£ ISRAELI-SYRIAN PROBLEM See Page 4' ijt ua D4aii4 t 'S " 0wo -4 4 .4 Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXI, No. 150 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 8, 1951 FAIR, WARMER SIX Williams Asks 'U'BudgetRaise Governor Proposes Million-Dollar Hike in University's Appropriation A $1,000,000 increase in the University appropriation for 1951-52 was recommended to the State Legislature yesterday by Gov. G. Men- nen Willianis. The increase brings the proposed University budget to $14,700,- 000-still $500,000 shdrt of the $15,200,000 asked by the Board of Regents. GOV. WILLIAMS said he thought the $1,000,000 raise was justi- fied because next fall's prospective enrollment at the University is Trum Blast at Backs Up Marshall Gen. ac Arthur's Pla ar t- '51 Pulitzer Prizes Given To writers NEW YORK-(AP)-The Pulitzer Prize for fiction was awarded yes- terday to "The Town" by Conrad Richter. No drama award was made this year. 1 TWO AWARDS were made fo meritorious public service ren dered by a United States news paper. The newspapers honore were the Miami Herald and Th Brooklyn Eagle "for their crim reporting during the year." Carl Sandburg received a award for his "Complete Poems." Margaret Louise Colt received an award for her biography "John C. Calhoun; American Portrait." In the field of international re porting, two Associated Pres staffers were honored. They are Relman Morin and Doi Whitehead. Morin was cited fo his story, "Death of an Airbase, and for another story "Hatred T Stay Lng After the Last Shot L Fired in the Korean War." Whitehead was honored for his story, written with the U.S. Ma-. rines outside Seoul, describing the Han River action. The prizes have ben awarded annually since 1917 by Columbia University through a $2,500,000 be. quest fron Joseph Pulitzer, lat publisher of the New York Worl and The St. Louis Post-Dispatch A $500 CASH AWARD is giver each individual winner, and a $50( gold plaque to the winning news- paper. Columbia's trustees choose the winners on recommendation of the Advisory Board of Colum- bia's Graduate School of Journ- alism. Other awards in the field of in- ternational reporting went tc Keyes Beech of the Chicago News; Homer Bigart and Marguerite Hig- gins, both of the New York Herald Tribune, and Fred Sparks of the Chicago News. Russia Rejects ,japan Peace Talk with U.S. Russia rejected separate nego- tiations with the United States on a Japanese peace treaty yesterday ahd demanded the calling of a council of foreign ministers to take up the question, according to The Associated Press. In Ann Arbor, Prof. Robert Ward of the political science de- partment said the move was ex- pected, but was still significant in its point of timinig. * * * THE SOVIET NOTE was pre- sented in the midst of Washington efforts to work out a draft treaty on which all parties would agree and if this failed, they would pro- ceed without Russia and China, According to Prof. Ward, the United States will probably go ahead with its own plans for a Japanese settlement. He noted it will result in a pe- culiar situation in which Russia will be at peace with other powers but still remaining technically at war with Japan. * * * 'CHANCES OF any explosive re- action are not expected by Prof. Ward. because Japan is now occu- Omuch greater now than four months ago when the original figure was set. "During the past few days I have discussed the change with members of the legislature," Gov. Williams said, "and they agree there is sound justifica- tion in setting the appropriation at a higher level." The governor also asked for $145,000 for the Medical School to defray costs of instruction for 40 additional medicalstudents. UNIVERSITY OFFICIALS said if the governor's original $13,200,- 000 recommendation were passed, nearly 300 members of the present faculty would have been asked to resign next year because of lack of funds. This would have cut the University's teaching staff by 23 per cent. President Alexander Ruthven said he was very gratified the legislators and the governor had given serious thought to the dif- ficult financial position in which the University finds it- self. "While the proposed appropria- tion will not meet all' the needs of the institution for the next year as we see them, it is our opinion, in view of the unsettled condi- tions, that we should make every effort to keep costs of operation within the proposed allocation," the P'esident said. . Williams also boosted his 1951-52 budget recommendations for seven other state supported colleges by $1,354,000, including a $750,000 increase for Michigan State College. The proposed budget will have to be passed by both houses of the legislature before any appro- priations are made. Red Troops Pushed Back Near Seoul Enemy Morale Reported Low TOKYO -(R)- South Korean troops smashed hard into a North Korean army corps northwest of Seoul yesterday and rolled it back three miles to points 13 miles from the capital. Other Allied forces in the East forced back hard fighting Reds a mile and a half. THESE Red setbacks on the flanks and a withdrawal north of Chunchon in the center coincided with reports of dissatisfaction in Communist ranks. AP correspondent John Ran- dolph reported some Allied offi- cers on the western front believe North Korean and Chinese Reds were angry because they felt Russia had let them down on tanks and planes for their now stalled spring offensive. The Allies have won back nearly half of the ground lost north of Seoul to 300,00 Reds who aimed the main weight of their futile offen- sive at capture of the capital by May day. "There is no denying that be- fore the offensive began April 22 there were many signs that the Reds were counting on tanks and aircraft," Randolph said in his dispatch from the western front. 'Uncle Joe Stalin sold them down the river again,' one officer exulted after the first few hours of the offensive showed no tanks or planes."~ LAST WEEKEND, some 7,000 North Koreans northwest of Seoul stood their ground and defeated Allied attempts to dislodge them. But yesterday at dawn, South Koreans opened an attack with support of Allied artillery. The Reds resisted until late after- noon, Then the North Koreans began a general withdrawal from advance hill positions.' The South Koreans said they were in contact with a division and a half of North Koreans, fighting in groups up to regimental1 strength. IN CENTRAL KOREA, Allied armored patrols plunged north through Chunchon yesterday. They found the highway center deserted by Chinese Reds. It is eight miles south of the 38th parallel and 45 miles northeast of Seoul. Allied gains in the East were near Inje, which is four miles north of the 38th parallel. The United Nations attacks on the Red flanks had these purposes: in the West-to clean out a Red pocket threatening to cross the Han River northwest of Seoul: inf the East-to straighten lines north of 38.- i 1 Geronimo! ATLANTA - ( ) - A crop- haired youngster with a yen to be a paratrooper was weighed by the Army and found want- ing. The Army found Bobby Dix- on, 17 years old, of Dalton, Ga., was six pounds under the mini- mum requirement of 106 when he volunteered Thursday. Yesterday he weighed in at 106 pounds. Bobby was happy but full. Since Thursday he had been cramming himself but- his menu yesterday topped them all. Before he was weighed yes- terday he ate two complete breakfasts, which included four eggs, two milk shakes, half a dozen bananas, a pint of milk and innumerable glasses of wa- ter. The Army accepted him. Mac's Po lc Called Risk By Presidel Marshall Attar Peace Negotiati WASHINGTON-(4A' --Presi Truman last night joined Si tary of Defense George Mar in blasting Gen. Douglas3 Arthur's war plans in Korea. The President said widenin conflict, might bring down a of bombs on American citie, President Truman's broac and televised speech came' Sec. Marshall told senators MacArthur's proposals would all-out war with Russia, ex Europe to attack and perhaps the free world into two camp * * * THE PRESIDENT, follo through on the Administra double-barreled c oun t e r at t said a single, atom bomb expl over an Americancity wouldE more casualties than the U.S suffered in all the. Korean wa KOREAN VETS PARADE-Girls toss confetti into open trucks as army rotation veterans from Korea are paraded through downtown street in Seattle after landing from military sea transport a short while earlier. The shipload of 1,502 soldiers was the first to be returned under the new army rotation plan. McGee Dies as Appeals. Fail LAUREL, Miss. --(R)- Willie McGee, 37-year-old Negro gro- cery truck driver, was executed at 1:10 a.m. today for raping a white housewife in the bedroom of her home here five- and -one-half. years ago. McGee died in the electric chair National Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The United States and Russia yesterday broke off direct talks aimed at settlement of Moscow's $10,800,000,000 Lend Lease account. * * * HOUSTON-A jet bomber ex- ploded high in the air near Houston last night, killing three flyers. HOLLYWOOD - Columbia Studios yesterday cancelled "by mutual consent" its contract with actor Larry Parks, who told a House committee he was a Communist from 1941 to 1945. S * * * SAN FRANCISCO-Lieut. Gen. Albert Wedemeyer, whose long- secret report warned of a Red at- tack on South Korea, has asked for retirement from the United States Army. El Salvador Earthquake. Toll Mounts SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador-- (JP)-The death toll from Sunday's earthquake in southeastern El Sal- vador mounted yesterday to the proportions of one of the major disasters in the country's history. The government said approxi- mately 1,000 were killed in the city of Jucuapa alone. * * * HUNDREDS MORE were in- jured. The President of the Re- public, Lt. Col. Oscar Osorio, ac- dompanied by high military and civil officials, and rescue teams from all over the country rushed to the stricken area. The government decreed three days of national mourning., Greatest damage was reported in Jucuapa, a city of about 12,000, located 90 miles east of San Salvador, and at China- meca, about 17,000 population, two miles farther east. The near- by townsdofMNueva Guadalupe, Santiago de Maria, Usulutan and Caserios also suffered consider-" able damage. The government Bureau of In- formation gave no death toll for Chinameca but said 200 injured had been removed from that city to a hospital in nearby San Miguel. The government communique de- scribed the destruction at China- meca as "50 per cent less" than the damage at Jucuapa. ALTHOUGH El Salvador is in a volcanic region, the country has never before experienced such a destructive quake. The entire country is subject to periodic heavy earth shocks, however. The observatory placed the epicenter of the quake about 60 miles southeast of the capital. The government is requiring safe-conduct passes for all persons seeking to enter the devastated region. Dependency Plan [n Effect-Correll' after losing four desperate appeals within the last six hours. The ex- ecution ended a case that had at- tracted nationwide interest. THE LAST DECISION was made by Chief Justice Fred Vin- son of the United States who de- clined to halt McGee's execution scheduled for 1:01 a.m. today. McGee was brought to Laurel from the Hinds County jail, ar- riving here at 11:05 p.m. State highway patrolmen drove him up to the jail. They announced to some 300 persons who pressed forward that they had McGee and that he would die last night. Just about the time McGee was brought to Laurel, Judge Wayne Borah of the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals at New Orleans refused a temporary re- straining order holding up the ex- ecution. The plea was filed with Borah Food Tests Inconclusive Lab tests on food which reput- edly was responsible for the epi- demic in Betsy Barbour House last week have not proved con- clusive, Dr. Warren E. Forsythe, Health Service director, said last night. However, he said epidemiologists will continue to look for a clue behind the sudden wave of sick- nesses that struck 60 women and left as quickly as it came. "We couldn't find the reason for the West Quad epidemic and we may not for this either," Dr. Forsythe said. He referred to the Quad illnesses in October, 1949, which scores of patients attri- buted to food infection. Dr. Forsythe added the cause of the sicknesses may have been an influenza virus. shortly before- 7:30 p.m. by Mary Kaufman, New , York attorney, after U.S. District Court Judge Sidney Mize refused an injunc- tion petition A Jackson, Miss. ** * EARLIER Associate Justice Hugo Black of the United States Supreme Court declined to halt the execution. McGee's attorneys also ap- pealed by telephone to presi- dential assistant David Niles seeking intervention by Presi- dent Truman, but they said they were advised the President would not intercede and that there was no point in further discuss- ing the case. McGee was taken by authorities from the Hinds County jail for the 90-mile trip to Laurel. * * * MEANWHILE, on campus, members of the Committee to Save McGee staged a last-ditch drive to halt McGee's execution. The committee, which came out of hiding for the first time since its "monster rally" earlier this semester, distributed leaf- lets throughout the campus area last week. A meeting fea- turing prominent speakers was tentatively planned for this week but was eventually can- celled. During the past three weeks, the committee claims to have en- couraged the sending of about 1,000 telegrams to President Tru- man and Gov. Fielding Wright urging clemency. Israel Brands Syria 'Aggressors ISRAELI-SYRIAN frontier-(P) -Israel accused Syria yesterday of "armed aggression" in the six-day fighting along the northern fron- tier and demanded a UN Security Council meeting to take up the is- sue. lias Clause Conference To BeHeld, By CRAWFORD YOUNG Fraternity discriminatory claus- es will be the issue at stake in a panel discussion to be held at 8 p.m. today in the Rackham Am- phitheatre. Independent, Student Legisla- ture, and affiliated opinion will be represented on the panel. In ad- dition, delegates from other cam- puses will, be present to contrast. the problem here with that else- where. TO E X P R E S S independent opinion, Gordon MacDougall, '52, ex-president of the Young Pro- gressives, has been selected. Bill McIntyre, '53, formerly head of the Student Legislature Campus Action Committee, will explain the SL's approach to the fraternity discrimination prob- lem. SL this fall recommended that a September, 1956, time limit be set for removal of bias clauses, with University recognition to be denied those groups which failed' to comply, except under certain extenuating circumstances. This motion is awaiting final approval by President Alexander Ruthven. INTER - FRATERNITY Council policy will be defended by Pete Johnstone, '51, chairman of the IFC Human Relations Committee, which has been working on the discrimination problem for two years. The discrimination panel will1 serve as a "kickoff rally" for the IFC-sponsored Fraternity Week. Tomorrow, the program will continue with a 3:15 p.m.panel at the Union on "IFC Problems and Policies." At 7:30 p.m. fi- nals of the IFC Sing will be held at Hill Auditorium. Moderator for the debate will be Prof. Karl Litzenberg, of the English department, former head of the residence halls and an active alumnus of Delta Upsilon fraternity. "I do not want to be respo sible for bringing that abou President Truman said. The President added these sta ments to a previously prepa speech for a civil defense con ence. SEC. MARSHALL charged C MacArthur's peace appeal Mar to the Red commander in K( had destroyed any chances o Korean war settlement at I time. He said the tnited Natic was preparing an announcemei of readiness to discuss a w settlemet-the announceme to come from President Trum -when Gen. MacArthur ma his peace-talk offer without a proval from Washington. "In view of the serious 1i of Gen. MacArthur's statement the negotiations of these natia Sec. Marshall said, "it bedi necessary to abandon the eff thus losing whatever chance th may have been at that time to gotiate a settlement of the Kor conflict." A FEW HOURS after Sec. M shall testified behind closed do -as did Gen.. MacArthur week-the President stepped t into the Asia policy fight. President Truman sharply d puted the general's argume the present policy in Korea 1 lead to another war and t: country should "go it alone" necessary to force a Communi surrender by bombing R China. The President declared the nations stopped Communis march in Asia and "dealt a he blow to the Kremlin conspira all over the world. He asse: there are signs of a crackup hind the Iron Curtain. HE SAID a "go it alone" pc might destroy the western woi defense effort and result in "tremendous Soviet victory." Sec. Marshall hinted this cc try will hit Red China by air sea if, the Reds strike at Ameri forces outside Korea, presuma those in Japan and with the S enth Fleet in Far Eastern wat Deploring this "very distres: action," Sec. Marshall picta Gen. MacArthur as a commax who had grown so far out of sy pathy with U.S. policy that superiors doubted his ability make the proper command d sions in the field. "He would have us accept risk of involvement not only in extension of the war with : dhina," Sec. Marshall said, in an all-out war with the So Union." $4,000 GOAL SET: Fresh Air Camp Tags To Be Sold Tomorrow h, Tomorrow is the 31st annual Tag Day, an opportunity for stu- dents to support the University Fresh Air Camp for underprivi- leged children. With the quota set at $4,000, student volunteers will man buck- ets throughout the campus area to collect donations for the two- month University project. Con- tributions from students, faculty members and other Michigan resi- dents defray about one-third of the camn's nrational costs. Ann Arbor. It is staffed primar- ily by University graduate stu- dents in the education school and the psychology and sociology de- partments. MOST OF THE children come from broken homes in the lower economic groups. They are what social agencies call "in-betweens" -potential juvenile delinquents whose behavioral maladjustments can still be corrected before they reach matiritu 1 r c 2 { E 8 ti r J TO MME. PANDIT: 'U' Students Give Wheat for India 4>- By DONNA HENDLEMAN Six University delegates were in the crowd of 100 students from 11 colleges who presented a token gift of 700 pounds of wheat to In- dia yesterday. The gift was received by Madam Vijaha Pandit, Indian ambassa- dor, at the Indian embassy in Washington. Tha students had cnngregayted caravan had been led through the capital by a motorcycle es- cort. On hand for the presen- tation were three Minnesota Democrats, Sen. Hubert Hum- phrey, Rep. John Blatnik and Rep. Roy Weir. After accepting the wheat and the money, Madam Pandit said, "Every grain of wheat will find fertilne si in hearts f ndan They suggested it might be con- sidered next week, but an un- named House leader admitted the bill might have been permanently shelved. * * * THE STUDENT CARAVAN to Washington was instigated by a group at MacAllister College in Minnesota. They were joined in their erus abv rerentativesnof