-Middletown; 54 -Carlini; 56-Damore; 57-Haffner; 59-De- Lava I.- 60-King; 62-Armanetti; 63-Kachaturoff; 64-Baumgartner; 65-Belejack; 66-MacRae; 67-McCormick; 68-McKay. 70-Maurer 71-Soldwedei; 72-Roche; 73-. Duffill; 75-Perrin; 76-Howe; 77-Walker; 78 -Williams; 79-Dyer. 81-Cochron; 83-Davis; 84-Crawford; 86 --Steeb; 88-Collier; 89-Rich. 90-Demyan; 91-Carse; 93-Higley; 97- Roche; 99-Peterson. Allies Express New Hopes In Truce Talk Stalemate MUNSAN-(A)-An Allied spokesman expressed fresh oF,"imism yesterday over the outcome of the stalled talks on a Korean cease-fire line, but there still was no settlement in sight. Another meeting-the 24th on the buffer zone issue since renewal of the talks-was slated for 9 p.m. yesterday at Panmunjom. A UN command communique said yesterday's 5-hour, 15-minute session at Panmunjom ended "without attaining any tangible results." However, the acting spokesman, Lt. Col. Howard S. Levie, told correspondents he felt that they were "a lot closer today" than a month ago or a week ago. * * * * MEANWHILE, in Washington, a new formula designed to get Korean truce talks off dead center has been drafted here, officials k disclosd last night. Indications are that it has already been forwarded to Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, UN commander, for use as he sees fit in today's negotiations with the Communists. The heart of the proposal is reported to be that the UN will agree t conditionally to the drawing of a cease-fire line along the present battle line. This cease-fire would become effective when all terms " of an armistice have been agreed f upon. W arren Calls The specified condition is that the agreement of the line would be good only for a limited period of time-perhaps about 30 days. Dur- SDur- ing that period the fighting would ~at orm continue an d the negotiators would be committed to see whether they could solve the remaining SAN DIEGO -(P)- Republican highly controversial armistice Governor Earl Warren opened his problems which they have not yet campaigi) for the Republican talked about. A _-- - - ak d a o t A trocities Confirmed By Ridgway TOKYO-(YP)-Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway tonight confirmed the authenticity of a report that the Reds had slaughtered 5,500 United States war prisoners in Korea. The general's statement came shortly after the Peiping radio had hotly denied that the Reds had taken part in any atrocities. They charged in turn that thousands of Communist prisoners had been "massacred." EARLIER, the author of the Al- lied charge, Col. James M. Hlanley, was questioned by an investigator for Ridgway's United Nations Command headquarters in Pusan. Then Hanley flew here, presum- ably for further questioning. Manley stuck to his figures, despite skepticism in some of- ficial Washington and Tokyo quarters and the implied threat that he might lose his job. While some officials thought there might have been some dupli- cation in Hanley's figures, his story was being seat out to the scldiers ir. the front line just as he said it should be. In his report today the general expressed regret that Hanley's evi- dence had not been coordinated before it was released. He said that it had caused un- necessary anguish among relatives of soldiers in Korea, saying, that all deaths had been reported to next of kin regardless of how death occurred. Frontline combat troops heard the report via the Armed Forces radio yesterday-two days after it had been transmitted throughout the free world. It seemed to take Ridgway's headquarters and De- fense Department officials in Washington by surprise. Hanley said he issued the figure so that combat troops wouldn't be fooled by Red propaganda assurances of good treatment of prisoners. Ridgway said the information contained in Hanley's statement "had of course no connection whatever with the current armis- tice negotiations." Russia Calls For Atomic Weapon Ban Acheson Rejects USSR Conditions PARIS-(iP)-Russia's Andrei Y. Vishinsky demanded yesterday an immediate ban on atomic weapons and a one-third cut in the armed forces of the five great powers as an urgent prelude to world dis- armament. Secretary of State Acheson promptly rejected these demands and declared the intention of the United States, Britain and France to persevere with "the serious business of trying to get agree- ment on genuine steps toward dis- armament." Acheson said he was glad to see Vishinsky had decided to stop laughing at the three-power west- ern arms proposals, but said that Vishinsky still is not ready for ac- tion on real reduction of arma- ments. U.S. DELEGATE Warren R. Austin tagged Vishinsky's ideas "old claims, old misrepresenta- tions, old charges and old propos- Sals. Vishinsky spoke to the UN General Assembly at a session in which French Foreign Minister Robert Schuman urged the Rus- sians to live in mutual trust with the rest of the world and UN Secretary General Trygve Lie called for the foreign ministers here to start genuine negotia- tions on a settlement of East- West problems. The Russian was in his usual form, sometimes shouting and sometimes speaking in a moderate tone. Western spokesmen speculated that Moscow saw Vishinsky had pulled a boner by laughing at the arms limitation proposals laid down by the United States, Bri- tan and France at the start of the sixth General Assembly. They sug- gested Vishinsky had been in- structed to trot out old sugges- tions, often' turned down by the UN, in an attempt to recapture the initiative and woo peoples dis- illusioned by his rejection of what might be a step toward peace. Perryo Return To End Position Wildcats Seek Second Big Ten Win After Three Consecutive Setbacks By GEORGE FLINT Associate Sports Editor Two slumping Big Ten football teams will clash in Michigan Stadium today before an expected crowd of 65,000. Michigan's Wolverines, defeated in their last two outings, will attempt to hit the comeback trail against a disappointing North- western eleven which has dropped three in a row after taking its first four contests. * 4 4 MICHIGAN suffered a letdown last week against an inspired Cornell team,' after absorbing a last-minute loss from Illinois the POLITICOS CONFER-George Edwards, former president of the Detroit city council, who had just spoken before the Michigan Crib, consults with SL President Leonard Wilcox and Secretary Robin Glover during Thursday night's ballot counting for SL and Student Publications Board posts. * * * * SL BDack 'To TNormalal After Quick, eaceful Ballot Coun 4- - presidential nomination with a speech last night assailing what he termed dishonesty in the Demo- cratic administra;ion and plead. ing for a liberal GOP platform. The ailing California governor, hospitalized just a day after an- nouncing his candid acy declared in a transcribed address: ; "We must clean out the chisel- ling, the favoritism and the dis- honesty that is shonxing the pub- lic today." * * * Prof. Predicts PacificAttacks DETROIT--P--Communist at- tacks of "the Korean-type" were forecast soon throughout the South Pacific yesterday by Prof. William M. McGovern, professor of political science at Northwest- ern University. Prof. McGovern predicted a Communist uprising in the Philip- pines, but he declared Russia would not be ready to launch an- other world war for a year. T h e Northwestern professor was a principal speaker at the convention of Sigma Delta Chi journalistic fraternity here. t By CRAWFORD YOUNG Norma.lcy returned to the Stu- dent Legislature Building in a hurry yesterday, as thie air clear- ed after a brisk ballot-counting Thursday night. Top legislators departed early T' Crossings Safegruarded By StopSigns Stop signs have been installed at two busy University intersec- tions, according to Capt. Rolland Gainsley of the Ann Arbor Police Department. Control signs are now operating at Forest and Ann Streets where University women from Couzens Hall had been having great diffi- culty crossing on their way to and from the residence hall. The other protected corner is Maynard and E. William, where signs were posted after a city bus and a car collided when neither yielded the right of way. Capt. Gainsley reported also that two-hour parking meters for several streets are on order and are expected some time late this month. U of C Reaffirms Loyalty Oath Move BERKELEY -(P) - Regents of the University of California yes- terday reaffirmed their decision to drop the school's controversial "loyalty oath" for employes and faculty members. The board yesterday voted 12 to 5 not to reconsider its action of last month.. yesterday for a Big Ten student government conference in East Lansing, leaving no festering scan- dals behind them. IN WHAT appears to be the most efficiently handled election in years, everything went like clockwork. In almost every past election, some sort of fraud or foul-up has held up some of the final results for days. Spring, '50, was the fastest previous count-and it lasted an hour longer than Thursday's tal- ly, which wound up at 1 a.m. SL officials attributed the fast count to fewer ballots and more efficient workers. ALTHOUGH approximately 200 ballots were invalidated, Men's Judiciary, which policed the elec- tions, reported that nothing smacking of scandal had been uncovered. There was no one main reason for the voiding. Write-in voting reached a new peak with Major's 200 votes. Major's backing posed the pos- sibility that a human candidate might run on a write-in cam- paign in the ifuture-there is no ruling to prohibit it. Charges of block voting were raised when Ellie Haar, '53, of Sigma Delta Tau picked up 45 votes on the last ballot from Phil Barad, '53, of Phi Sigma Delta. However, these accusations were vehemently denied by the parties involved. As it is, there is no way of proving the case one waywor the other. Elsewhere, Rog Wilkins, '53, picked up 36 when Charles Wil- liams, '53, dropped out in the sec- ond biggest switch. Both are from the East Quad. Only two other switches amounted to more than 20, as block voting seemed to be a negligable factor. See SL, Page 4 Game Tickets Resale tickets for the North- western game today can be ob- tained at the Union ticket ser- vice in the Union lobby from 9:30 a.m. to 12:00 today. Anyone with extra tickets for sale can turn them in early this morning. However, student tick- ets are not handled by the re- sale service. No fee is charged for this ser- vice and the tickets are sold for the regular price of $3.60. Truman Fires Lamar Caudle Over Scandal KEY WEST, Fla.-(P)-Presi- dent Truman fired Assistant At- torney General T. Lamar Caudle yesterday, saying he had "en- gaged in outside activities" not in keeping with his ducAies as the gov- ernment's no. 1 prosecutor of tax frauds. The 47-year-old Caudle, chief of the Justice Deoartment's tax division, bas been under question- ing by a House committee which previously had unearthed a wide- spread scandal in another govern- went Pger cy, the Internal Reve- oue Bureau.- *' * * COMMITTEEMEN who plan to question Caudle furtner, have said they wanted to find out why 'sol nm.ny" eases of alleged tax fraud, recommended for prosecution, had oeen Gropped. Howyer, Joseph Short, Presi- dent al secretary, stressed that Caudle was ousted, for outside activities. He did r.ot elaborate. in Weshington, Caudle told newsmen with tears in his eyes: 'My heart is broken. I have noth- ing to hide from anybody." Johnson Advises End of Controls WASHINGTON - (-) - Eric Johnson, retiring as commander of the nation's defenses against inflation, recommended yesterday that direct wage and price con- trols be dropped "at the earliest possible time." previous Saturday. So the Wolver- ines hope to be up again for this all-important contest. Last season Michigan set up their eleventh-hour grab ott the Big Ten championship with a 34-23 victory over Bob Voigts' Wildcats. A victory this season is necessary if Bennie Ooster- baan and his crew are to keep alive hopes for another Big Ten championship, undisputed or otherwise. Illinois, leading the conference with four wins and no defeats, plays Ohio State today. Michigan has a conference record of three wins and one loss-that one to Illinois. * * * BESET BY injury troubles for the last two weeks, the Wolver- ines will be in slightly better con- dition for the Wildcat battle. Lowell Perry is expected to be at full effectiveness again at the of- fensive left end spot. The wingback corps will be strengthened by the return of Frank Howell, out since the Stanford game with a cracked ankle bone but now sufficientty recovered to handle offensive assignments again. Other injured players are in fairly good shape, though Roger Zatkoff is not at his peak playing form with an aggravated leg in- jury. The Northwestern backfield is veteran except at quarterback. Voigts has Dick Alban and Rich Athan, a pair of backs who stood out in defeat last season against the Wolverines, and a pile-driving fullback named Chuck Hren. Hren is the Wildcat workhorse. He's carried the ball 105 times this See WOLVERINES, Page 3 Egypt Asks UN Elections In Sudan Area PARIS-(P)-Egypt challenged Britain in the United Nations yes- terday with a proposal that both let the Sudan alone until a UN supervi'ed election can decide the future of the million-square-mile area. Egyptian foreign minister Mo- hamed Sajah El Din said he was mnore th an certain the British would not agree. The British in London said they would think it over. * * * SALAH EL DIN proposed in the GN Assembly's general debate that the UN run the Sudan--which Britain and Egypt have ruled jointly sirce 1899-until a deci-. sion is made by vote of the 8,000,- 000 Sudanese people. The proposal hit the UN as a surprise one day after King Farouk was hailed in his parlia- ment at Cairo as King of Egypt BACKING a bipactisan foreign policy, he spoke out, ac he has be. fire, v ganst Americar isolation- ism. This country, be said, should help its friends in thr free world to defernd themselves against oo- Bible aggression. Warren's speech was broad- cast to the Repubican state central committee meeting here a.id carried nationally. Doctor'k orders Thursday fwced him to cancel plans to deliver the ad- dress himself. The 1948 GOP nominee for vice president, openly ooposed by dis sident ,Republicans in his home state, renewed his appeal for party unity. "Our forces must not'be divided by our own actionsv he said, "only to be destroyed by our op- pcsition." U.S. To View Loan To Iran KEY WEST, Fla. - P) - Presi- dent Truman has told Iran that 'U' ENGINEER: Heart Attack Takes Life Of Prof. James Gault World News Roundup By The Associated Press DETROIT - Three men were shot to death in the first two days of Michigan's 1951 deer hunting season. An involuntary man- slaughter charge was brought as the result of one killing and State Police w e r e investigating the strange circumstances of a second. NEW YORK - A Western Union Vice President was ar- rested yesterday, accused of con-. spiring with gamblers to set up a horse race wire in Michigan. BOSTON - The Massachusetts Legislature last night branded the Communist Party a "subversive organization" and voted to ban it from the ballot. WASHINGTON - The chief of the U.S. Bomber Force, Gen. Cur- tis Lemay, said last night his far- reaching air fleet could launch swift retaliatory attacks at the industrial and military heart of any enemy. At the same time, he cautioned it would be a gigantic task needing more than" a hand- Prof. James S. Gault, 52 years old, a member of the University engineering faculty since 1922, died early yesterday morning of an acute heart attack. After suffering the attack at home, he was rushed to University Hospital, but he was dead upon admission at the hospital. 7 * * Prof. A. H. Lovell, chairman of the University's Department of Electrical Engineering, praised Professor Gault's work with the University. He had built up the Sero-mechanism laboratory and the courses offered in the field of electrical controls for large pieces of machinery, Prof. Lovell noted. * * * 'MASTER PIANIST': Pianist Brailowsky Performs at Hill "The Master Pianist," Alexan- der Brailowsky made his fourth appearance before Ann Arbor aii~r.PS c~ in , a 'nr,last ,night Often, however, Brailowsky is asked to play the Chopin cycle, for which he is most famous. A WIDE traveller, Brailowsky arrived in the United States from Europe only two weeks ago. There