DEFENSE OF SORORITY RUSHING See Page 4 IT r C N Latest Deadline in the State :4Iaty t COOL AND CLOUDY VOL. LXIII, No. 13 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1952 SiX PAGES Reds Stage Giant Korea. BattlePush Attack Repulsed At Most Points By The Associated Press Communist troops attacked across two-thirds of the Korean battlefront last night and early today in the biggest co-ordinated operation in many months. They were driven back almost everywhere, but intense fighting for three or four minor hills car- ried on into the daylight hours. THE CHINESE opened flood- gates of a reservoir north of the battleline-for their assault on two major hills northwest of Chorwon. Nearly 6,000 Chinese troops attacked the two peaks in the wake of the surging waters. But the river which coursed around the two hills rose only two feet, hardly enough to be noticed. Allied defenders, fighting with grenades, fists. and even stones, drove back the attackers. AT THE SAME time, .the Reds punched at the U. S. Marine line at 13 points on the extreme West- ern Front near Korangpo and Pan- munjom. The Communists seized a new hill north of Korangpo, swelling their captured outpost prizes of the past few days of in- tense fighting. The two major assaults hit strongpoints on the Allied line east of Old Baldy. Nearly 2,000 Red troops were thrown into each action. Meanwhile at the United Nation headquarters in New York yester- day a suggestion for recruiting a United Nations volunteer reserve army totalling up to 60,000 men to fight aggression was sent by a committee to the U. N. Assembly for full debate. It is expected to run into sharp Russian objections and the United. States is lukewarm to the project. The whole idea eventually 'may disappear, since there is little en- thusiasm for it in the Assembly. . Ten Thousand o ear Adlai Stevenson To Speak in Ypsi Today; Major Address Slated for Detroit By DIANE DECKER More than 10,000 persons, including 1,000 University students, are expected to hear Gov. Adlai Stevenson speak at 2:30 p.m. today in Pease Auditorium at Ypsilanti. Sponsored by the Washtenaw County Democrats, the presidential candidate has not yet announced the topic of his speech. GOV. STEVENSON'S Ypsilanti appearance will be part of a full day of speech-making. He will arrive at 2 p.m. at Willow Run air- port, after delivering an address earlier in Saginaw. Gov. Williams * * * land other State leaders, including Adlai Moves Campaign Into Finale SPRINGFIELD, Ill.-(AP)--Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson drives into the windup of his presidential cam- paign today with a bid to voters in 25 states with more than two- thirds of the electoral votes at stake on Nov. 4. The Democratic presidential nominee moves into the campaign finale counting on heavy help from President Harry S. Truman but with party coffers reportedly a bit bare. a representative from the Students for Stevenson club, will form a greeting committee at the air- port. After a short conference with the committee, the candidate will proceed to Pease Auditorium where he wil deliver an address. Following this speech, he will appear briefly at Willow Village and head into Detroit, making short speeches at key points along the way. The Communism issue will get a going over in a major address at 10:30 p.m. at the Masonic Temple. * , * AUTOMOBILE caravans from various parts of the country have been organized in preparation for the Illinois governor's half-hour Ypsilanti talk. Among these will bn st dt World News Round up * *, * j n , , aam wi a*uen STRETCHING ahead of Steven- caravan sponsored by Students son are nearly 15,000 miles of for Stevenson. Between 1,000 and travel, spider-webbing out from 1,200 students registered yester- his home base here to both coasts day at transportation booths, and the Deep South. The Illinois and others are expected to drive der Deep Shou. Theinroind their own cars and arrange for governor will show up in around their own riders. 100 cities for minor and major ad- dresses. Eight nation-wide tele- The club has prepared decora- vision-radio speeches are on tap tions, mostly in the form of "I including two of the "fireside chat" Love Adlai" signs, which will adorn variety without studio audiences. the motorcade. Five buses, plus The tee-off point today is many private cars, will carry those Michigan, with the governor's address on "the entire subject of Governor Stevenson's Detroit communism"-external and in. address will be heard over WJR ternal--scheduled for Detroit's at 10:30 p.m. today and will be Masonic Temple and a radio-TV carried also on 'WJBK-TV audience tonight. Wilson Wyatt, (Channel 2). Stevenson's campaign manager, His Ypsilanti speech can be said "the speech in Detroit will heard at 2:30 p.m. today over be one of the most important local stations WPAG and in the campaign." WHRV. Whether Stevenson and Truman will teamup in a joint appearance who have registered for transpor- somewhere along the line still is tation. Students may still sign up uncertain. There will be a near until noon today at booths in the miss later in the week in Missouri, Union, the League and on the when President and nominee will Diag. The group will leave from the visit the state a day apart. Union between 1 and 2 p.m. BUT IN THE first public pro- OTHER CARAVANS will come nouncement of the subject from from Saline, Chelsea, Milan and all the Stevenson camp, Wyatt told townships south of Ann Arbor. newsmen today he believes Tru- Ypsilanti police and college of- man's give 'em hell swing along ficials are preparing for the on- the whistle stops definitely is help- slaught of automobiles by posting ing the Democratic cause. traffic guides around the city. To Stevenson's manager sized up facilitate parking, the college will the Democratic campaign as fur- lift all parking regulations and ther along toward success at this will open several fields for the oc- point than had been expected. casion. The Illinois governor, Wyatt ,aid The candidate's appearance was is "talking sense to the American announced last Wednesday night people" as he promised to do from after a meeting of county Demo- the beginning. crats. DEPARTMENT REPORTS NEEDED: Council Outlines Action On'U' Annexation Issue 'Ensian There will be a campus sale of senior pictures and 'Ensians today in front of the General Library. All seniors who have not yet had their pictures taken for the 'Ensian still have the oppor- tunity to do so. Appointments for pictures may be made at the Student Publications Bldg., lo- cated at 420 Maynard St. Students are asked to re- member that Oct. 16 is the yast day appointments will be made. Series Tied As- Yankees Score, 3-2 BROOKLYN-(P)-Vic Raschi and Allie Reynolds double-teamed Brooklyn with an 11-strikeout job yesterday to send this homer hap- py World Series into a seventh game with a 3-2 New York Yankee victory. Two tremendous home runs by Duke Snider weren't enough to match the desperate Yanks who fought back to tie the series for the third time. THE SEVENTH and final game will be played at Ebbets Field o- day with the possibility that Rey- nolds and Joe Black of the Dodg- ers may meet for a third time. Black was the victor in the first game but Reynolds triumphed in the fourth. Both are right handed throwers. Yogi Berra and Mickey Mantle ripped into 22-year-old Billy Loes for homers and Raschi provided the other run with a single that bounced off Loes' left knee and rolled into short right field, scoring Gene Wood- ling in the' two-run seventh. But Manager Casey Stengel, struggling to keep alive his dreams of a fourth straight world cham- pionship, had to call in Reynolds to save the fast-tiring Raschi in the eighth inning. Snider's second homer of the day and fourth of the Series-tying records held by Lou Gehrig and Babe Ruth-slashed the Yank lead to 3-2 in the eighth. The homers by Snider, Berra and Mantle brought the Series' total to 14, high for any kind of a World Series. *#* * RASCHI pitched a brilliant game, striking out nine men before he weakened in the eighth and walking only one. With the help of The Chief he received the credit for his fifth Series win. For a kid pitcher working in his home town, Loes did a re- markable job. Blazing fast in the early inn- ings, Young Billy started to go wild in the sixth. He got behind McDougald but made him pop up and threw four straight balls to Rizzuto. With the heat on, how- ever, he took care of Mantle and Big Johnny Mize, who went hit- less. The home run total of 14-eight by the Yanke and six by the Dodg- ers-topped the old high of 12 set in a seven-game Series by Wash- ington and Pittsburgh in 1925. The previous high for six games was the 11 of 1936 by the Yanks and Giants. Political Clubs To Present DebateToday Four campus political clubs are joining forces to present a debate on the nation's foreign policy at 8 p.m. today in Angell Hall Auditor- ium D. Prof. Preston Slosson of the his- tory department will speak for the Democrats and George Sallade, member of city council, will uphold the Republican stand. The debate, "Resolved that the foreign policy of the last seven years has worked to the benefit of the American people," is joint- ly sponsored by the Young Repub- licans, Young Democrats, Students for Stevenson and Eisenhower for President clubs. C A'~W~ £~U ' ' I -Daly-Ken Toote BEWILDERED FRESHMEN-A newcomer to campus searching vainly for the famous University seal formerly located at the center of the Diag, sees only a Stevenson supporter manning a political booth. Acacia Petitions Hatcher For Return of Diag Seal Student disapproval over the removal of the famous University seal from the diagonal took definite form yesterday when Acadia Fraternity petitioned President Harlan H. Hatcher to have the his- toric seal replaced. President Hatcher is in "full agreement with us," according to Acacia president Dick Merrill, '53, who presented the fraternity's pe- tition. * * "THE PRESIDENT told me that a new monument had been con- sidered when the old seal was removed this summer, but the adminis- -tration decided to wait until fall By The Associated Press WASHINGTON -- Comptroller General Lindsay C. Warren denied yesterday a GOP charge that his office was playing politics by de- ciding at this time to distribute four million dollars in back holi- day pay to government employes. CHICAGO-Some 1,500 striking AFL elevator operators went back to work yesterday followed by many of the Loop's 400,000 office workei's who had been made idle by the five-day walkout. BERLIN-East German Com- munists have pulled out all the stops for a monster Moscow type demonstration today honoring visiting Nikolai M. Shvernik, president of the Soviet Union. The day marks the third anni- versary of the Soviet zone gov- ernment. * * * WASHINGTON - Combined forces will rehearse the defense of Alaska in exercise "Warm. Weather" next month, the D6- fense Department announced yes- terday. The Air Force will fly about 5,000 paratroopers from Sewart Field, Tenn., to Alaska to take part in the maneuvers, one of the largest designed to test the de- fenses of the territory. LONDON-Field Marshal Lord Montgomery called yesterday for a supreme command to shape and run Allied policies in the cold war against Communism. The deputy supreme comman- der of the Allied powers in Eur- ope also suggested the non- Communist nations of the world should consider now how "to handle and direct" a possible global shooting war against the Russian-led bloc. LONDON-Some 54,000 Britons who were held by the Japanese as Red Press Charges Hit By Kennan BONN, Germany VP)-George F. Kennan, ousted American ambas- sador to the Soviet Union, denied yesterday remarks attributed to him by the Communist press. A correspondent of the London Daily Worker had written that Kennan said in Moscow at a cele- bration of victory in Europe on May 9, 1945 that "they-the Rus- sians-think the war has ended, but it has only begun." THE ALLEGATION that he made the remarks was recently re-j printed by the Moscow newspaper Pravda. It cited the quotation in attempting to depict Kennan as "hostile to the Soviet Union."% The ambassador branded thef allegation as a "characteristic example of Communist press distortion." The Soviet government demand-I ed Kennan's recall last Friday. It said he was no longer welcome there because he had made "slan- derous attacks" on the Soviet Union. School Dismisses Three Professors NEW YORK -W) -- Three col- lege professors were fired last night for refusing to tell a Senate' committee whether they had been members of the Communist party. The Board of Higher Education dismissed the three after a ses- sion at Hunter College during which some 75 students stood on the street outside and shouted slo- gans on behalf of the professors. to determine what the students wanted placed there," Merrill said. Possibilities discussed by Pres- ident Hatcher were a raised platform with a bronze seal, a circular bench, a fountain or a senior class memorial. The University president also suggested that a contest might be held to determine the best design for a monument. Tradition had been shattered this summer when the University Building and Grounds Department removed the old diagonal and sub- stituted a new concrete platform, for the construction work de- stroyed the large, central brick in- lay of Maize and Blue brick bear- ing the University's initials. DATING back to the 'twenties, this portion of the Diag had long been a favorite meeting place for University students and had fig- ured in a great many initiation stunts of campus honoraries. However, as the years passed, the inlaid seal sank lower than the surrounding walk and be- came a miniature lake with each rain storm. An old campus 'tradition held that freshmen who violated the canctity of the seal by walking on it must face through "discipli- nary" action by upperclassmen. The Student Legislature is also investigating the seal's dis- appearance. A shroud of mystery seems to surround details of the old seal's disappearance, di- mensions and purpose. Estimated cost of placing a new marker on the Diag runs from $400 to $500, according to legislator Bob Ely, '54, who talked with plant de- partment officials. SL plans to look into the history of the seal and find out what can be done about replacing it. Then it will report to University officials and find out the University's plans. If the University is not inter- ested in replacing the landmark, Ely said, the project will be turned over to the senior class for con- sideration. He ridiculed the contention of the Democrats that they initi ated such works in the West. Democrats have used the Recla- mation Act and the Federal On the contrary, he said, the Power Act to increase and per- petuate their own power in Washington. Eisenhower's stopover here for a major campaign speech followed a day of whistle-stopping across the state of Washington along the same route as that taken last week by President Truman. The general, hugely enjoying waves of. laughter, blistered the President on his cross-state run. * - IN SEATTLE, he hit at what he called the Democrats' top-heavy federal control in reclamation and power development, and in ad- vancing his own idea, said: "I am convinced out of my ex- perience with some very big jobs that the way to do it is by sharing of effort rather than by its concentration. "This means the full use of pri- vate resources plus a local, state and federal partnership here in the state of Washington and the Pacific Northwest rather than de- pendence upon a daily directive from Washington, D.C." The phrase "whole.hog govern- ment" studded his speech. * * * MEANWHILE, in Cincinnati Sen. Robert A. Taft last night called President Truman "a dan- gerous demagogue" who makes political speeches disregarding truth. "His speeches must be taken apart," Taft told an audience at a Hamilton County Republican political dinner. "They are di- rected to personal units of each group and they exhibit complete recklessness of truth." Taft, principalspeaker at an "appreciation dinner" given 1,036 precinct workers, the county com- mittee and the county and state tickets, said he has been study- ing the speeches made by the Pres- ident on his current tour of the country. Acheson Calls Red Tactics Unsuccessful PITTSBURGH ()-Secretary of State Dean Acheson said yesterday that Communist tactics of violence have failed and that the Reds are searching "for new ways of gain- ing their ends." Acheson told 700 delegates at- tending the CIO International Electrical Workers' fourth annu- al convention that President Tru- man is "the man who has done most to stiffen the backbone of the free world against Communism." Furthermore, he declared that in our peace table talks in Korea- "We will not compromise with the basic principle that no prisoner shall be forced against his will to return to the Communists." HIST Attacks, Ike's Senate Supporters By The Associated Press President Truman declared yes- terday that he does not believe the AmericanX people will elect as pres- ident a man who would "surrender to Taft, McCarthy, Jenner and Kem." Truman directed his attack on Dwight D. Eisenhower's senatorial supporters in a trainside talk to a cheering crowd at Helper, Utah. HE REFERRED to Republican Sen. Taft of Ohio, Sen. McCarthy of Wisconsin, Sen. Jenner of In- diana and Sen. Kem of his own state of Missouri. Truman said Helper got its name from the helper engines that pull the trains up the mountains hereabouts, "I think the Republican party needs some helper engines," he said. "It would take a whole round- house of helper engines to get the Republicans elected." "As for their candidate," the President added, "I don't think helper engines will get him out of the trouble-he is in." He said the Republicans have a "terrible record." Police Chief Joe Myers estimat- ed the Helper crowd, at 3,000. Earlier in the major address at Provo, Utah, Truman charged that the Republicans have tried and failed to disguise a 20-year record of obstruction and isolationism be- hind "the shining armor of a na- tional hero"-Gen. Eisenhower. MEANWHILE in Charleston, W. Va., Sen. Sparkman, Democratic nominee for vice president, said yesterday he thinks Gen. Dwight Eisenhower has hurt his chances, on the R1epublican ticket by the kind of campaign he's running. He also predicted the GOP won't "get a single electoral vote" in the South. "Since he has gone to the politi- cal stump," Sparkman said of the Republican presidential nominee, "he must expect the sort of things that come in a political way." Sparkman's views were express- ed at a press conference opening a two-day stumping tour of South- ern West Virginia. Lewis Leans TowardAdlai CINCINNATI --( () - John L. Lewis, fresh from victory in his periodic wars with the coal indus- try, appeared close last night to switching allegiance from the Re- publican to the Democratic party. Lewis, 72-year-old president of the United Mine Workers, with powerful political support in Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Ohio, held his own counsel on the eve of his United Mine Workers Convention. But Lewis, an avowed Repub- lican, already has labelled Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, the Re- publican nominee, as a leader of the "especially privileged group of oppressive exploiters." Both the AFL and CIO have come out for Stevenson, and the guessing has been that Lewis will go along. Court Supports Crime Witnesses Eisenhower Hits Back at President OnPower Issue,' By The Associated Press Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower called President Truman "an expert in political demagoguery" at Seattl yesterday. In a full dress review of the problem of water and power develop- ment, the general said the Truman administration is devoted to one idea, "the idea of a whole hog federal government." IN A SPEECH prepared for delivery in Seattle, the Republican presidential candidate argued for more local control of the great reclamation and power projects. i By ERIC VETTER A definite course of action on the annexation of University ter- ritory by the City of Ann Arbor was adopted unanimously last night by the City Council. After several months delay; the annexation, which includes the North Campus area, University Golf Course, the Botanical Gar- dens and the former Inglis prop- erty, appears headed for formal approval at either the Oct. 20 or Nov. 3 council meeting. * *, * THE FORM of the Council ac- tion at their meeting was a motion that the various city departments affected by the annexation sub- mit reports to the City Planning Commission regarding the effects of the annexation to their depart- ments. When these reports are ready the Planning Commission will submit recommendations to the Concnil as toa coure onff aon concerning annexation which rec- ommends department reports be- fore annexation is approved. This enables the Council to approach the issue in an intelligent fashion and will show future generations the Council's concerned with the issue. * *1 * FURTHER University-city re- lations were aided in a latter coun- cil move which created a special administrative group to handle joint agreements between the two bodies. Composed of members of the Planning Commission, Police, Fire and Water Departments and the City Engineers office, the group will work with the Administration in future pro- jects. Alderman John S. Dobson re- commended the new group on the grounds that it would give city of- ficials a background of experience in University dealings and would ON STATE BALLOT: Reapportionment Plans Proposed By ALICE BOGDONOFF Two proposed constitutional amendments will appear on the Michigan ballot this November to solve the much debated problem of reapportionment in the state gov- ernment. Proposal number 2 is called the Representative Government Plan. It was iniated by the Michigan reapportionment of the legisla- ture. Proposal 3 places its stress upon the House of Representatives which would apportion the House on the basis of population and continue to district the Senate ac- cording to area irrespective of population. * * * the present 32. In proposal 2 the state Senate would be increased to 33 members, and the districts would be so divided as to have about equal representation. As regards the House, 'under proposal 2 the members would number 99 instead of the present 100. The House districts would be based on the senatorial districts