CAMPAIGN STATEMENTS See Page 2 wY 1Mwrtg~ 47latlg CLOUDY AND MILD VOL. LVI, No. 28 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS -12, NROTC Units To End in February Temporary Houses Are Future Slums Shortage Will Ease By Spring-Brown 'Pointing out that the University temporary housing projects are po- tential city slums, Mayor W. E. Brown Jr. estimated yesterday that Ann Ar- bor's housing shortage will be eased by spring through the construction of permanent houses and apartment houses. Quoting a University of Minnesota estimate anticipating 21,000 students, Mayor Brown stated that he expects University (of Michigan) enrollment to reach the 20,000 mark. City build- ers, who have been hampered by war- time restrictions, lack of materials due to West Coast lumber strikes, and labor uncertainties, are ready to provide permanent housing facilities as these difficulties are eliminated, he said. Expanding from an original tract of 40 acres in 1837, University proper- ty has gradually grown until the city now owns little land beyond that in parks, the Mayor stated. To remedy this and to encourage housing con- struction, the City Council has set up a committee of aldermen, contractors, and representatives from the Real Es- tate Board and Planning Commission. On the recommendation of this com- mittee, city ordinances making build- ing difficult have been repealed, and the city limits will be extended to ac- commodate the new structures. Ann Arbor has been one of the hardest hit cities in the country by the influx of veterans under the G.I. Bill of Rights, Mayor Brown said. He criticized the lack of provisions in the bill for wartime building to anticipate the shortages. "The city is doing ev- erything possible to make available housing of the proper character," the Mayor concluded. AVC To Hear Housing Report AVC will meet at 7:30 p.m. today in the Union to hear the report of Russell Wilson ofhthe housing com- mittee and Edward Moore of the leg- islative committee who are to discuss housing for veterans with Lt. Col. Philip Pack, director of veterans' af- fairs in Lansing today. Housing activities of the Ann Ar- bor city council and work of the AVC committees on cooperative eating, legislative action, and publicity will be reported at this time. The steering committee of Ann Ar- bor AVC has endorsed the FEPC Bill now in congress, it was announced yesterday. Pack To Meet With Veterans Housing and eating problems in Ann Arbor will be discussed by cam- pus VO and AVC representatives and Lieut. Col. Philip C. Pack, director of the State Office of Veterans' Affairs, in Lansing today. The two problems, part of an agenda that will be presented to Col. Pack, were approved at a meeting of VO yesterday. Clark Hopkins, of the Veterans' Service Bureau, announced plans for a University-sponsored dance and reception for veterans Dec. 14 in Waterman Gym. Two hundred host- esses and University officials will be presented to the veterans, Hopkins A "Pearl Harbor Day" dance, sponsored by the Veterans' Organ- ization will be held 9 p.m. to mid- night, tomorrow in the Union ball- room with Bill Layton's orchestra. The dance is an all-campus af- fair but members of the V.O. upon presenting membership cards will be admitted free. said. Purpose of the dance is to ac- quaint veterans with one another. Other VO business included a re- port by Herbert Otto on estimated costs of a veterans' cooperative eat- ing establishment; appointment of a committee to investigate re-drafting Six Polling Places Set For Election Tomorrow Booths Will Open 7:45 a.m., Close 3:15 p.m.; Ident Cards Must Be Presented To Vote Polls for voting in the election for campus officers tomorrow will be open from 7:45 a.m. to 3:15 p.m. Polling places will be located at the Engine Arch, on the diagonal in front of the library, in the lobby of Angell Hall, between the Ro- mance Languages Building and Tappan Hall, in the lobby of the School of Architecture and Design and in front of an entrance to the Natural Science Building. Student officers to be selected are two Union vice-presidents, ten mem- bers of the J-Hop Dance committee, senior class officers of the literary and engineering colleges and two stu- dent members of the Board in Con- trol of Student Publications. In addition, students will select a university for the SOIC adoption. Campaign statements of candi- dates appear on pages two and three of today's special election edition. Only male students will be eligible to vote for Union vice-presidents. One will be elected by literary college stu- dents and another by students of the combined schools: business adminis- tration, forestry, architecture, pharm- acology and music. The elections for vice-presidents from the Medical School and the dental schools are un,. contested. Seniors voting forx class officers of the literary or engineering colleges will be checked at the polls for class All students who have signed to work on the election booths tomor- row should come to a special meet- ing at 8 p.m. today in the Union. membership. The engineering college seniors will elect a president, vice- president and secretary - treasurer. The candidate receiving the most votes will be president, the second- highest candidate will be vice-presi- dent and the remaining candidate will be secretary-treasurer. Literary col- lege seniors will elect a president, vice-president, secretary and treasur- er. Voting will be by preferential bal- lot with final positions determined as in the engineering college. All students may vote for the SOIC candidates and for the Board in Control of Student Publications candidates. Five members of the J-Hop com- mittee will be elected by the literary college, three by the engineering col- lege, one by the combined schools and the election from the architecture col- lege is unopposed, The election of candidates for Qr estlion Box A Veterans' Question and An- swer Box will be published weekly in The Daily. Questions for the column are compiled from letters addressed to the Veterans' Editor of The Daily and will be answered by Clark Tib- bitts and the staff of the Veterans' Service Bureau. Questions received by The Daily by Friday will be answered in the column of the following week. All veterans are urged to submit questions relating to any veteran problem or question. campus offices will not be certified unless they obtain eligibility cards from the Dean of Students office, Charles Walton, Men's Judiciary Council president stated. "Because many candidatesyhave failed to establish their eligibility, the Council will not certify any candidate who has failed to obtain an eligibility card," he stated. Eligibility cards can still be obtained' today. Election Cards Being Issued In Place of ID's Identification or election cards may be obtained 9 a.m.-12 noon, 1:30-4:30 p.m. today and tomorrow from the cage in University Hall. Identifica- tion cards ready for distribution will be issued to the students, but in the event that a student's identification card is not ready, he will be issued a special election card. Either identification or election card must be presented at the polls to establish voting eligibility. Students applying for special elec- tion cards the last two days were re- fused because a new shipment of identification cards will be issued to- day. Students should stop at the cage again today to ask for their identifi- cation or election card if they have not already obtained it. If a student's identification card is not ready he can have his picture taken or retaken when applying at the cage. Navy students will receive special identification cards tomorrow morn- ing. Vet Refresher { Course Planned Second Set Will Begin Jan. 25; Topics Vary The University's second pre-term refresher course will open Jan. 25 with an expected enrollment of more than 400 veterans, Clark Hopkins, as- sociate director of the Veterans' Ser- vice Bureau, announced yesterday. The course, designed to help vet- erans' readjustment to academic life, will offer review work in English, mathematics, social science, business administration and engineering. An academic survey course will also be offered to aid the veteran in reac- quiring good study habits. Veterans will not be eligible to elect any course in which the subject was not previously covered in a pre- war or service course. Veterans enrolled in the refresher course will receive full subsistence and tuition allowances under the G.I. Bill. No credit toward a degree will be given. Classes in most of the courses will meet four times a week. The academic survey course will meet five times weekly and the slide rule course, two times a week. The schedule will be arranged so that a veteran may take two courses in mathematics and two in English. One University To Be Adopted In Student Poll Rehabilitation Funds To Be Sent Abroad To select a foreign university for adoption by the Student Organiza- tion for International Cooperation and the World Student Service Fund, students will vote tomorrow on four universities: the University of the Philippines, the University of War- saw, Strassbourg University and Tsing Hua University. Reports on Needs As soon as the university has been selected, the SOIC will cable it and1 request a specific report of the needs of the university. The SOIC and WSSF will attempt to aid the univer- sity in its program of rehabilitation from the ravages of war. The two organizations hope to con- tribute between $5,000 and $7,000 to the selected school, Jack Gore, SOIC president, stated. A campaign to collect 10,000 books will be held in January and a campaign for funds will take place in January or Febru- ary. SOIC Investigation The four universities, in addition to several others, had been tenta- tively selected at a mass rally last June when University students, hav- ing some affiliation with each of the schools, appealed on their behalf to SOIC. It has been learned that it is impossible to get supplies to certain of the schools and their names have been eliminated from the slate. *. *: * Talks Planned On Universities The selection of a foreign univer- sity will be discussed by representa- tives of the Universities of the Philip- pines, Strasbourg Tsing Hua, and Warsaw at a meeting under the sponsorship of the Student Religious Association in Lane Hall at 7:30 p.m. today. These representatives will present the needs of the four war-devastated schools so that students going to the polls Friday will have a better idea of the university to which they want to send financial aid. Jack Gore will lead the discussion as moderator. Sheean Lauds Merits of UNO Says Making It Work Is Only Key to Peace The only hope for permanent peace lies in setting up the United Nations Organization and making it work, Vincent Sheean, noted foreign cor- respondent and author of "Personal History" and "Not Peace But a Sword", told an Oratorical Associa- tion audience yesterday in Hill Aud- itorium. Labelling the UNO "the conscience of the world," he cited the UNO Com- mission on Human Rights as evidence of the modification of national sov- ereignty. Russian Disputes Our disputes with the Soviet Union, Sheean said, are not the product of any direct conflict of interests, but of ideological differences and prejudices. He scored our lack of a foreign policy and advised that with intelligence and astute leadership, no major conflict between the United States andothe Soviet Union need arise. The London Conference failed primarily, he as- serted, because of the refusal of Sec- retary of State Byrnes and Foreign Minister Bevin to accept the equal status of the USSR. Public pressure in both the United States and Britain is resulting in too- rapid demobilization in Germany, he warned. If the British and Americans retire, the French will move in, pro- ducing the same chaos as in the last war, he predicted, which will culmin- ate in some neo-Hitlerite resistance movement. The Russians, unable to permit such disorganization, will move in to preserve order, and pos- sibly to lead Germany into the Soviet Union, he maintained. Unanimity Insisted The Soviet Union's insistenco nn Says U.S. By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Dec. 5-Snowy- haired Patrick J. Hurley, his voice flaring with anger, asserted today that two career diplomats who fa- vored "collapse" of the present gov- ernment in China had been given vital assignments with Gen. Douglas MacArthur after Hurley sent them heme from the embassy at Chung- king. Also, in the course of two and a half hours of impassioned testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Hurley made these other major assertions: Major Assertions That Britain was opposing United States Policy for the unification of China at the very moment that Maj. Gen. Hurley, then Ambassador at Chungking, was trying hardest to ne- gotiate an agreement between the Chinese Communists and Generalis- simo Chiang Kai-Shek. That some of the career men in China supported an imperialistic bloc of nations and were perfectly willing to use lend-lease to subjugate people contrary to the policies of the Atlantic Charter. Hurley named the "imperialistic -bloc" as consisting of Britain, France, The Netherlands, to a less important extent Belgium and Portugal; and, before the war, Ger- many and Japan. Communists Not a Threat That at the moment none of the big powers, Russia, the United States and Britain, is helping the Chinese Communists and without such help the Communists are not, in Hurley's opinion, a major threat to the con- trol of China by Chiang Kai-Shek. That some American diplomat "leaked" to the Communist leaders in North China a policy agreed upon by President Roosevelt at the Yalta big-three conference that the United States would arm either Nationalist or Communist troops when its forces invaded China, depending on what troops it found in the territory where the invasion occurred. As a result, Hurley said, he suddenly discovered that the Communists were concen- trating troops toward one port so that they would be sure to get Ameri- can arms. Coke Bar To Open in league Refreshments, Music For Dancing Available A Coke Bar in the League Cafe- teria will officially open today for all students on campus. Open on Monday through Friday from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m., it will afford a place for students to meet, dance to a newly installed juke-box, and have refreshments. First of its kind on campus, and promulgated by Bill MacGowan and Doug Clark, with assistance from members of Assembly and Pan-Hel- lenic, the Coke Bar will have an at- mosphere of friendliness and in- formality. Hurley Reports On Retention Of Career Men Sailors' Britain Opposed Unification Policy University of Michigan to the war effort in furnishing instruction and other services and facilities for the training of naval personnel. Your in- stitution may be justly proud of the part it has played in the victory which has been won." Initiated at the University in the summer of 1942, the program was open to all men between the ages of 17 and 20 who passed qualifying physical and mental examinations, the first of which were given in April, 1942. Four terms of training were pro- vided men preparing for general duty in the Navy. A specialized training program, ranging from six to 12 terms, was set up for potential offi- cers. Tickets To Go , On Sale For Union Formal Tickets for the Union Formal, scheduled from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday, Dec. 15, in the Rainbow Room of the Union, willhbe sold to- morrow, Monday, and Tuesday at the travel desk in the Union. So that all may have equal chance to purchase tickets, seventy-fivle tickets will be placed on sale from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. Friday; 100 tickets will be sold between noon and 1 p.m. Monday, 50 between 4 and 5 p.m. Monday, and 100 between 6:30 and 7:30 p.ni. Monday. The remainder will go on sale from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. Tuesday. A 1945-46 Union card must be pre- sented by all civilian men who pur- chase tickets. Only men may buy tickets and only one ticket will be sold to each person. Traditionally the first all campus formal of the year, this year's affair will mark the first all out post war formal dance, and will be complete in every respect, according to Dick Roeder, chairman of the event. Flowers will be presented to coeds as they enter the ballroom, and re- freshments of punch and cookies are to be served on the dance floor. Leather programs, carrying the Un- ion seal, will be given, and decora- tions will follow the same theme. Bill Layton and his all-campus or- chestra, featuring Patty DuPont, will furnish music for the completely for- mal dance. Galens' Buckets Will Swing on Campus Friday Seek To Raise Funds For Hospital Work Seventeen members of Galens medical society will form their an- nual Tag Day "bucket brigade" on campus tomorrow and Saturday-and the coins that roll into their pails will enable the Galens to continue their year 'round activities for the little shut-ins of University Hospital. Located at strategic campus points, the Galens will present contributors with the Galens Tag, which will sig- nify support of the hospital's recrea- tion and rehabilitation program for younger patients recovering from op- erations and illness. The medics will be swinging their pails for student contributions to the annualrchildren'sChristmas party. Your donations will make their Christmas-away-from-home a merry one. But Galens aims at something more than a one-day "binge" Using its col- lected funds to maintain the Galens workshop, handicrafts of every des- cription are offered the children through a supervised occupational program. Galens also provides a library and weekly movies to widen the walls around these kids, whose convales- cence would otherwise be restless and trying. School for Vets To Open Here Next January Beacon Institute, the sdhool of "know-how" for World War II vet- erans seeking positions in industry, will open here Jan. 2 with its initial class completely filled, Keith Haien, '40, co-founder of the institute, an- nounced yesterday. Haien said that 40 veterans will be admitted in January and that the school's experience with this first group will determine the number ac- cepted for future classes. Original plans had called for admission of 50 students each month for a six months' course. Applications for admission to the institute are being handled by Lieut. Col. Philip C. Pack, director of the State Office of Veterans' Affairs. Veterans enrolled in the institute will be housed at Willow Run Village and will be transported to the school, located in a factory near the Michi- gan Central station, by state-fur- nished busses. Haien said the institute will grant certificates of graduation but will not graduate anyone "we can't rec- ommend to industry." Koussevitzky Will Conduct Now in its sixty-third season, the Boston Symphony Orchestra, con- ducted by Russian-born Serge Kous- sevitzky, will highlight its concert at 8:30 p.m. Monday in Hill Audi- torium with symphonies by Proko- New Duty Not Known as Yet Congressional Legislation To Rescind Appropriations Throughout Entire U. S. The University's V-12 and NROTC units will be terminated at the end of the current semester, Comm. Norman C. Gillette, executive officer, announc- ed yesterday. Future status of present V-12 students has not yet been made public. Capt. Woodson V. Michaux, commanding officer of University Naval activities, said that an anticipated lack of funds will force termination of the V-12 contract. Legislation rescinding appropriations for V-12 and NROTC units in colleges and universities throughout the country is now before Congress. Advance notice of the termination will serve the interests of both the government and the participating educational institutions, Capt. Michaux said. Rear Admiral William M. Fechteler, Assistant Chief of Naval Personnel, in a message to the University, said: "The Navy is deeply appreciative of the many contributions made by they HUMOROUS ASPECTS: Prof. Swinton Describes Life In War Internment Camp HONORABLE HISTORY: Strassbourg Rated Second Among French Universities Bedbugs were one of the main problems and sources of entertain- ment in Santo Tomas Interment camp near Manila, Prof. Roy S. Swinton of the Engineering Me- chanics Department said in his talk to the A.S.M.E. last night. Speaking on the humorous aspects of life in Santo Tomas prison camp, and showing slides of cartoons drawn there, Prof. Swinton, who was teach- ing at the University of the Philip- pines at the time of the Japanese invasion, told how he had to start the car for the Jap who took him to the camp. No preparations had been made for the prisoners. he said. and The garbage detail was enviable, Prof. Swinton said, for the garbage pails often came back filled with food and notes. The best food available on Christmas of 1944 was found in the garbage pail from the comman- dants' kitchen. After the Japs discovered this method of smuggling in things from the outside, food and notes were sometimes delivered in coffins. Al- though only one American Red Cross package was delivered to the camp during the three years Prof. Swinton was there, he charges that the Red Cross officials in the camp seemed to EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the fourth and last in a series of articles on the foreign universities slated in tomorrow's elec- tion. Information for this article was supplied by the World Student Service Fund. Steeped in tradition dating back to its founding in 1538, the Univer- sity of Strassbourg was before the war rated second among French uni- versities. Corresponding to our various "schools," were seven "faculties" composing the University. Approxi- mately 2,500 French and 800 foreign students were divided among the "faculties" of Protestant and Catho- lic Theology, Law, Medicine, Sci- ences, Liberal Arts and Pharmacy. A library of more than one million bourg last October in an atmosphere of extreme psychological tension. Though some damage has been done to the physical parts of the campus, the major problem is that of men- tally transferring the entire univer- sity-students and faculty alike- back to a French university. Tossed between German and French rule for years, the citizens of Alsace Lorraine now are in a state of confusion. Under German occupa- tion they were forced to speak only German, to bow only to the German command. Now, as a part of France, they have many adjustments to make. Andre Blonay of the European Student Relief Fund has suggested