EDITOR'S NOTE See Page 4 / Latest Deadline in the State 41P a t t CLOUDY WITH SHOWERS VOL. LXI, No. 159 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY 18, 1951 SIX PA Truman Challenges Taft, MacArthur mar Policy' Reds Lin Cites Great Expense of All-out War ,; Emphasizes Need For Many -Allies WASHINGTON-(P)-President Truman challenged Gen. Douglas MacArthur and Republican Sena- tor Taft yesterday for advocating policies he saidwould put the United States in "an all-out war In China all by ourselves." "One week of all-out war," the President asserted, "would cost us 10 to 20 times" more per week than the Administration proposes to spend under its new $60,000,000,000 defense budget. * * * LATER Mr. Truman remarked to reporters that World War II cost $450,000,000,000 and another world war might easily cost $600,- 000,000,000. In a fighting mood, Mr. Tru- man practically threw away a prepared speech to defend his Far Eastern policies before the National Conference on Citizen- ship. "We must have some friends in this world," he said in reference to the reluctance of Allied coun- tries to join the United States in an extended war against Red China. "Some senators and some other people would have us go it alone. } WHAT AMERICA spends for de- fense in the next year and a half, the President said, "may ward off World War III," He reported that nearly $19,000,000,000 has been spent on defense since the attack in Korea a year ago. "Never was there a time when the right decisions were more necessary than at this time," he went on in his extemporaneous address. The President reminded report- ers of the fire-eating Harry Tru- man who toured the country in 1948 in his "give-'em-hell" re- election campaign. * * * . AT NO TIME did the President mention MacArthur o° Taft by name. But there was no doubt he was talking about the General he relieved in the Far Eastern policy dispute and the Ohio senator who has supported many of Mac-] Arthur's ideas since. It would be courting disaster, the President said in his pre- pared remarks, if Congress should permit the defense pro- gram to "get snarled up, or de- layed, or slashed." Unless existing controls are ex- tended by law beyond June 30 and strengthened in the process, Mr. Truman warned, "the cost of living will go through the roof." Martha Cook Thefts Result In Restrietions New regulations went into full force this week at Martha Cook residence as dormitory officials launched an investigation into the theft of at least $200 from women's rooms and the dorm store. Locked doors and careful ob- servance of visitors marked the first major wave of thefts in the history of the residence hall. MRS. LEONA B. Diekema, dorm director, said yesterday she had supervised fingerprinting of all resident women. Several wallets *from which money has been stolen are now in the possession of po- lice, who are processing them for fingerprints. The first robbery occurred shortly after the start of the semester when about $70 was found missing from the cash box of the dormitory store. After a lapse of two weeks, a large-scale outbreak of small thefts from women's rooms PRESIDENT TRUMAP: * a' 4 Senate Probers Rule Bradley Need Not Talk WASHINGTON - 0) - Senate investigators decided 18 to 8 yes- terday that they cannot compel Gen. Omar N. Bradley to reveal what was said between President Truman and his advisers at a meeting which led to the ouster of Gen. Douglas MacArthur. By this action, the Senate Armed Services and Foreign Re- lations Committees upheldtheir presiding officer, Senator Russell (D-Ga.), who ruled that Bradley was within his rights in refusing to disclose the conversation. Brad- ley had declared that his value as a confidential adviser to the President would be ruined if he talked. * , * THE VOTE kicked up a new controversy in the Truman-Mac- Arthur dispute with some charges --and denials-that the inquiry into ,MacArthur's dismissal has taken on "political overtones." Later President Truman him- self spoke out in defense of Brad- ley's silence. Mr. Truman said the Senate in- quiry group did exactly right in upholding Bradley's refusal to talk about the meeting. He add- ed the decisions and actions taken were his own and his conversa- tions with his advisers and staff were his own business. * * * Korean Fears Mac's Policies HOUSTON- (/) - The Korean Foreign Minister said yesterday his people fear that General Doug- las MacArthur's proposals might bring Russia into the war. "They all agree as to the effi- cacy of these," Minister Yung Tai Pyun said, "but what the people fear is that these tactics might provoke the Soviet Union into war." Pyun came to Houston to ad- dress the National Convention of the General Federation of Wo- men's Clubs in behalf of Korean relief. He said in an interview that what the Korean people don't want is a stalemate-"a standing1 source of loss," he termed it. 1 HST Says Mac Ouster NoNewIdea WASHINGTON-(I)-President Truman said yesterday he had considered removing Gener MacArthur several times in the past year. He said he made up his mind March 24 when the former Far Eastern commander sent what Mr. Truman described as an ulti- matum to the Red Chinese lead- ers. BY THIS ACT, Mr. Truman told a news conference, MacArthur ex- ceeded his authority. The matter, he added, should have been sub- mitted to the Joint Chiefs of Staff beforehand. In a detailed discussion of the MacArthur affair, the Chief Executive also disclosed that Secretary of State Acheson at first advised caution when the matter of removing the General came up at a White House con- ference April 6, five days before Mr. Truman acted. The President said Acheson's caution was based on political reasons purely. He added the State Department head came around to his own view once all the facts had been put on the table * * a ACHESON, Mr. Truman said, believed an ouster would stirup a fuss. He was right about that, the President added with a grin. In a rapid fire, exchange with reporters, the President said he would have removed MacArthur even if the General had not written the letter to Rep. Mar- tin of Massachusetts, House Republican leader, favoring use of the Chinese Nationalist troops on Formosa to open a second front in Asia. This letter, written March 20 but made public April 5 by Mar- tin in a House speech, just added fuel to the fire that had been go- ing on for almost a year, Mr. Tru- man said. HE SAID HE made up his mind that the country needed a new General in the Far East when MacArthur in an ultimatum March 24 called on Peiping to settle the Korean war. MacArthur said that if the UN should ex- pand military operations to the enemy's "coastal areas and inter- ior bases," it would "doom Red China to the risk of imminent military collapse." Truman Talk Astounds Mac NEW YORK-(P)-Gen. Douglas MacArthur said last night he had reacted with "astonishment bor- dering on incredulity" to President Truman's statement he several times had considered removing the Far Eastern Commander from his duties. "It is difficult to reconcile this," the deposed Far Eastern comman- der said, "with my appointment by him as commander-in-chief of the United Nations command." Cop Caught ITHACA, Mich.-(P)-Police Chief Carl Stegman of nearby Merrill was convicted yesterday by a Justice Court jury of reck- less driving. It was announced an imme- diate appeal will be taken to the Gratiot County Circuit Court. Stegman was ticketed by Constable E1mer Hammond after he had chased a speeder through Breckenridge i a s t month. Stegman caught the speeder, who was fined, but was given a ticket himself as he returned through the town. Hammond testified t h e townspeople of Breckenridge were irate when Stegman sped through the town. Hike in Gas Tax Vetoed By Wiliams LANSING--()-Governor Wil- liams yesterday vetoed a one-and- a-half-cent increase in Michigan's gas tax and the Republican-con- trolled Legislature was unable to override his veto. The GOP missed by one vote in the House to override. The Senate voted 25 to six, a strict party vote, to reject the veto and boost the gas tax from three to 4.5 cents. BUT IN THE House, despite all the trading and pressure and GOP optimism, the Democrats stuck fast and used their potent minority to sustain the Governor's veto, the vote was 66 to 32, with two Demo- crats absent. Resentment boiled in the Sen- ate and in the highway bloc, largely in the Senate. The House took the defeat relatively calm- ly., Senate Republicans threatened reprisals against Williams, his ad-' ministration and Democratic bills. As a down payment on revenge, the Senate taxation committee met at once and tabled Williams' fav- orite bill-the two per cent cor- poration profits tax which had passed the House. * * * - WILLIAMS HELD out hope to the road lobby that its cause was not lost, saying there was still time to revive a one-cent gas tax bill in a House committee and get it passed before the lawmakers ad- journ May 25. He coupled his willingness to ac- cept that bill with a demand for the corporations profits tax, but there was no disposition apparent among the Republican legislators to do either. Wilkens Will Head NAACP On 'U'_Campus Roger Wilkens, '53, was elected the first president of the campus chapter of the National Associa- tion for the Advancement of Col- ored People last night at the group's first meeting. Other elected officers are Ed- ward Dawley, L, vice-president, Audrey Smedley , '53, recording secretary, Frances Wagman, 52L corresponding secretary, and Quenton Fulcher, '52L, treasurer. . , * THE NATIONAL constitution was adopted and a quorum set at one-third which is the last step necessary for Student Affairs Committee official recognition. The group, which had received its initial send-off last week from Walter White, National Secretary, voted to take action on the Na- tional NAACP co-sponsorshi of +ha Tr,.tn+,ix ar,.. wmi,,h in- Ripi eIL] UN -Group Asks Ch ina Embargo NEW YO}K-()-The UN Po- litical Committee, disregarding Soviet objections, recommended yesterday world - wide strategic embargo against arms and war supplies for Red China. The 60-nation General Assem- bly is expected to give it final ap- proval today. * * 4 The Political Committee vote was 45 to 0, with nine abstentions. The Soviet block of five coun- tries did not go on record at all in the vote. Luxembourg's rep- resentative was absent. The countries abstaining were Afghanistan, Burma, Ecuador, Egypt, India, Indonesia, Pakistan, Sweden and Syria. SOVIET Deputy Foreign Minis- ter Jacob A. Malik charged the United States was trying to put over a "shamefully illegal" resolu- tion in the embargo move. He and the other four in the Soviet block insisted the Secur- ity Council alone has the auth- ority to deal with embargoes. He could veto it in the council, but not in the assembly. The committee showed it would not go along with Malik and he then served notice he would not take part in the debate. As dele- gate after delegate lined up be- hind the embargo proposal, Malik calmly read a newspaper. It was the first time in history that so many countries have backed collective action in such a far-reaching embargo. It is de- signed to halt the shipment to Communist China of every scrap of strategic materials that can be used to make war. World News Roundup By The Associated Press DETROIT -- A taxpayer's suit was filed in circuit court yesterday against the city of Detroit and the AFL Bus and Streetcar Operators' Union that struck 27 days ago. It asked two injunctions. One would restrain the city from en- forcing penalty provisions of the controversial Hutchinson Act pending a court test. The other would direct 3,750 striking oper- ators to return to work. * * * RAMPAGING streams in Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas yesterday brought death to two men, with four persons reported missing. * * * DETROIT-A surprise walkout of some 800 employes paralyzed Western Union service in Detroit late yesterday. The stoppage was similar to sev- eral others in various parts of the country, and came after it appear- ed that Detroit would not be af- fected. WASHINGTON -- The govern- ment yesterday announced a cut in supplies of steel for autos and other 'civilian "hard goods" to about 65 per cent of pre-Korean war levels and warned of deeper cuts ahead. CONDEMNED SPY-Julius Rosenberg, convicted atom spy, leaves the Federal house of detention at New York for transfer to the Sing Sing prison death house at Ossining, N. Y. Rosenberg and his wife Ethel have been sentenced to death for their part in operations of an atom spy ring. Regents May Announce NTew ' U' Presid ent Today The University Board of Re- gents will convene here in Ann Arbor today and may possibly an- nounce their long-awaited deci- Druids Brew MagicPotion. From the Stonehenge circle Aided by the witches cauldron Mystic plans were brewed in dark- ness. Many twigs were examined Many rocks were overturned Subjected to heat from blazing torches Observed by men of knowledge and magic. Most decayed, were burned, were destroyed. Finally from the murky grove From the cave where Fingal lingered , The Order of the Mighty Oak emerged Causing the earth to shake and shiver Causing nations and cities to cower All to bend the twig and sapling And to capture the sturdy awends: Petrifying Pine Peterson, Leapin' Locust Leopold, Mealy-Mouthed Magnolia Mesh, Fanfaronading Fir Frank, Editorializing Eucalyp- tus Emerson, Popping Poplar Popp, Machinating Maple Miller, Coerc- ing Cactus Cuson, Meticulous Ma- hogany McIntyre, Willowing Wil- low Whitaker, Turncating Tama- rack Traves, Penny-Pinching Per- simmon Purvis, Wilting Walnut Watts, Dogged Dogwood Dunne, Yammering Yucca Yobst, Red Hot Hemlock Heathcott, Prattling Palm Papes, Exhilirating Elm Evans and Enervating Elderberry Ettl. The Almighty DRUIDS have spoken! South Huge I orean n.-slaugh sion as to who will succeed Pres- ident Alexander G. Ruthven when he begins his year-long retirement furlough on July 1. Tight-lipped University officials have refused to predict whether the Regents will name the next University president this weekend, although they have hinted earlier that the decision may be delayed until the middle of June. The recent announcement that Provost James P. Adams has sub- mitted his resignation, however, has led many observers to believe that the Regents will name the new president immediately. The Board members will ,be in committee sessions this afternoon and tonight and will convene in a formal meeting tomorrow morn- ing. Fiery Vulcan Gets W'orthies Mighty Vulcan, holding cour, in his forge, Mt. Aetna, sat embit- tered at man's misuse of his be- loved fire. Then came to him his faithful followers, saying, "Mighty Vulcan, hear these candidates for admission to our Sacred Order." These, being engineers, the only forms of mankind the gods would hear, were forthwith put to the test, and having passed the ordeal and proven their worthiness, were admitted. Thus entered the Sacred Order of Vulcan: Elliot Cooper, Donald Downie, Charles Froman, Charles Good, William Hickman, Robert Klamser, Fred Kohlmeyer, Dean Lind, George Marek, Donald Mc- Vittie, Ron Modlin, William Mor- ris, Merle Nelson, Robert Preston, and James Root. Communists Stopped in a West Korea Heavy Losses Dealt Red Foe TOKYO-()-Spearheads of an estimated 768,000 Reds yesterday struck through a hole in Allied lines in east-central Korea but were bled to a halt in the critical west. It was another all-out Red of- fensive against the United Nations forces along an 80-mile-wide front as scores of Communists stacked up deep for the big push. * * * ONE AMERICAN officer esti- mated Red dead exceeded 10,000 as yesterday's toll alone. First impact of the assault tore a big hole in the South Kor- ean Republican ranks on the east-central front. Americans rushed up to plug the gap as ele- ments of 96,000 leading Chinese poured through. The Korean Re- publicans were threatened on the east and west. The Chinese also threw heavy attacks late last night against American positions on the central front southeast of Chunchon and - on the perimeter above Seoul in the west. e* s IN BOTH CASES they were beaten off after hours of blasting by American artillery and, night-~ flying bombers. After counting 400 Chinese bodies north of Seoul on the front, defense officers told AP correspondent John Randolph they believed their positions there were impregnable. It was in the center around Chunchon and the east-center near Inie that the Red onslaught was most immediately critical THE HOLE POKED in the South Korean lines was southwest of Inje near the 38th parallel, AP corres- pondent Nate Polowetzky report-? ed. He said Republican troops were withdrawing northeast and south- west of that hub town. Even stronger Red attacks were under way last night around Chun- chon, pivot point of the central front. Allied troops were reported generally holding after stopping some limited Red penetrations. Masses of Chinese Reds were- streaming southward on the west central front. Allied units made slight withdrawals and steeled themselves for new Red attacks. Informed sources estimated the Reds have a potential of 1,141,000 troops in Korea and Manchuria for continued intervention. Alter Charge AgainstYouth The assault and battery charge against Dennis Pitris was changed yesterday to one of disorderly con- duct by a motion of Assistant Pro- secutor John DeVine. Pitris, who stood mute on the assault charge, changed his plea to guilty at his rearraignment be fore Municipal Court Judge Fran. cis O'Brien. DeVine explained that the change made very little difference. "Both offenses are misdemeanors and both carry the same penalty," he said. Pitris and a 17-year-old compan- ion were arrested a week ago for the slugging of University student, Joe Venniri, May 9. Student Appears Today for Trial Lawyers, Football, DU's Tangle in Noeturnal Riot Pandemonium broke loose at 11:30 p.m. yesterday when Delta Upsilons, serenading women in Martha Cook, turned their musical talents to the honoring of studious men in the Law Quad. A few choruses of "Old Lawyers Never Die" was enough to start a riot which lasted an hour. THE LAWYERS responded to the ui xnediately calls,, thr Increased U Med crackers. Cook Enrollment Urged westside "Go ba nexpected serenade im- y with jeers, flares, cat- 'eats, and king-sized fire- residents rushed to the of their dorm to chant ck to the books, Law- ut they were drowned EXAMS TOO CLOSE: Free Beer No Lure to BusAd Students By ZANDER HOLLANDER. "BusAd students eschew free beer, Crazy? No:--exams too near!" pressure of forthcoming finals." Informed of the cancellation, some BusAd students expressed 'Queried as to the legality of such excursions, council members were quick to assert, that only err . r . : : : .-.... ,, i m. r. _ i.r_. ,_ _ _ f I yers," b