0 NEW YORK'S DOCK STRIKE See Page Z Y Latest Deadline in the State ~Iaitii rm FAIR AND WARMER VOL. LXIV, No. 11 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1953 ILamiim3E3IMP q FOUR PAGES <. Malan Bill Passes Both Chambers Non-White Vote Further Limited CAPETOWN, South Africa-(P) -Prime Minister Daniel F. Malan won the approval of both Houses of the new Parliament on the first reading yesterday of his new bill to cut down voting rights of some non-whites. Five members of the United party, chief opposition to Malan's Nationalists, walked out of the House when a vote was taken on an amendment by J. G. N. Strauss, the opposition leader. STRAUSS' amendment, declin- ingbto grant leave to introdue. the bill unless the government ave certain assurances, was then defeated 116 to 57 at a joint sit-. ting of the two Houses. The bill now goes to a select committee of 18 members of all parties which has power to ex- amine papers and evidence and revise the measure. By appearing to seek a compro- mise solution Malan hopes to gain some semblance of bipartisan sup- port on the final vote. THERE ARE indications that he will win enough supporters from the opposition to give him the required two-thirds majority. The bill seeks to validate the Voters' Act of 1951 which was thrown out by the courts last year because it had not been passed by a two-thirds majority of both Houses. It throws some 50,000 colored- persons. of mixed blood in Cape Province-off the general regis- tration list and puts them, on a separate voting register. They would be allowed to cast ballots only to select four members of Parliament, all of them white. Ships Collide KillingTwo PORT HURON, Mich-(P)-- Two ships, a Great Lakes ore carrier and a German freighter, collided off Port Huron in the St. Clair River last night. The German ship, the Walsciess, sank. Police at Sarnia, Ont., said they had removed two dead and two survivors from the sunken freight- er. There was no immediate con- firmation of other casualties, but the Port Huron Times Herald said first unofficial reports it received said there were "several dead." The second ship, which anchor- ed still afloat, tentatively was identified as the Pioneer, of the Cleveland-Cliffs fleet. It was load- ed and downbound, just out of Lake Huron. The skipper of the German ves- sel tried to beach his craft on the Canadian side of the river, but it went down before he could make it Erskine Pitches Repatriation ir'Group Halts DodgerMtry.. Anti-Red Rio Brooklyn Hurler Establishes New T oPrisn s World Series Record by Fanning 14 Killed 5 Inur BROOKLYN-OP)-Trim Carl Erskine, a handsome Hoosier right- hander, shattered Howard Ehmke's 1929 World Series strikeout record PANMUNJOM-(G)-The Ne yesterday by fanning 14 New York Yankees for Brooklyn's first victory, tral Nations Repatriation Comm 3-2, in a brilliant comeback. sion yesterday stamped out The Yanks still lead in the series, 2-1. riot in two days. then engaged Yanked from the box after a disastrous four-run first inning in an angry exchange with the the opener, the 26-year-old Dodger bounced back to restore Dodger lies. confidence after two shocking defeats. The exchange took place sho * * * * ly after Indian guards killed t ROY CAMPANELLA, playing with a painfully puffed right hand, Chinese prisoners and woun blasted an eight-inning home run that gave the soft-spoken Erskine five others in a mass breakouto -i his greatest triumph. tempt. A North Korean was k .eu- nis- the ner 1in Al- irt- two ded at- ill- Wolverines Await Southern Visitors Tulane Backs McGee, Clement, Kent, Kennedy Will Lead Team in Contest By IVAN N. KAYE Daily Sports Editor Michigan will bid for its second victory of the 1953 football season this afternoon as it goes against an experienced Tulane University team in a top intersectional clash at the Stadium. Fair skies, eighty degree temperatures and a crowd of 55,000 in- cluding 6,000 high school bandsmen are expected to form the back- drop as Coach Bennie Oosterbaan's team attempts to justify its fourth place national rating. The kickoff will be at 2 p.m. THE GREEN WAVE, coached by former Texas Christian star Raymond (Bear) Wolf, carries a one and one record into the game, The Greenies blasted the Cit- adel in their opener two weeks ago, 54-6, but were edged last R um ors Fly Saturday by Georgia, 16-14. Tulane's victory hopes ride with an all-senior backfield composed olStriking of quarterback Pete Clement, half GE Loses Anti-Trust Court Case TRENTON, N. J. - (R) - The General Electric Co., a giant of American industry, was ordered yesterday in federal court to give rights to existing patents on in- cadescent lamps and their parts to the public. Federal Judge Phillip Forman ordered the patents turned over to the public in a judgment that enforces his 1949 conviction of GE on dharges of monopolizing the incandescent lamp industry in the United States. * * *s FORMAN TOLD'a reporter aft- er filing the 105-page opinion he believed "it is the first time in a contested anti-trust case that ded- ication of parents has been ord- ered." The order also applied to six other lamp supply manufactur- ers who were among eight firms convicted in 1949 by Forman of aiding GE to maintain a monop- oly in the nation. However, the judge turned down a U. S. government plea to force GE to divest itself of half its fa- cilities for producing electric light bulbs and their parts. Forman said "divestiture of General Electric is neither feasible nor in the public interest." * * * IN OTHER provisions of the judgment, GE was ordered to make available to the industry its blue- prints for lamp machinery. Forman also decreed that GE and the other defendants must end contracts and agreements with each other in the making of the lamps. Another provision restrains GE or International General Electric Co., Inc., from preventing their "partially owned foreign com- paniesfrom entering into compe- tition in the lamp industry in the United States." In New York, a representative of General Electric said in a state- ment that thz ruling by Judge For- man "goes further than we believe the court had'the power to go un- der Supreme Court decisions." t E a i J a Erskine gathered in Joe Col- lins'-soft tap to the mound and threw to Gil Hodges for the final out, the entire Dodger bench erupted onto the field to slap the back and wring the accom plished right hand of their pitcher. On the way he struck out Mick- ey Mantle and Joe Collins four times each, only one short of a series record. Going to the ninth inning with 12, just one short of the Ehmke high, he whizzed third strikes past the swinging bats of pinch-hitters Don Bollweg and Johnny Mize. Then he walked pinch-hitter Irv Noren before re- tiring Collins to put it in the bank. TIE 'DRAMA mounted steadily throughout the bright, summery afternoon with Erskine firing his blazing fast ball and sharp curve past the Yank hitters in a clutch duel with Vic Raschi. From the moment that Er- skine shot a third strike past lead off man Gil McDougald in the first inning, it was obvious he was a far different pitcher from the wild, shaky man who flopped so badly on opening day. See CAMPANELLA, Page 3 UN DEBUT: Ford Pledoes Economic Aid By The Associated Press Henry Ford II delivering his first speech as a United States delegate to the United Nations yesterday emphasized that "in the modern world, no nation can go it alone, in economics any more than in politics." Speaking before the General As- sembly's economic committee, Ford renewed a United States pledge that America would put up 60 cents for every 40 cents contributed by other members of the UN Techni- cal Assistance Program. ed and five wounded in a similar riot Thursday, THE COMPOUNDS still seethed. One; observer said the Chinese marched about, shoutingand beat- ing on tin cans.. Lt. Gen. K. S. Thimayya, In- dian chairman of the commis- sion, charged in a statement that camp violence was the re- sult of "well organized groups" formed before the prisoners were given over to Indian custody. The General had just received a letter from Brig. Gen. A. L. Ham- blen, who handles prisoner mat- ters for the United Nations Com- mand, charging the commission ,would violate armistice rules if it forced anti-Red prisoners to lis- ten to explanation teams from the Communist side. THIMAYYA did not accuse the UN Command of organizing the groups. It is known, however, that the UN'Command had encouraged the prisoners to form strong anti- Communist cores among the 7,800 Koreans and 14,500 Chinese re- sisting return to Red rule. Prisoners had been told while in South Korean camps, he said, that they would go to National- ist Formosa at the end of their detention but under the truce terms they will go to a "neu-f tral country." Hamblen's letter was a formall protest to the rules of explanations which the commission unanimous- ly adopted. Under these rules, pris- oners must listen to repeated ar- guments from Communist explan- ation teams. The UN Command argues that prisoners may refuse to listen to the explanations. Indian officials have refused to discuss the possi- bility that force will be used on prisoners who have announced they will not listen. But that is implied in the commission rules. -Daily-Dick Gaskili ALUMNI CHAT-Wyeth Allen (left), President of Globe Union, Inc., talks over the University that used to be with two other prominent alumni-Edgar N. Eisenhower, Tacoma, Wash., attor. ney and brother of the President, and University President Emeri. tus Alexander G. Ruthven. The three alumni were among more than 50 Development Council members who met last night at the Union to begin laying plans for the University that will be. A ir Force To Postpone Deciston on Radulovich By MARK READER member, said that they had also holl starting positions on A three-man military tribunal never heard him utter a disloy- the line. Right tackle Bryan reviewing the case of University ; al word. Burnthorne, a strapping 210- senior Milo J. Radulovich accused According to an official spokes- pounder from Amite, Louisiana of being a "poor security risk" by man for the 10th Air Force at and Tony Sardisco, another rug- the Air Force has held up final Selfridge Air Force Base the de-. ged lineman from Bossier City pronouncement of its decision on lay in announcing the board's have both been installed on the the charges for at least a week. findings was not out of the or- first team due to fine showings The second and closing hearing dinary. in the last two games. in the incident of the 26 year-old The proceedings of both hear- The, weakness of the Tulane physics major questioned in con- ings will be typed and submitted team appears to be its shortage of nection with "closely associating" 'to defense lawyers for their ap- depth. One deep the Green Wave with his allegedly Communistic proval as to the accuracy of the presents a formidable club, but father and sister officially wound official transcript, the spokesman. up at 10:15 a.m. yesterday. said. * * ** * * T backs Lester Kennedy and Max McGee and fullback Ronnie Kent. This quartet, one of the most ex- perienced in the South, ran all over Georgia last Saturday, but had trouble keeping possession of a wet football. The Bulldogs re- covered two key fumbles in the fourth quarter to stall the Green Wave and preserve the narrow vic- tory. ALONG THE forward wall the New Orleans club presents a solid array anchored by all-Southern hopeful Captain Al Robelot, a rug- ggdy 200-pound senior guard. Two highly touted sophomores I' THE lovich worker Co. for spread CHARGES against Radu- state that his father, a at the Hudson Motor Car many years, had tried to -Communist propaganda l i l among the other workers and that he read the Daily Worker and a Communist sympathizing Serbian' language paper. Two volunteer witnesses to- day, Arvin Wheaton and Claude Blande, members of Local 154,j UAW of which Radulovich is a, edell Smith in Detroit AFTERWARD the board will review the records and notify Ra- dulovich of the findings before releasing its decision to the public. The verdict is automatically subject to examination by the Air Base Commander, the Con- tinental Air Command and the Secretary of the Air Force. d11 IFollowing the hearing Radulo- I vich commented that publicity the case attracted had done much to" help him. He also indicated noti- fication by the Air Force of its final decision would be' forthcom- ing within a week to 10 days. Two other Air Force officers are facing a possible discharge as "poor security risks," a 10th Air Force spokesman at Selfridge Air, Force Base said yesterday. A third officer received a dis- charge "under honorable condi- tions" two years ago, the spokes- man added. The two officers' cases are still pending, making Lt. Milo Radulo- vich the fourth such case to come up within the past two years. TULANE Coates Cummins « Sardisco Camp Robelot Burnthorne Bravo Clement Kennedy McGee Kent LE LT LG C RG RT RE QB LH RH FB MICHIGAN Topp Walker Dugger O'Shaughnessy Beison Balog Knutson Baldacci Kress Branoff Balzhiser Lineups Waterfront NEW YORK-(iP)-Rumdrs of impending murder and mayhem swept the strikebound East Coast waterfront yesterday and rival longshore leaders in New York were put under protective police guard. The docks themselves, from Maine to Virginia, were quietrin the second day of an International Longshoremen's Assn. strike for higher wages. An estimated 60,000 dockers were idle. THE NEW YORK Herald Trib- une said last night that John L. Lewis' United Mine Workers had invited the beleaguered. ILA into its fold. The report could not im- mediately be confirmed, either here or in Washington. About 100 ships were caught in the strike which began at midnight Wednesday. The first passenger liner to become a strike casualty was the Ameri- can Export Line's Constitution, laid up in New York indefinitely. Military ships were being work- ed. In New York, the FBI tipped local police to a report that two gunmen were on their way here from Oregon to kill Joseph P. Ryan, president of the orphaned ILA. * * * A 24-MOUR police guard was placed on the private hospital room, where the 69-year-old Ryan has been, confined with an illness for several days. An unofficial police guard also was placed on John Dwyer, a leader in a grim struggle to drive Ryan's ILA off the docks. Dwy- er is an organizer for a new AFL longshoremen's association. Dwyer and his ILA Local 895 seceded from the old union before the strike began. He was up and down the water- front during the day, exhorting ILA pickets to bolt the union and join the new AFL setup. Two de- tectives were by his side. s *w * IN BALTIMORE, where 18 ships are tied up by the strike, police were alerted on a tip that machine guns and rifles were moved from one car to another near the water- front. Rushed to the area, police found nothing. President Eisenhower Thursday named a board of inquiry to pave the way for a strike-ending Taft- Hartley law injunction. The three- man board meets today and its re- port must be at the White House no later than midnight' Monday. Report Given On Taft Death WASHINGTON-()-The first public statement on the probable origin of the widespread cancer there is a great lack among the reserves,; of experience and with the "I PERSONALLY believe," the }11 "I * 'U ~ d~ k' 'b. l U ~ ' 'T d' I C' I? 'U7^' C 'U U 7A. c World News Roundup 1 [ ' i m Y i rlli automobile manufacturer who De OUVIC joined the U. S. delegation for the first time .this year continued, "that it is essential for the nations In his first visit to Michigan s here to find a way of working to- ant at Fort Custer during World gether on terms that will give peo- Walter Bedell Smith attacked Ru ple everywhere a real chance to yesterday, saying that peace is po live and prosper in dignity and suits its actions to its words. mutual respect." i Addressing Detroit's First Fri The United States had pre- viously promised $12,767,145 for possible to escape the conclusion the Assistance Program in 1953. a conference confined to the Aust Congress still must appropriate tactics of abfuscation to mask its $4,700,000 of this, and only eight negative attitude." and one half millions has been * * * appropriated for 1954. SMITH CALLED the proposal Ford promised that the United that Communist China be a mem- States will put up every cent of ber of such a conference another its share of this year's contripu- diversionary device. tions. "Can anyone imagine what Following the speech wifh in- possible interest Communist terest were the Soviet delegates China could have in Ger nany's who in previous years denounced internal affairs?" he asked. the program as an imperialist ven- The Undersecretary told the ture linked to the American Point club that there was nothing in* Four program. However, recently any of Russia's proposals that a the Russians pledged a ruble equiv- ' moderately cautious individual or alent of one million dollars for a responsible government could 1954 and Poland and Red Czech- put any trust in. oslovakia each promised about * * * 1$70,000. "AS STRESS' of suspicion, dis-' S-trust and friction are eliminated, SNew 1Tel'ckrses the United States is ready to work concurrently towards arms reduc- Fivasivu TEMPP' ATI TTRETtbl NT QRtI'Q- By The Associated Press HANOI, Indochina-Remnants of a Vietminh brigade which' once numbered 5,000 men maneuvered frantically in the Red River Delta last night to avoid extinction by French Union forces. A 10-day-old French drive appeared to be paying off. A little Dunkerque may' develop as the Communist-led rebels work their way eastward, village by village, from their old stamping Half-Time Bandsmen Temperatures in the 80's. partly cloudy skies and the "world's larg- est collection of bandsmen" will greet an expected 55,000 football fans at the Michigan-Tulane game today. "Even John Phillip Sousa in his ' heyday didn't have 6,500 bands- men to direct at one time," ac- cording to George Cavender, as- sistant director of the University ince he served as an army lieuten- d War I, Undersecretary of State ssian evasion and dilatory tactics ssible as soon as the Soviet Union iday Club, Smith said, "It is im- that the Kremlin seeks to avoid trian-German question. It is using weatherman predicting a warm afternoon, Coach Wolf may be forced to use some of his inex- perienced players in order to spell the regulars. MICHIGAN, wh in showed tre- mendous depth in its 50-0 rout of Washington last week, will start virtually the same lineup which opened the season against the Huskies. See TRIPLE THREAT, Page 3 Showi To Feature 6,500 from State High Schools ground in the Hung Yen area, 30 the Gulf of Tonkin. * WASHINGTON --"Organized labor might as well realize the only way it will get the Taft- Hartley law changed is to elect a sympathetic Congress in 1954," John L. Lewis' union newspaper miles southeast of Hanoi, toward * * * CHICAGO - A Lutheran Church group yesterday called upon the government to reduce or remove what it called bar- riers to the practical operation of an act admitting displaced more's "Ha, Ha, Ha," and Rich- ard Rodgers' "Some Enchanted Evening." Cracking down on youthful Degrees Given To Foresters fence-cutters hoping for a free entry into the Stadium today, lo- cal police authorities have as- signed two motorcycle officers and 10 policemen to patrol the area inside the gates. * * * MUNICIPAL Judge Francis J. O'Brien yesterday said that "the entry to an athletic event without payment of admission is a viola- i !'.