THE KOREAN WAR See Page 4 Ci - r Latest Deadline in the State ilait1l ti CLOUDY AND COLD VOL. LXHI, No. 32 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1952 SIX PAGES McCarthy's. TV Speech, Contested Heed Facts Dirksen Urges WASHINGTON - (M) - Backer of Gov. Adlai Stevenson choruse "lie" yesterday in response to th speech Monday in which Sen Joseph McCarthy - accused th Democratic presidential nomine of giving "aid to Communis causes." They used a wide choice o words-"big lie," "storm troope mentality," "dishonest," "slan der," "character assassination and the like-but the basic mean. ing never varied. ON THE OTHER side of th fence Sen. Everett Dirksen, Repub lican from Stevenson's home stat * of Illinois, said Americans shouk4 "carefully ponder the facts tole about Adlai Stevenson and his left wing advisers" in the McCarthy speech. "We in Illinois, being famil- iar with these facts, and with other weaknesses of Gov. Stev- enson's record as governor of Illinois, have been trying to get them before the public for some time," Dirksen said in a state- ment through his office here. Dirksen and Americans for Dem- ocratic Action, one of McCarthy'k primary targets in his attack or Stevenson associates, disagreed a to who benefited from the fac that the Wisconsin Republican had a huge nation-wide televisior audience for his speech, made at a privately-financed dinner in Chi- cago. ADA took this view in a state- ment: "We are glad McCarthy made his speech on a nation-wide broad- cast last night, as it afforded the whole American public an oppor- tunity to see the 'big lie' technique in operation. The storm trooper mentality, which advocates the use of the club to beat 'Americanism into those who disagree with the Wisconsin senator, was blatantly evident in the dishonest and cow- ardly use of fractional fact and in- nuendo which characterized his high and wild attack on Gov x Stevenson." Preferences Faculty members who have filled out The Daily presiden- tial preference polls are re- quested to leave the completed forms in their department of- fices. *If this is impossible any polls which are mailed to The Daily should be marked with the name of the faculty member's school or department. Members of The Daily staff will pick up the polls today and the results will appear in The Daily tomorrow. Conscientious Objection Discussed The position of the conscientious objector was discussed last night in a meeting of the Fellowship of Reconciliation in the Methodist Church. According to Albert G. Watson, Regional director of the FOR, the current selective service laws give two options to the conscientious objector. He can either request a 1AO rating as a non-combattent or a 1-0 rating which consists of an indefinite deferral. A third step which many objectors have taken is not to register. The new selective service plan of alternate work for those wish- ing deferments was also discussed along with another phase of the FOR's program. This phase con- sists of using non-violent methods of fighting racial intolerance. Debate Slated On Corruption Corruption in the federal gov- ernment will be the topic of a de- Montagu Stresses CooperationBelief Rutger's Anthropologist Contradicts Darwinian, Christian Basic Theories Stressing the similarities between the Christian concept of man and the Darwinian theory of evolution, Prof. Ashley Montagu, chair- man of Rutgers' anthropology department, opened the "This I Believe" series last night. Speaking' on "Man in the Universe," Prof. Montagu emphasized at the beginning of his lecture that he was talking from the scientific viewpoint and from scientific observations. * , .y* HE POINTED OUT that the Christian concept of man empha- sized his sinfullness and the Darwinian theory stressed brutality - both revolving around the idea of r t r I ,I Pep Rally The Central Pep Rally Com- mittee announced yesterday that there will be no pep rally Friday night preceding the Illi- nois game. Dean of Students Erich Wal- ter felt that the rally might in- terfere with the plans which the city has developed to cur- tail as much as possible van- dalism of any kind on Hallo- we'en night. The rally Friday night be- fore the Purdue game will be held as scheduled, the com- mittee said. Stevenson As Candi( Attacks ates Hit GOP N.Y. iI ........ Adlai Says '*''~People Not Co lilege Poll Still Favors Eisenhower By CRAWFORD YOUNG Daily Managing Editor The college student still likes Ike. This was the conclusion drawn from a poll of student opinion conducted by the Associated Col- legiate Press. After probably a record flood of editorials, adver- tisements, petitions and counter- petitions which has swamped the nation's campuses, the tide of sentiment runs strongly in favor of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower. The statistical breakdown fol- lows: Eisenhower ......57 per cent Stevenson .........33percent Undecided .......... 9per cent Other .............. 1percent EISENHOWER'S popularity comes in spite of the fact that there are almost asemany who style themselves Democrats as there are Republicans in circula- tion on the campuses. Thirty-two per cent of those polled claim to be Democrats, 36 per cent Repub- licans, with 30 percent assuming the shadowy guise of the inde- pendent voter . Parental voting patterns re- main a strong factor in deter- mining the political allegiance of the student. Fifty-six per cent confessed that they agreed with their parents in the choice of candidates. Nineteen per cent have asserted their political emancipation by disagreeing, while a neutral 23 per cent are listed as unsure. Michigan student opinion in September was quite in line with the national iesults-a Daily poll at registration showed 64 per cent favoring Eisenhower, with 33 per cent backing Stevenson. However, college editors were at complete variance with the overall results. Here, 57 per cent wanted Stevenson as President, 41 per cent supported Eisenhower, with a meager two percent undecided. And the Stevenson backers seemed much more vocal in their support. At latest count, 14 col- lege papers had come out editor- ially for Stevenson, with only two for the General. U. S. Troops Gain SEOUL, Wednesday-t;')-Allied infantrymen smashed two Chinese battalions off the crest of bloody Sniper Ridge in close-quarter fighting today on the blazing Cen- tral Korean Front. competition. The theory of competition is 'contrary to the real nature of man and animals which actual- ly exemplifies the spirit of co- operation, he said. Prof. Montagu believes that man is born good with certain motiva- tions which must be cultivated by love to ensure normal develop- ment. HE 'CITED the denial of love during childhood as the reason for crime and the lust for power. If both man and animals are treated kindly they will respond with cooperation, he added. "Hatred is only love that has been frustrated," the anthropol- ogist said. A person who has en- countered cruelty will respond with cruelty. Changing the forms of institu- tions will not accomplish the de- sired peace, he stated. Only as man changes his attitude from one of competition to one of co- operation will he become the indi- vidual he was intended to be, he concluded. CLC Decides On Lecture Ban Actions Running the gauntlet of current civil rights questions the Civil Liberties Committee took action last night on University, local and national questions. On the campus level the com- mittee decided to organize a pres- sure group among the five politi- cal clubs who put the lecture com- mittee referendum on the Student Legislature ballot last semester. The group's purpose would be to urge SL, the Regents, and campus groups to act on the referendum. CLC went on record as support- ing the proposal that "the sole criteria" for a speaker on campus should be current recognition of the group sponsoring him, by the Student Affairs Committee and Joint Judiciary. On the question of scholarships, CLC took the stand that the Uni- versity should accept only those grants f that are based on need and academic ability. In discussing the atomic spies,' Julius and Anna Rosenberg, the group decided that they could not pass judgement on the conclusion of their trial, but decided to send, a letter to President Truman ask-, ing that the death penalty be changed to life imprisonment be- cause "it has no precedent in ci- vilian courts." CLC also passed a motion com- mending Mayor Brown for allow-I ing the Progressives to hold their recent rally in Ann Arbor's West) Park, after the doors of the Ma- sonic temple were closed to them. Brush Fires Ravage Hall Of Country By the Associated Press The most serious and wide spread forest and brush fires i years burned fiercely yesterda throughout much of the. Easter half of the United States. The flames blacked woodland and farmlands in about half th 48 states. Thousands of forest ran gers, army troops, national guards. men, farmers, townspeople anc even school children joined in the battle to keep the flames froir towns, farm houses, and oil stor- age tanks, THE CHICAGO weather bureat said no important rain was ir sight for any fire-plagued are but that a 180-degree shift in the wind might help stop the fire ir its tracks in the Central states. Forseveral days the fires have been fanned by a southwest wind. Forecasters said a cold front spreading across the east- ern half of the country will shift the winds to the north and northeast. The fires threatened to curtail or eliminate the hunting season in some areas. Gov. Paul A. Dever of Massachusetts issued a proclama- tion closing the Massachusetts woodlands and suspending hunt- ing during the ban. * * * THE SITUATION was most ser- ious in Arkansas, where numerous fires raged out of control; in West Virginia where 450 fires have blackened 150,000 acres, and in Mississippi, where an estimated 1,500 fires have burned out nearly 50,000 acres this month. Fires of varying seriousness also were reported in Kentucky, Texas, Louisiana, Virginia, Wis- consin, Indiana, Michigan, Min- nesota, Ohio, Oklahoma, New Hampshire, New York, and New Jersey. Meanwhile in Miami hurricane "Fox" was pronounced dead by the Weather Bureau yesterday. The storm contained 165-mile winds when it crossed Cuba last Friday. It killed three and destioy- ed hundreds of homes in Central Cuba, mostly in the town of Ag- uada de Pasajeros. Hatcher In Conference At Chicago President Harlan H. Hatcher is currently in Chicago represent- ing this campus at a two-day con- ference of the American Associa- tion of Universities. Ending today, the conference may pass a resolution urging uni- formity of methods of regulating speakers on the 39 campuses rep- resented in the conference, accord- ing to University relations director Arthur L. Brandon. Including the most prominent private and public supported col- leges in this country and Canada, the association is concerned with recommendations rather than pol- icy decisions. It is headed this year by University of Missouri president F. A. Middlebush. YR's Will Hand Out Literature -Daily-Don Campbell~ SEN. BLAIR MOODY MAKES CAMPAIGN SPEECH IN EAST ANN ARBOR * * . * * *. * * *. * MOODY HITS OPPOSITION: Democrats Speak at Torchlit Rally By DIANE DECKER Nearly 200 people last night wended their way down atorch- lit road to the Mary D. Mitchell School in East Ann Arbor to hear Gov. G. Mennen Williams, Sen. Blair Moody and a host of county candidates on the Democratic ticket. Assembled in a somewhat in- congruous atmosphere of school children's Hallowe'en decorations and campaign posters, the crowd heard Sen. Moody denouncerthe Republicans' opposition to the Mu- tual Security program. "What would Stalin give to be able to set up an espionage sys- tem to influence Congress to vote to destroy an alliance against the Kremlin?" Sen. Moody asked, cit- ing the GOP cuts from Mutual Security appropriations. EAST ANN ARBOR was one of the later stops in Sen. Moody's Prison Rioters To Negotiate, Free Hostages CHESTER, Ill.--(P)-Rebellious prisoners at riot-torn Menard State Priton last night agreed to release three of their hostages and meet with prison and state offi- cials. The agreement between 37 pris- oners in the Psychiatric Division and the prison officials were nego- tiated by an unidentified press rep- resentative. He said the inmates agreed to release the three host- ages prior to the conference some- time tomorrow. This was the first break in the day-old riot, but some 300 inmates still held seven other hostages be- hind barricades thrown up within the east cell block, which stands across the courtyard from the psychopaths' stronghold. tour of the area, and his speech was cut short by the still later ap- pearance of fellow campaigner Gov. Williams. The local appearance was one of many grass-roots rallies which the pair hit during the course of the evening. Beginning at a Chamber of Commerce dinner in Chelsea, the candidates visited Willow Village, the trailer camp on US 23 and here, before wind- ing up the tour at an open house at Ypsilanti Democrat head- quarters. While the assembled crowd waited to hear the State candi- dates, seven county candidates spoke briefly and circulated through the group, passing out literature and shaking hands. AT PERIODICAL intervals, the crowd broke into choruses of the song introduced at the National Convention last July, "Don't Let 'em Take it Away," and the piano player cut loose with "The Ten- nessee Waltz." Sen. Moody stressed that the major problem in 1952 is Com- munism. "We are confronted with a totalitarian power which hopes to enslave us as it has en- slaved others," he maintained. "The basic issue is how we will Most Coal Miners Return To Work PITTSBURGH-(AP)--Practical- ly all the nation's 375,000 soft coal miners went back to work yes- terday after a one-week strike, confident they'll get the full amount of their, recently nego- tiated pay increase. The back-to-work movement be- gan Monday after President John L. Lewis of the United Mine work- ers told the diggers to resume production until the government rules finally on their $1.90 a day pay raise. stop this threat without resort- ing to atomic warfare." "We must be so powerful that, when the Kremlin decides it is time for a showdown, they will see it's no use," he said, quoting: the need for strong Mutual Security. He drew applause from the aud- ience when he said, "it is a great opportunity to be able to elect a man of Prof. Dawson's capability," Prof. John P. Dawson of the law school, who is running for U. S. Representative from this district, also appeared at the rally. Auto Industr'y To Receive More Steel WASHINGTON-(P)-The auto industry was notified yesterday that civilian goods manufacturers will get an additional 1,480,000 tons of steel to boost their scant allotmentsin first-quarter 1953. The motor industry, which had forecast shutdowns in February unless more steel was granted, was assured by the National Produc- tion Authority NPA of an "equit- able" share of the new metal. More steel may be forthcoming later, NPA Administrator R. A. McDonald told the passenger car industry committee. He promised fortnightly checks on prospective steel supplies. Some industry representatives, still dissatisfied, told McDonald they expected the total of addition- al steel available for civilian use would run to two or three million tons instead of 1,480,000. NPA's original allocation, an- nounced last week, would have provided metal for only 630,000 passenger cars in January, Febru- ary and March, as compared with a previously authorized production 1% million. For General Ike Campaigns In LongIsland By the Associated Press NEW YORK-Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson declared last night at the climax of a triumphal day of campaigning in New York and New Jersey that the Republicans "have everything on their side- except the people." The Democratic presidential nominee, speaking to a cheering audience of approximately 20,000 persons who bulged Madison Square Garden, Wpressed com- plete confidence he will win next Tuesday's presidential election. ATTACKING his Republican op- ponents, the Illinois governor de- cared that in advance of the elec- tion the Republicans are celebrat- ing their victories, but they never win "the last one." "And the big one is the last one, as all generals should know," he said in a vigorous jab at his GOP opponent, Gen Dwight D. Eisenhower. Asserting that the "most power- ful publishers, noisiest comment- tors and greatest demagogues can only cast one vote," he said the GOP is "in for a terrible morning. after when the grand old party is over." * * * HE CONCEDED that in the be- ginning Eisenhower had been the Gen. Eisenhower will speak at 10 p.m. today over WJR. Gov. Stevenson will broad- cast at 2:45 p.m. and 10:15 p.n today over WXYZ. symbol of a movement to cast out what he called "the old and weary leadership." "The people turned to a man whose name became a symbol of high purpose," Stevenson said, "but history has recorded that this light was snuffed out in the sordid triumph of expediency." He said that the high hopes of the American people were destroy- ed in the chain reaction of com- promise when Eisenhower met with Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio and, in the words of the Illinois governor, adopted the principles which Taft has advocated. MEANWHILE Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower paraded through 65 miles of crowded Long Island yes- terday, telling people they have been let down by an administra- tion he said has "robbed" them of their pride in government. The Republican presidential nominee kept on repeating that he intends to go to Korea. With the election only a week away, Eisenhower reverted to the theme with which he opened it on Sept. 2 in the deep South, the theme of "mess in Washington." "Part of that mess, my friends, has been subversion, disloyalty in government. Part of it has been waste and extravagance in the ex- penditure of your tax money. Part of it has been fumbling and stumb- ling in the foreign field. LS&A Meeting To BeHeld "Freshman Education" will be the topic of discussion at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, in the League, where the first Literary College Confer- ence of the semester will attempt to evaluate the aims, courses and requirements of the freshman program. The Literary College Confer- ences present students with an op- portunity to meet their profes- sors in open debate, and not only to express their own views, but to hear those of faculty members. They are open to all students and teachers in the literary col- MAJOR ADDRESSES: Group Sponsors Adlai Speech Re-B road casts By ERIC VETTER Two of Gov. Adlai Stevenson's major campaign addresses will be carried on special rebroadcasts over local Ann Arbor radio sta- tions today. At 1:15 on WPAG a tape record- ing of Stevenson's speech on Com- munism given in Detroit will be presented, and at 5:30 p.m. on WHRV his address before the American Federation of Labor Convention in New York on "la- bor's place in an intergrated emon- omy" will be given. THE BROADCASTS are part of day and will end on Saturday. A total of ten re-broadcasts will be given by the time the project ends; five on each station. SATURDAY'S broadcast will be a repeat of the Communism speech being re-broadcast today, but will be at 5:30 p.m. Saturday on WHRV. At 10:30 a.m. on Friday the final WPAG program will carry a repeat of the Baltimore infla- tion speech. Financing of the broadcasts has been accomplished with local CANDIDATES NOT WELL KNOWN: Four Minor Parties on State Ballot rJ-=-- _ By ALICE BOGDONOFF Almost everyone knows by now whether or not they like Ike, but few voters have even heard of Hallinan, Hass, Dobbs, Hoopes, and Hamblen. These five presidential candi- dates will attempt to challenge Stevenson and Eisenhower with platforms of the minor parties. Several times 'third' narties have Charlotta A. Bass will appear on the Michigan ballot. Hallinan, who spoke in Ann Arbor this month, has based his platform mainly on the immed- iate ending of the Korean war and a strong civil rights pro- gram. More obscure than the Progres- sive party is the Socialist Labor Partv. which is rinnin Erie .As the helm and Myra Tanner Weiss in vice presidential slot. Neither Hass or Dobbs are connected with the Socialist Party which ran the well known Norman Thomas for many years. This year the Socialists have put up Darlington Hoopes, who will not appear on the Michigan ballot. 1+.ct in +In n r.. n, of inor