ROOSEVELT TRIBUTE lee Page 4 Lw& 4:)att]g CLOUDY CONTINUED COOL VOL. LVI, No. 112 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1946 PRICE FIVE CENTS Swiss Political Scientist To Highlight Michigan A cademyMeeting Today Vets Start World News At, a Glance New AVC A'to'ic Control Highlighting the fiftieth anniver- sary meeting of the Michigan Aca- demy of Science, Arts and Letters being held here today and tomorrow, William E. Rappard, rector of the University of Geneva and eminent Swiss political scientist, will discuss "The Mandates System and the Unit- ed Nations Trusteeship" at 4:15 p.m. today in Rackham lecture hall. Papers and lectures oy both ama- teur and professional scientists in 17 different fields from anthropology to zoology will make up the programs Jap Election For Next Diet Still Close Race Observers Forecast TriPartite Coalition TOKYO, Friday, April 12--('P)- With half the ballots counted, Social Democrats, with surprising strength, were still pressing Japan's two major conservative parties today in a close race for domination of the next Diet. Observers began to forecast a tri- party coalition government. Of the first 206 -candidates as- sured of election, 49 were Progres- sives, 49 Liberals, 42, Social De- mocrats, 43 independent candi- dates, four Communists and 19 of minor parties. Eight winners were women. There are 468 Diet seats to be filled. Returns indicated the nationwide vote would average about 72 per cent of all eligibles. Political jockeying for power began immediately, with leaders of top par- ties reiterating demands for Pre- mier Shirehara's resignation and dis- claiming any intention of joining him in a coalition cabinet. All three of the Shidehara minis- ters running for the house of repre- Wages Insufficient TOKYO, April 12-(P)-Only 14 per cent of Japan's millions of work- ers earn enough to meet the rocket- ing cost of living, General MacAr- thur said today in his latest report on the occupation. sentatives were definitely elected. They are Welfare Minister Hitoshi Ashida and Liberal Ministers With- out Portfolio Narahashi and Tayas- hige Ishiguro. Sanni Nosaka, tp-drawing Communist, polled 80,000 votes in incomilete returns from Tokyo's first district, placing third highest among winners there. Ichiro Hato- yama, president of the Liberal party, led the district winners with 106,000. Second was demure Miss Shizue Yamaguchi, 30, a dietician in her father's factory, who cam- paigned because it was " a patritoc duty" and polled 85,000 votes. The two oldest veterans of the House continued to top all individ- ual vote records of all districts, how- ever. Yukio Ozaki, 87, polled 130,000 votes-while maintaining that "I'm too old and too deaf to serve," and refusing to budge from his house for any sort of campaign. Takao Saito, old-time Progressive leader, polled 125,000. It remained unclear just what be- hind-the-scenes political arrange- 'ments would be made concerning the Shidehara cabinet. Mayor Laids Taxi Ordinance Says New Provisions Are Beneficial to All Stressing the need for protection in a city taxicab ordinance, Mayor William E. Brown, Jr., said yester- day that "bblieve it or not," the or- dinance revision to come before Com- mon Council Monday serves the best interests of taxi drivers and owners as well as the public. The city's $10 taxi license are re- sold for as ,much as $3500 under the present ordinance, Brown pointed out. Drivers apd owners will be pro- tected from this type of exploitation under the new ordinance, he said. The mayor urged everyone inter- ested in the taxicab ordinance to pro- cure a copy from the Clerk's office. of the individual section meetings of the Academy today and tomorrow. Approximately 400 members from Michigan, Indiana, and Ohio are ex- pected to attend the meeting, accord- ing to Dr. Frederick K. Sparrow, as- sociate professor of botany at the University and secretary of the Aca- demy. All meetings are open to the public. Mandates Commission Member Director of the Graduate Institute of International Studies at Geneva since 1928, Dr. Rappard was a mem- ber of the Permanent Mandates Com- mission and director of the Mandates Section of the League of Nations As- sembly. He is in the United States now as a member of the Swiss diplo- matic misison conducting negotia- tions to settle the problems raised by the Allied claims under the Pots- dam agreement to German-owned assets in Switzerland. Rappard Educated Abroad Born in New York City in 1883, Dr. Rappard was educated at the Uni- versities of Geneva, Berlin, Munich, Harvard, Paris and Vienna. He has served as assistant profesor of eco- nomic at Harvard University and as See ACADEMY, Page 2 Union Officers Attend Meeting In Minnesota Union president Richard Roeder and secretary Harold Walters are at- tending the 3-day 1946 conference of the Association of College Unions, which opened yesterday at the Uni- versity of Minnesota. The conference will be the first post-war meeting of the ACU and will be held in the Minnesota Coff- man Memorial Union. The Coffman Union was one of the last Union buildings constructed be- fore tha war, and will give delegates planning new buildings an unusual opportunity to study the layout of one of the most modern student so- cial centers. Delegates will be able to observe the functioning of a highly developed student self-government program in the Minnesota Union. Union food problems, public rela- tions, and Veterans programs will be the major topics of discussion during the conference. Union Directors Porter Butts of Wisconsin, Ray Higgins of Minne- sota, Nelson Jones of Brown, Lloyd Vallely of Purdue, and Foster Coffin of Cornell will be present at the con- ference. ,~. .. Record Concert Will Feature Jazz Music All students are cordially invited to attend the Record Concert from 7:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Sunday, in the North Lounge at the Union. The Union Social Committee has arranged a program titled "Jazz at the Philharmonic" which will include such popular disc recordings of Cole- man Hawkins, Goodman Sextet, and Fats Waller. Mystery Melodrama ToBe Given. Today Presented by Play Production, "Kind Lady," a mystery melodrama, will be given at 8:30 p.m. today and tomorrow in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The play was adapted by Edward Chordorov from Hugh Walpole's play "The Silver Masque." Dorothy Mur- zek will play the title role. Chapter Willow Run Group Bids for Members Ann Arbor's growing American Veterans Committee last night formed a new town chapter, while the newly-organized Willow Run group planned a membership drive at its second meeting. The 12 charter members of the Ann Arbor town chapter elected Jer- ry McCroskey temporary chairman. A resolution approving the Mini- mum Wage Bill, without the Farm Parity rider, was passed by the par- ent chapter at a meeting in the Union. Copies of the resolution will be sent to Rep. Earl Michener, rep- resentative from this district; Rep. John McCormick, House majority leader; and to the House Labor Corn- mittee. The campus AVC also plans a dance to be held April 19. A membership rally will be held Wednesday, April 17, at the West Lodge Community House by the Wil- low Run chapter of AVC. Speakers will be Guy Nunn, chairman of the Michigan Council of AVC, and Susan LaDrierre, secretary of the Ann Ar- bor chapter. All student veterans at Willow Run are invited to attend. In commemoration of the death of President Roosevelt, a year ago, the chapter pledged itself to advance- ment of his progressive policies. A Problem, Sirs! The mystery of the missing Slide Rule thickened yesterday as a group of independent engineers reported that the giant Slide Rule has been in their possession for the past three days and will be returned if the dance committee will post a substantial reward on the Union bulletin board by 1 p.m. today. As substantial evidence that they are' in possession of the much -sought - after instrument, the independents revealed that the "painting job is horrible-in fact, the B-C scale is unintelli- gible." Roosevelt Home To Be Enshrined Truman Will Dedicate Hyde Park Estate Today HYDE PARK, N. Y., April 11-0P) -President Truman tomorrow will dedicateasarnational shrine the house, the gardens and the rolling acres which were home to Franklin D. Roosevelt. A 33-acre portion of the late Presi- dent's estate, including the stone and stuccohmansion where he was born and the century-old rose garden where he is buried, will be presented formally by Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt to Interior Secretary J. A. Krug. President Truman's dedicatory ad- dress will follow the presentation. Ceremonies will be broadcast from 2:30 to 3:00 p.m. (EST) over three national networks (NBC, CBS, ABC). Radio coverage is expected to be the greatest for any event since V-J day. The British Broadcasting Com- pany will carry the program to Eng- land and Europe. The State Depart- ment will boadcast it to Latin Amer- ica and later will rebroadcast it in 23 foreign languages throughout the world. This quiet little Dutchess County village is preparing for an influx of thousands of people for the dedica- tory ceremonies, which commemorate the first anniversary of Mr. Roose- velt's death. WASHINGTON, April 11-(')-- The Senate Atomic Energy Com- mittee unanimously approved to- day a far-reaching control bill de- signed to stimulate'the peacetime development of the new power source without endangering na- tional security. The bill gives the gverment absolute control over the produ- tien, ownership and use of fission- able material from which the en- ergy is derived, and sets up an atomic energy commission of five civilians as the administrative agency. * * e Iran J' Negotiations- - TEHRAN, April 11 -(IP)- Nego- tiations to settle troubles in Azer- baijan and Kurdistan already may be underway, it was indicated today shortly after the chief of the auton- omous Azerbaijan government de- clared his province did not want to be separated from Iran. The Azerbaijan premier, Jafar Pi- shevari, also was quoted in a broad- cast from Tabriz last night as openly thanking the Red Army "since it was by their efforts that the tyran- nical regime of Iran was overthrown." The premier asserted that "all our activities proved to the world we are not separatists. We have never wanted to be separated from Iran." (I ifCI*ff,'. .4. Wage Increases 0 NEW YORK, April J1-(A)- Eight major motion picture stu- dios today termed "fantastic" the wage demands of James C. Petrillo, president of the American Federa- tion of musicians (AFL). "The wage increases in the field of musicians and staff, under an- alysis, would approximate a 1,200 per cent rise," the companies said in a statement. They added, how- ever,sthat the companies would meet with the union tomorrow. Coal Strike... WASHINGTON,I" 'April 11-(~)- Secretary of Labor Schwellenbach tonight expressed confidence he could bring John L. Lewis and bituminous coal operators together next week for renewal of contract negotiations whichdthe union suddenly broke off yesterday. Schwellenbach, after a two hour conference with the operators and a separate 140 minute conference with Lewis and his United Mine Workers, said the time is not yet ripe for ap- pealing to the parties in the dispute to resume negotiations immediately. TuminTo Ta11k At Robert Owen Dr. Melvin Tumin of the Depart- ment of Sociology of Wayne Uni- versity and advisor to the Wayne chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peo- ple will speak at a joint meeting of that group and the Inter-Racial As- sociation at 9 p.m. today in Robert Owen Cooperative House. Earlier in the evening, members of IRA will give a dinner for the Detroit representatives during which the two groups will compare their aims and purposes. They will attempt to find a way that they can assist each other in solving racial problems in their re- spective areas. An attempt will also be made to de- vise a plan whereby representatives of inter-racial organizations of the Big Ten schools can meet to discuss their problems. Besides the discussions by members of the two groups, an outline of the work of the cooperatives will be pre- sented by one of its representatives. A social hour will follow. 0b Union To Probe Charges Against 'U' Building Plan; 151 Milo oe se 0 Senators Team To Back New Aim in Housing Project Called Step In National Program By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, April 11-An am- bitious program to provide 15,000,000 homes in this country (luring the next 10 years won support in the Senate today from an unusual combination Early Showdown Anticipated In Local Contractors' Dispute The dispute between the Ann Arbor General Contractors Association and the George A. Fuller Co. moved toward a showdown yesterday as J. S. Gray, secretary of the International Bricklayers Union, announced that a union officer would be sent here to investigate charges that the University's building program is throttling local veteran home construction. According to informed sources, the construction union's ban on a six- day work week, which went back into effect last November, is one of the main issues of the dispute. of members. Senator Taft (R-Ohio), frequently SUPPORTS HOUSING -- Senator Robert Taft, Ohio Republican, who joined with Senators Ellender and Wagner to back an ambitious na- tional housing program. a leader among themore traditional Republicans, Senator Ellender (D-La), a member of the southern Democratic bloc, and Senator Wag- ner (D-NY), veteran sponsor of much New Deal legislation, joined in vocal support for the program. 'Big Step' They termed it a "big step" for millions of American families, with private capital supplying most of the funds, and local and state gov- ernments taking the initiative. While the Senate discussion was going on President Truman told his news conference that he was satisfied with the form in which an emergency housing bill, principally for veterans, had passed the Senate yesterday. Lacks Ceilings That measure, like the bill the House passed, lacks the ceilings on existing houses which the President had asked. The Senate, however, put back in the $600,000,000 for sub- sidies to spur production of building materials. The House had struck that out too. The Civilian Production Adnliinis- tration, meanwhile, relaxed its con- struction controls to permit priori- ties for some non-veteran housing. In general the change permits help on materials for housing for work- ers producing food and other srarce essentials, for repairs to disaster- damaged structures, ana repairs or alternations to keep existing space habitable or make more units avail- able. TRUMAN- fm iproveinent Prospects Cited In World Food WASHINGTON, April 11 -- (P) - President Truman reported an im- provement in world food prospects today as the government and Con- gress moved to jar loose more meat and grain in this country. The President told his news con- ference that if we can get by for the next 90 days everything will go well. As heartening factors he cited rains in India, improved spring and winter production in North Africa and France. Higher Meat Prices The House Agriculture Committee recommended higher meat prices in hopes of curbing the black market and the agriculture department slapped out an order designed to limit distillers grain stocks and require them to turn loose any grain they have above the limit. Officials said they had no knowledge that there are any hoards. The order, effective next Monday, restricts the amount ofgrain that whiskey makers may hold to a 7 /2 days' supply. If they have more than that on hand they must report it, al- though officials said theykwere not aware of any hoarded stocks. Cut Use Of Flour The department continued mean- while to weigh a proposal to cut do- mestic use of flour by 25 per cent by rationing supplies to bakers and re- tailers. An average increase of about six cents a pound in retail meat price ceilings is contemplated in an OPA extension amendment by Chairman Flannagan (D-Va) of the House Agriculture Committee. Budget Def iit Falls Greatly Truman Announces 7 Billion Dollar Drop WASHINGTON, April 11 -(A)- President Truman announced to- day that the deficit for this fiscal year would be $7,000,000,000 less than January estimates and "we are on the way to a balanced budget" He also expressed fresh views to his news conference on three meas- urse pending in Congress. Housing Bill Housing - He is satisfied with the housing bill as it passed the Senate yesterday. It lacks price control for existing homes, but contains other features he recommended.. Army-Navy merger - He thihks the sweeping bill drafted by a Senate military subcommittee has a lot of good points, but he reserves comment on it as a whole until Congress fin- ally passes it. Poll tax - He still favors federal anti-poll tax legislation. Poll Tax Stand The chief executive was ready for questions about his poll tax stand following his repark in Chicago last Saturday that it was a matter the states would have to work out for themselves. He had a statement pre- pared which said he had not changed his stand in favor of federal action to outlaw the poll tax but that he favored state action as well. First Year Hardest The question about unification of the~ armed nip forcs ouhed1 offia' l Raymond C. Daly, the Fuller's construction superintendent, has maintained that the six-day week plan with overtime pay is necessary as an "incentive" to make up for deficiencies in the local supply of building specialists. Import Workers According to Daly, workers have to be imported if the Fuller Co. is to meet the fall deadline set by the University for completion of vet- erans' apartments and dormitories. In its telegram of protest to hous- ing and union officials and members of Congress, the General Contractors Association said that prospective veteran home-buyers in Ann Abor could not compete with the Univer- sity for the available supply of con- struction workers if the six-day work week with overtime pay were con- tinued. The association referred to the Mayor William E. Brown's veteran- civilian housing committee-report, which disclosed that 3,000 homes are needed immediately in Ann Arbor, as proof that the veterans housing prob- lem here is critical. Building Lags Mayor Brown told The Daily last night that local home construction has lagged far behind population since 1929. As the dispute over the University's dormitory construction program neared a climax, vice-president Ro- bert P. Briggs was in Chicago con- ferring with officials of the Civilian Production Administration in an at- tempt to clear the way for the rest of the University's building program, which has been stalled since the OPA ban on non-veteran construction went into effect last month. *: * * City Housing Group Urged Wilson W. Wyatt, national housing expediter, sent a letter to Mayor Wil- liam E. Brown, Jr., yesterday, urging the creation of a city emergency housing committee comparable to that organized here early this week. Mayor Brown also received an ac- knowledgement of Ann Arbor hous-- ing statistics he had sent to the Chi- gago office of the National Housing Administration. The figures will be incorporated into a comparative sur- vey of national needs. UN Will Move Headquarters New Interim Site Will Be at Lake Success NEW YORK, April 11-)---The United Nations decided today to move its interim headquarters to the $17,- 783 ,040 Sperry Gyroscope Plant at Lake Success-22 miles from New York City-and accepted an offer of Mayor William O'Dwyer to set the old World's Fair site at Flushing Meadows in order for next Septem- ber's meeting of the General Assem- bly. The Security Council, pledged un- der its rules to meet at least every two weeks, will transfer its activities from Hunter College, in the Bronx, to the Lake Success site as soon as arangements can be made. New York City's offer-described by Secretary General Trygve Lie as "a very great contribution to the success of the United Nations" and a "generous gesture"-was to spend $1,250,000 improving the municipal building at the Fair site and to erect housing units to accomodate 4,000 persons on the UN payroll by Jan- i uarv 1. 194'7 SOLUTION IN INDIA: Self-Governing Status Will Insure Unity The establishment of a constitution providing India with self-rule will be in reality a treaty between India and Great Britain, and not merely an instrument giving India dominion status, Sir Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, Indian philosopher said yesterday. The constitution which the Brit- ish commission is in the process of drawing up in consultation with Sir Radhakrishnan said that there need be no fear of Indian disunity once self-rule is established. Any divisions which may appear at that time will be based upon political thought. They will be the divisions between the reactionaries and the revolutionists. "The differences between Moslem and Hindu was falsely accentuated a majority of the Moslems in India are converts and as such are Indians first, then Moslems. Though an In- dian Moslem may feel himself a mem- ber of the Islamic world, he is first and foremost an Indian, just as a Christian is primarily a citizen of his own land, he concluded. T~!* * * Publicity officials would not am- plify the brief statement, which ap- peared to indicate that the cabinet mission was ready to open round- table discussions with the All-India Congress Party and Moslem League, with discussions following between those two parties. The mission is here to make in- I i