I 1 4 6 DIXIECRATS' PARTIAL DEFEAT Latest Deadline in the State A61F juatt4p Y PARTLY CLOUDY VOL. LX. No. 26-5 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, AUGUST 3, 1950 FOUR PAGES T Senate Unit OKs Wage, Price Control Depends on Rise In Living Cost y WASHINGTON-)-The Sen- ate Banking Committee voted yes- terday for automatic price and wage controls and rationing if the cost of living rises to some point which the Committee will fix later.. The alarm clock method of in- voking the curbs was approved by a voice vote. This reversed a 12-1 vote 45 minutes earlier for the general idea of standby powers for President Truman to put on such controls if and when he sees the * need. THE COMMITTEE acted after signs had appeared in the House that the Administration was grab- bing up the standby authority ball. In that branch a last-minute sub- stitute was introduced to broaden the limited economic control mea- sure originally sponsored by the White House. 'Backed by Admin- istration leaders, it included the standby powers. The Senate Finance Commit- tee rounded out a day of rapid- fire deveopments on' home front mobilization with a vote for a 10 per cent tax on television sets and home freezers. The televis- j.ion levy was expected to bring in $42,000,000 a year and the freez- er tax another $8,000,000. The committee did not get to President Truman's proposal to boost income taxes, though Secre- tary of the Treasury Snyder urged prompt action. It did go through the formality of junking provisions of a House- passed bill which would have cut excise taxes by $1,010,000,000. Another tax boost voted by the committee would bring in $5,000,- 000 by raising the levy on 'oper- ating slot machines from $100 to $150. Another. attempt to get a tax Sincrease, failed. This was a plan ntotie an excess profits tax onto a measure for renegotiation of de- fense contracts when prices are considered too high. Truman's Man Still Hopes in Missouri IRace Hennings Claims PrimaryVictory By The Associated Press The campaign manager of form- er U.S. Rep. Thomas C. Hennings, jr., of St. Louis claimed the Mis- souri Democratic Senate Nomina- tion yesterday over President Tru- man's choice, State Senator Emery W. Allison. State Senator Elmery Atlison congratulated his opponent last night but clung to the hope that a final count might yet give him victory in the race for the Demo- cratic senatorial nomination in Missouri. HE LATER reduced the margin to 5,035 with 184 precincts un- counted. He refused to concede al- though admitting his chances were slim. He said he would await the tabulation of absentee ballots Fri- day. In 4586 of 4676 precincts, Hen- nings had 178,967 votes, Allison 174,217. President Truman, who had cast a mail ballot last Wednesday, had no comment. * * * KANSAS REPUBLICANS nom- inated Gov. Frank Carlson for U.S. Senator and Edward F. Arn, form- er state attorney general, for Gov- ernor. U.S. Not Open to Soviet Peace Deal Refuses Negotiations on Basis of Giving Communist China UN Status LAKE SUCCESS-(P)-American chief delegate Warren R. Aus- tin heatedly rejected yesterday any "deals" for a settlement of the Korean War. Austin turned down for the second straight day in the Security Council a Soviet move to link the question of Communist China's en- trance into the UN with the Korean War. He said the United States will never agree that the end of North Korean aggression depends on any other issue. * * * THE COUNCIL adjourned until 2, p.m. today without acting on its agenda. The Soviet Union is seeking to have the Council take up e Police Stop Peace Rally NEW YORK - (A) - Leftist "Peace" marchers - banned from' heavily-guarded Union Square - defiantly clashed with police yes-' terday in a tense, noisy brawl. An estimated 2,000 marchers formed ranks amid thousands of home-going workers at the height of the rush hour. "We want peace-open up the square," they cried. MOUNTED POLICE charged their ranks and scattered them but they reformed again and again as the brawl swirled through the streets of downtown Manhattan. A 1,000-man police detail - stationed like an army ground the Square - spent an hour breaking up the demonstration. Fists flew at times and several injurieswere reported. At least one window was smashed. Thirteen of the marchers were arrested, most of them charged with disorderly conduct or assault. DRIVEN AWAY from Union Square-traditional center of New York soap box oratory-some of the marchers still. were shouting slogans as they fell back south as far as 11th Street, three blocks away. About 500 others moved north to 23rd street and milled about a park in Madison Square. But po- lice pressed in and chased them out. An estimated 10,000 persons making their way peacefully along sidewalks in the Union Square area were thrown into a turmoil by the fighting. * * * THE NEW YORK Labor Confer- ence for Peace, which sponsored the forbidden rally, later released the text of a telegram it said was sent to Mayor William O'Dwyer. It charged that police clubbed the marchers, adding: "Mr. Mayor, it was quite a spectacle of brutal- ity and blood." The New York Labor Conference for Peace originally scheduled the "peace rally" to protest the atom bomb and to call for mediation in Korea. But the police refused them a permit for the rally. the question of seating Commu- nist China before ioing on to the Korean problem. Austin joined five other dele- gates in demanding the Council It~ everything aside except the issL - of aggression upon the re- public of Korea, a question that has been before the Council five weeks. Backing Austin were Sir Gladwyn Jebb of Britain, Jean Chauvel of France, Arne Sunde of Norway, Antonio Quevedo of Ecuador and Alberto I. Alvarez of Cuba. First County Draftees Get Physicals Washtenaw County's first group of eligible draftees -- 77 strong - left early yesterday morning for their pre-induction physical examinations in Detroit. Eighty-nine had been ordered to report but 12 failed to show up. A second group of draftees will report to Detroit Aug. 31. Out of the two groups will come the 64 men who will make up the coun- ty's quota in the September draft call. Draft Board officials said yes- terday that in making up the sec- ond group, they may have to dig deep into the lower age brackets. Most of the initial group that left yesterday were 24-year-olds and 25-year-olds, since Selective Service orders had been to con- centrate on older draftable men. Buck Appointed To State Panel Prof. Carl Buck of the School of Public Health was named yes- terday to an fl-member advisory panel to give Michigan's health agencies the once over. Appointment of the panel, which will use methods similar to those of the Hoover Commission, was announced in Lansing by a legis- lative committee on government re-organization. Also named to the panel was Dr. Leonard Himler, director of Ann Arbor's Mercywood Hospital. ECA Loan to Spain Unwise -- Acheson WASHINGTON-(P)--Secretary of State Acheson yesterday op- posed the Senate's $100,000,000 Spanish loan "rider" to a pending ECA appropriation. He told a news conference there were adequate funds for any jus- tified Spanish loan already avail- able in the Export-Import Bank. * * * HE ALSO said that the State Department had met with no suc- cess in efforts to persuade Spain to adopt a more democratic gov- ernment. The Senate Tuesday added to legislation appropriating funds for European recovery a clause saying a $100,000,000 loan should be made to Spain through the Export-Import Bank Though he did not phrase it that way, Acheson's attitude ap- peared to be this in short: he feels any loan to Spain ought to be handled in the regular way; that Congress ought not to tie the hands of government agencies in negotiations with Spain by direct- ly ordering a loan. * * * ACHESON DID say he is not opposed to the principle of a loan to Spain if it is economically jus- tifiable and a good credit risk. He recalled, however, that in his last comprehensiversummary of American policy toward Spain last Jan. 18, he noted there were a number of economic barriers to such a loan. These obstacles, he said, are in the power of the Spanish govern- ment to correct. The Senate loan proposal will have to go before the House, which could knock it out of the bill. Chi Minh Men Train in China SAIGON, Indochina-(P)-Of- ficial French sources said yester- day three camps have been open- ed in Communist China to train troops of the Communist-led Viethminh army, which is fight- ing French forces in Indochina. The informants gave this ac- count. The training centers, near the Northern Indochina frontier, are located at Wenshan, Tchenn- gan and Tunghing. At least 10,000 Vietminh soldiers are in the three camps, some of them having been sent there last May. The camps are used not only to drill and equip raw recruits but to give advanced commando training for soldiers of Commu- nist chieftain Ho Chi Minh. __ ..m...,,. _.,.... :.:. ._:" .,, ALONG THE CHINJU-PUSAN ROAD-Sherman tanks lead a counterattack of American force, built around battered fragments of the 24th Division and reinforcements from Okinawa. The GI's have fallen back on the central front to make the Naktong river the new United Nations defense line. ** * s E LeatherieeksI Ready for Korean Fight SOUTHERN PORT IN KOREA, Aug. 3-(/P)-The U.S. Marines be- gan going ashore early this morn- ing and started moving immed- iately toward the critical Korean' battlefront. Unloading of Marine equipment continued through Wednesday night, following the docking yes- terday. THE MARINES were in combat fatigues and wore canvas leggings. Brown and green camouflaged cloth covers were on their heads as they moved from the ships. While waiting on the dock, some snatched a few winks of sleep. Others polished and oiled their weapons. Trucks were lined up at the pier, ready to roll toward the front as soon as the troops climbed aboard. The vow to "give them the best we got" was spoken by a sergeant veteran of World War II as he looked out across the rail of a transport yesterday at the low hills Starr Compares Present' Crisis to That in 200 B.C. of Korea. He wasn't cocky, confident. just I Belgium Movement Not Anti-Monarchic -- Slosson w orld News Roundup By The Associated Press LONDON-The Republic of Tur- key, which links southeastern Eur- ope with Asia, is planning to apply for membership in the North At- lantic Defense Alliance, the British Foreign Office said yesterday. * * * DETROIT - The Ford Motor Company last night announced a settlement with the UAW-CIO of a workers' dispute over trans- fers that had brought a strike threat. *' * * SAN FRANSISCO-The govern- ment yesterday sought to jail Har- ry Bridges immediately by declar- ing the labor leader a danger to the country's internal security in the Korean war crisis. LANSING-Governor Williams said yesterday he will ask the a, 1 5 lzigiv gcsis in House Hears New Bill on Comunists WASHINGTON-(P)-A b ill which would outlaw the Commu- nist Party, and another which would require all Communists to register as agents of a foreign government were introduced in the House yesterday. The new measures were off er- ed justnas ammovewas started to bring the controversial Mundt- Nixon Communist curbing bill to the House floor for action. REP. COX (Dem-Ga) submit- ted the proposal which would make in unlawful to belong to or be affiliated with the Communist Party. Violators could be impri- soned for 10 years and fined $10,- 000. Rep. Saylor (Rep-Pa) filed a petition in the House to bring the Mundt-Nixon Bill up for con- sideration. If 218 House mem- bers sign Saylor's petition, the bill will be brought to the floor as it now is written. It could, how- ever, be amended. "Although s u c h similarities1 should not be carried too far, the present international crisis is1 strikingly analagous to the Greco- Roman situation in the second century B.C.," Prof. Chester G. Starr, visiting member of the his-1 tory department, asserted yester- day. In a talk sponsored by the In- ternational Center, the University of Illinois professor presented his analogy as follows.t THE PRACTICAL, enterprising Student Expert Fall Program Needs Boost Student experts, the University's own Quiz Kids, may not be around to give-the-cuff tips to course- hunting students this fall if more experts are not found soon to participate in the program. Keith Beers, summer president of Student Legislature, which sponsors Student Experts, has is- sued an urgent call for experts in 15 unfilled fields. THE MOST important of these are business administration, chem- istry, economics, history, physics, zoology and Army ROTC. Experts are also needed in astronomy, bo- tany, forestry, fine rats, geogra- phy, German, philosophy, and speech. Beers would also like to find one or two male and female ex- perts on extra-curricular activi- ties. Experts will not only be re- warded with that feeling of im- portance which comes with giv- ing advice, but will also be en- titled to register early. The experts are to meet on Sept. 19 at 8:30 a.m. in Rm. 25 Angell Hall. They will be on the job from 9 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 4 p.m. Sept. 19 and 20 in the same room. * * * EXPERTS ARE to advise stu- dents in their field of concentra- tion. Although a B average is de- sirable, it is not an essential re- quirement for becoming an expert. Students interested in working in the student expert program should contact Beers, 28534, or Dorianne Zipperstein, 38850. Romans compare with the Ameri- cans of 1938-39 and Greece with Europe of the 1930's, with small states continually at war, a work- ing knowledge of the balance of power system, teeming with al- liances, and united solely by a com- mon civilization. Of the five major powers which Rome (the U. S.) faced, both Greece under Philip (Germany un- der Hitler) and Syria under Anti- ochus (Russia under Stalin) had expanded swiftly and were rumor-1 ed to have allied to conquer Egypt, (Poland),ea move opposed by the two trading nations, Rhodes and. Pergamum (Britain and France). When Rhodes and Pergamum went to war against Philip they realized that they alone werea unequal to the task, and much' like their counterparts in 1941, sent ambassadors to the power- ful Rome (the U.S.). Under Roman law, Rome could fight only defensive war, so an ultimatum was sent to Philip and when he failed to acknowledge its existence, Rome considered her- self insulted and justified in "de- fensive attack." Meanwhile Antiochus was paci- fied and temporarily forgotten. When Philip was defeated, although the "liberated" Greek cities were declared free, occu- pation troops left two years la- ter and Rome still pulled the strings and expected alliegance. The Romans then realized that Antiochus (Stalin, remember) was still a threat (the point at which the U. S. is now) and tried to limit his expansion into Thrace (China), but his promises to the disgruntled lower classes increas- ed his power until Rome went in- to battle against him and in 188 he was defeated. * * * PROF. STARR then carried the startling analogy into the future, declaring that Rome's uncertain policy toward post-war Greece (now,Western Europe) involved her so deeply into international quarrels that in 146 B. C. she was forced to conquer Greece, thus completing the cycle of liberation, domination, conquering, and sub- jection. "And the result was that Rome became so large that her system of democracy could not work and she became a dictatorship under Augustus," Prof. Starr added. Called Last Major UN Withdrawal South Koreans RegainYongdok TOKYO-(P)-American troops yesterday fell back on the central front to make the Naktong river the United Nations defense bar- rier for much of the north and west sides of the Korean beach- head. Field dispatches said the gene- ral withdrawal was expected to be last major UN pullback of the war. Battle-ready U. S. Marines streamed ashore and started im- mediately forethe hard-pressed lines. Ahead of them were army reinforcements which had arriv- ed earlier. HOWEVER, ON THE east coast, the Communists were chased out of the battered town of Yongdok by the South Korean third division Tuesday under the covering fire of a U. S. cruiser and destroyers. A far east naval communique said the South Korean counter- attack carried three miles north of Yongdok, northeast anchor of the twisting front. One of the critical sectors was west of Pusan, the main supply, port at-the southeastern tip of Ko- rea. Fighting raged only 40 miles to the west of the city. The general withdrawal, how- ever, apparently did not extend this far south on the western side of the box-shaped beachhead. LATEST FIELD reports said army tanks and troops were en- gaged in bloody fighting after halting a powerful Korean Com- munist thrust 40 miles west of Pu- san with a counterattack. The Americans drove within three t five miles of Chinju before re- turning to their positions, an Eighth Army communique said yesterday. The general withdrawal - planned and orderly - began two days ago. Its aim apparent- ly was to relieve the heavy pres- sure of 10 Communist divisions - possibly 100,000 troops - until fresh army and newly ar- rived Marine units can get into combat. For two days, the Americans and South Koreans have been pulling back behind the Naktong river on the north. They gave up their old line from Hamchang at the northwest corner of the box to Andong, eastward toward Yong- dok. The Americans on the north- south front just below Hamchang withdrew from Sangju eastward to new positions behind the river. Tuesday they did the same on the Kumchon front, abandoning the town30 miles northwest of Taegu. How far south the withdrawal carried was not clear either in field dispatches or the Eighth Ar- my communique. The communi- que indicated, however, it might be down to the point where the (Continued on Page 4) Expect Pledge Of 'No-Strike' By U.S._Labor WASHINGTON - ( ) ae Mn- people in Washington are con- vinced that in the labor-manage- ment field the events immediate after Pearl Harbor are about to repeat themselves. That means. 1. A labor-manage- ment conference. 2 A no-strike pledge, at least in defense pro- duction. 3 Creation of some kind of labor board to handle dis- putes. THE labor-management confer- ence is already being talked about -.. - _ s 1,,, 1 A _A. 1 By PAULA STRAWHECKER "The present situation in Bel- gium is not the result of anti- monarchist sentiments, but of re- gional differences and opposition to King Leopold III himself," Prof. Preston W. Slosson of the his- tory department said yesterday. "If Leopold had held out and refused any compromise, a rep- ublican movement might have grown, but the fact the Belgium exile, saying that he would not return unless he was favored by 55 per cent of the votes in a plebiscite, Prof. Slosson con- tinued. "Actually Leopold received 57 per cent of the votes in the pleb- iscite a few months ago, but that small margin of victory was al- most tantamount to a defeat," he asserted.: LABOR LEADER SAYS: Social Security Program Incomplete By LARRY ROTHMAN "Although the government's so- cial security program is a start, there are still important gaps in it entirely labor." with government, and not More care must be exercised with health insurance than with pensions, though, Becker empha- sized. For pensions deal with money payments, whereas health At this time the workers' right to social security has been well nr lic. o . _ - 1 _ -. _A