REACTIONS TO MACARTHUR See Page 4 Y tr Dzinz Latest Deadline in the State :43 agt CLOUDY, WARMER VOL. LXI, No. 136 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, APRIL 21, 1951 FOUR PAGES Millions of Library Cuts Operating Time General Library officials have decided to keep the building closed every Sunday this month and next, as part of an experiment in money-saving measures. The move was made in anticipation of a slash in the library's operating funds next year,'according to Prof. Warner G. Rice, library director. He said its purpose was to determine whether a Sunday shutdown would be feasible as a permanent economy policy in the future. THE EXPERIMENT will be terminated in time for students to use the library on Sundays during the final examination period. Several other service curtailments are under consideration and may be put into effect this semester on an experimental basis, Prof. Rice said. A letter of protest has already been dispatched to library officials by the Student Legislature, pending further SL study. * * * * PROF. RICE ESTIMATED that next year's reduced budget will necessitate a paring of expenses equivalent to the wages of 15 full- time library staff members. He said that the Sunday closing, if continued throughout the academic year, would bring about a saving approximating the wage of one staff member. Operating costs amount to more than $60 per Sunday. Prof. Rice felt the Sunday closing would be a relatively satisfac- tory aid in solving the budget problem, because other places are available for student study, and because it is difficult to find suitable staff personnel to work that day anyhow. A NUMBER OF other experiments are contemplated to determine which services can be reduced or eliminated with the least inconven- ience to the campus, he revealed. Among these are: 1) closing the circulation desk at 6 p.m. daily, 2) opening the library an hour later or closing an hour earlier each day,. 3) closing at 6 p.m. Friday and noon Saturday, 4) closing divisional libraries evenings and Saturdays, and 5) dis- continuing service entirely in some units which serve small groups, such as the study hall at Willow Run Village. Some expense reductions are also being considered in the pro- cessing departments, which handle cataloging and preparation of books for use. * *. * * "WITHOUT DOUBT putting into effect any one of these sug- gestions will result in some inconvenience to a considerable number of library users and it is to be regretted that stern necessity dictates the contemplation of any such moves," Prof. Rice said. Student Legislature president George Roumell, '51, termed it "regrettable" that the University is "forced to curtail educa- tional services because of possible budget cuts. "I am wondering if another solution can be found by the library in its attempt to work within its budget," he added. Legislator Lee Benjamin, '52, was more vehement in protesting the action. "I think library service is poor enough on Sundays as it is, without eliminating its study facilities entirely," she said. 'New 7,500,000 JamS treets AlongRoute Ovation Greatest In U.S._History NEW YORK - (A) - A roaring multitude yesterday gave General Douglas MacArthur the greatest acclaim this nation has ever heap- ed upon a returning hero. The mass outpouring of people and emotion-police estimated the crowd at 7,500,000-swelled into a thunderous tribute to the famed soldier who has sparked a deep and bitter conflict over American policy in Asia. * * * THE OVATION rolled from the green expanse of Central Park down into the gry stone depths of Lower Manhattan during' four hours and one minute of unbroken acclaim. With Mrs. MacArthur and their 13-year-old son, Arthur, near his side, the General told a huge crowd at city hall: "As I watched your throngs, a great pride and a great con- fidence came upon me for here- I saw in this great city, this melting pot of the world, an indomitable force which cannot fail to maintain our freedom and our way of life. "This, I said to myself, is Amer- ica. And this, with God's help, we shall keep American." Mayor Vincent R. Impellitteri presented the General with a gold medal as a tribute from the peo- ple of the city. The medal bears an inscription which says: "In defense of honor and liberty and the fundamental principles on which free Institu- tions may rest." * *. 4. AT A LUNCHEON in his honor, MacArthur told New Yorkers the city's welcome had done "what an enemy in savage campaign- ing in the Pacific has never been able to do-you have forced us to capitulate." He said Mrs. MacArthur had warned him not to try to make another speech. He added: "Though many of you may doubt it, I do most meticulously obey my commander-in-chief." And he gestured toward his wife nearby. The MacArthur parade wound through 15 miles of city streets banked with masses of people in a holiday mood. They were all there, straining for a glimpse of the man with the gold-braided cap who was seeing this. city for the first time in 14 stormy years of war and peace. This turnout was almost double the 4,000,000 who greeted Charles Lindbergh in 1927 and Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1945.; The tumult swept along with MacArthur and his family. The General rode in the first car with Mayor Impellitteri. Behind them came Mrs. MacArthur and Arthur, still wearing his long-billed avia- tor's cap. They waved and smiled and nodded acknowledgment of the greeting. From the crowd came a bull- voiced bellow: "Come on MacAr- thur. Save America!" Pe tain's Condition ReportedCritical ILE D'YEU, France - (P) - The condition of Henri Philippe Petain, 94 years old, head of the Vichy Regime, was extremely critical late last night, after a new relapse in his fight against pneumonia. Yorkers * * Acclai ISTRATI0 * acArthu D I 'USES' BRR DLLY T FT * * 4, A llies Push On Toward Chorwon TOKYO - (A') - Allied troops early today drove back up a 1,500- foot height in seesaw fighting for Chorwon, 18 miles inside Red Korea. Field dispatches said the Reds appeared to be slowly yielding in a last-ditch stand for that rail- highway hub and supply base in the west-central sector. Allied forces have won nearly all the dominating fringe of mountains south of Chorwon. * * *. LATE LAST NIGHT, the Reds split an Allied company and drove it off a 1,500-foot hill six miles south of Chorwon. This was one of a series of Red counterattacks. The Allies had beaten off the others in close quarters action which involved fists and rifle butts. Early today, after artillery blast- ed the enemy, the re-formed com- pany regained the height in the face of heavy machinegun fire.. The Reds hurled more than 500 men in one of yesterday's counterblows. Seventy-five were killed and more than 150 wound- ed before the, foe fell back.1 Other field dispatches said UN forces advanced unopposed today iri Central Korea and shelled Red troop concentrations in the east- central sector. Snow flurries fell on troops mov- ing across ridge tops in the center. * *! * THE HEAVIEST UN artillery bombardment raked an area about four miles north of the Allied-won Hwachon Reservoir. A tank-in- fantry force seized a hill a mile north of the reservoir's eastern tip. Other UN troops maintained their positions in the town of Hwachon and around the reser- voir. The U.S. Eighth Army's new commander, Lt. Gen. James A. Van Fleet, offered no predictions on the next phase of the war during a frontline visit. He said it was "anybody's guess" what the Com- munists would do next, but added: "There is a definite buildup and I imagine the enemy would like to take another shot at us. We're ready for them-if they do." Perkins Becomes Delaware Head NEWARK, Del.-(A')-The Uni- versity of Delaware yesterday in- augurated John A. Perkins as its 21st president. Pekins, at 36 the youngest land- grant college president in the na- tion, has held office since last Nov. 1. He came to Delaware from the University where he was -'1 sistant provost.- A political scientist, he also for-t merly was state comptroller and budget director for the University.i -Daily-Roger Reinke 'MACARTHUR' GREETING--General Douglas MacArthur, in customary military garb, greets a throng of local admirers at the side door entrance of the Union. The General, alias Larry Gottlieb, '52, startled the campus yesterday with a surprise visit to the city. Sitting beside the General is his aide, Dick Nelson, '52. Brth students later admitted that the hoax was "their version of what happened on TV." 4 t "* # lk 'MacArthur' Shocks 'U' With Unexpected Arrival Two Oil Tankers Collide; tProbable Deaths Set at 38 NEW ORLEANS-()-Two oil tankers collided in a dense dawn fog in the Gulf of Mexico yester- day with a probable death toll of 38. Both ships were swept by flames after the crash. India Food Aid Measure Out Of Committee The Senate Foreign Relations Committee yesterday approved a compromise bill providing $95,- 000,000 worth of food grains for famine-stricken India. 4' The committee's action came as University students and local citi- zens staged a public meeting de- manding swift Congressional pas- sage of the measure, pigeonholed for four months in committee. * * SEN. TOM Connally, (D-Tex.) committee chairman, said mem- bers recommended half the food be a gift and the government lend India $47,500,000 to pay for the balance. He said the committee also voted to authorize another $95,- 000,000 worth of food grains for use under the same terms later, if Congress provides the funds. The Senate committee's action came on the heels of the approval of a similar measure by the House Rules Committee, where the mea- sure had been pigeonholed despite pleas by President Truman and Secretary of State Dean Acheson for speedy action. The adminis- tration, however, had proposed The Esso Greensboro was left a blazing hulk with only five of her 42 crewmen rescued. The 10,- 000-ton tanker wallowed in a sea of flaming oil spilled from the 140,000 barrel cargo she was car- rying from Aransas Pass, Tex., to Baltimore and New York. THE 26,500-TON super tanker Esso Suez, the other ship in the collision, was cut by a 20-foot gash in her bow about 10-feet above the water line. It was able, however, to put out the fires that swept its forepeak and proceeded last night toward New Orleans at its regular 17-knot speed. It was expected here today. First Mate Walter Brehm of Lyndhurst, N.J., was the Suez's only reported fatality but four of Its 44 crewmen were badly burned. The Suez was enroute in ballast from Baltimore to Corpus Christi, Tex. The Esso New York, which raced to the Greensboro's aid, radioed early yesterday morning "no one believed alive on board." Later, after rescuing four crew- men of the Greensboro, one badly burned, and recovering two char- red bodies, the New York aban- doned rescue efforts saying there appeared no hope of there being any other. survivors. But a second and third body were recovered. later. They were believed to be Michael Wajda of Miami and a man identified only1 as McCann.' 'U' Regent Doan A ccepts New Post i 1 J J {\ t7 j By CAL SAMRA Gen. Douglas MacArthur shock- ed the campus yesterday with a surprise visit to the, University, but later proved to be an im- postor. The handsome hero of the Pa- cific made an abrupt appearance on State St. at 2:30 p.m. yester- day in a gray Chevrolet convert- ible, and with the famous Mac- Arthur salute, paid tribute to as- tounded students, who stood on sidewalks, gawking, applauding- and laughing. National Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTONn Oren Long, a Kansan who went to Hawaii 34 years ago as a social settlement worker, was named by President Truman yesterday to be Governor of Hawi'ii. WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W. V.-Sen. Paul Douglas (D- I11.) warned last night Gen. Douglas MacArthur's Far East- ern policies could "cause Russia openly to enter the war and hence start World War Three." WASHINGTON - The General Electric Company announced last night it intends to give all its 200,- 000 workers a pay increase, retro- active to Mar. 15, if the govern- ment approves. The General was accompanied by his chauffeur and two of his staff. A Confederate Flag flutter- ed on the car. * * * * THEN, AS suddenly as he ap- peared, he disappeared. But the General was no apparition, for last night" he turned up again, this time in a blue Buick con- vertible. MacArthur, witnesses report- ed, was seen at 9 p.m. in front of the Union, wearing his cus- tomary trench coat and weather- beaten Army cap. Startled by-standers said that five stairs were embroidered on his coat, that he wore sun-glasses, and that he intermittently puffed on a curved pipe. * * * LATER, four University students, members of Pi Lambda Phi fra- ternity, admitted that' they had planned the phoney impersona- tion as a "good gag." MacArthur turned out to be Larry Gottlieb, '52. He had been accompanied by Dick Nelson, 52, Miv Sallen, '52, and Jerry Fanger, '52. Gottlieb insisted that his im- personation of MacArthur was not meant to be malicious. "All four of us agree with MacArthur's pol- icies." Fanger explained that "we did it on the spur of the moment. It was our version of what happened on TV in San Francisco, Wash- ington, and New York." 'Unique Talk Given at Phi IBete, dinner Because he did not want to de- liver the usual "commencement address" often heard on such oc- casions, Prof. Parker of New York University dramatically described the life of "A Man to Remember" at the 43rd annual Phi Beta Kappa initiation banquet last night. The "Man to Remember" turned out to be John Milton, but the audience of Phi Beta Kappa mem- bers was kept guessing about Prof. Parker's subject until the closing moments of his address. * * * MILTON'S identity was kept se- cret in order to present his ideas' and views for what they were worth alone, without coloring them by anypersonality, Prof. Parker explained. Milton "became famous be- cause he was identified with a cause people felt keenly about," according to Prof. Parker, who is a member of the NYU English department. Strongly interested in govern- ment, Milton was the "ardent foe of any form of totalimarian rule. He believed that the state existed. for the people." In Milton's own words, "It is a race of idiots whose happiness de- pends upon one man." * * * THE GREAT Englishman fought courageously f o r many causes, none of which were achieved dur- ing his lifetime, Prof. Parker said. As an example of this courage, Milton "told a world famous gen- eral how to behave," the NYU professor pointed out, "but he did not, I may add, dismiss the general." A man with important views on education, Milton held that col- leges and universities failed to in- still a deep and permanent love of learning. He thought that edu- cation should produce good citi- Tension Up With Another Climax Near Chiefs of Staff. To Be Questioned WASHINGTON-(RP) - The a- gry MacArthur-vs-Truman dispute brought from ISen. Robert Taff (R-O.) yesterdaya charge the Ad- mninistration is "using" Gen. Omar Bradley to serve its purposes. On every hand, there were indi- cations pointing to a showdown on foreign policy. "THE TRUMAN administration is working both sides of the mili- tary and political street," Sen. Taft told a reporter. He said Gen. Brad- ley speaks out or keeps silent as the White House wishes. Thus there was no sign ofa let-upsin the great quarrel on whether President Truman did right or wrong when he tired Gen. MacArthur frem his Pacific commands last week with the ex- planation that the General did- n't fit in with plans to restrict warfare to Korea Everything pointed to a build-up to another climax, probably late this month, when Gen. MacAr- thur will return to Washington for a question4and-answer session with the Senate Armed Services Committee. * * * THE QUARREL is p'pointed now on whether the Joint Chiefs - of Staff-whose duty is to advise the Presi lent on military mat- ters-were for or against Gen. MacArthur's views on how to run the war in the Far East, Chairman Richard Russell (D- Ga.) of the armed services group indicated it would investigate the Joint Chiefs' position. Gen. MacArthur said in his speech to Congress Thursday he believed his advocacy of air opera- tions over Manchuria and of block- ading Red China had been shared in the past, from a military stand- point, by the JCS. « * 4. IN TOKYO, a key officer on Gen. MacArthur's old staff said the general could fully document his speech. Supplying proof, this of- ficer said, "will be the easiest part of it" and "the big battle will come when he appears before the Senate Armed Services Committee to bring out the details." Gen. Bradley is chairman of JO"S. Sen. Taft's criticism of him was based on remarks Gen. Bradley made at Chapel Hill, N. C., Thurs- day night and on a speech he made at Chicago, Tuesday. * * * Senators Fight Over Policies Of MacArthur WASHINGTON-- ( ) -- Three aroused Senators ended a war of words over Gen. Douglas MacAr- thur's policies yesterday with a shoving match at the door of a radio recording studio. Sen. Homer Capehart (R-Ind), a heavily built man of 53 and a backer of Gen. MacArthur, told re- porters he' seized Sen. Hubert Humphrey (D-Minn) by the lapel and "threw him out" of the studio after Sen Humphrey called him "a, very dirty name." THEN SEN. CAPEHART said, Slack in Buying Rate May Cut Prices. i 0 By VERNON EMERSON Decreasing urgency in consumer buying of automobiles and major appliances this year may mean the upward spiral of prices will slack- en off, according to results of a nationwide consumer finance sur- vey. The sirvev which was made in that prices will go up this year, the most popular choice for sav- ings investment continued to be United States savings bonds. 2. Half of the consumers who have immediate plans for funds they will receive from maturing government bonds said they will v.-nama* *mn i 4 T. T_ r.vin the people are well aware that we are in an inflationary period. Even though the median income rose from $2,700 to $3,000, more con- sumers thought they were worse off than thought they were better off " Lansing departed from the .rv" o 4. v that see rpcult. show that proper use of govern- ment economic controls may mean. that prices will be substantially stable for the next half year. In spite of the inflationary sentiment in the country, Prof. Katona felt that controls would make lare nric increases im- i I