f r 'LA-PRENSA'... UN APPEAL See rage 4 Y L iflir ujau :43 a t I t j Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXI, No. 120 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SATURDAY, MARCH 24, 1951 SNOW FLURRIES, COLDER SIX PAGES Flares S h te on Route of M issing ransport * * * * * * Army Cuts QUota For AprilDraft' S" Increase in Volunteers Given as Reason for Slashto 40,000 Men WASHINGTON --(P)-- In a surprise move, the Army yester- day slashed its April draft call from 80,000 men to 40,000. The Army explained that it was getting twice the number of volunteers and lcsing far fewer men in Korea than was expected when the April call for 80,000 draftees was issued Feb. 1. DEFENSE OFFICIALS said another factor in the draft reduction was the need for a greater proportion of junior officers to help the Army train and absorb recruits. Despite the change in draft plans, the Army expects to meet its 1,600,000-man goal by June 30. It now has about 1,400,000 men. It hopes that volunteering will continue at the monthly rate of 23,000 established during January and February. If the May and June drafts are held to the April figure of 40,000 and the volunteers Government ;Slashes Tire Shi p Ients WASHINGTON-R)-The Gov- ernment slashed tire and tube de- liveries for new passenger cars 25 per cent last night, effective April 1. The National Production Auth- ority order, issued because of growing rubber needs by the mili- tary, followed these other develop- ments: I . -President Truman signed stop - gap legislation extending rent controls for three months un- til June 30. 2. The Bureau of Labor Statis- tics cost of living index hit an- other new high as of February 15, rising 1.3 points in the preceding . month. 3. Retail sales slipped off some- what, providing a lull in the in- flatiorary storm, but wholesale price levels climbed to another new record as of March 20. The cut in tires for new pass- enger cars was even deeper than the 20 per cent reduction in steel for automobiles which pre- viously had been ordered. Increased need of rubber by the military, combined with a drop in synthetic rubber production, was blamed for the new restriction. Fires and other operational difficulties are expected to cut the April production of synthe- tic rubber about 4,000 long tons below earlier expectations, NPA said. The rent control extension will affect some 1,300 communities which had taken no such steps on their own. dontrols were due to expire March 31 except where positive action had been taken. Communities still may order .de- control of their own areas. * * * Ceilings Read On Groceries CINCINNATI -()-- Three new food regulations within the week will set price ceilings on 65 per cent of the items a grocer sells, Price Stabilizer Michael DiSalle said last night. The new regulations, he said in an interview, "will control the prices on everything but fresh fruits and vegetables." DiSalle, director of the Office of Price Stabilization, has said before that such regulations were in the works. He also revealed that a previous- ly outlined manufacturers' roll- back would be forthcoming within 10 days. He said this rollback would es- tablish manufacturers' prices "as of the prea~Koreax1 level and per- mit only direct cost increases af- ter that date." Railroads Ask For Freight Rate Hike keep coming in at the current rate, the Army will be only 11,000 short of its mark at the end of June. I The announced draft call for May is 60,000. No figure has been given for June. * * * . ARMY OFFICIALS said that the reduced draft was not expected to interfere with plans for releas- ing reservists or for speeding up the rotation of battle veterans from Korea. Assistant Secretary of Defense Anna Rosenberg has told Con- gress that the Army hopes to start releasing reservists in the near future. She set no date. Some Army officials saw the possibility of decreased volunteer- ing as a result of the radical re- duction in the draft call for April. They noted that many young men, particularly those just starting their college educations, had been volunteering in the hope they would get a head start in the Army before being drafted. These officials pointed out, how- ever, that the announced May draft for 60,000 can easily be re- tained and the call for June set at that figure or higher if the rate of volunteering falls off. * * *.- Army To Call ROTC Grads This Summer WASHINGTON-(IP)--The Ar- my announced yesterday it will call into active service about 10,- 000 Reserve Officer Training Corps students who will graduate from colleges this summer. The announcement said the ord- er affected all students who have been enroled in the senior ROTC program and that all would be commissioned during July, August and September. The students will be ordered to their basic branch service schools for about 90 days immediately aft- er starting their active duty. The order includes all ROTC members who have been deferred from selective service in order to complete their education. The ac- tive duty call also affects ROTC members who have not executed deferment agreements but , who have had less than two years prior active service'as officers or enlist- ed men. Pilot Reports Wreckage in StormySea 53 Passengers On Lost Plane LONDON - (P) - A U.S. Air Force officer at Shannon Airport said today flares and wreckage were sighted along the route over the Atlantic followed by the long- overdue U.S. Air Force C-124, missing with 53 persons abroad. A pilot of one of the armada of searching planes made the sighting. A ROYAL AIR Force control of- ficer at Uxbridge, Eng., said the search pilot, in a B-29 Superfort, reported by radio seeing what he believed was a life raft. The offi- cer said seas were running high and there were strong winds in the area. Two weather ships were closing in on the spot some 450 miles southwest of Ireland in the Atlantic Ocean. The pilot of the search plane said he made the sighting at 12:45 a.m., London Time (6:45 P.M. yesterday) -- almost 24 hours after the big transport was last heard from. The huge transport plane bound from the United States to Britain with 48 passengers and a crew of five disappeared early yesterday in a fog and rain 800 miles south- west of Ireland. Among the pass- engers were several high-ranking officers, including Brig. Gen. Paul T. Cullen, Deputy Commander of the Second Air Force, headquar- tered at Barksdale Field, Shreve- port, La. STRATEGIC AIR Command headquarters at Omaha, Neb., an- nounced four SAC officers were abroad. They were Col. Kenneth N. Gray, Budget Officer; Lt. E. A. McKoy of the Materiel Director- ate; Lt. Col. J. I. Hopkins, Chief of SAC's Military Personnel Di- vision; and Maj. G. H. Stoddard, assigned to the Directorate of Plans. A routine radio message from the transport at 1 am. (7 p.m. Thursday) gave its psition as 800 miles southwest of Ireland and said it expected to land at 6 a.m. at the U.S. Air Base at Mildenhall, Eng. There was nothing in the mes- sage to indicate what went wrong," said the Royal Air Force Controller who is directing the search. Big Four Deputies Still Deadlocked PARIS-(A)--The Big Four De- puty Foreign Ministers met in se- cret for four hours yesterday for what was called, an informal ex- change of views. An official Western source said "very little, if anything, was ac- complished." A deadlock has long been evident. The deputies, seeking/ since March 5 to agree on a list of world subjects for a proposed meeting of their chiefs, decided to resume open meetings today. These are open in the sense that details are made public at the end. OUT LLIES Union Votes To Postpone HVeat Strike CHICAGO-(P)-The threat of an early. meat shutoff to Ameri- can consumers vanished yesterday when 110,000 AFL and indepen- dent meat handlers agreed to de- lay their strike at least until May. However, the 120,000-member CIO United Packinghouse Workers union failed to reach a similar agreement with the packers. This union could strike legally after the present agreement expires Sunday midnight. THE UNIONS are angry at the government for turning down part of an industry-wide wage increase. A CIO strike, like one called three years ago, would cut sharp- ly but not paralyze the nation's meat supply. The AFL Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen reached an 'agreement with Swift and Armour, the nation's two largestapackers, holding up their strike at least until May 6. The AFL group represents 100,000 !workers. Pat Gorman, secretary-treas. urer of the AFL union, said the union expected the same pat- tern would be followed with other packers. Most of the AFL union's mem- bers are employed by the smaller packing companies while the bulk of the CIO packinghouse workers are employed by the large pack- ers. THE STRIKE deadline exten- sion is designed to give govern- ment officials a chance to recon- sider an 11 cent hourly wage boost agreed to Feb. 9 by the packers and unions. Eric Johnston, wage stabiliza- tion director, turned down the agreement holding it violates the government wage formula limiting pay boosts to 10 per cent above levels of Jan. 15, 1950. The meat handlers re- ceived an 11 cent boost last August. The February agreement con- tained the provision that govern- ment approval was neededtby March 25 to make it effective. The new settlement moves this up until May. World News Roundup By The Associated Press LIVERPOOL-The former Cze- choslovak ambassador to India ar- rived with his family yesterday to seek political refuge in Britain. * *' * WASHINGTON-Senator Byrd (D-Va) yesterday got the back- ing of Jesse Jones, former Re- construction Finance Corpora- tion head, in a fight to abolish RFC. Byrd made public part of a letter he received from Jones expressing, doubt that a Senate investigation of political influ- ence in the huge government spending agency "has more than scratched the surface." UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.-The United Nations announced plans yesterday to resettle 50,000 Pales- tine refugees in the Sinai Desert of Egypt. DRIF OF E SOUTH E S* 4 KuREA Reds Routed Infantry, Paratroopers Opposition Light, MacArthur Says TOKYO--(P)-Allied paratroop- ers and ground forces forged a solid front today 20 miles north of Seoul, seizing most of the Reds' last-stand territory below the 38th Parallel. General MacArthur, flying to the front today, said the daring operation virtually ended all or- ganized Red resistance anywhere in South Xorea. Hi troops were as close as two miles to the 'ars- ficial boundary for North and South Korea. A-BOMBER-The Air Force announced this week that this B-47 jet medium bomber wil of three types participating in the Eniwetok atomic tests. Last night these tests, which m already taken place,' aroused speculation over possible Soviet observation of the Eniwetoka I be one nay have atoll test area from offshore submarines. sighted in the vicinity. During the 1948 Eniwetok tests, several unidentified subs were - - 1 New A tom Plant To Be Cons trncted- DENVER - (P) - A $45,000,000 atomic plant for a major but se- cret type of production will be built northwest of Denver. Construction will start late next month and be completed next year. The plant, small in size compared to giants at Hanford, Wash., and Oak Ridge, Tenn., will be nestled on barren land against the foot-hills of the Rock- ies. ANNOUNCEMENT of the plan caught state and city officials by surprise. They have been boost- ing the state as a haven from atomic warfare, starting a move- ment by industry and military in- stallations to the area. There were a few hints on the purpose of the plant. An atomic energy spokesman said it will not produce bombs or atomic weapons "as such." It will give off no dangerous wastes nor will it use large quantities of water, gas and electricity-both marks of basic processing plants. The plant will be under the AEC's Sante Fe operations office. This is the office in charge of re- search, development, testing and production of atomic weapons at Los Alamos, N.M., 400 miles to the south. The nation's uranium production center is in south- western Colorado 300 miles away. * * * - AT HIS HOME in Fort Collins, Rep. William S. Hill (R-Colo.) said he was informed the plant will be devoted to radiological re- search in connection with the Los Alamos laboratories. The plant will be run by Dow Chemical Co. of Midland, Mich. The plant site covers 2,500 acres-about four square miles. Tobey Questions Fitness of O'Dwyer To Serve in Post WASHINGTON-(P)-Senator Tobey (R-N.H.) proposed yester- day that the Senate Foreign Relations Committee inquire whether William O'Dwyer should remain as Ambassador to Mexico in view of testimony in the Senate's crime investigation. Two Congressional committees already have asked Federal prose- cutors and tax collectors to study sharply conflicting testimony con- cerning O'Dwyer for any evidence of perjury or tax evasion. A leader of a New York firemen's union said he gave the former New York mayor $10,000 in cash. O'Dwyer denied it. TOBEY PREDICTED at a news conference that O'Dwyer's status as Ambassador "might be brought up" before the Foreign Relations SRA Meeting Will .Discuss Peace .Plans Students and faculty members will join in an all-campus peace assembly at 10 a.m. today in Lane Hall. Under the sponsorship of the Student Religious Association so- cial action department, the as- sembly will discuss the general world situation and appropriate action that may be taken by citi- zens to promote the cause of world peace. * * * EMPLOYING both panel dis- cussion and general open meeting techniques, the conference will di- vide its work into three stages. The first, under the heading of "the current global situa- tion," will include consideration of such topics as "the German question," the "problem of world armament" and the ques- tion of "militarization in the United States." This discussion will be follow- ed by consideration of the role of the citizen in peace activities and the functions of a campus peace organization. OCommittee, which only a few months ago approved his appoint- ment. Chairman Connally (D-Tex.) of the committee said it had no plans to re-study the O'Dwyer nomination, but he declined fur- ther comment. Officials said the Senate had no way of recalling a nomination, but Tobey contended the committee' should examine O'Dwyer's present status. THE CRIME Committee taking a Good Friday respite, got set for another inquiry into Murder, Inc., the Brooklyn gang blamed for scores of killings. O'Dwyer takes credit for breaking it up when he was New York prosecuting attor- ney. The committee snagged a witness, Abner (Longie) Zwill- man, who will get a chance be- fore the committee goes out of existence next week to answer under oath testimony connect- ing him with Murder, Inc. Meanwhile yesterday, the chair- man of the crime committee said "legalized gambling is not the answer" to the problem in this country. Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn.) expressed this view in a statement on the CBS program "Hear It Now." MORE THAN 3,000 men, with artillery and supplies, parachuted yesterday at Munsan, eight miles from the 38th Parallel. They sought to cut behind and kill Reds. But they killed only between 150 and 200. Eighty-seven Reds were captured. Enemy opposition gen- rally melted in favor of flight. An armored task force which speared up the main Seoul- Pyongyang highway an linked up last night wiih the para- troopers at Munsan also found few Reds. General MacArthur said in 4 statement, issued before he left by plane for Korea, that Red China's hopes of winning Korea with sheer masses of manpower have been bloodily crushed. * * * HE SAID he was ready to meet Red China's high command in the field at any time and seek a milir tary means of realizing the Uni- ted Nations' objective in Korea "without further bloodshed." (In Washington, State De- partment press officers said there would be no comment on Gen. MacArthur's statements.) MacArthur said the Commun- ists had been crippled by the heavy destruction to their supply lines caused by 'round-the-clock aerial and sea bombardment." I-e added that Chinese troopv are "showing less stamina" than Allied forces "under the rigors of climate, terrain and battle." Reports from the parachute drop zone at Munsan, 21 miles north of Seoul, said casualties were very low. Mayor Okays New Zoning After Revision Ann Arbor's new A-1 zoning ordinance has been okayed by Mayor William E. Brown, Jr. Mayor Brown yesterday decided not to veto the ruling, which sets up a special fraternity-sorority-co- operative zone. He had previously threatened not to sign the measure because League houses were not in- cluded in the district. He said, however, that he only gave his approval to the ordinance after Alderman A. D. Moore, chair- man of the city council's ordinance committee, had promised to take steps immediately to include Lea- gue dwellings in the zone. Assurances were also given the mayor that the size of student groups allowed in the area will be restricted. Terming the measure a piece- TALENT PARADE: Hilleizapoppin Slates Four Satirical Sketches More than 200 players will caper across the Pattengill Auditorium stage from 8 to 10 p.m. today when four house groups compete in the annual Hillelzapoppin skit program. Alpha Epsilon Phi, Sigma Del- ta Tau, Phi Sigma Delta (with a group of independent women) and Zeta Beta Tau will vie for honors and the coveted prize cup when they put on their skits at the show, which is a traditional xn.4r T711Nil ni .Vp, brella salesman," Miss Benjamin promised. The ZBT's will send a group of college men through the troubles of a Communist strike in Paris and the glories of a~ Parisian night club in their show. This play will feature original music by Jack Hodan, 52. "Ratio Riot" is the title of the Phi Sigma Delta offering. A Uni- versity coed will come up with a 'U' ARTISTS PERFORM: Music, Poetry Highlight IA U Bill, Student artists are coming into their own this weekend as the Student Art Festival brings their creative efforts to the critical pub- lic eye. PARIS-Harried by a spread- ing strike wave, the French cab- inn eeterdav raised the leel In addition, the poems of Thomas Campion, William Blake, James Joyce and Stephen Spender have, been set to music by Robert Cogan, '51 SM. Rose Marie Jun, act opera by Edward Chudacoff, Grad., entitled "Circus." The libe- retto of the opera was written by Dan Waldron. Prof. C. L. Stevenson, of the :i i