THE OUSTER OF ARIAS I See Page 4 Y WIA6 Ui 'I T."folof -.*. 4L- Q4-4- j-atest u ea tztn Uth et M tC VOL. LXI, No. 161 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MAY 20, 1951 CLOUDY, SHOWERS EIGHT PAGES Regents Fail To Announce 'U' President No Action Taken On Adams' Post The Board of Regents ended it meeting yesterday without namin a successor to President Alexande Gx. Ruthven, who is schedluled t begin his retirement furlough July 1. The Board had met amidst cam pus-wide speculation that it would announce the new president of th - University at yesterday's meet S* * a BUT ONE University spokesman was confident that the Boar would make a final choice before the expiration of President Ruth ven's term. "The Board," he said, "is known to have considered many men of excellent qualifications, and the list has been sufficient- l7 reduced in size to permit the Board to make a final choice be- fore the end of the president's term." Undoubtedly, he continued, the Board regards the selection of a president as the most serious and far-reaching of its constitutiona duties. "This explains the thor. oughness of the Board's delibera- tlens," he added. NO ACTION WAS taken on the requert of Provost James B. Ad- ams that his resignation be accept. el at the conclusion of Presideni Ruthven's service. Adams sent his resignation to the Board more than a year ago -May 8, 1950. One University official said the fact that the Board had not ac- cepted ,Provost Adams' reques might be regarded as "a strong im- plication that the Regents do no wish to accept Adams' resigna- tion." * * " The Regents approved the estab- lishment of undergraduate schol- arships. from funds provided by the Board in Control of Intercol- fegiate'Athietcs The Board has provided $15,. 000 a year for the undergrad- uate scholarships, which will be known as the Elmer Gedeon Memorial Scholarships, named for one of the former students killed in World War II The scholarships are to be awarded by the regular University committee without any control by the athletic board. * * * AT THE SAME time, the Board approved four appointments. Prof. Arthur Edward Murphy was named as a visiting profes- sor of philosophy for the spring semester of the 1951-52 Univer- (See REGENTS, Page 3) Group Will IShow 'Birth Of a Nation' The controversial motion pic- ture, "Birth of a Nation," will be shown at 8 p.m. Friday in a hall at 215 S. Ashley by the newly- formed Neptune Film Society, Al- lan Silver, '51, a member of the group announced yesterday. Silver said the single perform- ance would be open to the public. rHe added that since the hall only has a capacity of 200, admission will be on a "first come-first served" basis. TALKS BY Prof. Guy E. Swan- son, of the sociology department, and William J. Hampton, teaching 1 fellow in English and president of the Gothic Film Society, will accompany the showing. A heated campus controversy waged about "Birth of a Nation" last spring, when a showing by the speech department was can- celled at the request of several local groups, that charged the movie was anti-Negro. An informal committee then formed to show the film, but it disbanded when the Student Leg- islature voted to show the film. THE SL PLAN, however, fell through when one of. the film's distributors, the Museum of Mod- ern Art, New York, stopped ship- ment because it mistakenly be- lieved SL would charge admission. Three weeks ago the Triton " , I77777 THEY'RE OFF-Pete Carmona, '52E, drives Delta Sigma Phi's racer to victory in the first class 'A' heat in the Wolverun Soap- box derby. Delta Sig beat out Williams House and Theta Chi in this heat, and went on to place third in the Class 'A' finals. The race was part of the all campus Tennis Ball Weekend. * * * * Sigm--*a Pi Racer Places First olvern erb By AL LUCKOFF Sigma Pi fraternity's racer, driven by Fred Anderson, '54, swept across the finish line in 25.2 seconds to capture the class 'A' first prize trophy in the Wolverun Soapbox yesterday. Close behind were entries from Fletcher Hall and Delta Sigma Phi. Victor in the Class 'B' competition was Phi Gamma Delta with Tom Anton '52, at the wheel finishing just ahead of Tau Kappa "Epsilon and Delta Upsilon. The U.S. Rejects e o tRussian Plan tFor Japan WASHINGTON-()-The Uni- ted States flatly rejected yesterday a Russian plan for a Japanese Peace Treaty which, among other things, would strip Japan of all American defense forces. The Russians had proposed that the United States and its Allies scrap their own largely-completed program for a Japanese peace set- tlement and start anew, with Red China cut in on the treaty-making. AN AMERICAN translation of the Russian proposal, which be- came available here yesterday, showed what the Soviets want in the way of a treaty. For one thing, it would callI for the departure of all foreign troops from Japan one year aft- er the treaty was signed. This would mean stripping Japan of American defenses. For another, the Soviets would sharply limit Japanese armed for- ces, whereas the treaty draft pro- posed by the United States would permit Japan to rearm in accord- ance with its own estimate of its defense needs. THE RUSSIAN note was deliv- ered to American Ambassador Alan Kirk in Moscow on May 7. It sug- gested the calling of a Big Four Foreign Ministers Conference in June or July to undertake "prepar- atory work" on the peace treaty. The four foreign ministers to be represented would be those of the United States, China, Brit- ain, and Russia. China, in Rus- sian usage, means Communist China. The day after Moscow's disclos- ure that it had sent a note pro- posing a Pacific Big Four con- ference on the treaty, State De- partment press Officer Michael McDermott denounced the move. World News Roundup By The Associated Press LOUISVILLE - In an Armed Forces Day speech here, Admiral Forrest P. Sherman said yester- day the United States may have to fight a whole series of "relatively small wars" if it intends to main- tain its defense of the free world. * * * LONDON-The United States and Britain have decided to re- consider their plans for setting classes were based on wheel sizes. * * * SEVERAL hundred people were on hand to witness the blue and yellow Sigma Pi entry flash across the line. The car, remodeled, for the derby, placed in the 1941 na- tional soapbox derby at Akron, O. Miscalculations forced two heats to be run over, one in each class, by protests from contest- ants. In the first heat run, be. tween three class 'B' cars, Tau Kappa Epsilon, Phi Gamma Delta and Acacia, Although the drivers, pushing the wheels with their hands, eventually manipulated the cars to the line, the heat was run over with the finish line moved to the bottom of the hill. This time' TKE took the heat in 41.6 seconds., In a special exhibition race of "Jet-propelled" racers, Phi Gam- ma Delta defeated Zeta Beta Tau. * * * THE TROPHY for the best con-, structed car was awarded by the Judges to Fletcher Hall, with Theta Chi taking the runner-up prize. The award forthe best-dress- ed driver went. to Williams House, whose driver Fritz Daw- son, '54, wore a slightly wrinkled tuxedo and top hat. The "booby prize" was given to Acacia, whose racer, a made over toboggan, never quite made it to the finish line. Betsy Barbour Hall took top honors in the sponsors' division for sponsoring the winning car inl class 'B' and the best car entry. Henderson House won the bou- quet for sponsoring the class 'A't winner. Saginaw's Taxi Plan HitsSnags t SAGINAW-mP)-Saginaw's at-1 tempt to dig up a new source of1 income-eyed with envy by otherS money-hungry Michigan cities-k bumped into another snag yester- day. A court order restraining thec city fathers from the move wasp issued. The city council had hatched a plan to put a one per-t cent municipal tax on individualY incomes and business profits. t The first snag had occurrede when Gov. Williams vetoed aI scheduled election of the locals voters as a referendum.V H alf Million Students To Be Deferred WASHINGTON - () - Only about 500,000 students will escape military service- under the new scholastic deferment program, Se- lective Service officials said yes- terday. This compares with a total of about 700,000 students whose in- ductions have been postponed un- der present rules. A SPOKESMAN for Draft Di- rector Louis B. Hershey explained the reduction in the number of deferments this way: At present students are auto- matically deferred until they finish a school year. Under the new system, to obtain a defer- ment a college boy must stand relatively high in his class, or obtain a mark of 70 in an ap- titude test which will be given. starting May 26.- The spokesman said that this mark is equivalent to a mark of 120 in the army general classifi- cation test, and that of all the millions who took the test in World War II only 30 percent scored 120 or better. *, * * M O S T PERSONS, especially critics of the program, don't rea- lize that the new plan is designed to reduce the number of men re- ceiving student deferments," the spokesman explained. Officials figure there a r e about 1,000,000 draft-liable men in college. Thus, they appar- ently plan to defer about half of these and call up the others. So far, about 318,000 have filed applications to take the examina- tion. Iran Rejects Oil Dispute Negotiation TEHRAN, Iran -()- Iranian officials gave an icy reception yes- terday to a British note warning that refusal to negotiate oil dif- ferences would bring "the most serious consequences." Premier Mohammed Mossadegh refused to receive British Ambas- sador Sir Francis Shepherd be- hind the locked doors and boarded up windows of his office in the parliament building. So Shepherd delivered the note instead to for- eign minister Bagher Kazemi. * *. THE NERVOUS premier has barricaded himself to thwart pur- ported assassination plots. He has vowed to stay in seclusion until the giant Anglo-Iranian Oil Com- pany has been taken over under the nationalization law he pushed through Parliament. Iranian officials said privately the note-on which the United States had been consulted by Britain-was "just the same old nonsense." The British proposed sending a high level mission-possibly head- ed by Earl Mountbatten, a cousin of King George VI-immediately to reach a solution on the future of the British-owned company. Shepherd delivered the commun- ication to Kazemi at a 35-minute conference. Shepherd said their talk was friendly. The Ambassador then drove to the Royal Palace and had an hour's talk with Shah Mo- hammed Reza Pahlevi, an act which underlined the inaccessi- bility of the premier. Informed sources said there ap- peared little chance that Mossa- degh will agree to negotiate. He has rebuffed one such offer. The next move seemed to be up to the premier. Sooner or later, .if he persists in his present course, the Parliamentary Board, empow- ered by Iran's oil nationalization law to take over physical posses- sion of the world's largest refinery, will have to act. momI u r ma L l FE BACK ComMunists Hit by Nih Air Attacks UN Plugs Hole In Defense Line TOKYO -A)- Allied troops hurled back Chinese Red attacks yesterday 18 to 25 miles northeast > of Seoul in a battle of hand gre- *nades and bayonets. In east-central Korea, 16 B-29's teamed up last night with 20 light bombers in the heaviest night at- * tack of the war on Communist troop concentrations-200 tons of fragmentation bombs. * * * IN THE EAST Central area, other Allied forces appeared to have plugged a big hole ripped in the line at the outset of the five- day-old Communist offensive. To the west, North Korean troops yesterday were cut down on the outskirts of Seoul in a suicidal charge. The Communist drive by spear- eads of 768,000 men appeared to be sputtering, at least for the mo- ment. s THE REDS LAST night and early today tried to strike south down the Pukhan River Valley in a flanking move against Seoul. But the bulk of six enemy attacks were beaten back, some in hand to hand fighting. U.S. troops counterattacked one Chinese battalion of from 800 to 1,000 men and cut it to pieces with bayonets. In one area, South Korean troops were forced to make a lim- ited withdrawal under attack of three Red regiments. * * S OVER IN TH rugged east- central sector, where the U.S. Sec- ond Division had stood off 96,000 Reds, the Reds no longer were ex- ploiting a breakthrough on the division's right flank. HST Urged To Go Before Investigators By The Associated Press A suggestion that President Tru- man volunteer to testify in the Senate investigation of the firing of Gen. Douglas MacArthur was tossed into the big foreign policy row yesterday by Senator Wiley (R-Wis.). "If the President refused, the joint committee might very well consider subpoening him," Wiley, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said in a statement. Acheson Squabble .. MEANWHILE, President Tru- man was running headlong into a. violent fight in Congress over his insistence on keeping Dean Ache- son as Secretary of State. The fight is developing around I two vital administration money bills. By slashing either one, or by denying funds for Acheson salary, Congress probably could, and many observers believe will, force his dismissal. The bills are the State Depart- ment's appropriation of $283,500,- 000 and a $9,000,000,000 one-pack.. age foreign aid proposal which Mr. Truman plans to send to Congress late next week. --Daily-Ed Kozma. HUP, TWO!-Members of the University's ROTC Unit proudly bear the colors during the Armed Forces Day parade yevterday. The day's ceremonies took place at Ferry Field where local, Uni- versity and national dignitaries were on hand to honor this country's 'Defenders of Freedom.' owar * * * * * * * Crowds Hail Armed orces By JERRY HELMAN By JERY HLMANThe half-hour long parade left Hundreds of University students I theAlot long9prad e eft and Ann Arbor residents yesterday the Armory a 9 a.m. and proceed- lined the city's main arteries and ed down Ann, Main, Liberty and ended up at Ferry Field in observ- State Streets to Ferry Field. Knots ance of Armed Forces Day. of students and townspeople start- * * ** * * Admiral McCrea Expresses Confidence In United Nations Speaking yesterday at Ferry Field at the conclusion of the Armed Forces Day ceremonies, Vice Admiral John L. McCrea voiced confidence in the United Nations and said that it offers the world a chance for peace that can- not be ignored. Sent by the Defense Depart- ment to speak here, Adm. McCrea, as the featured guest, spoke on the UN and gave a review of its history, accomplishments and po- tentialities. ADM. McCREA, a former Naval Aide to President Roosevelt, told of Roosevelt's confidence in and plans for the organization and also of the preparations prior to the San Francisco conference. He related how President Roosevelt, realizing the import- ance of timing, insisted that the conference be held while the war was still on and victory in sight. As to the present state of the UN, Adm. McCrea deplored the excessive use of the veto by Russia but rejected Herbert Hoover's plan to form a separate organiza- satellites. * * * "THERE IS still a chance that Russia's satellites may be lured away," he said, "and, besides, tion without Russia and her there is also the possibility of ne- gotiation with Russia through the UN." * * * ed forming at 9 a.m. along State St. LARRIVING from Korea just in time to participate in the parade, Corporal Richard Swisher, the first Ann Arbor resident to return from active duty in Korea under the Army's new rotation plan, was the surprise guest of honor. Flights of airplanes passed over on schedule all through the morning. Besides the scheduled appearance of the local Civil Air Patrol group, and the jets from Selfridge and Baer Fields, an unexpected flight of jets zoomed over Ferry Field during the ceremonies. Filling the air with military tunes during the parade was the marching and ROTC bands. Uni- versity's ROTC units were among the participants along with the National Guard units from Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti. * * * FLOATS WERE sponsored by the UAW, CIO, AFL and by the Ann Arbor Industrial Union Coun- cil. In addition there were high school bands from communities around the city. Precision drill marching by the Pershing Rifles, an honor- ary University ROTC society, and the playing of the march- ing band combined wtih the ba. ton twirling of drum major Dick Smith, comprised the entertain- ment at Ferry Field. Following an invocation by an Army chaplain and opening re- marks by Regent Roscoe Bonisteel, who acted as master of ceremon- ies, and Mayor William Brown, President Ruthven spoke. Following President Ruthven's address, Adm. McCrea concluded the ceremonies with a talk on the United Nations. K t to n n **-U *jr A A VICE ADMIRAL McCREA Senate Group To Release 'U' Bill Soon Taft Assails ., IN AN ADDRESS Senator Taft (R-Ohio) last night called United States' participation in the Korean war "a failure." In a public address, Taft said that although he was not very critical of President Truman's ac- tion in sending troops to Korea at +he +imea nnflint+ t.rfAr+th /.3 By CAL SAMRA Special to The Daily LANSING-The University ap- propriations bill, on which hinges LAST WORD from University vice-president Marvin L. Nielhuss, who was in Lansing last Friday, is +Ikn 'h r il , - I .4 i- r cit in this year's University bud- get will be approved by the Sen- ate. The House passed this om- nibus bill unanimously a week is in marked contrast to last year's vitriolic debate. A year ago at this time, the economy-minded Republican ma-