SCOTTSBORO CASE-FINIS See Page 2 C, r Latest Deadline in the State Dut4l 4 I ,ellF 1 G SHOWER VOL. LX, No. 17-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1950 President Authorizes .Yank Americans Kill 7 Tanks With Rockets But U.S. Forced To Fall Back TOKYO-(AP)-Armor-led North Koreans launched their first ma- jor attack south of the Kum Ri- ver yesterday. The American defenders of Tae- jon, using 3.5 inch rockets for the first time, knocked out all seven of the Communists' spearheading tanks. With the Western front sudden- ly aflame again after a three-day lull, two divisions of American troops, newly landed in Korea, rushed west and northwest from the east coast to safeguard Allied supply lines to the front. ** * THIS QUICK deployment of major units of the U.S. Eighth Army, General MacArthur said yesterday, has ended "the chance for victory by the North Korean forces." The Americans, the United Nations Commander said in a spe- cial communique, have wrecked the Communist hope which de- pended upon quick conquest of all South Korea. Praising the holding actions by the Americans already in g combat, MacArthur said: "Our casualties, despite overwhelming odds, have been relatively light." He said future developments could be predicted and 'that mili- tary strategy will involve "plan- ned withdrawals as well as local advances," but that American strength will increase and Com- munist strength will reduce." THE ENEMY "has had his great chance but failed to exploit it," he said. "We are now in Korea in force, and with God's help we are there to stay until the consti- tutional authority of the Repub- lic is fully restored." The fresh Communist attack was against the new positions of the U.S. 24th Division north and west of Taejon. Exactly where the Communists hit was not disclosed in field dispatches. This was the first tank attack the Communists had been able to mount since they forced across the Kum Sunday night: The river defense line was overwhelmed in this thrust and shoved back to new positions nearer Taejon. I * s SOUTH OF TAEJON, abandon- ed emergency capital of the South K o r e a n Republic, infiltrating Communists struck from both sides of the highway. This highway leads to American rear positions, to the communications hub of Taegu, 70 miles southeast of Tae- jon, and on to Pusan, U.S. supply port at the southeastern tip of the peninsula. Even as the attack broke, two reinforcing divisions of U.S. troops moved west and north- west from east coast landings to protect these vital supply routes. It was reported at Lake Suc- cess yesterday that United Na- tions Forces fighting Communist aggression in Korea are growing slowly, but no combat troops have been formally pledged so far to join American GI's on the battle- field. UN Secretary-General Trygve Lie dispatched an appeal last Fri- day to 52 of the 57 UN members for all help they could give. To date, he has not been pledged one soldier. Only one power, Britain, appears or. the verge of commit- ting troops. Last Arts Panel ScheduledToday 5' f n i fnr T * * Slow- New Drive Calling Truman Asks Tighter Belts, No Hoarding Reassures Nation In Radio Address WASHINGTON-(Y)-President Truman told the American people last night they are in for some belt tightening because of the Ko- rean battle and world conditions but said that scare buying and hoarding are foolish and selfish. The chief executive gave to the AFTER A B' people in short and simpler lan- adrstoC guage much the same reporthe address to C made earlier in the day to Con- National Gu gress. broadcast tot * * * for some "be Guar AlsoI ActiV Draft Be U WASHING ed services w ordering lim servists to a There wa when Nation be called in PRESIDED day authoriz servists anc with free u build up figh * * * * of Reserv IUSY DAY - President Truman yesterday sent an ongress, authorized the calling of the Reserves and ard for the fight in Korea, and spoke in a national the American people, warning them that they are in elt tightening." KUM RIVER BRIDGE BLASTED-Retreating American forces send one end of the Kum River bridge up in smoke to prevent crossing of North Korean tanks. Later, however, the Communist forces crossed the river elsewhere, forcing defending American troops to fall back toward Taejon. F ifield Says Global War No'tPlannted MANILA - Russia was not pre- pared for a global war when the Communists crossed the 38th pa- rallel in Korea, according to Prof. Russel H. Fifield of the political science department, who toured Korea two weeks before the war broke out. Prof. Fifield explained this theory, pointing out that the war is localized in Korea, and that there are no Communist attacks in other parts of the world as yet. * * * "RECENT developments in Ko- rea indicate that the Soviet Union will use a frontal attack under two conditions: (1) if guerrillauactivi- ties fail in the desired country, (2) if the risk of provoking a third world war is not too high," the political scientist declared. Prof. Fifield is currently in the Philippine Islands, where he is studying conditions. He was in- terviewed by the Department of Foreign Affairs of the Philip- pines in Manila. The attack on South Korea was an acknowledgement by Russia of the strength of the Republic of Korea, Prof. Fifield said. * * * "THE COMMUNISTS would not have invaded South Korea if the government of President Syngman Rhee could have been overthrown by boring from within," he added. REVISION NEEDED: Retirement Plan Called Unsound' byMeriam By PAUL MARX Our programs of Old-Age As- sistance and Old-Age Survivors Insurance are socially and finan- cially unsound and should be rad- ically revised and consolidated, ac- cording to Lewis Meriam, vice- president of the Brookings Insti- tution. Speaking at the third session of the summer series on "The Quest for Social Security," Meriam at- tacked the universal retirement system that is in present use and proposed adoption of a pay-as- you-go plan which imposes taxes only to insure the citizen against current need. THE ACTIVE WORKER should extend to the dependents of his day reasonable and adequate pro- tection, the costs of which should be borne immediately, Meriam de- clared. The exponent of the "Floor of Protection" plan asserted that there should be a balance between taxes for the social security fund and the benefits paid out, with both the benefits and the taxes frequently changed to meet al- terations in economic, social and political conditions. Adoption of this system would allow as low a tax rate as pos- sible to be consistent with pay- ments of reasonable, but mo- dest benefits, Meriam said. "Then tax rates should not rise to a level that would threaten incentives." Formal social security systems as ours and risk-taking, which is essential for an expanding pro- productive capacity, are antitheses, but an expanding productive capa- city is the basis of true social se- curity, the economist asserted. ,. * * MERIAM EXPLAINED that the necessary funds for employment of the "Floor of Protection" plan would be raised from a personal income tax which would prevent a wage price spiral that destroys the value of formal social security systems to the dependent whom it seeks to benefit. IAU Festival' Will Feature Student Music A program of student.music will be performed at the Inter-Arts Union Summer Art Festival at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Assembly Hall of the Rackham Building. Opening the program will be Leslie Bassett's "Brass Overture," which will be performed for the first time by the brass ensemble under the direction of Prof. Wil- liam D. Revelli. * * * THE SECOND FEATURE will be four songs by Bob Cogan, mu- sic written to the poems of Cam- pion, Blake, Joyce and Spender. The numbers will be sung by Les- lie Eitzen, soprano, accompanied by Digby Bell at the piano. Cogan's songs were first per- formed at the Composer's Fo- rum last week. Dean Nuerenberger's "Quintet for Piano and Strings" will close the program. The number will be performed by John Wheeler, piano, Alfred Boyington, violin, Andrew Lisko, violin, Emile Simonel, viola, and Joan Lewis, cello. The Quintet was first presented at a composer's conference in Cin- cinnati. This is its first Ann Ar- bor performance. Service Physicals To Begin Monday By The Associated Press Pre-induction physical examina- tions will begin Monday in army and air force recruiting stations in Detroit. for lower Michigan. and ALL AMERICAN radio and tele- vision networks carried his words and the voice of American and British Broadcasting CorporationF arranged to beam them around the globe. The President said reports from the nation's top generals are reassuring but also show the job ahead of us in Korea is long and difficult as the result of "an act of raw aggression" by Communist forces. As an extra safeguard against inflation and to help finance de- fense needs, Mr. Truman told his countrymen, "it will be necessary to make substantial increases in taxes." HE SAID he will lay a balanced fair tax program before Congress as soon as it can be worked out, with the major aim of eliminating profiteering. Some 60 or 70 people, includ- ing cabinet members and other government officials, were in- vited to the White House movie room to hear the President make his broadcast. There was nothing vitally new in tonight's speech, beyond what he already had told Congress. But he did include part of a report that came in within the last few hours from Gen. Douglas MacArthur in Tokyo. The general said our hold on Southern Korea is "a secure base" and we are there to stay until "the constitutional authority of the (Korean) republic is fully restored." THE PRESIDENT also read part of another report from General J. Lawton Collins, Army Chief of Staff, who returned Saturday from a Korean inspection trip. It said our forces are "giving a splendid account of themselves," the task before them is no easy one, "but I am confident of the outcome."' In his speech to Congress ear- lier in the afternoon President Truman called for a $10,000,000,- 000 down payment on a vast mobilization drive to win the Ko- rean war an combat any Com- munist aggression elsewhere on the global front. More military manpower, anti- inflation controls, a swift step-up in war production, additional huge sums to arm non-Communist na- tions and - later - a sharp boost in taxes were among the salient recommendations the chief exec- utive made to Congress. See TRUMAN, Page 4 State Region Prepares for NSA Congress (EDITOR'S NOTE: Students from every corner of the nation will at- tend the Third Annuai National Stu- dent congress, Aug. 23-31, at the Uni- versity. .This is the second article in a series which will present many- of the issues they face.) The Michigan Region of the U.S. National Student Association (NSA) held two state-wide confer- ences during the year on problems raised by the "Student Bill of Rights." The Michigan Conferences in March and June were to aid stu- dents in their consideration of the problem, inform delegates who would attend the Third Annual National Student Congress here, and formulate a regional stand on the vital issue. STUDENTS CONCLUDED that the three year old NSA Bill of Rights-which is currently under fire from all sides-is inadequate. To replace it, they laid down in clear detail a statement of conditions, which they felt should be met-if effective cam- pus training for citizenship was to exist. In justification of the conditions, their preamble states: "Stemming from certain funda- mental aspects of the human be- ing, the concept of an ideal demo- cratic society has developed as one in which each individual as the basic unit is free to conduct him- self in such a way that the inter- ests of the whole society tend to be fulfilled to a maximum degree. It is within this type of a demo- cratic ideal that we define the ex- istence of the educational com- munity. See MICHIGAN, Page 4 Top Communist Leaders Hold Cominform Meet BERLIN-(P-Top Communist leaders of Europe and China gath- ered in Berlin last night for what appeared to be an important Com- inform discussion. Ostensibly these Communist representatives from 18 nations came here as foreign guests for the third annual convention of East Ger- many's Socialist Unity (Communist) party which opens today. * * * * BUT THE PROMINENCE of the visitors and the fact that many of them were leading lights in the Moscow-directed cominform suggested that something bigger was afoot. It was the biggest gathering of Communist leaders since the outbreak of the Korean war. It came at a time when Comm- form pressure was being intensi- fied against Premier Marshall Tito's Yugoslavia. Westernlead- ers also have been expecting in- creased Cominform pressure on Greece. Palmiro Togliatti of Italy and Jacques Duclos of r-ance were among the arrivals here. THE SOVIET delegation con- sists of M. R. Suslov and P. N. Pospelov. Suslov is Secretary of LONDON - (P) - Russia an- nounced yesterday that her price for Korean peace still is un- changed-the admission of Com- musnist China to the United Nations. The Moscow radio broadcast a dispatch from the official Soviet news agency Tass giving the Russian version of talks be- tween Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko and Sir David Kelly, British Am- bassador to Moscow. the Russian Communist party's central committee and is Russia's Cominform delegate. Other Communist notables were Wang Chia Hsiang of the Chinese Communist Central Committee, Premier Josef Cy- rankiewicz and Jakub Berman of Poland's Communist Polit- buro, The Socialist unity party is not a member of the Cominform. How- ever, the Soviet-occupied East Ger- man Republic, which is ruled by that party, recently was brought into close cooperation with the eastern bloc by a series of treaties with Poland, Czechoslovakia and Hungary.I About 4,000 delegates are ex- pected to attend the socialist unity convention, which will end Sun- day. The party was formed in 1946 by the Russian-enforced merger of the Social Democrats and the Communists. In a qui President's+ tary strengt troduced in gress to "fr vice for th persons nom This mean listments ar cept in for IN HIS ME gress that a 000,000 shou then U.S. d announced t Secretary o dip into the tional Guar and individu quired. The am promptly a call of Res needs of t] and the Na lective" ser The emph vices was fo mediately u electronics e: The army ed that sor reserve unit reservists, w said there is air reserve s moned into Marine Cor mobilize cer units. A DECISI tional Guar ed until ar month. The Def clined to e the more th of the Res active duty The late figures, wh made public ed that thes more than 5 ally authori 882. The de on June 30 the military -500 lesst The June 30 the result o ordered sine began, nor t then in res due to volun THE DEl expected to mobilize ma gress to rai to draft fro figure of 35 Under th provides fo aged 19 thr have beenc an initial q S ENDING FOUR PAGES' ists dsmen Liable to e Duty Law To sed Freely TON-01)-The arm- vill begin immediately ited numbers of re- ctive duty. s no announcement al Guard units might to Federal service. NT TRUMAN yester- ed the calling of Re- d Guardsmen, along se of the draft law to iting units. ck follow-up to the call for greater mill- th, legislation was in- both houses of con- eeze"' in military ser- e next 12 months all w in uniform. is that men whose en- re expiring could be another year. ESSAGE advising Con- n additional $10,000,- ild be spent to streng- efenses, the President hat he had authorized f Defense Johnson to Reserves and the Na- d for as many units' uals as might be re- my and air force nnounced a "limited" ervists "to meet the he Korean situation" vy announced a "se- vice callup. hasis in all three ser- r individuals with im- isable skills, such as xperts. and air frce.intdlca± ne of their organized s, as well as individual ill be called. The navy a possibility that some quadrons may be sum- service as units. The 'ps said it, too, may rtain selected reserve * * * [ON on calling up Na- d outfits is not expect- ound the end of this ense Department de- stimate how many of han 2,000,000 members erves will be called to Y. st available strength ich the department during the day, show- armed services are now 500,000 below their leg- zed strength of 2,005,- partment reported that the total strength of services was 1,458,500 than a month earlier. 0 figure does not reflect f stepped-up recruiting ce the Korean fighting he slight increase since ervists on active duty ateering. FENSE Department is take a further step to npower by asking Con- se the top age subject m 25, possibly to a new i. ie present law, which r the drafting of men rough 25, draft boards called upon to furnish uota of 20,000 men. thods ROTC MANUEL UNLOVED: Textbook Sale Draws Curious Junk' Seekers By PAULA STRAWHECKER "Wel-1-1, I was just curious." That was the standard response to the question "What interest do you have in textbooks that are obsolete in classes?", asked yes-' terday at the book sale sponsored by the Textbook Loan Library. * * * MOST PEOPLE wanted to "pick up some reference books - cheap" or get a background for term pa- pers. One man who was "interested in seeing what's in the junk," walked off with an armful of books. Another, loaded down with ten books, explained he was "ine hr...intr rn n . Ge- cording to the two harrassed mon- ey-takers. The largest crowds thumbed through books at the English and science tables, but English, social psychology, history and political science texts were car- ried away in the greatest num- bers, while French, math, chem- istry and engineering texts fared poorly. "Thousands" of ROTC Infan- try Manuals went untouched. PRICES ranged from 10 to 50 cents per book, with the average sale around 50 cents. The books were donated to the Textbook Loan Library, and EDUCATION SHORTCOMING CITED: Students Shown Job-Hunting Me By PETER HOTTON (Daily City Editor) American schools are on the wrong track in training men and women for jobs, because they pay too much attention on developing skills and not enough on develop- ing good personalities, according to three top officials in Michigan business. comings of the schools by citing a survey of persons who failed in job-landing and promotions: Almost 90 percent of the per- sons polled could not land jobs because of their personal "disabl- ing qualities," while only 10 per- cent failed because of the lack of necessary skills. * * * "It's not a matter of morals but of good business," he said. 3. Incompetence. But it's not always inability that causes a per- son to fail, although sometimes it is a person's not fitting into a certain job, Runkles explained. 4. Domestic problems, which ex- plain themselves. The business man also cited several attributes, which might be called "enabling qualities" in getting a job or a promotion: 1. Dependability. 2. Drive and initiative, but not aggression. "Don't go ahead over the heads of your fellow workers," he warned. "This way you lose valuable headway. he indicated.