CHiN A'S CIVIL WAR See Page 4 Li L wp4b 743 titg FAIR AND COOLER VOL. LVI, No. 160 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JUNE 9, 1946 PRICE FIVE CENTS Vets Satisfied with 'U' Educational Facilities Daily Survey Reveals Questions Prepared By Newcomb, Tibbitts Employ Scientific Selection The overwhelmingmajority of the University's male veterans are satis- fled with the education they are receiving here, a Daily survey of veterans' opinion reveals. Designed to gain an accurate picture of veterans' views and plans, the survey reached 100 of the campus' 5,155 veterans enrolled this semester. Questions by Newcomb, Tibbitts The questions were prepared by Prof. Theodore Newcomb, of the sociolo- by department, a public opinion expert who assisted in a public opinion sur- vey for the U. S. Army in Germany, and by Clark Tibbits, director of the Veterans Service Bureau. Members of The Daily staff polled the veterans, who were scattered through every part of 'Ann Arbor, Willow Village, Ypsilanti and other out- lying sections. The veterans to be polled were selected by Prof. Newcomb by means of a formula which guarantees a scientific sampling. Minority Favor Third Term Upsetting previous predictions that most veterans want a full-length summer semester, less than half the veterans polled said that the University should go back to the three-semester year. Less than half indicated they will attend the eight-week summer ses- sion this year. Slightly more than half of the 100 veterans were at least fairly well satisfied with campus social life, but nearly one-third said it had aspects which were undesirable. Coeds Called "Mature' A majority of the veterans believed that Michigan coeds are "mature for their age," although only 41 were of the opinion that the average coed would make a good wife. m1kThe overwhelming majority refuted the recent newspaper attack on coed morals with 81 declaring that it was "greatly exaggerated." Concerning campus activities, the majority of veterans polled said they had no personal interest in fraternities, the Student Religious Association and student government. Perform 'Useful Function' ,Y The majority also said that fraternities, The Daily, University athletics and University counseling services were performing a useful function. More than half of those polled indicated they will use all of the time in college to which they are entitled under the G.I. Bill of Rights, while they were almost unanimous in the intention to complete a degree program. More than four-fifths of the veterans intend to complete their education at the University. AFL Seamen's Is Te morarily W.alkout Averted; TELL STORY OF FABULOUS JEWEL THEFT-Col A. C. Miller (right), Allentown; Pa., of Provost Marshall General's Ollice, and his assistant, Lt. Col. J. S. Myers (left), New York City, go over the five in their office in Washington after disclosing the arrest ofa WAC captain and her Col. husband, Col. and Mrs. J. W. Durant, in the theft of a fabulous $1,500,000 of jewels and other treasure from Kroriberg Castle owned by the German house of Hesse. (AP lWir'ephoto). ANN ARBOR PROBLEM: "Potential Delinquents" Need Better Understandg-Morse " "Mor * * # * * * Questions Used in Daily Poll, 1. How well satisfied are you with the education you are getting at University? very well, 44; fairly well, 46; not very well, 8; not at all, 1; uncertain, 1. 2. Do you think you r c sses are conducted on a sufficiently high level of maturity? yes, 88 no, 7; uncertain, 5. 3. Do you have any changes to suggest in curriculum or teaching methods at the University? yes, 60; no, 33; uncertain, 6; no answer, 1. (Those who answered "yes' were asked what changes they had in mind.) 4. Do you intend to use all of your G.I. time? yes, 66; no, 26; un- certain, 8. 5. Do you plan to complete a degree program? yes, 96; no, 1; uncer- tain, 3. 6. Are you thinking of changing to another college or university? yes, 13; no, 81; uncertain, 6. 7. Do you plan to attend the summer session here in 1946? yes, 43; no, 47; uncertain, 10. 8. Do you think the University should offer a full-length summer term of 16 weeks? yes, 45; no, 46; uncertain, 9. 9. How about social life at the University-how well satisfied are you with that? very well, 27; fairly well, 31; not very well, 16; not all satisfied, 10; uncertain, 15; no answer, 1. 10. Is there any aspect of University social life which you consider undesirable? yes, 31; no, 56; uncertain, 12; no answer, 1. (Those who answered "yes" were also asked to name the undesirable aspects.) 11. (How do the women students at the University impress you?) 12. Do they seem to you reasonably mature for their age? yes, 67; no, 22; uncertain, 10; no answer, 1. 13. Do you think the average woman student here possesses the qualities of a good wife? yes, 41; no, 21; uncertain, 38. 14. Did you happen to see (or hear about) the story in the Detroit Free Press about the University coeds? yes, 100. If "yes," what did you think about it? greatly exaggerated, 81; somewhat exaggerated, 11; more or less correct, 3; understated, 0; uncertain, 5. 15. Do you have a personal interest in the following activities? Fra- ternities-yes, 36; no, 55; uncertain, 5; no answer, 4. The Daily-yes, 74; no, 26; uncertain, 0. Student Religious Association-yes, 14; no, 54;, uncertain, 32. University athletics-yes, 77; no, 17; uncertain, 6. Student Government-yes, 34; no, 53; uncertain, 13. University Counseling Ser- vices-yes, 60; no, 25; uncertain, 15. 16. Do you think the following activities are performing a useful function? Fraternities-yes, 56; no, 22; uncertain, 18; no answer, 4. The Daily-yes, 97; no, 0; uncertain, 3. Student Religious Association-yes, 43; no, 5; uncertain, 52. University athletics-yes, 90; no, 3; uncertain, 7. Student Government-yes, 44; no, 25; uncertain, 31. University Coun- seling Services-yes, 71; no, 13; uncertain, 16. 17. Do you feel that you are getting adequate information and advice from University sources regarding your personal problems? yes, 40; no, 32; uncertain, 28 ... regarding personal problems? yes, 48; no, 24; un- certain, 27; no answer, 1. (Those who answered "no" to either question were asked what they thought the University could do about it.) Married veterans were asked to write on the poll sheet their own answers to the following questions: 1. Is your wife here with you? regularly, 25; only part of the time, 0; only for occasional visits, 1. 2. How well satisfied is your wife with her present life? well satis- fied, 13; fairly well satisfied, 10; not very well satisfied, 3; not at all satis- fied, 0. 3. (What could the University do to make life more enjoyable for your wife?) 4. How many children do you have? no children, 15; one child, 9; 2 children, 1. 5. If you have no children, do you expect to have any while you are at the University? yes, 5; no, 8; uncertain, 2. By NATALIE BAGROW The need in Ann Arbor in regard to the juvenile delinquency problem is not for more recreational centers nor for the reform of the detention home, but rather for better under- standing of the treatment of chil- dren who are only "potential delin- quents," according to William Morse, Universityreducational psychologist and director of the Fresh Air Camp. Confusion regarding the problems of children, both normal and delin- quent, is at the root of the trouble in Ann Arbor, Morse said in an in- terview yesterday. Public Confused Questions of policy, he declared, are the cause of the general public's confusion about theories of punish- ment, leniency and therapy. This problem, Morse said, has been pretty well solved by trained specialists in youth problems, but the attitude of the community has still to be clari- flied on the issues of treatment of delinquent children. One factor which is not generally realized, Morse said, is that there are three kinds of delinquent children. He enumerated these as being chil- dren who are simply homeless or without sufficient parental guidance, children who are already well on the way to maladjustment and border- line cases between the two divisions, or what he called "potential delin- quents." Fine lines must also be drawn, he said, between children who require hospital or detention home care and those who need only specialized and individualized attention, observation periods, planned placement and close follow-up by trained workers. Ann Arbor Commended Ann Arbor's achievements in set- tilg up recreationalcenters for the youth of the comunity Morse termed commendable, but, he said, these centers are designed mainly for nor- mal well-adjusted children and chil- dren of the maladjusted type can- not be cared for on a super-imposed basis such as are the YMCA, the YWCA, the Boy Scouts or the Girl Scouts. Delinquent and potentially delin- quent children must be approached in their natural group, Morse de- lared, which calls for a trained worker who is free to live in the neighborhood in which he works, and who can thus organize activities for the children in their natural group. "Children are not inclined to go voluntarily to the ordinary group worker except to make trouble," he said, "which means that the worker must go to them-" Widespread Probhm "The situation in Ann Arbor," Morse commented, "is symptomatic of the general cultural picture in this re- gard. There are very few communi- ties in the country which are not going through the same throes of readjusting their methods of hand- ling delinquent children." "The cultural lag," which Morse described concerns the failure of the communities of the nation to keep up with the advances made in gain- ing new information, techniques and understandings which "ought to be brought to bear on the problem," Senate Agrees Tohet Truman Cut Spending WAShING TON, June 8-(P)-The Senate agreed today to give the Pres- ident a free hand in cutting approp- riations to tay within an anual Congressional budget. Majority Leader Barkley (Dem., Ky.) got the provision put into the Congressional Reorganization Bill on a voice vote. He protested as "too restrictive" a section in the original bill requiring the President to make a horizontal cut in all appropriations if he finds the gap between govern- ment revenues and spending is great- er than Congress has approved. This was the only major decision reached during a. six-hour session in which the whole mneasure came un- der attack. Senator Connally (Dem., Tex.) shouted that "we ourselves are dis- crediting ourselves by telling the country we are running the Senate in a slipshod way - that we need some- body to come in and tell us what to do." Some senators said privately that they thought the bill "as good as dead," It will be tie Senate's order of busines;s when work is resumed Monday, but Barkley is anxious to get on to consideration of OPA ex- tension legislation. The Democratic leader passed the word that after two hours or so of additional debate on the reorgani- zation bill he will move to take up OPA if no vote is in prospect. Lay- ing the reorganization measure aside likely would mean that the Senate never would get back to it. Italians Monarchists Charge Fraud In Plebiscite Naples Riots Cause Injuries, 2 Deaths By The Associated Press, ROME, June 8-A monarchist leader charged today there had been fraud in the plebiscite in which Italy chose to be a republic, and de- manded an Aliled review of the bal- loting that doomed the reign of King Umberto II. Monarchist demonstrations, mean- while, subsided today after causing two deaths and a score of injuries in Naples and rioting in Rome and Palermo, Federal police said the death toll was only two, and Minister of the Interior Giuseppe Romita de- clared the entire country was quiet. Chief Justice Giuseppe Pagano dis- closed this afternoon that late ar- rival of some returns would delay over Sunday the supreme court certi- fication of the election, and it ap- peared that the Italians wouldihave to wait two or three days for formal proclamation of the republic. Inter- ior officials put the republic 2,011,000 votes ahead of the monarchy. Tullio Benedetti, head of the Na- tional Monarchial Union, in letters to Rear Admiral Ellery W. Stone, chief allied commissioner, and' to al- lied diplomatic missions in Rome, declared "an infinite number of pro- tests" were being received "about the gravest electoral frauds designed to make the outcome in favor of the republic," Walter Names Scholarship, Prize Winners Scholarships and prizes for 28 stu- dents in the College of Literature, Science and the Arts were announced yesterday by Associate Dean Erich A. Walter, chairman of the scholarship committee of the literary college. Simon Mandelbaum Scholarships were awarded to William R. McDon-. ell, '47, Bernard Agranoff, '47, and Robert D. Woodward, '47. McDonell also received the Paul F. Bagley Scholarship in Chemistry and Agra- noff was awarded the Elizabeth Sar- gent Lee Medical Prize. Library Service Scholarships were awarded to Emilie Wiggins, '46, El- eanor Meacham, Grad., Elinor Burn- ham, Grad., E. Jean Holcombe, Grad., and Enid Karsten, Grad. Leonard Choen, '48, and Irma Eic- horn, '48, received the James B. Hunt Scholarships. Thi Samuel J. Platt Scholarships were awarded to Howard A. Cole, 46, and Margaret M. Farmer, '46. Rita C. Calahan, '48, and Betty G. Goodman, '47, won the Phoebe How- ell Scholarships. Faculty Scholarships were awarded to Robert W. Rumm, '48, and Neva Meisen, '47. Other scholarships and awards were given the following students: Esther Giovannone, '48, the Martha Robinson Hawkins Scholarship; Don- ald La Badie, '47, the John Pitt Marsh Scholarship; Gene Constance McArtor, '47, the M. Gomber Schol- arship; John G. McDonald, '47, the W. J. Hammill Prize; Beatrice D. Miller, '48, the Agnes C. Weaver Scholarship; and Millicent Saari, '47, the Fanny Ranson Marsh Scholar- ship. Other members of the scholarship committee are Prof. Richard C. Boys of the English department, Prof. Kenneth L. Jones of the botany de- partment, Prof. Palmer A. Throop+ of the history department, and Prof. Mischa Titiev of the anthropology department. DEAN HAYWARD KENISTON * *.* Literary School' Changes Rules' OnAttendance A new regulation on class atten- dance, whereby instructors will con- sider the absence record of each stu- dent individually, has been adopted by the faculty of the literary col- lege to be inaugurated in the fall semester, Dean Hayward Keniston announced yesterday. Replacing the absence regulations which have been in effect for more than 20 years, the new ruling was described by Dean Keniston as a "more realistic approach" to the mat- ter. The new rulings, which were unanimously adopted, read: "1. Students are expected to at- tend class regularly. "2. When the instructor considers the number of absences excessive, that is, when a student's absence from a course endangers his satis- factory academic progress, the in- structor should send a written report on the case to the Administrative Board for action. Freshmen and sophomores should bb reported to the Chairman of the Academic Coun- selors, 108 Mason Hall; juniors and seniors to the Associate Dean, 1220 Angell Hall. "Instructors of freshmen are par- ticularly urged to keep accurate enough records on attendance so that they may report absences to the office of the Academic Counselors at five weeks and at eight weeks." In effect, under the new regula- tions, action on absences by each student will depend on his scholastic record or on the wishes of the in- structor. Absences excused by the Health Service or other authorized officials will not be counted against a student's attendance record. Under the present ruling, instruc- tors are supposed to report three consecutive absences. Famine Funds Funds from house collections for the Famine Relief Drive are due from 8 a.m. to noon tomorrow at the Famine Committee table in the lobby of the League. Rowland Westervelt, treasurer of the committee, has requested that funds be submitted in sealed envelopes on which the name of the contributing house is written. Hearing of Smith Case Is Postponed Postponement of the extradition hearing of Maynard E. (Snuffy) Smith, Congressional Medal of Hon- or winner who is charged with failure to keep up alimony payments, has been gained until June 28, at Wash- ington, D.C. Ask CIO Opposes . Goverunent's Settlement Plan Working Hours Issue Forms Basic Difficulty By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, June 8-The im- mediate threat of an AFL seamen's strike blew over today but a new government maneuver to stop CIO sailors from walking off ships June 15 began generating union opposi- tion. The AFL sailors union of the Pacific halted a strikevote and began talk- ing wage-hour issues with West Coast shipowners. A spokesman for the owners reported "definite progress." That happened in San Francisco. Apparently it scuttled a possibility that both AFL and CIO seamen might be on strike simultaneously on all coasts by mid-June. Here in Washington, government conciliators stepped up efforts to dis- solve the CI0 end of the maritime crisis. They produced a plan to give sailors time off with pay in port in- stead of a shorter work week at sea. To provide something definite for discussion, they suggested retention of the present 56-hour week at sea' and a day off with pay for every 14 days afloat. Neither the men who operate the ships nor those who man them show- ed any inclination to accept the plan as a complete solution to the issue of working hours-biggest barrier in the way of an agreement. They took no official, public stand, and negotiations continued. However, union spokesmen said the proposal ignores their fundamental demand, for a cut in the 56-hour week at sea. One said privately the strike would not be called off until there was some modification. Assistant Secretary of Labor John W. Gibson told a news conference both sides in the dispute are giving "thorough discussion" to the plan for time off with pay in port. Ad- ditional conferences between medi- ators, operators and union negotiators were set for tomorrow. Gibson said he couldn't predict whether time off with pay in port would be the formula for wiping out the threat of a strike. He said he saw nothing to warrant real opti- mism that the walkout will be avert- ed. Chinese Peace Seems Unlikely Truce Prolongment Request Is Refused NANKING, June 8--(RP)-Chinese minority parties fought today to pro- long the Manchurian truce but the government army commander in Manchuria said he expected to re- sume his advance when the armis- tice with the Communists ends at noon June 22. The democratic league, the youth party and the nonpartisans, three minority political groups, prepared to meet with the U.S. special envoy, General Marshall, and urge that any peace settlement include political as well as military issues. The 15-day truce which Marshall arranged to take effect Friday was designed to give time for a permanent agreement to end the civil warfare between the Communists and the government in Manchuria. "To separate political from military questions is a risky business," declar- ed Dr. Lo Lung-Chi, spokesman of the democratic league. "We want to make these 15 days a success and if necessary prolong the period (of the truce) to make peace solid and per-/ manent." Dr. Coggeshall To Leave U' Appointment of Dr. Lowell T. Cog- geshall, professor of tropical diseases, as Chairman of the University of Chicago Department of Medicine was revealed last night by Dean Henry F. Vaughan of the School of Public UN Probe Truman Will Address House Case Labor Bill To Be Subject of Message WASHINGTON, June 8 - (P) - House leaders alerted members today to be on hand for a special message from President Truman next week, and Chairman Sabath (Dem., Ill.) said he expects it to be a veto of the Case Labor Disputes Bill. Sabath would not make a fiat prediction but said his idea of what is coming is based on a conversation he had with the chief executive. House Democratic Leader McCor- mack of Massachusetts told newsmen, however, that he had "no positive knowledge" of what the President will do. At the White House, presidential secretary Charles G. Ross told news- men the President will make his posi- tion known in a message "whether or not he signs the bill." UN To Study Atomic Energy Control NEW YORK, June 8 -(W)- The atom bomb, potentially the most ex- plosive issue in the world today, goes before the United Nations Fri- day with the convening of the Com- mission for Control of Atomic En- ar, v visor as one of the most important ever delivered before a United Na- tions group, was still incomplete today and the advisor indicated that last-minute consultations would be held with President Truman early next week. 3. The elimination from national armaments of atomic weapons and of all major weapons adaptable to mass destruction. 4. Effective safeguards by way of inspection and other means to pro-