WHAT IS AGGRESSION? See Page 4 j [I: C A6F 4f[t A6P r t * aiIij WARM CLOUDY VOL. LVI, No. 117 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TIIIRSDAY, APRIL 18, 1946 PRICE FIVE CENTS ' Granted Use Of illow Run Air port Free Press Misquoted Us, Students Contend; VO Denies Alletions By PAUL HARSHA Stormy protest at a Free Press front page story on the morals of Michigan coeds continued yesterday with an expression of indignation from the campus Veterans Organization and reports from students whose comments figured in the story that they had been misquoted. Veterans Organization members at a meeting last night agreed that "the vast majority of the 6,300 veterans on campus are highly inflamed at the' fase allegations on campus morals" which were made in the Free Press article by Norman Kenyon. The statement that "veterans, are shocked by the sexual promiscuity and excessive drinking they are encountering on their dates," has no basis in fact, VO members asserted. In a letter to John S. Knight, Free Press publisher, VO President Kenneth J. Fleishauer said his organization believes "the character of the University of Michigan coeds is on a par with that of normal girls everywhere, and your paper has no basis for stating otherwise." University people quoted in the Free Press story, meanwhile, as- serted that their words had been twisted out of context. Dean of Women Alice C. Lloyd, claiming she was "misquoted and misrepresented," said she was "personally proud" of the women on this campus, "who have shown fine social responsibility in maintaining their own rules and who have stood for a high standard of social conduct and morality." Willow Village veteran William Horowitz was quoted in the Free Press as saying that "coeds are as easy conquests as the pickups around Ypsilanti. Just get 'em out of Ann Arbor and they're yours!" Horowitz revealed last night that he never had been with a University coed outside Ann Arbor, and that he had said nothing derogatory about local coeds. T. J. Phillips, another Willow Village veteran whose words were used in the story, said he "objected very much to the general tone of the article," and he didn't mean to call attention particularly to the coeds at Michigan in his statements. Martha Sanders denied she had said, "Necking is done in the open a lot more nowadays." Meredith Geer, whom the Free Press quoted as a veteran, is actually' a coed from Dearborn. The Willow Village American Veterans Committee rallied to the defense of the coed with a resolution to be sent to the editor of the Free Press. Charging that the article "unjustifiably tended to undermine the reputation of a great university," AVC expressed its "strong indignation at such irresponsible journalism." Coed leaders of Panhellenic Association and Assembly, joined the voices of protest. Barbara Ann Hazelton, representing Assembly, said the story was t"a distortion and an exaggeration." Marion Johnson, president of Panhellenic, amplified her remarks by accusing the Free Press of trying to stir up fear of another "roaring 20's." "The conditions attributed to this canus are so wholly in discord with life on our post-war campus that the wrath of both veterans and coeds is justified," she declared. ECONCENTRICS PANEL: Newcomb Predicts Results of Pastoral Policy inGermany Price Control Shattered by House Action Bill ID imt- Is. end Of OPA Stbsi(Iyes WASHINGTON, April 17--OP)-A rebellious House overthrew impor- tant phases of President Truman's stabilization program tonight, pass- ing the price control act with restric- tions and directing that subsidy pay- ments shall stop. "You have murdered the OPA," Rep. Sabath (Dem., I.) shouted to his colleagues at the stormy night session. "Repeal of price control," was the judgment of Price Administrator Paul Porter. The restrictions were plastered on a bill to continue the OPA beyond its present June 30 expiration date-for nine months, instead of a year as the Administration asked. After voting the amendments on a series of record votes however, the House put off until tomorow the final roll-call which will send the bill to the Senate. Its future there is highly uncertain. Senator Thomas (Dem., Okla.) an- nounced tonight that he will intro- duce an amendment tomorrow to remove OPA controls on "everything but rents and alcoholic beverages." It would come up for action when the Senate considers the OPA measure. The hitch on final passage oc- curred when Rep. Bradley (Dem., Pa.) demanded that the official final draft of the hill be read. This was not ready and the House quit for the night shortly before 10 p.m. As one restrictive amendment after another went into the measure, ru- mors swept the Capitol that Porter and Stabilization Director Chester Bowles would quit, but an aide of Por- ter and Bowles himself denied them. Only rent controls escaped the House's sledge-hammer. Every amendment to alter these controls was defeated while those dealing with other phases of the. control program went through by heavy Republican votes, assisted by some Democrats. One amendment, whooped through on a roll-call vote of 259 to 137, would require the OPA to make a drastic overhaul of its price ceilings. It provides that they must reflect cost plus a "reasonable profit" to producers and distributors. An amendment to drop all price controls on meat, however, was de- feated, 172 to 223, on a roll-call after the House earlier had approved it on a tentative ballot, 139 to 122. Britain Plans To Nationalize Steel. Industry LONDON, April 17-MP)-Britain's Labor government said today it plans to nationalize a large part of the na- tion's iron and steel industry, and a conservative spokesman c h a r g e d Prime Minister Attlee was "acting like Hitler." The tumult touched off in the house of Commons indicated the pro- posal would be one of the most con- troversial of all the government's public ownership projects. Winston Churchill, leader of the Conservative opposition, snapped that the announcement "Wears the aspect of a singularly questionable and indeed thoroughly disreputable performance." .Amid an uproar from the Labor benches, he was cut off by the speaker, on grounds that the question was not debatable. Prime Minister Attlee had declined to assure Churchill that the govern- ment would avoid taking any impor- tant administrative step before the nationalization proposal was debated in the House. Dawson To Speak "onor Students Prof. John P. Dawson of the Law School will address the 23rdAnnual honor's Convocation Friday, April 26, in place of Vdiscount Halifax, British ambassador to the United' States, who was originally schedul- ed to speak. Prof. Dawson came to Michigan as an assistant professor in 1927. Recently he held a war position as Acting Regional Economic Coun- selor in the State Department. Viscount Halifax spoke at Honor's Convocation in 1944. .Saturday Work Is Approved by Un ion Off icials Local Membership Still Resents Overtime Bernard Johnson, vice-president of the International Bricklayers Union, announced yesterday that the un- ion s executive committee had ap- proved continuation of the six-day work week on the University's con- struction projects, but reactions of local union and construction officials indicated that the bitter controversy is far from being closed. 48-Hours Week Issue Louis Hackbart, secretary of the Bricklayers, Masons and Plasterers Union Local 14, said there will be "considerable resentment on the part of local contractors and union mem- bers." The bricklayers will meet today to discuss the 4-hour week issue. Henry de Koning, of the Ann Arbor General Contractors Association, said the contractors would also meet to- day to plan their next move in the dispute. Defense by Johnson Johnson defended the 48-hour week with the statement:- "The situation here is such that bricklayers must be brought from outside if the University program is to be completed. It is unfair to ask these men to furnish their own trans- portation and pay for room and board on a five-day week. There is little doublt of the importance of the Uni- versity program. The job will be done on a six-day basis." Hackbarth said the local union will continue the 40-hour week on jobs for local contractors but that no member of the union will be pre- vented from working for the George A. Fuller Co., University contractor, on a six-day basis. Predict Stoppage Local contractors have predicted that home construction here will be shut off if the 48-hour week is con- tinued on the University's projects. The contractors raised the current dispute last week by contending that they could not compete with the Uni- versity for labor if the double-pay- for-Saturday policy were continued. Meanwhile, the Ann Arbor Veterans and Citizens Housing Committee pre- pared to consider the problems of local contractors at a meeting Satur- day in City Hall. The contractors have been asked to attend the meet- ing. Nunn Discusses A VC Activities A meeting of the Willow Run chap- ter of AVC was held yesterday at which guest speaker Guy Nunn dis- cussed the national and state activ- ities of the AVC and Suzanne Ladei- are, described the activities of the Ann Arbor and Wilow Run chapters. Announcement that Dean of Stu- dents Joseph A. Bursley is to speak on the housing situation at the next meeting, to be held Wednesday, was made by Allen C. Weaver, secretary of the Willow Run chapter. Following his discussion, Dean Bursley will wel- come questions from the floor con- cerning housing problems. Poles Charge Nazis Pursue Atom Studies 1{eseareh Goes- on In Spain, UN Told NEW YORK, April 17-(P)-Po- land told the United Nations Secur- ity Council today there were some indications of Nazi scientific efforts to carry on atomic research in Spain and suggested that weapons even more terrible than the atomic bomb might be under experimentation there. The statement was made by Pol- ish delegate Oscar Lange with his demand that the United Nations collectively break off diplomtie relations with the regime of Gen- eralissimo Francisco Franco. France and Mexico joined in Po- land's effort to isolate Franco Spain from all the fifty-one members of the United Nations. Edward R. Stettinius, Jr., the United States delegate, ended the day's debate with a brief restate- ment of American objectives: (1) that the Franco government should be removed by the Spanish people and (2) that the overthrow should be peaceful. He did not say defi- nitely how the U. S. would vote on the Polish resolution. The French delegate, Henri Bon- net, asserted that "continuation of the existing situation in Spain con- stitutes a danger for international peace and security." Lange, in an hour-long arraign- ment of the Franco government, told the council and observers that six uranium mines existed in Spain, and suggested that their output could be the basis of atomic re- search there. He then chided the Allied governments on the score of secrecy surrounding any mention of the newest known weapons of the atomic age. "The question has been raised," Lange said, "whether atomic energy projects are actually in operation in Spain. There seems to be some indi- cation that at least an effort is be- ing made in this direction, though some of the governments represented at this table may have more informa- tion about it than up to now they have been willing to disclose to the world public. This question, how- ever, is a secondary one." Lange pointed to the frictions which closed the French frontier as a more immediate threat to peace. Ratification of VO Constitution Is Unanimous The State Association constitution was ratified unanimously by veterans at the Veterans' Organization meet- ing held last night in the Union. This move automatically makes the VO a member of the State Student Veterans' Association and thereby gives them a voice in the distribut- tion of the State Veterans' Trust Fund, now in Gov. Harry Kelly'sscon trol. Each student veterans' group of the various local vocational and aca- demic institutions are entitled to one vote in the Student Veterans' Associ- ation meetings. A conference of the SVA is scheduled for May 3 and 4, at Kalamazoo. Five members from the VO will be appointed by Ken Fleischauer, presi- dent of VO, to represent the Univer- sity of Michigan veterans at the con- ference. Kalamazoo College, with the coop- eration of Western Michigan College, will act as host during the confer- ence. WAA Authorizes 'Interim Permit' Aero Research To Start Immediately; Clarification on Airline Leases Awaited Temporary permission to occupy and operate Willow Run Airport was granted the University yesterday by the War Asset Administration, and Prof. Emerson W. Conlon, of the aeronautical engineering department, said that research and experimentation at the famed air base will 'begin immed- iately." 'Interim Permit' Authorized The WAA's announcement said the Reconstruction Finance Corp. had been authorized to grant an "interim permit" to the University "to maintain and operate the landing area and air- port facilities" at Willow Run. Pending the issuance of the formal IranClamps temporary permit, the RFC has been authorized to grant an immediate "right of entry," the WAA said. Censorship on Officials Await Word University officials, awaiting offi- News Reports cial notification of the WAA's deci- sion, assumed yesterday that the per- mit will authorize the University to U.S. State Department lease landing rights to the airlines Weighs Formal Action serving Detroit. Seven major airlines are seeking WASHINGTON, April 17-(AP)-An three-year contracts for landing Iron censorship, which some Ame- rights, including options for a three- can officials suspect originated in year extension. Moscow, was clamped by. Iran today Robert M. Averill, spokesman for upon all news dispatches by foreign the airlines, said operations could correspondents in that country. begin at Willow Run within 30 days The United States State Depart- after the government relinquishes possession. The port already has a ment, announcing the development terminal building. as soon as word of it was received- termnal uildnghere from the embassy at Tehran, Operate Cost-free was considering tonight what action Revenue from the leases would it should take in protest. A strong enable the University to operate the formal objection may be registered giant airfield cost-free. with the government of Premier University officials were unable to Ahmed Oavam. affirm that the University will accept 'Blind' Type use of Willow Run on a temporary The censorship is on the "bind" basis. A spokesman said that the type which denies to the authors of University's "attitude" will be deter- dispatches any information asto mined by the Board of Regents. how their stories are being changed. Provided the Regents approve the Newsmen regard this as a most dan- interim permit, the WAA's decision gerous form of news control since it will pave the way for a number of allows governments to distort the University and state projects, includ- meaning of stories without any re- ing pilotless aircraft research, wind course permitted the writer. tunnel experiments, an NROTC air In response to questions about cen- trainingdprogram and experiments sorship conditions in Russia itself, with radar in air navigation, the State Department said that Mos- Others To Use Field In addition to the Department of cow had exercised a blind censorship Aeronautical Engineering, five other 1or a period beginning about March schools and departments of the Uni- 1and ending March 2. versity plan to use Willow Run Air- Russian Censorship port's facilities, including the civil, The present censorship in Russia mechanical and electrical engineer- permits the writer of a news dispatch ing departments, the School of Busi- to see a copy of the censored story ness Administration and the School before it is telegraphed-but it makes of Forestry and Conservation, no provision, so far as is known here, of .oesty and Cos erkvhat he for the writer to seek changes in the Gov. Kelly said last week that the censored portions of the story. state was seeking facilitiesaWillow The censorship development came Run for air units of the statee militi a few hours after President Truman The program will not interfere with had announced the appointment of the University's plans for the airport, George V. Allen of Durham, N. C., to .Gv s.'be Ambassador to Tehran, succeeding The Umversity Flying Club will Wallace Murray who leaves that post probably move its program from Ann tomorrow because of illness. Allen is. A r Airport to Willow Run. the State Department's expert on Primarily Educational Iranian affairs. The University's negotiations for As one of the youngest men ever the air base opened Jan. 28. Although to be named ambassador, he was the University has sought the port hand-picked for the post in order to primarily for educational purposes, it reduce to a minimum the number of has indicated that the airlines would days it would be vacant at this criti- be accomodated as "a service to the cal time. He is expected to leave for people of Michigan." the new assignment in about 10 days. The airlines have been basing their future plans on Willow Run. Detroit City Airport has already been declar- Coal W al -Out ed inadequate and Wayne County Airport is not considered convenient for commercial airline purposes. n The airlines are particularly inter- ested in routing four-engine flights Small Many through Willow Run.Sm l Reports M n t rnen.r . , By SHIRLY FRANK A pastoral policy will necessitate a severe decline in the German birth rate over a short period of years, Prof. Theodore Newcomb of the so- ciology department predicted in a Camputs Voters To Receive Data On Candidates An election bulletin, listing the pe- titions of the candidates for the Stu- dent Congress, will be distributed to students Wednesday, Harry Jackson, president of the Men's Judiciary Council, announced yesterday. The qualifications and platform of each candidate, stated in less than 100 words, will be reported in the bulletin. If particular groups of can- didates wish to run on the same plat- form, they will be able to pool their space. This will enable students to pick candidates with similar aims for the several choices necessary un- der the proportional-representation system of balloting. Handbills Banned The Men's Judiciary Council has banned the placing of election posters and handbills on University bulletin' boards. Th petitions for Student Congress, not to exceed 100 words and bearing 50 signatures, must be placed in the Student Congress petition box in the Union student offices before 5 p.m. Saturday. Information for Petitions Candidates should include the fol- lowing information on their petitions: 1. Full name. 2. Ann Arbor address. 3. Ann Arbor telephone. 4. School year and semester. 5. College and de- panel discussion on the De-indus- trialization of Germany, held by Econcentrics, student economics club, yesterday. The recently announced plan for reestablishment of the German eco- nomy provides for a standard of liv- ing approximating that of 1932, Prof. Edgar Hoover of the economics de- partment said. German exports of steel, chemicals, and machinery, are to be reduced, and Germany will de- pend mainly on her exports of coal, textiles, glass, and ceramics to fi- nance her imports, he said. German Industry Emphasizing the relatively late growth of German industry, Prof. Benjamin Wheeler of the history de- partment pointed to the factthat de- industrializing Germany would in- volve turning the clock back to 1880, not as far as would be necessary for another country. Speaking from the political point of view, Prof. Arthur Bromage of the political science department said that the policy of de-industrialization must be carried out even if it makes it impossible for Germany to pay for her imports, reparations, or her own civil administration. Before extensive re-industrializa- tion is allowed to take place, Ger- many must prove that she is denazi- fled, decentralized, and democratized, Prof. Bromage said. Production of Chemicals Production of coal, chemicals, and steel elsewhere in Europe beside Ger- many, probably at higher cost; in- creased competition in world mar- kets by Germany as In exporter of textiles, coal, glass and ceramics; and curtailment of the German market for wood, iron ore, and food were mentioned by Prof. Hoover as prob- lems arising out of German de-indus- PCA To Use Willow .Run NEW YORK, April 15-(P)-Penn- sylvania Central Airlines will begin using the Willow Run Airport, near Detroit, within "two weeks or a month," Robert Wilson, PCA vice- president, said tonight. "Just as quickly as we possibly can, we want to begin operations," Wilson said. "It will take from two weeks to a month to install ticket counters and other facilities." Wilson said some PCA planes would continue to use the Detroit City Air- port but the Willow Run field was needed chiefly for four-engine air- craft. "None of the airports in Wayne County have hangar facilities for the larger planes and the runways are too short in case of unfavorable wind conditions for landing," he .r lam uiosig v w WASHINGTON, April 17-(IP)- Reconversion is suffering "a setback which will steadily grow worse day by day if the coal strike continues," Civilian Production Administrator John D. Small reported tonight. "Scores of plants are down because of lack of fuel," Small stated after a telephone survey of key factories and industries, made at the request of Secretary of Labor Swellenbach. The 17-day work stoppage by John L. Lewis' soft coal United Mine Work- ers is increasing the injury done by the recent steel strike, "insofar as its overall effect on production is concerned," the production chief said. "In addition to consumers goods and the production of materials for the housing program, essential rail- road and utility services will be hit severely if the work stoppage is pro- longed." The checkup, he said, revealed that SPRING CONCERT TODAY: Pro f. Reveli7To Conduct Orchestra e The University Symphony Orches- tra, under the direction of Prof. Wil- inn, n Rntr mii vm t.-cnt to n- - c status. There are about 85 active members at present. the Michigan Composer's Club and her sonata for ninna will he ner- i i !I