ON DEFERRING COLLEGE MEN See Page 4 itFA6 D4ali CLOUDY, COOL Latest Deadline in the State RUMMMAMOMMOWMEM016d VOL. LXI, No. 128 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, APRIL 3, 1951 SIX PAG Senate Limits Troops to Europe ine di g ill Draft ExamI Rules Given University Announced As Testing Center; Examination Dates Set WASHIN.GTON-(P)-The University was named by the Selective Service yesterday as one of the 1,000 examination centers at which college students will take tests for possible draft deferment. The agency also set fBorth the rules of the examination which will be given May 26, June 16 and June 30. *.* * * * THERE WAS no announcement of the "passing" grades to be re- quired or the scholastic standing which also will be considered. A Selective Service spokesman said these standards will be announced later. The tests will be given to draft registrants who have begun, and plan to continue, their college or university studies, graduate or undergraduate. High school graduates and others who are candidates for admission to their first year of college will not be eligible to take the test until they have entered college. * * * * THE SELECTIVE SERVICE announcement said: "The test presupposes no schooling beyond the ordinary high school preparation for college. "Scores on the test will not themselves determine eligibility for deferments. "Scores on the test, together with evidence of scholastic perform- ance in college, will be used by the Selective Service local boards in considering the eligibility of registrants for occupational deferment, as students." THE ANNOUNCEMENT said all eligible registrants who wish to take the test should apply immediately. They must get a postcard application from any local draft board, fill it out and mail it in. The application blank, in the form of a double postcard, may be obtained only from draft boards. It is already addressed-not to the draft board but to the Selective Service examining section of Educa- tional Testing Service, P.O. Box 586, Princeton, N.J. The student does no addressing-just folds the double card after filling it out, applies a stamp, and mails the complete card. The address is on the reverse side of the application form. * * . ." SAMPLES of the application-SSS form No. 106 and attached SSS form No. 107-have been mailed to colleges throughout the coun- try but may not be- used in applying. Usable forms can be had only from draft boards. On the application, each registrant must designate an exami- nation center and its number, chosen from the list announced yesterday. The centers are at colleges throughout the United States and the territories. The Educational Testing Service, Princeton, New Jersey, which' is administering the test, will assign each man to the center re- quested or to the closest posible alternative center, and give him a date for his test. Each student should mail only one application. Tickets of admis- sion to the testing center will be issued as rapidly as possible. No ticket wil be issued to a man who files more than one application. In reporting for the test, the student must bring an official docu- ment showing his Selective Service number and the draft board which has jurisdiction over him. Each applicant can take the test only once. , See SAMPLE TEST, Page 6 SCHOLARSHIPS SUGGESTED! Amendment Curbs Power Of President Democrat Move Delays Final Vote WASHINGTON-()-The Sen- ate overrode administration lead- ers yesterday and went on record against sending more than four more divisions of American ground troops to Europe without Congres- sional approval. By a vote of 49 to 43, it adopted a limiting amendment by Senator McClellan (D-Ark.) and wrote it into a controversial troops-for- Europe resolution. IN THE FACE of this setback, Democratic leaders secured a re- cess of the Senate until today, abandoning plans to seek a final vote last night on the troops-to- Europe resolution. Administration leaders thought they had disposed of the Mc Clellan amendment two hours earlier when the Senate voted 46 to 44 to reject it. But on a surprise motion to re- consider the action, the Senate voted 49 to 43 to revive the amend-' ment and bring it before the cham- ber again. IT WAS PASSED by the same majority on reconsideration, and then its supporters made the adop- tion final by shouting down a mo- tion to reconsider. Mc Clellan's provision says: "It is the sense of the Senate that no troops in addition to such four divisions shoulddbe sent to Western Europe in implementation of article three of the North At- lantic Treaty without further Con- gressional approval." It also wrote into the resolu- tion an amendment by Senator Watkins (R-Utah) calling for eli- mination of provisions in the Ital- ian peace treaty limiting that country's military strength. West Draws~ NewtAgenda'i For Confab PARIS-(A)-The three Western powers re-drafted their proposed agenda for a Foreign Ministers Conference at the beginning of their fifth week of talks yesterday. But Russia's Andrei Gromyko criticized its omission of what he described as t h e "dangerous"! North Atlantic Pact. GROMYKO also objected to other parts of the western re- draft, but officials who were pres- ent said he did not reject it. The main section of the re- draft read: 1. Examination of the causes and the effects of present inter- national tensions. "The existing level of orma- ments and armed forces and mea- sures for international control and reduction of armaments and armed forces including those of the Russia; the United Kingdom, France and the United States. "The demilitarization of Ger- many. "2. Completion of the treaty for the re-establishment of an inde- pendent and democratic Austria. "3. Problems relating to the re- establishment of German unity and preparation of a treaty of peace." 'DO, * * * * * y .. alt 11 * r,, ,r ISTEEL LEJ ^ >. . a" :. I I 'U' ,. x.. y, M ,, , ,.: T ELCTIO De mocratsL Lag By WideMUargin By The Associated Press Republican candidates for the University's Board of Regents, incumbent Roscoe 0. Bonisteel of Ann Arbor and newcomer Leland I. Doan of Midland, were maintaining a commanding lead over, their two democratic opponents as The Daily went to press at 2 a.m. today. Unofficial returns from 1,553 of Michigan's 4,358 recincts gave Bonisteel, an attorney seeking his second term as Regent, a total of 116,833 votes. Doan, president of the Dow Chemical Co., followed closely with 116,413 tallies. * *A * Leading -Daily-Jack Bergstrom IT MIGHT AS WELL BE-Even though the weather doesn't indicate it, spring was given its offi- cial sendoff yesterday as Michigan's Rose Bowl champion football team began preparation for the 1951 season. Linemen went through the usual blocking drills on the dummies with line coach Jack Blott (background) adding aid and encouragement. ANOTHER TITLE BREWING? Spring Football Drills Open By GEORGE FLINT Wintry blasts gave spring foot- ball a cool reception yesterday, but' 85 young men who hope to enter the Wolverine grid picture next fall didn't seem to notice it as the 1951 drills opened. With a paucity of lettermen present (they are excused from the vernal practice sessions), Coach Bennie Oosterbaan and his assis- tants concentrated on whipping freshman and junior varsity as- pirants into shape. * * * OOSTERBAAN'S CRY of "put 'em through their paces!" was echoed by line coach Jack Blott's hurry-up voice as a beefy group of forward-wall hopefuls worked on the dummies and went through a live tackling drill. Last season's most valuable gridder, Don Dufek, was around to help out as the more exper- fenced backfield men ran through signal drills. Dufek's words of advice were particularly directed to the fulback candi- dates who must master the tricky ballhandling, requisite for that position in the Michigan single- wing system. The fullback post and both half- back positions are wide open at this time, first-stringers Dufek, Chuck Ortman, and Leo Koceski will be graduated this spring. * * * RUGGED Dick Balzhiser, a freshman from Wheaton, Illinois, figures tg get an extensive tryout at the position, as does reserve back Russ. Reseorla. Oosterbaan may also work several other backs at the position who haven't pre- viously played there, but who have (Continued on Page 3) ROSCOE O. BONISTEEL Faculty, Students Laud New. Deferment Policy Reactions to the deferment poli- cy for college men brought an ad- vocacy of a federal system of scholarships from one college dean, whoops of joy from the av- erage student and general appro- val from the faculty. "I CERTAINLY believe that the government should provide for the continuing supply of trained per- sonnel," Dean Hayward Keniston of the literary college said in ap- proval of the policy. He emphasized however, that Karsian Hits RentControl ActionTactics Karl Karsian, one of three-mem- bers of the local Rent Advisory Board who opposed recommending rent decontrol of Ann Arbor, yes- terday denied charges that the minority group had pushed poli- tics and personalities into the is- sue. Charges that the minority re- port on the action, which was sent to Federal Housing Expeditor Tighe Woods Saturday, was un- it was now necessaryto set up a federal system of scholarships for high school students to take care of all who are deserving of an education. "The scholarships should cover the difference between the cost of attending college and the amount of money the student can earn in the summer," Dean Keniston explained. MANY STUDENTS, especially seniors, were quick to note that graduate students would also be deferred. It was reported that the office handling graduate admis- sions for the School of Business Administration was packed with inquiring students y e s t e r d a y morning. Because the budget restric- tions limit the graduate school facilities, Dean Ralph A. Saw- yer of the Graduate School doesn't look for a large increase in students next fall. "About the-only place we'll be able to expand will be in depart- ments that aren't crowded now," he said. THE PROVISIONS of the de- ferment plan have announced in- formally before a meeting of the National Conference of Deans and 1 1 1 i 7 500,000 TROOPS: Red Build-up Largest Of War Says M'Arthur TOKYO--P)-Chinese and North Korean Reds are massing the largest number of fresh and seasoned troops ever committed in the Korean war, General MacArthur's headquarters said today. Intelligence estimates figured the reinforcements at the front swell the Red potential to at least 63 divisions-more than500,000m en. FOR THE SECOND straight day, MacArthur's communique made pointed reference to the Red massing movements. These were con- <' centrated on the central front VOTE RECORD SET: Brown Elected Mayor; Creal Wins Council Post LELAND I. DOAN > MURRAY D. Van Wagner, for- mer governor of Michigan and an appointed incumbent, trailed the Republican leaders by almost 20,000 votes. He was credited with 92,754. Still further back was his Democratic running mate, Es- canaba attorney Wheaton L. Strom, with 75,229 votes. In other State races, Michigan's Republican faithful w h o have swung spring elections for 18 years appeared to have done it gain, as they piled up a lead of about five to three for most of the tiket. DR. LEE M. THURSTON, Re- publican, State Superintendent of Public Instruction and a target of last minute attack by Gov., Wil- liams Was having no trouble in knocking down the Democratic nominee, Edgar W. Waugh, Mich- igan State Normal College Profes- sor. The two Republican incumbents on the State Supreme Court, Jus- tices Emerson R. Boyles and Neil E. Reid had leads of better than two to one over Democratic nom- inees James H. Lee and Theodore P. Ryan. REPUBLICAN candidates for the State Board of Agriculture which governs Michigan State College and the State Board of Educa- tion also had comfortable leads. Returns on the three State'A proposals showed the voters overwhelmingly in favor of authorized annual sessions of the Legislature and a, $500 death benefit to survivors of~ men killed in the Korean War. A pay raise for Supreme Court Justices lagged by 10,000 votes. Returns indicated that the Dem- ocratic stronghold in Detroit turn-x ed soft after delivering a whop- ping majority for Gov. Williams in last fall's election. Indications were that only about 175,000 votes were cast in Detroit and precincts there which went 90 percent Dem- ocratic- last fall were only going about 65 percent Democratic this time. Both Parties Hold 'Victory' Celebrations Ann Arbor Republicans and" Democrats drew almost equal sat- isf action from their victrie s" last night as party supporters gathered to "celebrate" the re- turns. Encouraged by what defeated Democratic mayoralty candidate Lewis Reimann called "a distinct victory for the Democratic party," state chairman Neil Staebler em- phasized the party's increased strength since the 1949 mayoralty campaign as an "indication of the Democratic increase in size and effectiveness that would continue with every election." MEANWHILE at the Renublican Alabama Student Slays Roommate TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - (P) - A marine veteran and student at the University of Alabama, James L. Colvin, 24 years old, yesterday shot and killed his 27 year old room- mate, Luther Veazey, a freshman Navy veteran. Colvin said Veazey threatened to kill him after he came home drunk from a wild party on cam- pus. where a Communist spring coun- teroffensive is expected. But the communique said the huge enemy potential was handi- capped by laying open commu- nications, supplies and troop movements to attack by Allied planes. Field dispatches reported "sev- eral" American patrols knifed back and forth across the old political boundary during the day. They maintained contact with a danger- ously large Chinese troop and sup- ply concentration. By VERN EMERSON Mayor William E. Brown, Jr., and Common Council President Cecil O. Creal were returned to of- fice yesterday as Ann Arbor voters gave Republican candidates sweep- ing victories. Republican forces received only one setback here as voters in the Fourth Ward returned Democratic Alderman Cornelius S. Ulberg to another term on the council. Each of the remaining six wards gave the Republicans sizeable vic--I tory margins. Three of the councilj FALTERS ON FOURTH SHAKE: Undersize Stomach Foils Student candidates were unopposed, includ- ing Prof. Arthur Bromage, of the political science department, who was an incumbent. ALTHOUGH Mayor Brown was pushed in some precincts by his Democratic opponent Lewis Rei- mann, he emerged a srong winner, receiving 4,443 votes to Reimann's 3,092. Brown's running mate, Creal, did slightly better, beating Dem- ocrat Karl Karsian 4,635 to 2,847. City voters also gave their sup- port to Republicans running for seven seats on the county board of supervisors. Three of these posi- tions were uncontested. * * * LOCAL CITIZENS okayed an amendment to the city charter making future elections of judges to the Municipal Court non-parti- san, and approved the annexation of some 40 acres of land by the city. A voting record for Ann Arbor was set as nearly 8,000 went to the polls. City Clerk Fred J. By RICH THOMAS Tom Anton, '53, learned that his stomach was of less than average size the hard way and lost $10 in the process. Several weeks ago, Anton bet * * * * I've been drinking two quarts of water a day for two weeks now trying to stretch my stomach." Coaching Anton during t h e training period was Spense Par- sons, '52, who expressed disgust .:::>::