PARTY ISSUE See (Graif ton, Page Y Lw I t *~at CLOUDY AND COOLER VOL. LVI, No. 95 ANN AltiIOR, MICllfCAN, SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 194 PRICE FIVE CENTS Government Acts on Model Village Plan Sample Willow Run Land Redesigned A major move in the plan to trans- form Willow Village into a perma- nent model community was made yes- terday when directors of the Willow Run Area Planning Commission met with Federal Surplus Property Ad- ministration officials from Cleveland and Detroit. Working with three sample par- cels of Pederal land already improved with roads, sewage and water facili- ties, the Commission's architects, Saarinsen and Swanson, interna- tionally-famous town planners, have redesigned the land into building lots with areas alloted to streets, roads and public buildings. John Lynch, in charge of real estate for the SPA office in Cleve- land, will take these plans to Wash- ington next week. Federal ap- praisers are now being appointed to appraise the land value, and arrangements are being made to cut down the length of time re- quired for advertising before dis- posing of the Federal surplus property. The County Board of Supervisors, meeting last week, adopted a resolu- tion whereby they will exercise their priority to buy the land after the Federal appraisal. The Planning Commission is already negotiating with a private firm (reported author- itatively to be Henry Kaiser's small home contracting company) to take over the land from the county. Meanwhile, Federal engineers will start immediately appraising those water and sewage facilities usable in the housing development. The Ypsilanti Township Board has taken steps to negotiate with the Govern- ment for the purchase of these litil ities. Working with maps showing the original lots purchased by the Gov- ernment as well as the present use of the land in streets, dormitories, and the present utilities, the Com- mission's architects prepared a study of these three "surplus" sec- tions. None of the parcels are now i use. Classified according to the type of temporary building formerly oc- cupying them, the parcels are: 1) land south of Holmes Road, formerly occupied by dormitories; 2) land be- tween Holmes and ,'Clark Roads, formerly occupied by trailer houses; and 3) land east of Midway Blvd, formerly occupied by private trailers. The Planning Commission was made official advisor to the Federal Government on surplus property last year. Serving in this capacity at the meeting were Geer and Schneider representing the a r c h i t e c t s. Government was represented by Lynch and his assistant, Frank Mis- kell, from Cleveland, and by Harry Grayson from the local SPA office in Detroit. The annual meeting of the Com- mission to elect new directors was announced for May 9. Nega oticions in Strike Stopped Early End of Electric Dispute Is Not In Sight NEW YORK, March 22-(P)-Wage negotiations between Westinghouse Electric Corporation and the strik- ing United Electrical, Radio and Ma- chine Workers of America, CIO, "have been broken off," mediator William H. Davis said late today. "The mediators are retiring from the case," he said, adding that they would make a report tto the Secre- tary of Labor, "probably next Mon- day." Arthur S. Meyer was the other mediator in the dispute. The company has offered what they called a 15.1 cents hourly in- crease, but the union claimed it was no better than 9.7 cents because of clauses which the union said would reduce incentive, 'bonus, vacation and other pay rates. University Fire Contract Asked William A. Lucking requested an injunction against the Board of Re- gents making contracts for fire pro- STRIKE-BREAKERS? Police Accused of I-If i f i SUrk By The Associated Press ISHPEMING, Mich., March 22- Charges that State Police were being used as strike-breakers were made today by an official of the CIO Unit- ed Steel Workers as a back-to-work movement was reported continuing among 2,000 striking workers on the Marquette iron range. Army Reduces Claim To Year Draft Extension Eisenhower Gives Up Indefinite Draft Status WASHINGTON, March 22-()- The army solidified its position for a one-year draft extension today as General Dwight D. Eisenhower with- drew his request for indefinite con- tinuance. The chief of staff's modification was explained to the House Military Committee by Secretary of War Robert P. Patterson. 'Both men had testified before the advocating an indefinite extension of the law expiring on May 15 and Patterson pleading for a one-year continuation. "Since then," Patterson told the committee as he continued his tes- timony today, "I have discussed it with the chief of staff and he also is in favor of one year." Eisenhower did not testify today. Patterson said he and the chief of staff agreed that the length of service under continuing legislation shoul'd not exceed 18 months and that an extension for a full 12 months would permit the army to discharge fathers now in service and to refrain from inducting more par- ents. They are willing, Patterson added, to accept a limitation that no men be inducted over the age of 25 or under 18. Delin qiuentDriversI The Dean of Students office warned yesterday that at least 60 percent of the University driving permits which expired in March have not yet been renewed. Student drivers who have not reported their 1946 license number to the Dean of Students office, Room 2, University Hall, are re- quested to do so at their earliest opportunity. Disposal -of War Goods Scored By Committee WASHINGTON, March 22-()- The Senate War Investigating Com- mittee formerly headed by President Truman today scorchingly criticized the job the Goverment has done thus far in disposing of unused war goods abroad, particularly in Brit- am. Senator Mead (D-NY), present chairman, told the Senate later the State Department "does not dispute the facts" set out by the committee in charging that Britain put on "onerous" restrictions that forced down prices and gave this country a poor bargain in disposing of its left- over war goods there. Mead told a reporter however, that the depart- ment protested some of the commit- tee's conclusions. The committee presented figures indicating that the State Depart- ment's bulk sale settlement with Britain last December for uncon- sumed lend-lease goods and left-over American property represented a re- covery of only 10.7 per cent of the original cost. Thomas Shane of Detroit Diectr of District 29, USW-CIO, made the charge in a telegram to Governor Kelly, declaring: 'Authoritatively Informed' "I am authoritatively informed by representatives of the United Steel Workers of America CIO in the up- per peninsula that Michigan State Police are being used to aid in the breaking of the strike of iron ore miners at the properties of the Cleve- land Cliffs iron Company, Inland Steel Con pany and North Range Mining Company. "Police activities on the scene far overstep their proper role of main- taining peace and are an encourage- ment to strikebreakers. Request you take steps to end these actions and to guarantee the right of striking ore miners to peacefully picket these properties" Shane said information from un- ion officials in the strike area indi- cated "the State Police pressure was being used to intimidate pickets." 'Eight Carloads Of Police' "Officials of the Union tll me there were eight carloads of State Police up there today and that the police were being very busy about It," Shane declared. A spokesman a Governor Kelly's office said Shane's telegram had. been received but that preliminary investigation showed only two State Police were at the mines today as some of the strikers returned to their jobs. Clerk Names Russian Aceuts Its Spy 1Probe' MONTREAL, March 22 - (' - Fred Rose, Communist and member of Canada's Parliament, and Sam Carr, national organizer of the La- bor-Progressive Party, were "recruit- ing agents" in a Russian organization of agents in Canada, a lorner code clerk in the Soviet eilx-cosy at O- tawa asserted today. The clerk, 26-year-old Igo' Go- zenko, testified in police court that he exposed the Moscow-directed es- pionage ring because lie had become convinced that Canadian democracy was better than the Russian way of life. He charged that Russia used the Communist Party in Canada as a pivotal part of the Soviet spy net- work and had the NKVD, Soviet se- cret police-formerly known as the OGPU-in the Soviet embassy in Ottawa "and everywhere." He named more than 40 Canadians and Russians in connection with the network. Eleven were Russians, most of them connected with the embassy. Gouzenko, mystery man of the spy probe, testified at a preliminary hearing for Rose, accused of sending secret scientific information to Soviet agents. Rose joined the Labor-Pro- gressive Paty after the Communist Party was outlawed during the war, and was first Communist elected to the Canadian Parliament. MSC Consriidion Programi Expanded EAST LANSING, March 22-(')-- The State Board of Agriculture, gov- erning body of Michigan State Col- lege, today authorized the construc- tion of a new science building and an addition to the present power plant at the college. In addition to the two new build- ings, construction work is now in progress on two men's dormitories, three women's dormitories, a new classroom building, a home manage- ment laboratory, an addition to the administration building, six apart- ment buildings for married couples and 52 Quonset huts to house veter- ans. Reich Port Food Riots In lens ified By The Associated Press HAMBURG, March 22-Looting of food stores by hungry Germans in- creased in Hamburg today and a British medical officer declared that the first definite signs of starvation were apparent among many residents of Germany's second largest city. The police ordered food dealers to board up their shop windows as an emergency measure against bands of men, women and children who have stormed nearly 60 bread stores in the last four days. Guards were placed at the larger shops. 20) shops Looted In the last 24 hours, 20 bread shops have been broken into by groups of men, women and children. Most of them demand bread without ration cards. When refused they break win- dows and leap over counters, seize loaves of bread and escape before the police can arrive. The British medical officer de- clared that yellow faces, extreme thinness and dejection-the first signs of starvation-were discernible among many Hamburg civilians. Speaking from his experience in Holland where he had been during the widespread starvation there last year, he said: Just Like Dutch "They (the Germans) are just like the Dutch when the famine swept Holland. People then were collap- sing in the streets. I think it will be worse than that here." Factory foremen in the Hamburg area reported a sharp increase in ab- senteeism among the workers since the slash of the food ration in the British zone from 1,500 to approxi- mately 1,000 calories .daily. (The average in the United States is about 2,500 calories daily, with the con- sumption higher for actitve workers.) Reports increased of Germans col- lapsing at their work. One German hospital doctor said at least five per- sons were admitted in the last two days after falling on the streets be- cause of undernourishment. * ' * Lehman'Pit Out FoodCris ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., March 22 -(LP-UNRRA's Director General, Herbert Lehman, told a council meet- ing today that former President Herbert Hoover and Secretary of Agriculture Clinton Anderson "do not recognize the full size of the food emergency which faces the world." He referred to a statement by An- derson that the emergency would be short, and by Hoover that it will be over when the new harvest is in. "We have no right to plan here on the basis that the emergency will be over next winter" Lehman said. Navy AmBomb Test Postponed Heavy Congressional Work Causes Delay WASHINGTON, March 22 -()-- President Truman tonight announced a 6-week postponement of the atom bomb test scheduled to start May 15 at Bikini Atoll in the Pacific. He attributed the delay to a heavy run of congressional business which would prevent many congressmen who desire to witness the experiments from being there. The announcement was issued through Charles G. Ross, White House press secretary, who said the statement, giving no other reason for the postponement, covered the ground. Asked specifically if the interna- tional situation had any bearing,, Ross replied that he could not go be- yond the statement but he added that he had no reason to believe there were any international implications, Stalin Affirms Faith in UNO; Says Fear of War Caused by Propaganda, ____ ____ ___ ____ ____ ___ ____ __A FRENCH OFFICIALS VISIT TRUMAN ... Leon Blum, (left), former French premier and envoy extraordinary and French ambassador Henri Bonnet (right) walk arm-in-arm with President Harry S. Truman on the White House lawn. Blum is here for French-American economic conferences. SCHOOL REFORMY II Prof. Alberty Advocates Practical Chan"es in High School Program A curriculum which deals with the broad problem of human living must replace the traditional subjects now taught in the secondary schools, Prof. Harold Alberty of Ohio State Uni- all Chairmen Application Date Extended The deadline for applications for Senior Ball committee chairmanships has been extended to April 1. Two co-chairmen in charge of all committees, and chairmen of the patrons, decorations, publicity, music, refreshments, programs and building committees will be chosen equally from the literary school and engi- neering school senior classes, which are sponsoring the dance. Applications may be turned in to Pat Barrett, president of the literary school senior class, Don Snider, presi- dent of the engineering school senior class, Jean Athay, Betty Vaughn, Paul John, Frank Ruzicka, and Ar- thur Renner. They may also be placed in the Judiciary Council peti- tion box in the undergraduate office in the League. Kelly Appoints Veteran Board LANSING, March 22-(AP)--Gover- nor Kelly today appointed the six- man board which will administer the state's $50,000,000 Veterans' Trust Fund set up by the 1946 special leg- islative session. The six, all veterans of World War II, are: David J. Gothold, of Detroit, and Dunlap C. Clark, of Kalamazoo, Am- erican Legion representatives; Otto Beaudoin of Detroit, and W. Emmer- son Scott, of Caro, Veterans of For- eign Wars; Bonif ace Maile of De- troit, Disabled American Veterans; and John R. Worden of Detroit, Am- erican Veterans of World War II (AMVETS). CLA To 'Elect New P1-AQ; 0 t. T ilnd,1 ,V versity told 200 secondary school1 teachers and administrators lasti night.c Speaking here before a confer-1 ence of the Michigan Curriculum Planning Committee of the State De-I partment of Public Instruction, Prof. Alberty said that this reorganization is necessary if the schools are to meet the needs of young people. He anticipated opposition to such a program from teachers and the public unless a program is devised to help teachers develop new types of materials and to secure participation in its planning. For this reason, he said, the Michigan Department of Public Instruction is proceeding properly in encouraging curriculum planning by local schools and com- munities. The conference, which was called at the University by the Michigan Curriculum Planning Committee, will end this afternoon. B-29 Bombers' To Fly to Pole Air Forces Cooperate On Canadian Project WASHINGTON, March 22-(R)- The Army Air Force disclosed tonight preparations for flights by three long range B-29 bombers to the region of the magnetic North Pole to obtain technical data for Arctic flying. A carefully worded announcement linked the undertaking with the Ca- nadian Army's current "musk ox" expedition to the strategic far north area into which the Navy also has sent the aircraft carrier Midway for tests. The Army Air Forces, at Canada's invitation, are cooperating with the musk ox expedition which sarted on a 3,130-mile, 81-day swing around northwest Canada this month to ob- tain data for military operations un- der extreme cold weather conditions. Starting from Edmonton, Alberta, the B-29 flights "will be the closest approximation to actual military transport airborne operation under Arctic conditions ever attempted," the War Department said. States .Nations, Armies 'Want To Keep Peace Accuses Warmongers Of Fostering Discord By The Associated Press MOSCOW, March 22-Prime Min- ster Generalissimo Stalin today ex- ressed conviction that neither the ations of the world nor their armies re seeking another war, and af- firmed his confidence in the United Tations Organization as "a serious Instrument" for preserving peace. The Russian leader made his as- ertions in a written reply to three uestions put to him by the Associ- ted Press last Tuesday. His reply was dated today. (Stalin's forthright statements immediately produced world-wide reaction, and were hailed generally with gratification and hope. U. S. congressmen quoted it as indicat- ing greater success for the United Nations Organization, and as a re- nunciation of any militaristic am- bitions by Russia. Observers in London said the interview had eased tension.) The letter to Stalin began: "In view of the many questions be- ing asked in various parts of the world and the anxiety being ex- pressed over keeping the peace, may I respectfully address several ques- tions to you?" This introduction was followed by three questions which are quoted be- low together with Stalin's answers. Question: "What importance do you attach to the United Nations Organization as a means of pre- serving world peace?" Answer: "I attach great Impor- tance to the 'United Nations Orgai- zation as it is a serious instrument for the preservation of peace and in- ternational security. The strength of this organization consists in. that it is based on the principle of equality of states and not on the principle of the domination of one state over oth- ers. If the United Nlations Organiza- tion succeeds in preserving in the future this principle of equality it will unquestionably play a great and positive role in guaranteeing uni- versal peace and security." Question: "What in your opin- ion is responsible for the current fear of war. felt by many peoples in many lands?" Answer: "I am convinced that neither the nations nor their armies are seeking another war. They de- sire peace and are endeavoring to secure peace. This means that the current fear of war' is not being caused by this side. I think that the 'present fear of war' is being brought about by the actions of certain politi- cal groups engaged in the propa- ganda of a new war and by these means sowing seed of discordand uncertainty." Question: "What should the gov- ernments of the freedom loving countries do at the, present time to preserve the peace and tranquility of the world?" Answer: "It is necessary for public opinion and the ruling circles of all states to organize a wide counter- propaganda against these advocates of a new war and to secure the peace so that not a single action on the part of the advocates of new wars pass Without due rebuff on the part of the public and press: to expose the warmongers without loss of time and give them no opportunity of abusing the freedom of speech against the interests of peace." u I1 rVk a * Truman Favors Stalin's Views WASHINGTON, March 22-(R)-- President Truman's reaction to Stal- in's statement to AP correspondent Eddy Gilmore was that he had al- ways known that was exactly theway Stalin felt, a White House spokes- man said tonight. Chairman Connally (D-Tex) of the Senate Foreign Relations Com- mittee pretty well summed up the Capitol Hill reaction to Stalin's pro- nouncement for peace and the Unit- PH Toirxan. COOK LECTURER SAYS: Wartime Constitution Retained "The 'New Deal' Revolution has produced substantially the same Con- stitution for peacetime as exists in war," PrOf. Edward S. Corwin said in' the last of the 1946 William W. Cook Lectures yesterday on "The Postwar Constitution". "The problem," he pointed out, "is + ,.+n1-,hn a r1aMtinnshin hoetween Prof. Corwin also listed five chan- ges in the interpretation of the Con- stitution which the war has acceler- ated and intensified: 1. Congress has been given legis- lative power of indefinite scope. 2. The President has received the power and duty to constantly stim- ulateC ongresn touse this indefinite bomb will have its effect on the Constitution since it will increase the already strong disposition of the peo- ple to look to the government to save them and at the same time to undermine further the fading be- lief in social improvement through private effort. "The Constitution of our nresent