INTERNATIONAL ARMY See rage 2 Y Latest Deadline in the State Da11339 PARTLY CLOUDY VOL. LX, No. 23-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1950 FOUR PA S I I ,.. * * * * * * * * * * * First davalry Launches Big Counterattac 6 k * * * * House Group OK's Price Control Bill WASHINGTON - (P) - The House Banking Committee yester- day approved 20 to 1 President Truman's plan of partial controls but Congress threatened to junk it and adopt a drastic price- wage freeze to combat inflation. Stirred by ominous warningsc of Bernard Baruch as he appealed for all-out home front mobiliza- tion in the face of zooming prices, House members backed his ideas in growing force. There was talk the House might adopt the Ba- ruch plan. BARUCH'S proposals narrowly missed replacing the Truman pro- giam in the Banking Committee. A bill embodying drastic controls lost by a single vote - 10 to 9 - before the Committee went on to work on the Administration's mea- sure. The Committee finally voted to give the President most of the powers he asked to control pio- duction and credit. Mr. Truman himself rejected at his news conference the sweepingsuggestions of Baruch, elder statesman who wants a "ceiling on everything" to check inflation and assure "equal treatment for all." The Presi- dent said the measures he fa- vors are all that the nation's economy needs at this time. But the Baruch plan was catch- ing on, showing some signs of a groundswell in the House. Talk about it increased in the Senate t too. Chairman Vinson (Dem.-Ga) of the House Armed Services Com- mittee came out for it. Rep. Wol- cott (Rep.-Mich), senior Republi- can on the Banking Committee, announced he will support on the House floor the bill which the Committee rejected. This embodies price-wage controls and rationing. Evacuation of Mason Hall will Continue Evacuation of Mason Hall, the oldest building on campus, is scheduled to continue Monday. The removal of personnel and equipment is a part of a general and temporary re-arranging of de- partment offices and workers in order to leave Mason Hall, Univer- sity Hall and South Wing, free to be razed, in that order, according to University officials. * * * A PROJECTED $3,500,000 Liter- ary College building will take the place of the three halls, as neces- sitated by the destruction of Ha- ven Hall in a fire June 6. University officials said that plans for razing the three an- cient landmarks have not been completed. The first group to leave Mason Hall was a contigent of psychology department teaching fellows who moved Wednesday to the old 9OTC Building beside the Union. Monday the exodus will continue r with teaching fellows in English. history and phiosophy moving to the West Medical, Rackham Build- ing and Angell Hall respectively. THE SOCIAL Psychology and' Conference Research Projects, both sponsored by the psych depart- ment, will move to the Natural Science Building. Finally, personnel from the sociology department will go to the Rackham Building. KING COMEDY REIGNS: Field's Filmy Plot Fills Comic Fil King Comedy will reign for two nights in Ann Arbor, as W. C. Fields, Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy reap the rewards of cir- cus management in "You Can't Cheat an Honest Man" playing at 8 p.m. today and tomorrow in Hill Auditorium. Sharing the double bill is "Hangover Square," a thriller starring Laird Cregar and Linda Darnell -in an eerie mood piece of the sacred and profane set in London's 'homeless men' area. *- *. * * FIELDS, WITH ABLE ASSISTANCE from his crew, spends his time juggling the filmy plot to enable him to display all the separate routines which made him famous. He began his adult life as a petty thief, but had blind self- confidence in his theatrical abil- ities from the time he saw his first juggling act; it was in the art of ball, cigar-box and hat- tossing that Fields won his first acclaim at the tender age of sixteen. His first big juggling job was on an Atlantic City amusement pier where, in addition to his dex- terity with the bobbling balls, he was expected to stage a drowning every time the crowds around the refreshment stands began to di- minish. * * * Pretty Boy LANSING-OIP)-G o v. Wil- liams, who has crowned a lot of beauty queens, knows how it feels now himself. He's been voted the handsom- est Governor in the United States. This is according to the good people of Fayetteville, N.C. Draft Request Increased to 100,900_ Men WASHINGTON-( P)-The Ar- my yesterday upped its draft re- quest from 20,000 to 100,000 men. It called for 50,000 draftees in September and another 50,000 in October. The idea, the Army said, is to bring the armed services up to their authorized strength. IN LANSING, local draft boards are going to be "very strict" about both industrial and agricultural occupational deferments this time, Lieut. Col. Arthur A. Holmes, Dep-. uty State Selective Service Direc- tor, said yesterday. OTHER MILITARY develop- ments in Washington: 1. The Air Force is increasing its strength from 48 groups to 58 within the next 12 months. By January, 1953, it will be expanded to 69 air groups. Another 136,311 men will be needed. 2. The Army extended the tour of duty of all Army personnel in foreign service. Effective Aug. 31, the tours of duty will be extended for another six months - with one important exception, the Far East command. It had been au- thorized to extend foreign service tours "as may be necessary," 3. President Truman signed an executive order extending for 12 months all enlistments in the armed services. Considered Largest U.S. Action in War BULLETIN TOKYO, Friday -W)- Heavy North Korean attacks drove back the left flank of the First Cav- alry Division on the Yongdong front today, General MacArthur reported. U.S. artillery fire alone took a toll of between 1,600 and 2,000 Communists, a release said. MacArthur did not pinpoint the action but the cavalry's left flank is near the main Yong- dong-Taegu highway. By The Associated Press U.S. First Cavalry troops hit North Korean forces at Hwanggan, about eight air miles northeast ofj Yongdong, on the vital central front guarding allied supply routes from Pusan yesterday. Maj. Gen. Hobart Gay, com- manding the First Cavalry, order- ed the counterattack with one regiment supported by a battalion. THIS WAS considered the larg- est counterattack yet attempted by the Americans. Two hundred and nine men reached American lines after NEW U. S. WEAPON IN USE-Unidentified soldiers use the Army's new tank killer, the 3.5 bazooka, against North Koreans on the fast-fluctuating Korean war front. Smoke swirls from the weapon as it is fired. CANTATAS, TOCCATAS: Bach Anniversary Bust Sweeps Record Stores 1O.r THE PIER-OWNER had dis- covered that a drowning made the crowds hungry and amusement- minded. Fields liked to date his dis- like of water from this aquatic period. "I once drowned twelve times a day for two weeks. Would you like to swim if you'd drowned 168 times?" he'd query. "HOW ABOUT including a scene where I'm cutting cat-tails in a field and then a Manx cat . . ." was vetoed by every studio in town, but producers had to keep alert to prevent Fields from shoot- ing schemes on his own. Tickets for his circus antics and the British chiller are on sale to- day in the Administration Build- ing from 1 to 4:30 p.m., at the Union from 1 to 6 p.m. and at the HH1 Auditorium box-office from 1 p.m. till show time, at 50 cents. The double-bill is sponsored by Art Cinema League and The Daily. 'King Lear' To Be Presented Today An all-English presentation of an all-English drama is on the playbill for 8 p.m. today at Lydia Mendelssohn, when the Oxford Players enact Shakespeare's "King Lear," under the auspices of the University's speech department. This will be the first U.S. pro- duction of 'Lear' by the company which arrived in the States only last Wednesday. "Play production conditions at Oxford may be difficult," the group reported, "but we get extra satisfaction out of producing a top-flight drama with little equip- ment and space. We improvise well." W. C. FIELDS IKahn -F reund Lands British Health Service The British people "can not af- ford not to afford" their National Health Service, Otto K a h n- Freund, of the London School of Economics, said yesterday in giv- ing an appraisal of the British Na- tional Health Service. Speaking at the, sixth of the summer lecture series on "The Quest for Social Security," Kahn- Freund said that the simple fact that more medical care is avail- able to more of the English, popu- lation is indicative of the success of the new system. THE OFT-REPEATED disad- vantages of the plan such as cost, lowering of doctors' standards of living, and incentives, and unnec- essary red tape have not mater- ialized, while ruinous impact of diseases on family welfare is dis- appearing, Kahn-Freund asserted. Kahn-Freund explained that comprehensive services provided by the new system, including general and specialized services, costs the government $25 per person each year. Once the doctors in Britain be- come adequate to the needs of the population there will be no problem of incentive because they will have to render adequate ser- vice or lose their patients who are free to change doctors at will, Kahn-Freund revealed. World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-President Tru- man yesterday ruled out the use of the atomic bomb in the present struggle in Korea. And, to make sure there is no atomic sneak at- tack on American shores, the House quickly whipped through a bill authorizing search of all for- eign flag vessels entering Ameri- can waters. * * BRUSSELS, Belgium -- With shouts of "Leopold to the scaf- fold," opponents of Belgium's newly returned King last night invaded the grounds of suburban Laeken Palace. Rifle and saber swinging gendarmes drove them out. * * * WASHINGTON-National Com- mitteeman Arthur Summerfield has resigned as chairman of the Republican Party's Strategy Com- mittee, complaining that National Chairman Guy G. Gabrielson sen- tenced the strategy unit to death through inactivity. TOKYO-(AP)-A U.S. cruiser blasted the Yongdok area on the East Korean coast with eight-inch guns for the first time yesterday, a navy statement reported. Allied fighter planes poured rockets and machinegun bullets yesterday on North Korean forc- es building up for a push on the central Korean front, Far East Air Forces Headquarters an- nounced. shooting through encircling Reds. They were supplied by air drops from cub planes during the strug- gle. * * * NORTH KOREAN troops at- tacked the First Cavalry positions at dawn. Red tanks rumbled to- ward the American right flank emerging through drizzle under low hanging clouds. The Red attack was part of a series of thrusts along the curv- ing 200-mile Korean front. It appeared to be the prelude to possibly the biggest battle of the war. AP correspondent Tom Lambert in a separate dispatch said the Reds at Hwanggan attacked with 400 men and were thrown back by artillery and small arms fire. LAMBERT reported one Red force of about 200 men had swung around the flank of the Hwanggan position and unless dislodged might force the Americans to re- treat once more. After a flying visit to the front yesterday Gen. MacArthur told war correspondents in Korea he was never more confident of vic- tory-ultimate victory, he added, rather than an immediate turn of the Red tide. By NANCY BYLAN Today is a big day for organs and claviers, sonatas, toccatas and cantatas. It's the 200th nniversary com- memoration of the death of Jo- hann Sebastian Bach. EVEN BEETHOVEN and Brahms men have stilled their partisan voices to honor the first of the trio, one of the greatest or- ganists-his nearest competitor accorded him triumph in a musi- cal tournament between the two by fleeing town the day of the contest-and composers the world has ever seen. Normally m u s i c-conscious students and Ann Arborites have virtually started a Bach boom in the past two weeks. Sales of Bach records have been tremendous, music stores re- ported. Leading in popularity are the Brandenburg Concerti, closely fol- lowed by "The Well-Tempered Clavier," played by Wanda Lan- dowska, and Concerto in D Minor for Two Violins, both parts ren- dered by Jascha Heifitz. * * * OF SPECIAL interest have been three recordings of Bach by Uni- versity organist Robert Noehren: The Great Catechism Complete, Preludes and Fugues and Trio- Sonatas. One record store clerk credit- ed the upswing in Bach-buying to the increased output of Bach music by the record companies. The Long Playing catalogue of one company contains two whole pages of new Bach releases. * * * WHILE MOST of the Bach-pur- chasers are aware of the bicenten- nial, many customers have been influenced by the current abund- ance of Bach advertising, wheth- er interested in the anniversary or not,, a music store manager commented. Another record store clerk held that sales in Bach were augmented by Holy Year, as well as by the composer's anniver- sary. NOT ONLY the music stores but the radio stations are feeling the impact of the anniversary. WPAG will present an all Bach program at 2:30 p.m. today, and WUOM will follow with another all Bach concert at 9 p.m. Commemoration of the bicen- tennial will continue through the weekend, Noehren presenting an all-Bach program at 4:15 p.m. Sunday in Hill Auditorium. The University organist will play Prelude and Fugue in F Min- or, Canonic Variations on "Von Himmel hoch da Komm' ich hier," Fugue in G Major, Canzona, Trio-Sonata No. 6 in G Major and Fantasia and Fugue in G Minor. It will be open to the public. Daily Worker Still Peddled in Detroit DETROIT-(,P)-Vendor I z z y Berenson, 57 years old, peddled his Communist literature at his old corner - minus newsstand - yes- terday, but business was slim. Police, on orders of the Detroit City Council, removed Berenson's stand as a "public nuisance" yes- terday, but conceded nothing could be done to stop Berenson from selling his papers "off the arm." Soviets Still Snub Other UN Groups Security Couna To Meet Tuesday LAKE SUCCESS-(P)-Russia's Jakob A. Malik suddenly ended the Soviet boycott of the United' Nations yesterday and informed the UN he would take over the presidency of the Security Coun- cil Aug. 1. He also called a meeting of the. council for that date. The decision of the Soviet Dep- uty Foreign Minister was trans- mitted to Secretary-General Try- gve Lie as the UN received as- surances of almost a division of combat troops to help the United States fight .against Communist North Korea's invasion of the UN sponsored Republic of Korea. THERE WAS no hint from Ma- lik whether the Soviet Union would return to the 29 other UN organizations the Russians are boycotting over the issue of Na- tionalist Chineose representation. But some UN observers specu- lated that Maliks return might mean a decisive development in the Korean war. They recalled that Malik and U.S. delegates started conversations here which ended the Berlin blockade. It was stressed that if the Rus- sians move to hamstring actions in the Security Council, the Amer- ican and other delegations were ready to demand an immediate session of the UN General Assem- bly. Malik can veto future deci- sions in the Council, but has no such power in the assembly. * * * MALIK'S DECISION to return Aug. 1 was sent to Lie in a letter telephoned to the Secretary-Gen- eral. It was the first move Malik had made toward the Counil since he stalked out of the cham- ber last Jan. 13 when the Council refused to oust Nationalist China, Malik's return to the Council makes it certain that future de- cisions on the Korean war will face either long debate or 8 Russian veto. But Council dele- gates have insisted that the Rus- sians cannot veto decisions alr ready taken. Some action from the Russians had been expected during August, since the Soviet- Union normally would have the chairmanship un- der the regular alphabetical ro- tation plan. Council delegates also were dis- cussing a possible sudden break in the impasse over Chinese rap- resentation in the UN. They sug- gested that Malik as chairmn might make a ruling that the Na- tionalist Chinese Delegate, T. F. Tsiang, was not a member of the Council. * * * TSIANG MIGHT challenge this ruling, and Malik would put the challenge to a vote. With the line- up in the Council almsst evenly divided on the China question, it appeared likely that Tsiang would not get the necessary majority of seven votes needed to overturn the ruling. Delegates discussing this re- port said Tsiang might count only on the votes of himself, the United States, Cuba, Ecua- dor, Egypt and France. They said the Soviet Union, Yugosla- via, India, Norway and Britain - all of which have recognized Red China - cretainly would vote for the ruling, since they no longer recognize Tsiang's government. If such a vote should material- ize, the Nationalist delegation would be unseated, but, on the other hand, there appeared little or no chance that the Chinese Reds would get the necessary ma- jority to win a seat. Thus it might develop that the Chinese seat would remain vacant for a while, at least. Malik has kept in touch with the UN since his walkout. His sec- KOREAN WAR PROPHESIED 500 YEARS AGO: Weird Prohpecy In Korea Gains Credence Iaj. Rhoads By PAUL MARX A weird tale of a 500-year-old prophecy of the current Korean war and of the subsequent rise of a legendary popular leader, aided by recent rumors giving it ever- increasing credence, is rapidly working its way into the minds of the Korean people. tually in 1895 Japan assumed con- trol of Korea. The story specified that in the year. 1945 the foreign power would be defeated and Korea occupied for seven years by the conquering powers, during which time the country would be di- vided North and South. to the effect that a boy of that name, possessing unusual ability and intelligence is living near Kaeryong-san. Major Rhoads asserted that a colony of refugees from North Korea has settled in a fold in the hills thereabouts to await the com- ing of their expected sovereign. New Inner Capital," that the Lee dynasty first decided to build its capital in 1392. But af- ter the ruling Lee had been visited by a mountain god in a dream, who told him that this spot was reserved for the future Chung dynasty, the Lee capitol was moved to Seoul. elsewhere, even though this land was of poor quality. However, Major Rhoads re- ported that there is some skep- ticism toward these legends in Korea. One of the most skeptical is Hong Ki Moon, editor of the Seoul Shinmun. Hong possesses the oldest known copies of the HE DECLARED that whether all this is merely another example of a disillusioned people grasping at a straw and indulging in a bit of highly wishful thinking, or whether it indicates the existence of an intentional program on the part of some group to inflame the public mind for political purpose,