PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESIDAY, JUNE 14, 1944 - , E~E NEGOTIATION RESUL TS: Sweden Agrees To Cut Downe Ball Bearing Sales to Germany WASHINGTON, June 13.-(U)-In a major diplomatic-economic victory, the United States has won an agree- ment from Swedish ball-bearing manufacturers to cut down substan- tially on sales to Germany. The Nazis, their own ball-bearing output sharply. reduced by bombings, have been heavily dependent on im- ports from Sweden for bearings to keep planes and tanks in battle, and truck and factory wheels turning. Negotiations Are Successful The Swedes agreed to reduce their shipments, it was learned, as a result of negotiations between Stanton Griffis, American movie executive and special representative of the For- eign Economic Administration, and officials of the SKF Ball Bearing Company. Previously, the American, British and Russian governments had de- manded that Sweden cut off all ship- ments of ball bearings and other strategic materials to Germany. To this, the Swedish government repied that it could not make any reduc- tions. Blacklist Was Last Move The last move to have Sweden cut off ball-bearing shipments to the Germans came May 22 when the Un- ited States added 38 Swedish firms to its blacklist. This raised to 426 the total number of firms on the list. At that time the SKF company was not mentioned and this was in- terpreted to mean that officials were still optimistic regarding the out- come of negotiations. They had been under way at the present intense peak since late in April. Second Occasion Named The action was the second time that the act of blacklisting hadten- tered into current negotiations with neutrals. On May 6 it was announc- WAR BONDS ISSUED HERE! ed that 38 Irish firms had been black- listed for their alleged assistance to the enemy. One of the most powerful weapons at the disposal of the government is the now well established policy that such firms which persist in trading with the enemy will be penalized in the post-war period through contin- ued economic sanctions. "rchetsa (Continued from Page 1) This concerto is the practically un- known one of four written by Boc- cherini; it was resurrected from ob- livion in 1938 and issued in a mod- ern edition through the Smith Col- lege music archives and is not to be confused with the very popular Boc- cherini concerto in B-flat major. The work is full of brilliant writing for the solo instrument and is over- flowing with the same charm of melody that dominates all the music of this master, Prof. Ross said. The latter half of the program, comprised of contemporary American music, includes "Slow Piece" by Ross Lee Finney, winner of Pulitzer and Guggenheim awards in composition, and Quincy Porter's "Music for Strings," written in 1941. -Prof. Ross introduced Finney's "Duo for Violin and Piano" at an earlier concert in February. Mr. Por- ter is dean of the faculty at the New England Conservatory of Music and has been recognized as one of the leading American composers of our time. The public is cordially invited to attend the concert. Dental Society Elects Officers, Gives Awards Election of new officers was the primary business transacted at a din- ner party held by the Alpha chapter of Xi Psi Phi, dental fraternity, last night. The following officers were elect- ed: Norman Smith, president; Bob Overholt, vice - president; Ward Fountain, secretary; Horace Oren, treasurer; and Ron Smith, editor. Dale Lambert was awarded a dia- mond arrow pin for being the best editor of all the fraternity chapter papers throughout the nation. Dr. George Moore, deputy supreme president of the Alpha chapter, con- ferred fellowship degrees on 13 mem- bers which entitled them to life membership in any national chapter of the fraternity. Those who received fellowships are John Doyle, Ford Stone, Pfcs. Clay- ton Ronas, Harry Reizian, Jack Smith, Robert Tillock, Richard E. Walker, Richard A. Walker, Emil Touma (USNR), Dale Lambert, Har- old Willis, Marvin Haveman and Fer- dinando Molina. Union Sho Argued In WLR 11earings WASHINGTON, June 13.- (/P)- Parke, Davis and Company, Detroit drug house, and employe representa- tives argued at a War Labor Board hearing today whether the employes' change of bargaining representatives broke a continuity of relationship which relieved the company of grant- ing a union shop, DOUGHBOYS' EQUIPMENT: Yanks Are Too Well Outfitted For E fficieit Jungle Combat ITALIANS EAGER FOR FOOD SCRAPS-An Italian woman reaches. eagerly for scraps of bread, remains of a meal served American troops in Italy on a tray held by Sgt. Hershel Nelly of Willard, Tem. Other hungry Italians cluster around looking for food. CounseI I )enands Investigaton of Jur y i1 iaf Conspiracy Tri als Editor's Note: Murrin Spencer, Asso- ciated Press war correspondent, has spent two years in tie southwest Pacic. most of it with American douriboys, In the following story he give, a personal report on the eyi- eieCi of the doughboy's outfit. By MURLIN SPENCER WITH AMERICAN TROOPS AT HOLLANDIA, DUTCH NEW GUI- NEA, June 10-(Delayed)-(AP)-- Discarded bundles of clothing and equipment laid carefully to one side of the trail from Tanahamerah Bay to Hollandia airdrome are mute evi- dence that America equips its soldiers too well before sending them into jungle combat. Bare essentials plus rifle and ammunition are about all a soldier can carry and-like the Japanese --he can fight for days on meagre rations and in wet clothing. All else is discarded when the jungle trail is so tortuous that the sweat drips from your forehead into your eyes and young lungs cry for air you never seem to get. On many landings Americans have swarmed over the beaches carrying packs that were too heavy and tossed away article after article as they ad- vanced. The War Department recently has sent its investigators into the field to study jungle equipment and food, Their findings have not been dis- closed, but in talks with numerous soldiers and from personal experience f have found that many items are good. Many others were designed by individuals who obviously never saw the jungle. From head to foot the jungle trooper is clothed in green. His steel helmet with its liner is an asset besides protecting his head from shrapnel. The liner when worn alone is protection against the sun. The steel helmet may be used to carry water, to bathe in, to shave in and to make coffee in. It also substitutes for a pillow when lying all night in a slit trench. No soldier I have seen has carried gifts of "fox hole pillows" which seem to have had some popularity in the United States. Soldiers complain of the new-type high-top canvas boots with rubber soles and prefer the old-style GI shoe with leggings. The canvas boots, they say, cause the feet to swell, give no protection to the ankles, and are inferior to the regular shoe. There are many complaints against the regulation two-piece jungle uni- form with its four bulging pockets, two in the jacket and two in the trousers. Chief complaint is that they are too heavy, much too hot and not suitable for the tropics. The jacket pockets, always filled to the brim, give soldiers a "saggy breast"- an appearance they dislike. Many troops are issued rubberized raincoats which, when buttoned, are too warm in the tropics. A poncho, apparently less favored by army authorities, not only sheds the rain better but is cooler and can be used as a cover over foxholes at night. Men who had hammocks with their mosquito nets discarded them, not only because of their weight but because they are un- safe near the front lines. .There is the case of the officer on Los- Negros Island in the Admiralty group who swung his hammock, was heard to cry out during the night, was found dead with his throat cut the next morning. One soldier has jumped from his ham- mock mosquito net during an air raid without bothering to unzip the two fasteners. While it is the tendency of sol- diers-and war correspondents, too- to complain about everything and particularly food, they would be hap- pier if those persons who designed jungle equipment and prepared em- ergency rations would wear that equipment and eat the rations for a full week under wartime conditions. They feel that some changes would be made. It i .. 11 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ' 'i Continuous from 1 P.M. COOL Last Times Today FOR SALE ROYAL PORTABLE-A-1 condition, and General Electric Radio. 3943 BOY'S BICYCLE-8 months old, ex- cellent condition - basket, lock, stand included. Call Mr. Lee, 4439 evenings only. MUST SACRIFICE-Early American bedroom and living room suites. Couch which opens to full size bed. Lamps, rugs. Phone 24847. WANTED I WILL PAY TO NURSE your elec- tric phonograph during summer. Preferably one educated in Bach and Beethoven. Excellent care guaranteed. Reply Box 21. WANTED: RIDE TO FLINT wanted by Army pre-med student each Saturday, leaving about noon. Will pay all expenses. Contact Box 6, Michigan Daily. HELP WANTED: Noon dish washer and kitchen helper. Good pay. Excellent food. Now through sum- mer school. University Grill, 615 E. William. Tel. 9268. WANTED ride to New York over the 4th of July for married-icouple. Will relieve driver. Phone 6230. MISCELLANEOUS MIMEOGRAPHING: thesis binding. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 S. State. FOLLOW the crowd to the Sig Ep House, 733 South State. Room and board available this summer. Con- tact J. Linker, 6764. ROOMS FOR MEN-Acacia Frater- nity House. In nice section of town. Call. 2-3125. Ask for Paul Pospisil or Al Kennedy. GIRLS, why eat out? Room andj board at 1415 Cambridge for the summer session or the summer term. Call Ronnie Leitner, 2-5587. LOST AND FOUND LOST-Alpha Gamma Delta Sorority pin-Marallyn Mac Ritchie 22377. Reward. LOST: Brown Parker Pen with clip missing. Urgent. Finals are here! Elaine Katleman. 3-3119. LOST TUESDAY, Alpha Delta Phi pin, between Union, State Theater and Jordan. Call Mike Keeler, 2-4509. Reward, 2 dollars. WRIST WATCH-Gold lady Elgin, lost Sunday morning. E. Huron St. Reward. Please phone 22901. FOR RENT GIRLS' ROOMS for summer term and session at 715 Hillk Inquire Virginia Dodd, Alpha Xi Delta, 825 Tappan, phone 25579. GIRLS' ROOM with breakfast and dinner. Summer term. Zeta Tau Alpha house, 826 Tappan. 3018. ROOM and BOARD MASON, Mich. Tune 13.- (/P)- Apparently still about as far as ever from completing a jury to hear the first of a series of legislative graft conspiracy vvarrat trials, court ad- journed toniight with coUnsel for the 23 defendants demanding investiga- tion to determine whether the prose- cution had unfair priority in access to a list of prospective jurors. Judge John Simpson, the trial judge, set disposition of this flare-up as the first order of business in the trial tomorrow. Earlier the defense, through Attor- ney Chris M. Youngjohn, had moved unsuccessfully to have all tentatively accepted jurors dismissed and the jury panel vacated, charging that an illegal manner of selecting talesmen for jury service had been employed. Judge Simpson overruled him, hold- ing that while County Clerk Ross Hilliard had not complied strictly with the law in the lottery through which talesmen are drawn for jury duty, there had been no.violation of secrecy precautions with which jury selection is surrounded. Mrs., Fel dman To.(;ive Concert Nunbiers front Franck, Debttsty To Be Sting The last in a series of faculty con- certs will be presented by Dorothy Ornest Feldman, soprano, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music at 8:30 p. m. Friday in the Assembly Hall of the Rackham Building. Having received her B. M.. degree in voice and'piano from the Eastman School of Music, where she studied with Lucy Lee Call and Donald Lid- dell, Mrs. Feldman entered the School of Music as a pupil of Arthur Hack- ett. She has been a teaching fellow in the voice department of the School of Music for the past year. Accompanied by Ava Comin Case, pianist, Mrs. Feldman will sing num- bers by Donaudy, Debussy, Franck, Ravel, Hugo Wolf, Osma and Bibb, also an original composition by her sister. The recital will be open to the gen- eral public. Ending Today1 Completion of the second day of the trial found 13 jurors accepted tentatively-exactly the position at the same time yesterday-and with every indication that many changes would be forced by the exercise of peremptory challenges before the jury is completed and the taking of testimony can start. Selection of the jury moved with painful slowness. Under the system adopted, 14 were chosen tentatively, and one-by-one have been sup- planted through peremptory chal- lenges, which require no explanation by the attorneys making them, or by excuse for cause-either the tales- man's request or because of prejudice or some other reason. MICHIGAN Thursday murder mystery that shocked two %IWA lptes i % ! SUIT CLEARANCE - - /~ Public transportation-by highway and skyway, by railway and waterway-is one of the most vital industries of this State of ours. It represents far more than a vast array of terminals, equip- nient, repair shops and cold statistics about moving manpower-it's the link that joins Michigan's cities and towns and rural communities to each other and to the rest of the Nation. In these tense times, it is the means of bringing boys home on furlough-of getting workers to the war plants-of keeping on the move all those people whose travel is essential to Victory. An estimated 75,000 of our fellow- citizens of Michigan are hard at work on the 34 railroads and the 3 airlines serving Michigan, on boats, barges, huge fleets of trucks, and on the 104 inter- city bus lines which operate 860 buses along 12,201 miles of routes within our State borders. No small share of the credit for the efficiency of this excellent 'ansiportation system belongs to the -----. o ' c Beautiful all-wool Shetlands, flannels, and tweeds to wear now and all through the com- ing year. They come inall your favorite colors: Navy, Black, Green, Red, Blue, Lilac, Brown, Beige, and Aqua. $ A95$ 995 and9 formerly to $35.00 ," .* o. 'Y. f h n ' t } i' 7a ti r Michigan Public Service Commission and the O.D.T. We who keep Greyhound buses rolling across our State are conscious of the importance of our particular job-to the whole system ofwartime transpor- tation. Without the buses doing their share of the job other transportation would be burdened beyond capacity. Many of our people today are serving in the Armed Forces-the rest of us are doing our level best to keep essen- tial highway travel safe and efficient. But we're also thinking about and plan- ning for the post-war days, when pleas- ure travel will"return and when such travel in new and finer Super-Coaches will be a greater pleasure than ever. Back the Attack! BUY MrE 17HAM DEEADE 4 0-AO - -1A1t I, r o~v ' 'IfliL