BATTLE OF CAMPUS GAOL See Page 2 C, r 4Lw4r 9a 743 ti1 INOUDY ND RAIN VOL. LVI, No. 103 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1946 PRICE FIVE CENTS Giant Pacific Tidal Wave Wreaks Havoc Campaign Is Designed To Stimulate Action Toward Student Government Hawaii, California,Alaska Report Extensive Damage To Be Voted On April 9,10 Rally Scheduled At Hill Auditorium Campus attention will be focused on student government this week as a spirited publicity campaign gets under way to acquaint students with two constitutions to be voted on in all-campus elections April 9 and 10. Thousands of students are ex- pected to attend a student-govern- ment rally at 7:30 p.m. Monday at Hill Auditorium where the mer- Student Government Discussions Start Panel discussions on the Council- Forum and Congress-Cabinet con- stitutions will take place at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow and Thursday at the Union as a preliminary to next week's campus-wide student gov- ernment rally and election. Speakers for each of the constitu- tions will set the stage for an in- formal discussion by six panel speak- ers and a period of questions and audience discussion. Sponsoring the panels are the Union, the League, SRA and the Committee for Liberal Action. Moderator of tomorrow's meeting is John F. Muehl, assistant director of the International Center. John Sessions, teaching fellow in English, is Thursday moderator, its of the Congress-Cabinet and Council-Forum constitutions will be debated. The University Band will play at the rally and a special skit designed to show the need for stu- dent government Will be given. Plans for the new government are sponsored by the Union and League. Meanwhile, a wide variety of pub- licity measures will be used this week to stir the student body to a realiza- tion of what the new student govern- ment plan offers. Banners posted prominently about campus, panel discussions, skits insororities, fraternities and dormitories, stump speeches, store displays, radio interviews and sand- wich board advertising will high- light the unique publicity campaign. The campaign will aim at arousing such enthusiasm that the whole stu- dent body will turn out and vote intelligently upon one of the two constitutions, according to sponsors. Tentative plans call for a mass meeting at Willow Run where stu- dent veterans at the University com- munity near Ypsilanti will have an opportunity to consider the two con- stitutions. The Daily will print the two constitutions this week for reader appraisal. Additional copies of the constitutions will be provided all students attending the rally Mon- day. A second election for student gov- ernment personnel will be held two and one-half weeks following the ratification of one constitution at the elections April 9 and 10. IFC Presidents Meeting Listed Discussion of pledging procedures, and reports concerning the coming student government elections will highlight a meeting of all fraternity house presidents at 7:30 p.m. Thurs- day in the Interfraternity Council office in the Union. This meeting will replace the reg- ularly scheduled one of April 10. William Crick, secretary-treasurer of the IFC, announced. Crick also reminded house presi- dents that all men who are registered for rushing on the second list, issued March 23, will become eligible for pledging Saturday. Miner To Lecture _ 5T1FIS STATUTE MIL0 [rzuru~m RUSSIA Krasovnad~k tE CuspaunRUSSIA l~~ihlar q BA W A Sultanabad I A Shjirz adabad Prospecling - Ou QAA Proven Oil Field- TR~UC A PROBLEM IN OIL--Map locates proven oil fields and sites where prospecting for oil has been carried on in Iran, Iraq, Eastern Turkey and Southern Russia. Black areas show territory in which oil con- cessions are held by governments of United States, Britain, France and the Netherlands. Shaded area is abandoned concession upon which prospecting never developed a successful well, according to pre-war reports. 400.,000 Coal Miners StIrike, Celebrate Traditional Holiday National Basis Won~ iSecure Peace -Slosson Oulines Plaii of Rollin iAreeient "There can be no guarantee of peace so long as any nation has the sovereign right to decide questions of war and peace for itself," Prof. Preston Slosson declared last night in a report on the Rollins College Con- ference on Atomic Energy. Speaking before the Association of University of Michigan Scientists, Prof. Slosson outlined the "Appeal to the Peoples of the World," unani- mously adopted at the conference, which seeks to expand the UNO into a federal world government. Secret Is Technological Scientists at the conference agreed that the only "secret" of the atomic bomb is the technological procedure, which any industrial nation can de- velop within ten years, and that there is no answer to the atomic bomb short of an effective inspection sys- tem. To work successfully, they con- cluded, the inspectors must have the power to go everywhere and see everything, to arrest offenders, and to bring them to trial before an in- ternational tribunal. Need World Government The conference agreed that a fed- eral world government which would be necessary to enforce such an in- spection system "can be best attain- ed by working through the UNO," Prof. Slosson said. They appealed for a general UNO conference to amend the constitution, setting up a "government deriving its specific pow- ,rs from the peoples of the world." Asked how soon he believed this could be accomplished, Prof. Slosson said that "we are working to get it under way before World War TII." The only two governments which might cause trouble, he noted, and Russia and the United States. An answer to the question of "what will you do if Russia refuses?" Prof. Slosson said, is the UNO provision for regional federations. "A great power that did not join at first might find it advisable to do so later," hie pointecd out. Copies of the appeal as signed at the conference have been distributed to congressmen, the President and the cabinet, and state governors. Prof. Slosson predicted that the ques- tion "might very well become an issue Ihis fall' A mbta secldo NEW YORK, April 1O--The government of Iran gave unqualified support to its ambassador here today Smid mount ug speculation over Mos- cow's reaction to the request of the United Nations Security Council for O full report on the Iranian issue. Iran's statement, communicated di- rectly from Premier Ahmed Cavam I o Secretary-General Trygve Lie, ap- parently was in response to earlier Russian claims that Ambassador Hus- sein Ala was not familiar with the latest developments in the situation. Ala presented Iran's side to the Coun- cil last week immediately after Rus- sia's dramatic walkout. Hawaii, worst-hit of the Hawaii waves that crested into speeding w Pacific Troops (Give Relief to Homeless HONOLULU, April 1 -(J)--- Maj Gen. George F. Moore, commanding general of the mid-Pacific, alerted troops under his command today to give disaster relief to island inhab- itants made homeless by the tidal wave. Moore offered services of the Army to Governor Ingram Stainback, and units were organized rapidly to feed, clothe, house and give medical care to thousands of homeless and scores of injured. Moore said the Army would open an evacuation camp for 3,000 civilians, homeless on the east- ern side of Oahu. Few Workers Made Idle by DSR Walkout Mayor Demands Union Submit to Arbitration DETROIT, April 1-1P)-A strike of street car and coach operators tied up Detroit's municipally owned transportation system today but kept few workers from their jobs. The strike, involving 5,200 mem- bers of the Amalgamated Association of Street, Electric Railway and Motor Coach Employees of America (AFL) began at 4 a.m. Monday after the operators, demanding an 18-cent-an- DETROIT, April 1-(/P)-Despite the bus and trolley strike, enough Detroiters made their way to Briggs Stadium today to buy out all re- served seats for the Tiger baseball opener with St. Louis April 16. The line bgan forming at 6 a.m. hour wage increase rejected a coun- ter-offer by the city of 15 cents hour- ly. Jeffries Demands Arbitration At a meeting with representatives of the union this noon, Mayor Ed- ward J. Jeffries told them: "You're not going to get a thing we previously offered, except arbi- tration." "We are not going to make any offer or do any negotiating while you are on strike," Jeffries added. "There is no excuse for a raise in wages if wage conditions remain the same. We want to go along with the nation- al 'hold the line' policy," No Union Response There was no immediate comment from union officials, who yesterday sought unsuccessfully to persuade the car and coach operators to defer strike action. Earlier, however, James McGinnity, international representative of the Union, asserted he believed a settle- ment could be negotiated "because we are very close." "We are not close and never have been," Mayor Jeffries declared. an Islands, was ripped by towering alls of water 50 feet above normal levels at Hil, crashing through homes, warehouses and business buildings, Recurrence Expected The center of the wave, was be- lieved to be the western tip of volcanic Unimak Island, Alaska. North Pacific shipping was warned to be prepared for waves 90 feet high. A recurrence of the crushing tidal rush was believed possible. Latest figures placed the toll in Hawaii at 52 known dead. From five to ten men were lost when the wave enveloped an Alaskan lighthouse. Every Island Hit Every island in the Hawaiian group was hit and widespread property damage was reported, especially at Hilo, on the island of Hawaii. There a ship was torn from its moorings, buildings on the seaward side of the main street were damaged and a bridge was wrecked. One large struc- ture swept off its foundations. Terrified witnesses said the waves ranged up to 25 feet above high-tide marks. Cars on coastal roads were engulfed by tons of hurtling watet, Heavy damage was reported frOm Hawaii, Maui, Kaui and the leper colony island of Molokai, where sev- eral beach homes were washed out to sea and lowland residents fled to higher ground. ChinaI's Reds Bring Reforms, Lindsay Says "Communists in North China have brought about several reforms which are of considerable benefit to the peasant population," Michael Lind- say, former professor of economics at Yenching University, declared, yes- terday at Rackham Amphitheatre. Lindsay pointed out that commun- ism in China is generally much dif- ferent from the popular conception of communism. "In some cases it is even more pro-capital than the Na- tional government," he said,. Speaking on the "Chinese Com- munist Areas," Prof. Lindsay said chief reforms were: transfer of pow- er from appointed to elected officials; enforcement of the rent limitation law passed by the National govern- ment in 1930; and reform of the tax system. The tax reform, Lindsay stated, neans that powerful families once beyond taxation now are taxed and that most of the tax money reaches the government and does not go in- to "pockets." "Fundamentally the communists in China are Marxists," he declared, "but socialism can't be built on peas- ant living. There will be a long per- iod of development in which capital will play a prominent part." Michael Lindsay will deliver his second lecture, entitled "The Prob- lems of Chinese Unity," at 4:15 p.m. today in the Rackham Amphitheatre. It will deal with the Koumintang re- lations since 1937, developments since the Japanese surrender, the part played by American foreign policy in the situation, and the prospects of attaining unity. Center of Wave Believed To Be Tip Of Volcanic Uniimak Island, Alaska By The ~,Associated Pre-; Tidal waves rolling out at airplane speed from a mighty submarine earthquake demolished the entire waterfront of Hilo, Hawaii, Monday and spread death and destruction to Alaska and California, At least 63 were dead, and Hilo reported as many as 300 may have been killed in that city alone. WAShINGTON, April 1 -((/P)- Soft coal mine operators and lead- ers of the striking United Mine Workers met today with a federal conciliator for the first time since the walkout began in an attempt to reach an agreement but re- ported no progress. Summer GI Bill Subsistence Plwm Explained Veterans in undergraduate schools and colleges who expect to receive -tuition and subsistance benefits under the GI Bill during the summer ses- sion will be required to carry a mini- mum of six hours of academic work, Clark Tibbetts, director of the Veter- ans Service Bur'eau, announced yes- terday. In any case, veterans will have to carry at least half of the minim um number of hours required by their schools or colleges dauring a regular semester. Tibbetts said. Tibbetts said the following policy will govern continuation of tuition and subsistance benefits: Veterans now in residence who at- tend this suimmer session will auto- matically be granted tuition and subsistance; Veterans now in residence who do not attend the summer session but return for the fall semester will automatically be granted tuition and subsistance at that time. He said that not all veterans would be eligible to receive subsistance bene- fits for the full period between the end of the summer session and the start of the fall semester, since an- nual leave accrues at the rate of two and one-half days a month. If a veteran uses his accrued leave, a corresponding amount of time is taken off his total educational time, Tibbetts said. Motor City Train To Stop Here PITTSBURGH, April 1 -/n) -- The nation's 400,000 bituminous coal min- ers today launched their first all- out strike since the war with a pro- gram of parades and speeches cele- brating "Lewis-Mitchell day." The coal-diggers hold the tradi- tional holiday annually in tribute to two United Mine Workers' presidents _--John L, Lewis and the late John Mitchell. Union leaders and public officials addressed the gatherings, which were more numerous in the leading coal states of West Virginia and Pennsylvania. Outside of that, the strike began quietly in coal fields across the nation. There was no picketing. Miners, lay- ing aside their grimy work clothes, simply started a routine walkout in the atmosphere of a spring vacation. Tomorrow, however, the coal shut - down takes on a more serious hue with start of curtailment in steel pro- duction, which was just getting back on its feet after the crippling strike of 750,000 CIO United Steelworkers in ,January. Leagrue PlansM Open 1 se Coeds To Be Takeni On Tour of Building The League will present, an Open House from 2 to 5 p.m. today to acquaint women with women's activ- ities, and to explain all phases of petitioning for League positions. Coeds will be met at the front and side doors at 2 p.m. and will be conducted through the building by junior assistants. These tours design - ed to familiarize women with the facilities of the League and uses of the student rooms will last about 45 minutes. Many of the rooms that were used by the public and private groups in recent years have been taken over by the students this semester. Both As- sembly and Panhel organizations have moved to new offices on the third floor and a new project room has also been installed on this floor. The public is being excluded from the Grand Rapids and Hussey rooms Fear Possible Recurrence Of Upheaval KETCHIKAN, Alaska, April 1-"P) -From five to ten men were lost to- day when a tidal wave crashed against the Scotch Cap lighthouse at Unimak Island and continuing ir- regular earthquakes led the com- mander of the Alaska sea frontier to warn of a possible recurrence of the tidal rush. The commander reported to the 13th naval district at Seattle that it was believed 10 men were in the light- house and all were lost. An earlier re- port from the Coast Guard said the personnel at the station was believed to have numbered five. North Pacific shipping was warn- ed by the Navy to prepare for waves 90 feet high. The center of the tidal wave was believed to be at latitude 35 north, longitude 164 west (the western tip of Unimak) and an oceangrapher was dispateh- ed by the navy in an airplane to "make observances and determine the speed, direction and height" of the wave. California appeared to have es- caped the full force of the tidal dis- turbance. The giant waves which crashed on central California beaches, however, terrified beholders and carried at least one man to his death. The elderly victim was one of two men strolling on a beach at Santa Cruz, south of San Francisco, when a great wave rushed upon them, The sur- vivor said he seized his companion and helped him to his feet and then lost hold of him as the outgoing wave tumbled them in the surf. San Pedro, just below Los Ange- les, reported one tanker and two cargo ships broke dock lines and were pushed back into the dock by tugs. A 10-foot wave hit the Oregon coast at Charleston, at the entrance to Coos Bay. No damage was re- ported. At Seattle, Howard Coombs, as- sociate professor of Geology at the University of Washington, said he believed the tidal disturbance origi- nated in a submarine earthquake of major intensity in the Aleutian area. He estimated that the wave was trav- eling at a speed of 400 to 500 miles an hour. He said he registered the earth- quake on his seismograph at 4:38 a.m., PST. (7:38 a.m. EST). Dr. Thomas A. Jaggar, University of Hawaii volcanologist, said the tidal wave had been caused by a "world- shaking submarine earthquake." He ruled out the possibility o an under- sea volcanic eruption. Sigma Rho Tau Names Speech Contest Winner Fay Ajzenberg, 46E, nominating Dr. Elisa Meisner, German-born atomic physicist, was judged best speaker in the preliminaries of the Hall of Fame contest held yesterday by Sig- ma Rho Tau, engineering stump speakers society. Others who will appear in the finals to be held April 16 are Charles Chad- wick, Robert Buckborough, and Jane Ingersoll. The name of the nominee advocated by the person winning the final contest is placed in the society's mythical Hall of Fame. This is the thirteenth local Hall of Fame contest to be held by the Mich- igan chapter of Sigma Rho Tau. The first one was held in 1930, but the contests were discontinued during the war years. Among the distinguished scientists nominated for the Hall of Fame in previous years are Sir Christopher Wren, nominated by John Dykester- hause (1930; James Watt, nominated by Erich Sommers (1931); Louis Pas- teur, nominated by Gordon Stowe (1932); Thomas Edison, nominated by Albert Stone (1933); Wilbur and Orville Wright, nominated by George Malone (1934); and Sir Charles Sim- ons, nominated by Morris Hill (1935). BRIGH TEN THE CORNER . Isolated Village To elcome Walker By FERRY LOGAN Ru -nor has it that the Gargoyle, local equivalent of a Collier's car- toon. will appear on campus early Thursday morning. "Early~ here is a figure of speech, used somewhat loosely. Joe Walker, who bears the responsibility for this' issue, has courageously offered to hie himself out to Willow Village Thursday morning to greet the vet- erans before their eight o'clocks, Gar- goyle in hand. The other members of the staff, made up predominantly of philosophy majors, have never arisen before 10:30 a.m. There is some question as to whether the gentlemen and their ladies living in Willow Village will appreciate Walker's visit in their midst. The impending doom has Shadroc: He shall not pass. (shakes Morton's hand). M: Is the tar ready? How about the feathers? 8: This grenade . M: No violence, understand? (crouches quickly) Quiet, you. fool. I hear melody. Enter Walker, pushing loaded wheel- barrow. He whistles, oblivious to the danger. He sneaks: