Y CAMPUS POLICE BAN See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State DaiIr 'I I VOL. LXI, No. 153 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY 11. 1951 rr New Red Forces Stiffen Defenses Against Allies TOKYO--P)-Fresh Red forces streamed into buildup areas along the western and central fronts today as resistance against aggressive Allied patrols stiffened generally across the peninsula. An Eighth Army spokesman reported "a considerable amount" of Red movement east of Munsan, some 10 miles below parallel 38 and 20 miles northwest of Seoul. AP CORRESI ONDENT George McArthur, on the west-central front, said Allied bombers ran into heavy*anti-aircraft fire last night * * * in attacks on a buildup in the acrr Re orted Re MOSTLY CLOUDY WITH RAIN SIX PAGES tdy IAd I '4 To -i ht Red hina E L..... ..1U British End Rubber Sale To Red China LONDON-(M)-Britain's Labor government yesterday halted rub- ber shipments to Communist China for the rest of 1951. Aroused American public opin- ion and whip-sawing attacks by Winston Churchill's Conservatives provoked the decision. The rubber ban was announced in the House of Commons a few moments after Churchill had thundered a demand for the change at once "on the grounds of national safety and even sur- vival." CHURCHILL also attacked Brit- ain's maintenance of diplomatic relations with Red China, saying these ties had brought no advant- age to Britain or the United Nations "and they have become a reproach against us in wide circles in America." A revival of isolationist sen- timent in the United States, he warned, might lessen American help for Europe, which could lead to the ruin of "the whole J free world." Sir Hartley Shawcross, presi- dent of the Board of Trade, said the government's opinion is that China already has imported enough rubber this year to fill her civilian needs for all of 1951. THEREFORE, he said, Britain is asking its colonial governments "to ensure that there will be no further exports of rubber to China from Malaya or the other British territories involved this year." Shaweross referred to "abnor- mally high" rubber imports by' Communist China in the first quarter. The government's own figures showed British territories shipped 45,000 tons of rubber to. Red China for the three-month period ending in March-about twice the total in all of 1949. Dewey Asks Embargo on Red Chinese NEW YORK-(P)-Gov. Thom- as E. Dewey yesterday urged an "absolute and total" embargo by the free world against trade of any kind with Communist China. It was one of 11 planks in a global policy which he said is most urgently needed to stop Rus- sia from 'taking the world "bit by bit." Among Dewey's 11 points co- ering both Asia and Europe were: No appeasement or retreat from Communism anywhere in the world; no recognition ever of Red China and use of the veto if needed to keep her out of the UN; more aid for Chiang Kai-Shek's Nationalists and releasing his troops for any use he wants to make of them against the 'Chi- nese mainland; continued bi-par- tisan support for a Japanese peace treaty; a policy aimed at an eventual United States of Europe. Admittance of Turkey, Greece, Spain and Yugoslavia Into the North Atlantic Treaty Alliance; Universal Military Training at once. .I A - s. --- E 01 Kapyong area. iapyong is 12 miles south of the parallel and 32 miles north- east of Seoul. McArthur report- ed the Chinese evidently have shifted east after withdrawing north of the old Korean capital. Field commanders expect a re- newal of the big Red spring of- fensive at any time in this battle of Korea. GEN. MATTHEW R. Ridgway said yesterday the battle marked a turning of the tide against world Communism. Lt. Gen. James A. Van Fleet had said earlier that he felt more confident of whipping the Reds now than he did at the outset of the Chinese and Kor- ean Red offensive April 22. Aft- er 10 days and losses of an es- timated 75,000 men, the Reds began a withdrawal that-in most sectors-still continues. Red supply lines have been hit 'round-the-clock by Allied fighters and bombers. More than 650 sorties were flown by dusk yester- day. The tank - infantry column stabbed into Munsan some 20 miles northwest of Seoul and withdrew yesterday after South Korean troops erased a threat by 6,000 Korean Reds to flank Seoul from the west. To the east, another Allied ar- mored column rammed at least eight miles north of Uijongbu, to Within 10 miles or less of the 38th Parallel. Farther east, Allied patrols re- entered Inje-five miles north of the parallel-without finding any Reds. Dawson Tells Of Free Stays At Fla._Hotel WASHINGTON - (R) - White House Aide Donald Dawson ack- nowledged yesterday that he and two other members of President Truman's staff took free vaca- tions at a $30-a-day luxury hotel in Miami Beach, Fla., after the hotel borrowed $1,509,000 from the government. But Dawson told senators he understood some lawmakers them- selves have accepted similar on- the-cuff courtesies from the same hotel, the Saxony. He named the other two presi- dential staffers as David K. Niles and Col. Charles Maylon. Making his long-awaited ap- pearance as a witness in the RFC Inquiry, Dawson swore he never abused his White House prestige by attempting to sway multi-mil- lion dollar federal loans. fox Reveals .. Brutal Story . f Ieatsn~~~ Tells of Packiii .., In Ice by Youths4 By PAUL MARX George Cox, '54, told his story: j to the police yesterday morning i $ and confirmed the rumors that he had been beaten and packed in dry ice last Friday morning. , ~~~- Cox's account of the attack was revealed by police officials at a R conference yesterday with Dean Walter and three members of his fraternity, Phi Kappa Psi. AT UNIVERSITY Hospital last night, where he is being treated for second and third degree burns, NEW SL CABINET-Leonard Wilcox takes over the chair at last a dislocated jaw and a broken elected president by acclamation. Surrounding him are the otherr nose, doctors described his condi- Stenn, vice-president; Phil Berry, member-at-large; Pat Doyle,c tion as "good." Leah Marks, member-at-large; Alice Spero, recording secretary and As he was on his way from the fraternity house to his room at 1026 Oakland at about 2 XeGet S a.m. Friday, Cox said an old 1 COX tenn model car slowly pulled along- side him. ,---- A shout of "let's get that dumb Leonard Wilcox, '52, was elected 1 passage of two key motions oppos- college SOB and pack him in dry president of the Student Legisla- ing University policies. ice for posterity" came from the ture last night in one of the most * * * car. About five teenagers then eventful SL meetings of the year. ELECTED TO the vice-presi- jumped from the car and severe- Wilcox won his post by acclama- dency was Irv Stenn, '52, former ly beat him up. tion and after the other officers SL Treasurer and cabinet-mem- * * were elected led the SL in the ber-at-large. THE YOUTHS then dumned d ------------------ -- - 'Fade Away' At an Honors Dinner last night for East Quadrangle stu- dents, President Alexander G. Ruthven announced he was planning to "fade away." He emphasized that his re- tirement at the end of the spring semester would be "quiet." Jim Yobst Wrill Direct 1952_Opera Jim Yobst, '52, was named gen- eral chairman of the 1952 Union Opera last night by the appoint- ments committee of the Union Board of Directors. Yobst, who has played a lead- ing role in Union Opera produc- tion for the past two years, will succeed Gene Overbeck, '51, chair- man of the 1951 Opera, "Go West Madam." THIS YEAR'S performance, in addition to its regular run in Ann s " I irizY vutialine aupea him into the car and the next thing Cox said he remembered was awakening on a lawn about two blocks from the fraternity house. He added that he thought he heard a girl's laughter in the car before he blacked out. I Crawling on his hands and knees, the 19 year old student from Cheyenne, Wyo. managed to reach the fraternity house and found his way to a lavatory. At about 7 a.m. fraternity bro- ther Ted Gibson, '52, found Cox sitting on a stool in the lavatory cringing in pain. Gibson called his roommate Mark Kremer, '52BAd, and they drove Cox to University Hospital where he was admitted at 7:45 a.m. When Gibson found Cox in the lavatory he was wiping his wounds with his shirt with water from the bathtub. Gibson said there appeared to be no evidence that Cox suffered the burns from fall- ing in the tub. Hospital officials said they could not yet tell exactly how the burns were caused. Police are conduct- ing a full inquiry into the matter' and the fraternity has promised them the fullest cooperation. Cox had been at the fraternity after supper working on a floor in preparation for the fraternity's Mother's Day weekend. Radioactive Snow Could affect AA Industry, Report Reveals Enough split radioactive atoms from last winter's Nevada A-bomb test explosions fell in Ann Arbor to be a hazard to industrial processes. This disclosure came in an article written by Prof. W. Wayne Meinke of the chemistry department, which appeared yesterday In, a science journal. THE A-BOMB dust detected here was 100 times greater than the normal radio-activity of this section, the article said. This was suf- ficient to cloud films being developed by a film-processing com- pany. night's SL meeting after he was members of the new cabinet: Irv corresponding secretary; Wilcox, Bob Baker, treasurer. LPosts - The new treasurer is Bob Baker, '52BAd. Alice Spero, '53 and Pat Doyle, '52, won the two secretary positions and Phil Berry, '52BAd, and Leah Marks, '52, were chosen as cabinet members-at-large. In response to the recent restric- tions placed on Lane Hall speak- ers, a motion was passed asking the University for a clarification and revision of all existing regu- lations affecting the appearance of speakers on campus in order to assure the maximum degree of freedom of expression. * * * THE MOTION also called for student representation on the University Lecture Committee and authorized the Campus Action Committee to undertake negotia- tions toward these ends. Also passed was a proposal approving discussions by SL's Human and International Rela- tions Committee, the Associa- tion of Independent Men, and dormitory governments with the Board of Governors of the Resi- dence Halls for the removal of possible discriminatory ques- tions from dormitory application blanks. There was little surprise at the results of the cabinet elections. Wilcox, a member of Phi Kappa Tau, was the overwhelming fhvor- ite for the presidency. He re- ceived the second greatest number of votes in last month's elections for SL and has been serving as SL vice-president since last fall. Stenn won the vice-presidency over Baker by a very small mar- gin. Baker was then nominated for treasurer and he won that post without opposition. Smith Tells. Of General's Asia Report 'Didn't See Plan," Says Marshall WASHINGTON - () - Gen. Douglas MacArthur was reported yesterday to have been ready in 1945 to march Allied troops against the Chinese Red army unless the Communists laid down their arms and agreed to a free election In China. Senator Smith (R-N.J.) gave this report to Senators as Secre, tary of Defdnse Marshall-for the fourth straight day-defended the administration program in Asia with arguments which President Truman told reporters are the exact truth, word for word. Mar- shall will resume his testimony to- morrow at 9 a.m. SMITH SAID he was informed by "a pretty good authority" that. after V-J Day MacArthur told the War Department the Chinese Red force was composed of only 125,- 000 to 250,000 guerillas. "He proposed," Smith said, "that, with Chinese government agreement, America guarantees the personal safety of the Com- munist leaders and their right to participate as a legal politi- cal party in free elections under American supervision. Smith said he was told "dozens of officials" of the army, navy, air force, marines and office of stra- tegic services saw theMacArthur report. But Marshall declared he- had no recollection of ever having seen it. At this time, Marshall was Army Chief of Staff and Mac- Arthur's military boss. MARSHALL, in his testimony, again rejected the present pro- posals of Gen. MacArthur to bomb China into surrender. Marshall declared this would risk a world the United States is not prepared.- He said the United States should "never yield" to any argument for admission of- Red China into the United Nations-and he re- peated that the Truman Admin- istration is against giving the island of Formosa to the Reds. Ex-President's Arrest Follows Panama Riot PANAMA, Panama-()-De- posed President Arnufo Arias was arrested and jailed yesterday after a bloody four-hour stand against the nation's armed forces driven to action by the greatest civil re- sistance movement in Panama's history. At least nine persons were kill- ed and scores wounded. Entrenched with hundreds of followers in the prsidential pal- ace overlooking picturesque Pan. ama Harbor, Arias fought to stay in office in the face of impeach- ment by the National Assembly and popular clamor against him. He lost and was thrown behind bars. The nine dead and the score wounded in today's fighting added to a toll of three deaths and 110 wounded or injured in the violent disorders touched off by Arias' act Monday night switching the country's constitutions by decree. Arias was flushed out of the third floor residential quarters of the palace by national police who fought their way in with machine guns, rifles and tear gas. NAACP's White rr." I uud% I- Orientation Chiefs' Must ApplyIToday Men who want to sign up as orientation leaders for the fall se- mester will have their last chance to do so today at the Union Stu- dent offices. Early next week, all al~plicants will be interviewed by the Union campus affairs committee and will be chosen on the basis of leader- ship ability and knowledge of the campus. Those selected will receive sev- eral privileges during orientation week next semester. Meals will be free 'and they will be allowed to register early. STAIRWAY TO STARDOM: Thespians Archer, Best Reveal Past However, the non - existent Ann Arbor Civil Defense agency can relax - the concentration was not nearly enough to be dangerous to human beings, ac- cording to Prof. Mienke. The split atoms were found here in snow that fell three or more 'tays after the two Nevada bombs of Jan. 27 or 28. * * * PARADOXICALLY enough, no further atomic dust was found in later snows after the detonations of Feb. 1, 2 and 6. This may have been due to a rumored difference in size of the exploded bombs. A more likely explanation of- fered was differences in the up- per air currents that carried the atomic dust eastward across the United States. The presence of radioactive' atoms in the snow was established by a process of chemical separa- tion, Prof. Meinke reported last night. An analysis of the snow revealed that certain elements which are waste materials result- ing from an atomic explosion were present. The radioactive snow was re- ported in widely scattered places all over the Eastern half of the country, Prof. Meinke said. "Ap- parently it was present wherever people took the trouble to look for it." World News Roundup By The Associated Press PARIS-Russia- agreed with the three Western powers last night on an incomnlte anrin that JIM YOBST Arbor, went on a week road trip over spring vacation. Yobst was production mana- ger of "Go West Madam' and served on the 1950 Opera, "Lace It Up," as costume director. He is a member of Mimes, the honorary Union Opera fraternity, and Phi Delta Theta. Yobst, who is planning to enter medical school, claims that his appointment time jitters are not yet over. Tomorrow night he will complete his medical aptitude exams. Four Posts Open On Honor Council Engineering Honor Council pe- titions may be turned in today at the Engineering Council office.in the West Engineering Annex. Four positions on the honor council are open to all scholasti- cally eligible engineering students except first-semester freshmen. By HARRY REED John Archer and Edna Best, stars of the first Drama Season presentation, "Captain Brass- bound's Conversion," which opens Tuesday, yesterday revealed es- sentially different ways of break- ing into the acting field and ris- ing to their successful places. ARCHER, who attended Hol- lywood High School and Univer- * * * sity of Southern California, tried for some time to crack the movie field, but wound up working for an extermination crew. He got his start in pictures by being one of two men in a Hollywood res- taurant when a tipsy director was bragging that he could make any- one an actor. Archer was selected as the test case, and his career was under way. "I've often wondered what happened to the other fellow," he mused yesterday in a break between rehearsals. Commenting on one of his latest pictures, "Destination Moon," he said, "It was the most interesting thing I've done. Even the prop years ago and migrated to the mecca of motion pictures, Hol- lywood, to take part in such hits as "Intermezzo," "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir" and "The Late George Apley." Miss Best also played a lead in "Captain Brassbound's Conver- sion" in New York, where New York critics lavishly acclaimed her work as Lady Cicely. LIGHTS GO ON AGAIN: Overnight Blackout on Observatory Hill Ends By DON MALCOLM Observatory Hill slowly recov- ered yesterday from the paralyz- ing power blackout that was caus- ed by a short circuit Wednesday night. Victor Vaughan House was the first to regain electric power. Its lights went on again at 5 a.m. yesterday. * * * it sold more than four times its usual number of candles. * * * - THE SHORT CIRCUIT left the University Food Service without refrigeration until 5:45 p.m. yes- terday, but all its perishable food was taken to refrigerators at Alice Lloyd Hall before it had time to spoil, according to. Francis C. Shiel.. Busines Managro f the mammma MMM