Y L Sr tqyrn 47aii4 DEAN'S REPORT See .Page 4 FAIR AND WARER Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXI, No. 94 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1951 SIX PAGES aU.S. Clanips Lid on Used Car Prices New Car Resale Affected by Order WASHINGTON-W) - Dollars- and-cents price ceilings were set on used cars yesterday in a gov- ernment order that also prohibited new car sales at more than the manufacturer's suggested retail prices. Automobile prices were frozen at the manufacturers' level on Dec. 18 but yesterday's order ap- plies to the retail markets and to individuals who may be selling a car. BRUCE MORRIS, chief of the automobile division of the Office of Price Stabilization, said the or- der is aimed at: 1. Halting a "widespread" flow of new cars into the used car markets. He said some dealers ' have been asking prices higher for these "new" used cars than the manufacturers' listed prices Sfor new cars. 2. Preventing used cars from sellingabove new car prices. The new regulations will be ef- fective March 2. The used car price ceilings will be based on prices listed in the guide books that used car dealers employ as a yardstick of values. THE ORDER says the guide books will be used to set dollars- and-cents ceilings on used cars. It also requires the dealers to con- ?tihue using the same guide book they employed in the past. Morris said the order specifies that in any case where a guide bokprice on a used car is high- ethan the list price of the car when new, the dealer cannot ;charge more than the new price. HOWEVER, the dealer will be } permitted to increase the ceiling price by the amount represented in accessories with which the used car may be equipped. But the prices that can be imposed for accessories-stich as radio, heater, optional transmission equipment -are specified in the guide books. The OPS official said the used car dealers may be permitted to raise prices later if the govern- ment authorizes an increase in the price at which the manufac- turer is allowed to sell. 'U' To Request Added Funds In Rare Move Increasing costs and a recent 10 per cent salary and wage boost have forced the University for the second time in its history to ask the state legislature for a supple- mental appropriation. An approximate $1,280,000 item for the University was included in the supplemental request of $10,- f 563,352 made to the legislature by State Controller Robert F. Stead- man. The University had asked the state for $1,716,000 to cover the remainder of the fiscal year ending June 30, 1951. According to Vice-president Mar- vin L. Niehuss, the University bud- get based on the money appropri- a#' by the state legislature failed ' to cover the actual costs for the following reasons: 1. The fee income was more than r $600,000 under the expected amount. 2. The fiscal year was marked by rapidly rising costs of supplies and materials. 3. A 10 per cent salary and wage increase was granted to 6,000 fac- ulty and non-academic employes on Dec. 18.k The University asked' the legis- S*lature for a supplemental appro- priation for the first time in 1945. Work. News Roundup By The Associated Press LONDON - Britain reiterated yesterday that it opposes any crossing in force of the Korean 38th parallel by United Nations Stroome winn,,+ nrinr -nmarntn. in City Wants More Money rom 'U Claims Tax-Free Property Keeps_ Revenue Below Operating Expenses By VERNON EMERSON (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first in a series of three articles explain- ing the background of current talks on University payment of city services.) The age old problem of University payment for city services has reached the point where one of the city fathers has said that "the University has become an economic detriment to the city." But University representatives maintain that the school, which as a state supported institution is tax free, cannot make any appre- ciable payment now that will clear up the matter. "WE REALIZE that the University is in a bad spot with the city asking for money on one side and the State Legislature refusing it on the other," John S. Dobson, chairman of the City Council group confering with University officials, said. According to Dobson, however, the city is in a worse position. As the University expands it eats up taxable land, and at the same time local citizens refuse to pay increased property taxes to make up the difference. "THE NEW South Quad alone removed some $135,000 of land from our tax rolls." And Dobson pointed out that annexing new See CITY, Page 6 land to the city is no solution to that problem-it takes 26 years to clear the costs of incorporating a new area. Last year, Ann Arbor voters rejected a proposal to boost taxes so that firemen's pay could be raised. Now fire and police protection are proving inadequate. The councilman said that many city employes refuse to stick with jobs that pay less than similar ones at the University or in other communities. PARTICULARLY HARD HIT is Ann Arbor's school system, in which 25 per cent of the staff quits every year because of low pay. In spite of pay raises doled out by the council Monday night, Dobson said the police and fire forces are still in danger of losing vitally needed men. One proposed solution is that the University pay more than it does now for police and fire protection, or maintain its own services as MSC does. At present the University pays the salaries of seven local policemen at a cost of about $27,000 a year. DOBSON HAS ALSO suggested that the University make pay- ments for services to money earning establishments such as the League, Union and dormitories. (NEXT: The University's side of the issue.) BACK TO OLD HAUNTS: Eisenhower in France To Head Pact Army . 4 Allies As Ni Gain on 60 Mile ew Korean Drive n Senate OK's War Contract ProfitStudy Proposes Board Used in WW II WASHINGTON, Feb. 21-(P)-- The Senate approved today a bill designed to recapture any excess profits resulting from billions of dollars worth of defense contracts. The House approved legislation would set up a board of five mem- bers to reconsider and renego- tiate government defense con- tracts. Such a board in World War II is credited with recaptur- ing about $10,000,000,000 the gov- ernment considered excess profits or costs. After the bill reached the Sen- ate from the finance committee today there was a see-saw fight over provisions giving the board authority to exempt from renego- tiation any individual or class of contracts it wished. But four roll calls left the dis- puted provision almost intact.. Because the Senate bill is some- what different from the one passed by the House, it now goes to a Senate-Housesconference to iron out differences. The House bill authorized rene- gotiation of defense contracts in excess of $100,000. The Senate ex- empted amounts under $500,000. Senator George of the Senate Finance Committee said, however, that he expected $250,000 to $300,- 000 would be the figure finally agreed on by Senate-House con- ferees. The renegotiation board is to be appointed by the President, sub- ject to the approval of the Senate. Wilson Appeals To Labor Lea ders WASHINGTON-(R)-Mobiliza- tion Director Charles E. Wilson yesterday urged labor union lead- ers to end "charges, counter- charges and recriminations" lest the nation's mobilization effort be damaged. Wilson made his appeal in a let- ter to union chiefs who have charged that the home-front con- trols program is dominated by big business and that labor is being asked to make unfair sacrifices. Three union labor rep'resenta- tives on the wage stabilization board recently resigned because the board proposed a wage ceiling limiting raises to 10 per cent above the level of Jan. 15, 1950. Generation Sale Sale of the winter issue of "Generation", campus a r ts magazine, will continue today on the Diag, in the Union and Angell Hall, according to Bob Rose, '51, circulation manager. Bad weather hampered ini- tial sales yesterday, he said. Gen Douglas MacArthur (center) strides up a road on the Wonju front in Central Korea during a front line visit with Lt. Gen. Matthew Ridgway (left), 8th Army commander, and Lt. Gen. Ed- ward Almond, 10th corps commander. Students Administrators To Confer on 'U's Problems VERSAILLES, France - (P) - Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower came back to Europe yesterday to take on once again the long time job of making this part of the world safe for people who don't like totalitarianism. * * * . HE ARRIVED in the Queen Eli- zabeth at refurbished Cherbourg, the first big port his armies liber- ated in 1944. It was the dawn of a misty, rainy day, but the Eisen- hower smile was there. The North Atlantic Alliance Commander had a quick cham- pagne breakfast with officials Local Church Gets Bequest LAS VEGAS-Lloyd C. Douglas, the clergyman who became a best- selling novelist left an estate val- ued in excess of $100,000, his will revealed according to the United Press. Douglas left $32,000 of the es- tate to the First Congregational Church of Ann Arbor to build a memorial chapel. Other principle beneficiaries were his daughters, Betty Douglas Wilson of Las Ve- gas and Virginia Douglas Dawson of West Mount, Quebec, Canada. and the welcoming party of his own command. With him was his wife. Other wives of the officers in Eisenhower's head- quarters will come here, too. "With God's help and with all of us working together we can keep the peace," Eisenhower told the shore welcoming party. Then he flew to Paris, boarded a limou- sine without ceremony and was taken to the fine Versailles hotel, the Trianon Palais, where he and Mrs. Eisenhower will live until a house is found for them. THE BALANCE of the day he spent helping to get settled in a six-room apartment, a luxurious place with furniture of the period of the last kings of France. Almost his only visitor was his Chief of Staff, Lt. Gen. Al- fred M. Gruenther, with whom he made his first quick tour in January around all the capi- tals of the 12 nations that have agreed to help defend the West against Communist aggression. His schedule today seemed like- ly to include a visit to the 60-acre plot carved out of the presidential hunting reserve as the site for his new headquarters. His offices and barracks of the 600-odd soldiers associated with the headquarters are to go up there. By JIM BROWN Daily Managing Editor A newly organized student-ad- ministration conference committee will be formally launched at 4 p.m. today at the request of Presi- dent Alexander G. Ruthven. Bringing together the Univer- sity's top administrators and 12 student leaders, the committee will probably be known as the "President's Conference." It will have no formal adminis- trative or legislative function but will serve simply as a discussion group through which campus-wide problems and grievances can be aired. STEMMING FROM a desire on the part of both students and ad- Belin Suggests Union Should Run Bookstore A proposal to back the establish- . ment of a student bookstore in connection with the Michigan Un- ion was heard last night by the Student Legislature. Proposed by Dave Belin, '51, the motion aroused a heated discus- sion. It asked that the SL urge the organization of the non-profit bookstore by the Union in its new addition. The motion was referred to the Campus Action Committee for consideration. In making his mo- tion, Belin contended that the Un- ion was the only logical location for a student bookstore, which would demand, he explained, a large capital investment, exten- sive and conveniently located fa- cilities, and full-time personnel with previous business experience. ministrators for a channel through which broad University problems and policies can be discussed, the President's Conference originally met informally last spring. Again last December the group was called together by President Ruthven and it was decided at that time to set up a formal structure for the conference. A special subcommittee was set up to map out the organization of the group and this subcommittee has recommended that the Con- ference be called together twice a semester. IT WILL BE headed by Presi- dent Ruthven' and will include most of the other administrative, officers. The student body will be represented by the presidents of the League, Union, IFC, AIM, As- sembly, Panhellenic, Student Leg- islature, Graduate Students' Coun- cil, three other SL members and the Managing Editor of The Daily. The subcommittee also recom- mended that other students be invited to sit in on the Confer- ence as the occasion arises. This afternoons meeting will feature a discussion of ways and means of maintaining and devel- oping loyalty and spirit on a- Uni- versity-wide basis and further con- sideration of the University's mo- bilization plans which were dis- cussed earlier at the December meeting. TERMING THE Conference "an excellent means for the channeling of information between the admin- istration and the students," Ar- thur L. Brandon, the University's Public Relations Counselor, point- ed out that it should "bring about a closer understanding of the many and varied relationships be- tween students and the University officials." Tart Victory CHICAGO-(P)-One of the necessaryobservances of Wash- ington's birthday was com- pleted here yesterday when Marcheta Benton, 18 years old, of East Chattanooga, Tenn., was named winner of the 19th annual National Cherry Pie Baking Contest. Miss Benton, a brown-haired, brown-eyed, high school grad- uate won over 29 other state champion bakers on a method of preparation, poise and excel- lence of the cherry pie. She was awarded $150 and a trip to Washington, where she will present one of her pies to Presi- dent Truman. War Threat Decreasing, HSTStates WASHINGTON-(P-President Truman said yesterday that al- though this country faces "the most tremendous emergency" in its history, it gradually is approach- ing a position where World War III can be prevented. But the President warned that victory can only come with coop- eration and sacrifices from every- one. HE TOLD Masonic leaders that this government has but one ob- jective: "to keep the peace." "It is an effort to prevent a third world war," he said, "and we gtadually are approaching a position in the world where that can be prevented, if we have the support and cooperationof all segments or the population. "And that means industry, la- bor, and farmer and you gentle- men-and all the white collar people who do the inside work to make these other things operate." * * * IT WON'T be easy, the President said, and he gave this reminder: "Everybody, I don't care who he is, or what his condition or his position is-from the President of the United States to the laborer who digs in the trench-must make some sacrifice in order that the whole country may be mo- bilized to meet the serious situa- tion with which we are faced." Chemist Held On Red Charge ALBANY, N.Y.-)-An assist- ant chemistry professor was in. dicted today on a charge of con- cealing Communist party mem- bership in answering a question- naire for a prospective job in atomic research. Richard N. Lewis of Newark, Del., a faculty member of the Uni- versity of Delaware, was accused by a Federal Grand Jury of mak- ing a "false, fictitious and fraudu- lent statement" on a personnel security questionnaire form of the Atomic Energy Commission. A warrant for Lewis' arrest was forwarded to the FBI at Wilming- ton, Del. Front Be is 3egrns Foe Retreats Eight Miles In One Place Reds Still Hold Han River Line TOKYO-W-Allied-troops of five nations advanced today in a new offensive alongca front of 60 miles in muddy central Korea. General MacArthur, resuming his daily communiques as United Nations commander, said his troops already have gained up to six miles in the new drive, opened at 10 a.m. yesterday. A SPECIAL United States Eighth Army communique listed one gain of about eight miles by South Koreans west of Hoengsong. Elements of the ninth and 10th corps -- including Ameri- cans, British, Australian, New Zealanders and South Koreans began the push against with- drawing Reds. An Indian field ambulance unit moved up with the troops. GENERAL MacArthur had or- dered the attack Tuesday during a visit to the central front pivot of Wonju. The 60-mile front, one of rugged mountains, extends from near Yangpyong on the Hlan river eastward past Wonju. Yangpyong, a former Chinese Communist headquarters town abandoned to the Allies this week, is 27 miles east and slightly south of Red-held Seoul. MacArthur, on his return to Tokyo from the Wonju visit, re- sumed his overall summaries which he dropped last December. At that time his troops were falling back before Chinese divisions toward Seoul which the Allies yielded Jan. 4. TUESDAY Reds defending Seoul repulsed two allied patrol attempts to cross the Han river line. These were other Tuesday ac- tions: The North Korean fifth corps, pummeled by United States tanks and artillery from the south and west, broke and ran for the hills in the Chechon sector on the east flank of the central front. To the west a French striking column slashed four miles straight north of Wonju, vital communi- cations hub 55 miles southeast of Seoul along the same road the Reds charged down nine days ago in their ill-fated counter offen- sive. An American armored column punched 10 miles northwest of Wonju and reported finding only a no-man's-land. Reserves Still Will Get Call WASHINGTON-(P)-The Army announced yesterday it will still call up more National Guard and brganized reserve units of com- pany and battalion size. Maj. Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor made the statement at a news conference in "clarifying" his an- nouncement Tuesday about call- ing no more guard divisions unless the world crisis takes a turn for the worse. "There are no present plans to call up additional National Guard divisions," Taylor said. "But we will call up Guard and reserve units of less than divisional size as needed." Taylor repeated his statement of Tuesday that the Army plans to release individual members of the six guard divisions now on active duty when they have com- pleted their statutory 21 months of federal service. Two Students Held =_ = t '' r r f t i i l i STILL FIRST IN COUNTRYMEN'S HEARTS? Washington's Birthday To Pass Largely Unobserved * * * * *~ * * * * * 4 4 4 Banks Will Close, of Course But One Historian Still Remembers Him By HARRY REED Unless there is a massed spon- taneous celebration of students who have noticed the red letters on their calendars, George Wash- ington's birthday will slip by today as unnoticed as Abraham Lin- coln's did ten days ago. Event fo the cnveron a na- One fraternity is throwing a George Washington.dance Sat- urday, complete with cherry trees, red coats, and silver dol- lars to heave across the puddles around the house. Business as usual is the campus motto, since University holidays -- -,..4-;- - -.. Tf - 0n, T%- George Washington's fame as a cherry tree-chopper was founded on myth, while the reputation he had among his contemporaries as one of the most polished gentlemen of the time has gone practically unnoticed by present day students. This word on Washington's eti- -,,,++ -n _ cnrf rt tt ...a TrS3 great things about Washington. He also had the rare knack of knowing precisely the right thing to say-and just when to say it. His timing was beautiful," Storm continued. WHILE WASHINGTON was a xr -l rnr:nie mo ha-ni -of hi "ONE TIME A critic named Morris lambasted him for not mov- ing against the British in New York. But did Washington blast him in writing? Neves. Instead, as he delicately put it, 'It would be well for the troops if like chamel- eons they could live on air, or like the bears suck their paws for ° '