MacARTHUR REPERCUSSIOFN' See Page 4 woo fL. i 's,, ra.Vy ~~aiI CLOUDY AND COLD Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXI, No. 132 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1951 SIX PAGES UN Forces Knife Through Smoke Screen in Korea By The Associated Press The United Nations drive into North Korea stalked forward yesterday on the heels of bitterly resisting Communist rear guards. Rigid new censorship regulations ordered by the new supreme Allied commander, Lt. Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, forbade all refer- ences to the size and location of Chinese and North Korean Reds. THE REDS, however, continued their slow retreat. For the third straight day the Communists burned smudge pots and set forests ablaze to screen their positions from devastating Allied air and artil- lery attacks. It was the same device the Chinese used last November to hide their dispositions before slamming into UN forces in north- west Korea. Chinese and North Koreans lost two key towns and some valuable - ground on the east central front r t n TegS To, .Arrive oday ets Stage for - <" Hill Turns Up; Freed of Draft Charge By CHUCK ELLIOTT Dave Hill, 19-year-old University halfback who disappeared in Jan- uary following failure to make the Rose Bowl squad, turned up Sun- day and was jailed, tried and freed yesterday on charges of draft evasion. Hill called his mother from Tor- onto on Sunday morning, saying that he would be home that eve- ning. A friend had located him and told him that FBI officials were hunting him. * * * AFTER BEING taken into cus- tody yesterday morning, officers brought him before U.S. District Judge Frank A. Picard in Detroit for trial. The judge waived charges, saying that Hill was obviously not a draft dodger, because he had not received any of the three orders sent to him to report for pre- induction exams. Hill promised to report for in- duction today. "I didn't mean to dodge the draft," he explained. "I didn't even think of the draft. I got counted out of the Rose Bowl squad and was unhappy." Friends had hypothesized that this was the reason for his disap- pearance Jan. 3. He had gone to Montreal to visit Richard Lord, an MSC hockey player friend, and had not returned to his Ypsilanti home. * * * HILL'S MOTHER, Mrs. S. J. Elder Hill, said yesterday that he had gotten very homesick and tired of bumming around Toronto. He had ended up there after run- ning out of money by Jan. 18. Odd jobs earned him enough money to continue eating, he asserted. Mrs. Hill reported that her son looked to be in better shape than when he left, "perhaps be- cause he didn't have to worry about studies." The FBI had been called into the search on March 22, when Hill failed to report for a third pre- induction physical notice. Wor d News Roundup By The Associated Press ATHENS, Greece-Nearly com- plete returns from Greece's first municipal elections in 17 years showed yesterday that right-wing and liberal coalition candidates scored crushing victories over Communist and left-wing op- ponents in nearly, all major towns and cities. WASHINGTON-The United States gave Yugoslavia a new $29,000,000 grant yesterday to help Marshal Tito's Communist regime stand up against Soviet bloc pressure, * * * WASHINGTON - S e n a t o r Mundt (R-SD) said yesterday a move to organize Southern Dero- crats and Republicans interested in a realignment of political par- ties will be made late next week. TOKYO-John Foster Dulles told the Japanese today that both major American political parties were behind the drive in a two-day fight that endec yesterday. Yanggu, six miles north of the 38th parallel and at the easterr tip of the strategic Hwachon Res- ervoir, fell first to Allied tanks and infantry. Then Red units yielded Yachon, on a paralle road three miles northeast of bat- tered Yanggu. The capture of Yanggu elim- inated the last Communist pock- et on the south shores of the Hwachon Reservoir. It ripped up the eastern anchor point for Red lines which had used the 11-mile long lake as a formid- able water obstacle against the Allies. Yanggu was the key to a major Communist buildup area in thi sector which now has been elim- inated. * * * AT LAKE SUCCESS North Kor- ean officials, boasting that the Communists are sure to win, once again demanded yesterday that the United Nations get out o Korea. In identical cables to Nasrol- lah Entezam of Iran, president of the General Assembly, and to Holland's Daniel von Ballusek, president of the Security Coun- cil, it also demanded that the UN punish what it called "mon- trous American atrocities." It made no mention of the presence of Chinese Communist troops in Korea. Iran Charges Britain, U.S. With Meddling By The Associated Press Iran charged Britain and the United States last night with med- dling in her internal affairs. An official statement issued by the Iranian ambassador in London, at the same time, assured Britain that Iran has no intention of giv- ing her oil to any other country nor of depriving Britain of its use. * * * , THE AMBASSADOR, Ali Sohei- ly, said he was issuing his state- ment with the approval of his gov- -ernment to correct " a spate of in- accurate and tendentious reports in certain sections of the British press." One of the five points he made was that "the 'exploratory' -oil talks between British and Ameri- can representatives in Washing- ton cannot have any validity for Persia (Iran) and are consid- ered by the Persians to be in- terference in their affairs." Soheily said Iran "has not 'by any standards received a fair and reasonable share of her vast oil resources." THE STATEMENT was especial- ly bitter about reports that Com- munists had provoked the move- ment in Iran to.nationalize the oil industry. "To ascribe to Communist intrigue and agitation the na- tionalist movement in Persia is blinking at hard facts and trying to find scapegoats for a purely nationalistic sequence of social evolution," it declared. Meanwhile Brig. Gen. Azizollah Kamal, military governor of Iran's southern oil fields, said striking apprentices agreed yesterday to re- turn to work at the big .refinery city of Abadan. They had been the spearhead of widespread strikes and rioting which last week took the lives of -AP News Photo REFUGEES-A family on the banks of the upper Mississippi River begins to evacuate all of its be- longings-including its livestock-as floodwaters began seeping through flood walls and levees. Whole communities were bracing themselves this week from the river's rising waters. A 22.5 feet stage is expected by May 1, eight and one-half feet over flood stage. House AtinSatUnderges First erils uure Fake A tmllOic Bobing OfDraft Plan While a steady stream of Uni- versity students picked up applica- tions for the college deferment test yesterday at the Ann Arbor draft board, their newly acquired privi- lege was facing possible revocation in Washington. Friday, the House of Representa- tives passed its version of the Uni- versal Military Service and Train- ing Bill. It contained a provision that would end the blanket defer- ment given to college students who are in the upper portions of their classes or who have passed the College Qualification Test with a score of 70 or higher. ACCORDING TO the House ver- sion of the bill, local draft boardsj would be given the final say on whether to defer individual col- lege students regardless of Presi- dential directives. However, when the Senate passed its version of the bill last month the college deferment program had not yet been an- nounced. The differences between the two versions will be ironed out in a Senate-House conference this week. If they agree on abolishing the student deferment plan it will be up to the President to either veto the entire bill or let it become law. MEANWHILE present college students under the age of 26 are, eligible to take the deferment exam Application cards for the test may be obtained from the local draft board at 208 W. Washing- ton St. or from the University Armed Services Information Center in Rm. 505 Administra- tion Bldg. All applicants must call in per- son for their card and only one form will be issued to a person. Unless congressional action up- sets the present plans the exam will be given at the University and at more than 1000 other testing centers throughout the country on May 26, June 16, and June 30. SAULT STE. MARIE-P--This strategic city became a make-be- lieve rubble yesterday, victim of one of thebnation's first mock atomic bombings. It was a serious and realistic test. But Michigan's civilian de- fence officials and Governor U. Mennen Williams inspected the area with evident pleasure- THEY SAID the experiment was "most heartening," although it showed up some minor flaws inI preparedness. "It was an inspiration," said Mayor William L. Freeman of Local Defense MObilzed in Mock. Attack Washtenaw County's defense or- ganization yesterday took part in the statewide mock atomic attack. mobilizing its resources on paper for the alert. Most of the work had been com- pleted last week. Otto K. Engelke, Washtenaw County Civil Defense Director sent Detroit authorities estimates of how many Detroit sur- vivors the county could aqcommo- date and how much equipment would be available for use in the bombed area. ONLY THE Civil Air Patrol and amateur radio operators in the county took an active part in the mock raid. Dr. Engelke reported that Washtenaw County could feed approximately 10,000 refugees from Detroit for a short time. He said that food supplies from Detroit would probably be sharply curtailed by a genuine atomic raid and he urged Ann Arbor residents to lay in enough non-perishable food to feed themselves and pos- sible survivors for two weeks. Besides providing food, shelter and treatment for survivors, the county plans to send equipment to the stricken areas in the event of an atomic raid. the Sault, "to see the help streaming in from other cities. It let the people of the Sault know we'll get help in time of emergency." Much of the mock raid went off with precision. It was announced at 6 a.m. (EST) with the roar of six jet fighters from the 10th Ar Force at Selfridge Air Force Base. ** * AS THE FIGHTERS wheeled through the cloudy sky, a huge siren shrieked the alarm for Sault Ste. Marie's 18,000 residents. Almost immediately the care- fully laid Civil Defense plans began to function. And from then until 10:15 a.m., when a second "all clear" sound- ed, help poured into the city from many parts of northern Michigan. ON PAPER, the vital Sault Locks, labelled as one of America's top possible targets for a real A- Bomb, were put out of commis- sion. Actually, however, ships continued to move through with- out interruption., Radio station WSOO stayed on the air telling the people it was all in practice. Many peo- ple had taken realistically to their bomb cellars and wouldn't come out. Detroit had its own mock bomb- ing yesterday. This, however, was a purely paper operation, Two Students Die In. Auto Accidents Two University students met death in automobile accidents dur- ing Spring vacation . Ruth Ann Richmond, '54SM, 18 years old, was killed in a high- way collision on April 11 at Sor- rento, La. She was a native of St. Joseph, Mich. Earlier in the week, on April 9, Walter J. Alexander, Grad., was killed and his wife Marguerite, 57 years old, seriously injured when their auto collided with a semi- trailer on a highway outside Ann Arbor. General Gets Big Welcome In Honolulu San Francisco Prepares Parade tumultuous welcome home for General MacArthur began yester- day at this starting point of war in the Pacific. The five-star general, on his way to defend before Congress the views that got him fired by Presi- dnt Truman, entered Honolulu af- t r a triumphal parade from Pearl Harbor-scene of the sneak attack by Japan Dec. 7, 1941. * -* * HE ACCEPTED the cheers of crowds lining a seven-mile tour into Honolulu. He placed a wreath in a na- tional cemetery in honor of 13,000 men who died during the victorious campaign MacArthur commanded - from Bataan to Tokyo. And he received an honorary de- gree from the University of Hawaii. * * * IT WAS the first of the parades, honors and ceremonies awaiting him when he sets foot tonight on the continental United States for the first time since 1937. Hawaii's welcome was staged more than 12 hours after he ar- rived by plane from Tokyo where he got a sendoff ovation from the Japanese and the Allied forces. Today he will fly on to San Francisco, returning to an Ameri- can mainland he hasn't seen in 14 years; there he is to be publicly acclaimed tomorrow. Then he. will proceed to Wash- ington to address a joint meeting of Congress at 12:30 p.m. Thurs- day. THE SAN FRANCISCO program calls for a formal airport recep- tion, a parade into the city and greetings at (he San Francisco City Hall. Washington plans a virtual half-holiday Thursday. Govern-' ment employes get time off to attend a parade in his honor. Baltimore will hold a mass demonstration with songs and hymns when MacArthur hits the West Coast. Voters T'o Get Aid inBooklet Two thousand "Know Your Candidates" booklets will be dis- tributed on campus today as aids for voters in next week's all-cam- pus elections. The booklet contains informa- tion and statements by candidates for the Student Legislature, Board in Control of Intercollegiate Ath- letics, engineering and literary college officers, Union vice-presi- dents and J-Hop Committee. Also in the booklet is the revised Student Government Constitution which requires student ratification before it goes into effect. The Association of Independent Men, the Inter-Fraternity Council and the Pan-Hellenic Society will cooperate with the SL in distribu- ting the brochure. Elections will be held on April 24 and 25. HEADS HOME - Gen. Mac- Arthur returns a salute at Tokyo airport before leaving Japan. Dismissal Upheld by1' GU' Experts I MmT Three experts By CAL SAMRA University FardEastern agreed yesterday that! President Truman was justified in his dismissal of General Douglas MacArthur on grounds of "insub- ordination."i Adding their voices to one of the most acrimonious debates in the history of the country were Prof. Russell Fifield of the politi- cal scence department, P r o f, Frank Huntley of the English de- partment, and Robert Ward, as- sistant director of the Center of Japanese Studies, * * * - PROF. FIFIELD, who several months ago visited Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek on Formosa, said pointedly, "I think the President, under the present conditions, did the right thing, "Truman really had no other alternative," he explained, "And I say that in spite of the fact that I have disagreed with him on many other points of policy," The Orient specialist empha- sized that the United States should do everything possible to keep out of war with China-a policy which, he admitted was be- ing followed by the Truman ad- ministration. Commenting on the violent pub- lic reaction to the ouster, Prof. Fifield believed that eventually- after some reflection-the Ameri- can public would rally behind Truman. PROF, HUNTLEY, who resided in China for 17 years and in Ja- pan for six years, was also "fully behind the Administration" in the rift. "This is not a question of personalities," he elaborated. "MacArthur is undoubtedly a great military general." But, he added, it is of prime necessity that we keep our allies and support the policies of the UN. Ward, who in March, 1950 was among several University educators meeting with Mac- Arthur, said, "I'm in favor of MacArthur's dismissal because he deliberately provoked the is- sue of the civilian over the mili- tary." On the other hand, he contin- ued, his removal should have been effected more gracefully, "It would have been wiser to have waited a few more months. Mac- Arthur may have resigned on his own accord." TWO OTHER University edu- Talk Country Will Hear Speech On Radio,TV GOP.Demands Review of Policy WASHINGTON -()- Congress whipped through formal arrange- ments yesterday for Gen. Douglas MacArthur to tell his story to a joint meeting-and by radio and television to the. nation-shortly after 12:30 p.m. Thursday. And Senate Republicans, voic- ing delight at the prospect of hearing MacArthur, called unani- mously for an all-out Congres- sional investigation of the Truman Administration's foreign and mili- tary policies. * * * GOP OBJECTIONS to the Tru- man program mounted to a roar of protest with the President's dis- missal of MacArthur last week, and the deposedegeneral's flight to Washington (he's due here early Thursday) fanned the flames of controversy to a new peak. Thirty-three Senate Republi- cans agreed at a closed meet- ing to back the proposed inves- tigation of Truman policies all over the world "in the light of General MacArthur's dismissal." Backers of the movement said they had a two-house inquiry in mind. The White House announced that Truman,4 has assigned his military aide, Maj. Gen. Harry H. Vaughan, to meet MacArthur at National Airport. It looked as if the President would not see Mac- Arthur unless the General asked for an appointment, and the White House said he hasn't asked for one yet. PLANS WERE also rushed for a big civic reception at the Wash- ington Monument. MacArthur messaged the Committee that he would be "proud and happy" to take part. MacArthur also wired that he would be willing to testify be- fore the Senate Armed Services Committee some time after his appearance at the joint ses- sion. The House Armed Ser- vices Committee promptly voted to ask the General to appear before it as well. In addition, Rep. Adair (R-Ind) introduced a resolution calling for the dismissal of Dean -Acheson as Secretary of State. And Rep. Bake well (R-Mo.) offered one to give MacArthur a special medal. Rep. Crumpacker (R-Ind.) introduced a resolution for the removal of both Acheson and Secretary of Defense Marshall. The resolutions. were referred to committees with no early action in prospect. 'U' Professor Gets Award Prof. Richard Musgrave of the economics department has been awarded a research fellowship from the Guggenheim Memorial Foundation in New York. According to Guggenheim offi- cials, he will conduct studies on the theory of public finance. Prof. Musgrave returned Sunday night from Germany, where he made preliminary arrangements during Spring vacation for a fiscal mission to be conducted there this summer. As co-chairman of a six-man group, he will study the tax struc- ture of the West German state and make recommendations following' the three months period. 'U' Asks Report Of New Car Tags i ORIGINAL REQUEST ALREADY CUT: State Committees Discuss 'U' Budget 4>--- i By RON WATTS LANSING-The fate of the Uni- versity budget request, which has been in the grips of Gov. G. Men- the Legislature. The budget re- quest is now before committees of both houses for preliminary con- sideration. without much protest. "But an in- stitution like the University with its own accounting system is much harder to pin down on budget function on a smaller budget. However, Sen. Hutchinson, who is a graduate of the University, said that he was sympathetic