'Yl r e trI t40 a Yn. t . ARTS FESTIVAL See Page 4 PARTLY CLOUDY, WARMER Latest Deadline in the State ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 1951 VOL. LXI, No. 118 EIGHT PAGES UN Troops Set To Cross 38th, Upon Labor Heads Unite Against Mobilization Group Demands Revision of Policy WASHINGTON - () - Econo- mic Stabilizer Eric Johnston, be- set by a mounting storm of labor criticism, yesterday sought means to'bring peacetinto the troubled mobilization setup. Labor chieftains turned their guns on the program at a rally sponsored by the united labor policy committee, airing demands for a thorough shake-up. LATE IN THE day, manage- 4ment informants said Johnston had called a labor-management meeting today in a move to re- store harmony. Johnston returned yesterday from a flying trip to confer with President Truman at Key West, Fla. Management officials said they are convinced the government will act soon-within a week, one in- formant predicted confidently- in an effort to settle the dispute. Last month labor union chiefs walked out in protest against what they termed "big business" domi- nation of the mobilization pi- ture. * * THE IMMEDIATE objective is to patch up a truce as the first step toward creation of a new wage stabilization board, presum- ably with dispute-settling powers, to replace' the old nine-man board. Meanwhile, big union leaders joined in lambasting the mo- bilization program, with such unity that talk arose of a pos- sible end to the great AFL-CIO split which started 15 years ago. The program up to now, said Walter P. Reuther, head of the CIO-United Auto Workers, has been put together with "shoe- string, baling wire, and old chew- ing gum." George Meany, AFL secretary-treasurer, called for an entire new price control set up. Union Opera Cast To Give Extra Show Faced with a near sell-out for the next week's night perform- ances of the Union Opera "Go West - Madam," Opera officials yesterday scheduled a special aft- ernoon matinee performance for March 30. Tickets for the matinee will go on sale today in the Union lobby, with prices set at $1.80 and $1.20. In addition, a limited number of $2.40 seats are still available for the March 28 and 29 evening show- ings. The Union ticket office will be open at the following times: 1:30 to 5 p.m. today, 5 to 7:30 p.m. to- morrow, 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. Satur- day, 1:30 to 5 p.m. Monday and 5 to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Evening performances will open at 8:15 p.m. March 28, 29 and 30 in the Michigan Theatre, while the matinee will start at 3:15 p.m. The matinee has increased the need for ushers, according to Op- era staffman Mark Sandground, '52. He said 15 men are needed for the afternoon performance, while the Wednesday and Thurs- day night shows are still short 10 ushers each. Sandground asked interested men to contact him at the Opera office in the Union. ' IFC Declnesj To Campaign The Interfraternity Council last< night refused to follow the exam- ple of the Association of Independ-1 Sports Policies At 'U'Defended Crisler Says Michigan Athletes Not PrivilegedClass, Not 'Subsidized' By JOE EPSTEIN and CAL SAMRA Michigan's athletes aren't a privileged class, but are subject to the same treatment and restrictions as the rest of the student body, according to Prof. H. 0. (Fritz) Crisler, Director of Physical Education and Athletics. A recent New York Times survey on "semi-professional" athletics at 40 colleges, now running in the Detroit Free Press, reported ath- letes commonly got subsidies ranging from outright athletic scholar- ships to grants from local businessmen and alumni. * * * * CRISLER, however, denied yesterday any such practices exist at the University. His defense of the University's relation to its athletes follows: Two Horace Rackham scholarships are awarded annually on the basis of grades, character, citizenship, leadership, and physi- cal achievements. Each scholarship carries with it a $500 grant, and a B'average must be maintained. The first Rackham scholarship was awarded to a third string varsity center several years ago. Subsequent scholarships have not always been held by varsity athletes. * * * * EACH HIGH SCHOOL in the State, he continued, is awarded a Regents-Alumni Scholarship every year. These are given on a co- petitive basis and provide only tuition expenses. "Naturally, some athletes have held these," he said, "but it takes a 2.5 average to hang on to them." Moreover, there are 100 additional Regents-Alumni scholarships for other qualified students in Michigan. These are also on a com- petitive academic basis. Various alumni clubs throughout the country also grant scholarships to deserving students from their regions. None of these scholarships depend upon athletic ability. The University annually grants 1,556 scholarships, having an approximate total value of $246,467. Ninety four athletes are among the scholarship holders. The total value of all scholarships held by athletes is $20,575. Many athletes, like other students, hold part-time jobs both on and off the campus. These jobs range from dishwashing to lab assisting. According to Crisler, in many cases athletes work only for their board. Salaries of these athletes range from $75 to $400 a semester. The University, at present, has loaned 11 athletes from $75 to $200, a service extended to any other student upon request through an extensive system of student loans. "The only courtesy extended exclusively to football players," Crisler said, "is a small number of tickets to games." Team members in the past received two tickets in their first year on the squad, four in their second, and six when they were seniors, Crisler said. A TIMES' SPOT check of the academic records of 48 football and 23 basketball players at Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, and North Carolina Universities, revealed an over-all academic average of 2.2. Of these 71 athletes, 30 were majoring in physical education. In contrast, the averages of the Michigan football teams in the past few years, Crisler pointed out, have been consistently above the University average: 2.46 in 1947, 2.50 in 1948, and 2.75 in 1949. The 1950 average has not yet been compiled. Crisler also revealed that ,physical education majors have not been in the majority on Michigan's football squads. Only nine out of 73 members of the 1950 squad are majoring in physical education. The vast majority are enrolled in the literary and engineering colleges. * * * * THE TIMES' survey admitted that "Michigan maintains a rela- tively high academic standard" but charged that "a boy with athletic ability is regarded as a greater asset to the University than a non- athlete." Prof. Algo Henderson, of the University education school, said yesterday that he had found no evidence of abusive practice here. He lauded the University for maintaining a balance be- tween athletics and education. "Many colleges, however, are more or less buying players," he admitted. "This is going to extremes and is probably establishing false values, lowering academic standards, and cheapening the college degree." PROPOSED PEACE TREATY: Ward, Says Economic Chaos Possible in Japan Senate Sets Vote Date on TroopsIssue Say Allies Agree On Parallel Plan WASHINGTON-()-The Sen- ate agreed last night to vote on its controversial troops - for - Europe resolutions on April 12. In their present form, the two resolutions approve President Tru- man's plan to send four more di- visions of American ground troops into the North Atlantic defense force. They also seek to establish a principle that Congress should ap- prove all future assignments of American forces to the interna- tional army being organized in Western Europe under General Dwight D. Eisenhower. * * * BUT WHAT Congress finally decides to do on the troops-for- Europe issue may depend to a great extent upon Allied policy in regard to crossing the 38th Paral- lel. Britain, France, Canada and the other nations fighting with the United States in Korea, meanwhile are reported to have agreed on policy for the next stage of the struggle revolving around the 38th Parallel. Diplomats said some public statement can be expected short- ly in Britain and possibly also in this country. Secretary of State Acheson told a news conference yesterday that there is no question about Gen. Douglas MacArthur's authority to send United Nations troops across the Parallel. But Acheson said the whole subject,is one on which the United States wants a meeting of minds with its allies. ACHESON YESTERDAY also appealed for friendship from the Soviet bloc peoples, but advised them that while Americans "covet peace, we will not sell our souls for it." "The peace we seek, is not simply the absence of war but a sound and free collaboration among nations in a pattern of responsibility based on mutual respect," he said. Acheson's statement was in let- ters to Senate and House Foreign Affairs Committee chairmen ex- tending strong Administration sup- port to a resolution reaffirming American friendship for all other peoples. World Newus Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Russia told the United States flatly yesterday that it "refuses to consider" re- turning 670 American vessels ob- tained under lend-lease during World War II. BUENOS AIRES-The Argen- tine congressional committee which has seized the newspaper La Prensa last night ordered its editor and publisher, Alberto Gainza Paz, jailed for 15 days for contempt of .congress be- cause he said the seizure vio- lated Argentina's constitution. Meanwhile, in Santiago, Chile, the local journalists' associa- tion has petitioned the UN Eco- nomic and Social Council, in session there, to make an imme- diate inquiry. * * * WASHINGTON - Actor Larry Parks told the House Un-Ameri- can Activites Committee yesterday' that he had joined the Commun- ist Party about 10 years ago, but that he left it in 1945 when he lost interest. * * * WASHINGTON - Frederick Vanderbilt Field, a New York millionaire whose name has been linked with Communism, won an acquittal yesterday on a nfl famnf; oa? rn cmah l o ra TV Lure STRATFORD, Conn. - (A)- A high school instructor has solved the problem of how to lure students to classes. He had a television set in- stalled so students could watch proceedings of the Senate com- mittee probing crime politics in New York. Attendance has been letter perfect, the instructor report- ed, but now the problem is to get students to leave the class- room when the period ends. Pre-Korean A rmyS ize Is Doubled WASHINGTON-(MP)-Presiden Truman told the world yesterday the United States now can strik against any new aggression with twice as much strength as it had when the Communist camp gam ble don the South Korean inva sion. An exchange of telegrams be tween the chief executive, at hi Key West, Fla., little White House and Defense Secretary Marshal showed the total manpowe strength of the armed forces ha mounted from 1,458,000 nin months ago to more than 2,900,00 now. rd ei Rail Center Of Chuncho FallsEasily Enemy Retreat On Two Fronts TOKYO-(P)-Advancing U ed Nations forces today were close to the 38th parallel that t could cross into North Korea time they received the order. The Allies were only eight mn south of the old, artificial bor at Red-abandoned Chunchon. bulk of the Chinese Reds, quitt Chunchon without a fight, alre had pulled back to or beyond parallel. NORTHBOUND DETOUR-A light tank in Korea is temporarily stopped as it attemp*S to ford a swollen stream on the central front. The vehicle formed part of a reconnaisance task force moving into Chunchon which UN forces took yesterday. Senate Crime Probers Hear O'Dwyer's Case t y e h 1d s e, sll r s e 0 NEW YORK-(P)-Senate crime probers were told yesterday that ex-Mayor William O'Dwyer took $10,000 in cash from the head of a firemen's union for his 1949 campaign. O'Dwyer swore under oath only Tuesday that he never took any contribution in 1949 from John P. Crane, president of the Uniformed Firemen's Association. CRANE TESTIFIED before the SL OKs New Constitution Uiianimnsly The Student Legislature last night unanimously passed its new constitution as amended after a four hour meeting that saw 28 motions and sub-motions come up on the floor for discussion. The new constitution is not a major change from the present one drawn up in 1946 when SL was formed.'It is, however, adapt- ed to fit revisions in student gov- ernment that have occurred dur- ing the past five years, and is aimed at providing a more flexible set of working laws, according to George Roumell, '51,aLegislature president. Before the new constitution will go into effect it must be ratified by a majority of the voting stu- dent body and must be approved by the Student Affairs Commit- tee. The SL has not yet decided how it will make the new consti- tution available to the student body. Major alterations included in the new constitution are: 1) Any referendum that is sup- ported by 600 signatures on a pe- tition will be placed on the elec- tion ballot. 2) When an SL member is dropped or resigns, a student may be appointed to fill his position by the Cabinet with a 2/3 appro- val of the SL body. 3) Any problem that is pre- sented to SL by a non-member must go to the proper committee for consideration before it can be brought before SL. Senate Crime Committee yesterday that he handed the money to O'Dwyer in a red manila enve- lope on tie porch of Gracie Man- sion, the official home of New York's mayor. "One man is lying," commit- tee counsel Rudolph Halley told newsmien. O'Dwyer, contacted by news- men, said of Crane's testimony and the alleged campaign con- tribution: "I was asked about that under oath and I flatly denied it. CRANE SAID the $10,000 was to back up a pledge of firemen's support for O'Dwyer in the 1949 campaign in which he won reelec- tion as mayor. After eight months of that second four year term, O'Dwyer quit to become ambassa- dor to Mexico. Millions of persons have follow- ed the sensational hearings in a federal courtroom here through television. Besides Crane's testimony, other highlights of the final day included: 1. Two more refusals by racke- teer Frank Costello to say how much he is worth-refusals that could lead to his imprisonment for contempt. 2. Testimony by Bert Stand, former secretary of Tammany Hall, that he believed Costello threw a , cocktail party on the occasion in 1942 when he was host to O'Dwyer. The ex-Mayor has testified he met Costello on Army business. 3. A new invitation to Gov Dewey to tell the Committee what he knows about crime in general and-if he wishes-about wide open gambling in upstate Sarato- ga Springs. Dewey indirectly re- jected the latest bid and accused Chairman Estes Kefauver (D- Tenn) of making "discourteous personal remarks" about him. Dewey, in a tart telegram to Sen. Kefauver, said it appeared the Committee was not interested in the opinions of the Governor as a former racket-buster but only in gambling conditions at the up- state spa and horse racing center. * * * . 1 "THIS TREMENDOUS gain in' our strength," the President said, "has been made necessary by the lawless aggression of Communist forces in Korea, and by the men- ace of still further Communist at- tacks against other free nations." The announcement obviously. was intended to produce a dual psychological effect abroad -- warn Russia, and assure Amer- ica's friends. And the telegram exchange also appeared to have a message for critics of the ad- ministration's rearmament pro- gram at home. Marshall's telegram said: "For your information, the strength we$ have already attained - a total strength in' excess of 2,900,000 - was not attained in World War II until more than 21 months after our build-up started in June 1940, following the fall of Franee, and more than three months after Pearl Harbor." Part of this probably is account- ed for by the availability this time of hundreds of thoUsands of re- servists, a trained and ready man- power pool which did not exist when World War II started. A substantial part of the initial buildup of the armed forces after the Korean war started came from these reservists of the Army, Navy, Marines and Air Force. FBI May Join Search for Hill, Federal investigators may take up the job of locating Dave Hill, '53, unless he reports for induc- tion into the Army. Local draft board chairman, Mayor William E. Brown, Jr., yes- terday announced that state selec- tive service officials have ordered a special draft order for the Uni- versity football player, who has been missing since early January. Mayor Brown said the order was designed especially to bring the FBI into the search for Hill. * - * FROM EIGHTH ARMY ead quarters in Korea, AP Correspon dent Leif Erickson reported th UN forces appeared in positio: today to strike across the 38t Parallel any time they choose t move after the withdrawing Rec across the political boundary. Chunchon, seized by U.S troops and tanks, was a much greater prize of war than Seoul, the liberated old Korean capital 45 miles to the southwest. It not only was a good massin point, but its roads and rails wer avenues of conquest into Centra Korea and to Seoul itself. The enemy also was pulli back on, the eastern front, wher Republic of Korean troops alread may have reached Parallel 38. IN THE WEST, however, tb enemy still was strongly entrench ed north of Seoul and to the eat of the capital. AP correspondent Jim Becke reported two divisions of the fres Chinese Communist Third Fel Army were tentatively identifie in front positions east of Seoul. An Allied armored patrol fighting north on the road fron. Seoul to Uijongbu met fierce Red resistance. Uijongbu is 12 miles north of Seoul. The enemy's; shifting of .60,00 fresh troops into the west raise conjecture that the enemy migl' be planning a counterattack. * * * THERE STILL was speculatio as to whether General MacArthr would send his troops across. th Parallel again or wait for dipk mats to confer. The recapture of Chuncho virtually restored the strateg: picture Rs it existed before t]; Chinese Reds launched their Ne Year's Eve offensive. A U.S. tank force made the first unopposed entry into Chun- chon after the. road was clearer of mines. AP correspondent Wil- liam C. Barnard, only newsanx to accompany the tanks, report- ed the Chinese apparently had withdrawn north of the Parallel Eighth Army headquarters r ports indicated the dug-in Re around Seoul wouli try to slow < halt the Allied advance up Korea historic invasion route by raisir a threat to the western flank. T wo Counties Name Liquor 'Cards Illegal The liquor cards many studen have been obtaining from ti county clerk to document the fai that they have the legal rigl to slake their thirst with some thing stronger than lemona have been found unconstitution in two counties of Michigan. The card system was begun I aid the hard pressed liquor dea ers, Franklin Rauner, head of t liquor control division of ti state's attorney general's offii told the Crib Club last night. The dealers are guilty of m demeanor for selling liquor i minors regardless of the "proo the minor offers to show that 1 (or she) is over 21, Rauner e plained. "Wayne and Macomb counti have both ruled that the cards a By VERN EMERSON A peace treaty with Japan will probably be okayed by the Senate within six months, but the former terror of the Far East will still face economic chaos, Prof. Robert Ward, of the political science de- partment predicted yesterday. Prof. Ward said that the treaty, now being discussed by the Sen- ate's Foreign Relations Commit- tee, will be a lenient one in rela- tion to financial and commercial r*c1p~xiti nnc The expert on Japanese affairs pointed out that when American subsidization of Japan's economy stops, that country may be forced to come to terms with the Com- munist dominated lands of Asia. * * * "WHETHER Japan w ill be forced by economic necessity to align herself politically with Rus- sia-thus turning her back on us-is the biggest question in her future." NOT A 'GHOST OF A CHANCE': f Russia Couldn't Beat U.S. -- Miller By FLOYD THOMAS Russia hasn't a "ghost of a chance" of beating the United States in a war, Prof. Henry Miller, of the engineering college, said yes- terday. But you don't have to be able Another Russian deficiency lies in a manufacturing power tre- mendously weaker than America's; Prof. Miller continued. Russia has only six per cent of the world's de- veloped power, he estimated, while th Unipr Rfn.r rn rnlc.8 n OTHER RESOURCE shortages, the ordnance expert said, paint this picture of Russian raw mater- ial deficiencies: Food production is lagging be- cause Russia's grain belt is dry-