I 'ALESTINE 'I' Latest Deadline in the State a tl SN( AND COLDER See Page 2 No. 93 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1947 PRICE FIVE ust Vet port Form First Day, rds Scattered Filing Rush upply of 56,000 absence re- 'ms was not enough to go to all of the University's' s t u d e n t veterans who college offices yesterday the first of the weekly er 50,000 forms will be e by the end of the week enish stocks which were ed by mid-afternoon yes- Robert S. Waldrop, direc- the Vetocans Service Bu- id last night. Rf Run . . run on forms yesterday e to the fact that many s took enough forms to last 1 semester, Walcrop said. many of the forms were ut incorrectly, Waldrop ized that all forms must hbe veteran'shname, his .umber and the law under 1e is enrolled. veterans who had not y absences made extra r themselves by filling in ies of all their courses and meeting, although this tion is required only for in which classes are Purdue Tops Michigan; Suprunowicz Scores 17 Ehlers, Hoffmn an Leaf.Boilermakers In 56-45 Wiii over Basketball, Team s' that there was ens to go to the Bureau for ad- cause all forms rious college of- more are avail- ated that only ersity forms are the reports are omatic card fil- Lafayette, Ind., Feb. 17-With Ed Ehers scoring 23 points and Captain Paul Hoffman playing a sensational floor game, Purdue broke its 3-game losing streak with a 56-45 victory over Michigan here tonight. Record Light Cointy-Wide' Primary Vote , Brisk Fight Marks City Alderman Race By DICK MALOY Late, unofficial returns in yes- terday's county-wide primary elec- tion indicate one of the lightest votes on record. The only heavy voting recorded was in the city where a brisk race developed in the contest for four positions in Ann Arbor Common Council. Eight Republicans vied for the four contested seats. Annexation Approved At 2 a.m. this morning, complete returns showed voters favoring the Eastover Hills annexation ques- tion. Balloting gave the measure a two to one vote of approval. East- over Hills is located in Pittsfield Township, just east of Ann Arbor. In the only other county-wide issue, voters from 28 out of 43 pre- cincts gave incumbent Circuit Judge James Breakey a lead of 2,596 to 1,333 over Municipal Judge Jay H. Payne in the race for Cir- cuit Judge. Returns from out- county precincts which had not reported at press time will notbe sufficient to swing the election, County officials reported. Ypsilanti Returns Early returns from Ann Arbor city in the Judgeship contest showed only a six vote difference between the two jurists. Later e- turns from Ypsilanti gave Judge Breakey a wide lead, however, which he held throughout the eve- ning. In Ann Arbor, complete, unoffi- cial returns gave incumbent Wal- ter Garthe the nomination for al- derman in the 1st ward; Lawrence Leever the nomination in the 2nd ward; Robert Ward the 3rd ward nomination and incumbent Ber- riard Harkins the nomination in the 7th ward. Rev. David A. Blake Jr., a grad- uate student at the University, was defeated in the three-way race for Ypsilanti Township supervisor. Blake, a candidate on the Repub- lican ticket, resides at Willow Vil- lage. He is working toward a de- gree in religious education. Cook Lecture Subj ects Told Titles for the William W. Cook Lecture series, "Alternative to Serfdom," which will be given during the week of March 10, were announced yesterday by E. Blythe Stason, dean of the Law School. John Maurice Clark, professor of economics at Columbia Univer- sity, who is to be the speaker this year, has titled the individiual lectures "Wanted: A Balanced Economic Society," "The Human Material-a Biological Approach," "Competition and Security," "Revolution in Economics-After Keynes, What?" and "Toward a Society of Responsible Individuals in Responsible Groups." Mack Suprunowicz, the only Wolverine able to score consistent- ly, dented the Purdue defense for 17 points. The Michigan attack was particularly ineffective in the second half. Purdue Leads at Half Purdue led 27-25 at the half, but Hoffman scored eight straight points in 3 minutes to make the margin 35-25. Michigan theatened again, then came up to 45-40, but Ehlers turned on the steam and Purdue pulled away. The difference in the styles of play is told by the statistics. Pur- due made 19 of 46 shots for the astonishing average of 413, but the Boilermakers took only nine shots all night from behind the foul line, driving directly under for almost all of their baskets. Michigan shot 83 times, 51 of the attempts from farther away than the foul line and had a cold aver- age of 192. First Half Close Coach Cowles Wolverines gave the Boilermakers a nip and tuck tussle during the first half. The lead see sawed with Michigan leading at 11-7 and again at 25-24 before Purdue took a 27-25 mar- gin at half time. Captain Hoffman then swept .the Wolverines off their feet with his ball stealingtactics at the start of the second half. The Purdue leader ripped under the hoop for eight straight points and the 35- 25 margin was enough for Pur- due. Suprunowicz tried to shoot Michigan back into the game and managed to bring them up to 38- 34 and then 45-40, but at this stage Ehlers went wild on drives under the basket and Michigan began losing regulars via the per- sonal foul route. Jackson Raps Black's Ruling On.Wage Law WASHINGTON, Feb. 17-()- Justice Jackson spoke out sharply today against "elastic and some- what unpredictable interpreta- tions" by his Supreme Court col- leagues of the Wage-Hour Law on which' the portal pay claims are based. The ruling he specifically as- sailed was delivered by his old antagonist, Justice Black. Jackson resorted to a separate concurring opinion for his criti- cism, making it apparent that he has not been restrained by any conciliatory efforts Chief Justice Vinson may have made since Jack- son issued his public assault upon Black from Nuernberg last sum- mer. Jackson's immediate target was an opinion today which upset a finding of the Wage-Hour Ad- ministrator that certain appren- tice railroad men were "employes" under the act. Jackson and the eight other justices agreed the men did not come under the act. Black was assigned to write the opinion, and Jackson disliked his reasoning and said so. "No kind of agreement between the parties in, interest settling borderline cases in any way satis- factory to themselves,' however fairly arrived at, is today worth the paper it is written on," he said. "Interminable litigation stimulat- ed by a contingent reward to at- torney is necessitated by the pres- ent state of the Court's decision." House'Holds' Ineoime T ax Cut Proposal To Await Senate Action on i1Budget WASHINGTON, Feb. 17-(R)- A "hold everything" order today forced the postponement of House legislation to cut income taxes, even as the Senate voted to keep in effect the ighl wartime tax rates on luxuries, travel and tele- phone bills. In announcing the oider, Chair- man Knutson (Rep., Minn.) of the, house Ways and Means Commit- tee told reporters that if Congress fails to slash $6,000,000,000 from President Truman's $37,500,000,000 budget, "it will kill any idea of a 20 per cent (income) tax cut." Knutson 'declined to estimate when he may set income tax hear- ings to begin, saying only the mat- ter must wait until the budget is- sue is settled. tempted to e time yes- leted cards floor. Wal- xns to see put in the terans may file their reports time after their last class Ze week up .until 5 p.m. on ollowing Monday. lion To Hold, Mi-Annuml nuer Today e semi-annual Union ban- initiating the spring tryout am, will be held at 6 p.m. to- n the Union dining room. y man interested in learning t and participating in Union ties durng the coming semes- nay attend the dinner, for 1 there is no charge. ri Activities k Ford, Law School vice- dent of the Union, will provide ective tryouts with informa- on student activities under- i by the Union. er dinner, members of the itive council will be intro- I and their functions ex- ed. Councilmen, chosen from g committee members, head of the Union activities, among i are dances, a weekly radio 'am, bridge tournaments and s. d Presentation ring the program, men who done exceptional work in the ests of the Union will be pre- d with awards. Councilmen receive black and gold "M" and underclassmen will be red with medallions on which rnion Tower is engraved. veral days after the banquet, en interested in becoming ac- n Union activities will be tak- n an indoctrination tour of uilding and will have an op- nity to take part in the try- program by signing up for with the various committees. iris Curator Talk Today 'ench Portraiture from Fou- to Cezanne" will be the sub- of an illustrated lecture by 1~ r.14- n+ 4.1r= m n- A ' ) t i , k x VA Chief Target of Budget Cu As Appropriations Committe Presen1ts New Bill To Congres With the Senate apparently ready to hold the budget cutting to $4,500,000,00-to avoid slashes for the Army and Navy-Knutson said that if the lower cut prevails "the tax re- duction this year certainly will be something less than 20 per cent." The Ways and Means Chair- man, with no end of the budget battle yet in sight, announced he had called off hearings set to begin tomorrow on his House Bill No. 1 calling for a 20 per cent "across the board" tax re- duction. The Senate decision to retain wartime excise rates, on -whisky, beer, fur coats, lipsticks, luggage, admissions, passenger fares, etc., was on' a simple voice vote. The House had likewise voted to re- tain them, but because of differ- ences of wording, the Senate and House versions will have to be ad- justed in conference. Knutson emphasized that postponement of income tax leg- islation would not upset his plan to apply retroactively to January 1 whatever cut is voted. On this point! he differs with Senate Republican leader Taft, of Ohio, who insists that tax reductions not become effective before July 1. These were the principal devel- opments in a day during which the budget battle broke out all over Capitol Hill: Democrats accused Republicans of seeking to "gag" the House by preventing any members from of- fering an amendment to the $6,000,000,000,000 budget slashing resolution when it is brought to the floor on Thursday for a vote. Student Group Plans Revamp Of Exchange Ken Bissell, director of the Stu- dent Book Exchange, said yester- day that reorganization is being planned for the management of the Exchange. Members of the American Vet- erans' Committee, the service fra- ternity Alpha Phi Omega, and the committee of the Student Legis- lature, at present in charge of management of the mart, Bissell said, have been discussing a plan which would put - the book store under the control of i board of seven directors. The Board would include, in ad- dition to members from each of the foregoing organizations, a rep- resentative of the Michigan League, the former director of the Exchange under the old system, the present director, and the Au- ditor of Student Accounts. Under the present system a com- mittee of the Student Legislature contracts with a director, who in turn discharges the responsibilities of the Exchange, Bissell explained. Facilities of the Book Exchange will be available all semester to students, Bissell added. The mart is located on the second floor 'of the League. Books still short in supply, he said, are Crocker's "Public Speak- ing" and Ellsworth's "Interna- tional Economics." IT CAN BE DONE: Records Show 101 Students Made All A's Last Semester Those elusive Phi Beta Kappa keys are one semester closer to 101 students who topped the list of campus scholars last term after, earn- ing all-A records. The total includes 88 students in the literary college, six in the music school, three each in the forestry and public health schools and two in the education school. Number Increases with Enrollment Charles H. Peake, assistant dean of the literary college, pointed out that the number of all-A students has increased nearly propor- tionally with the enrollment. The number of students in the literary college earning all A's last spring was 65 while in the fall term of 1945 it was 41.J During the last summer session, 75 students in the literary col- lege earned all A's. Dean Peake explained that although the enroll- ment was lower, the individual study load was lighter, resulting in a higher percentage of perfect M rs. l pper records. iis l p e The following students earnedT all-A records last term: ToSpeak Here Literary College - Anderson, Wayne A.; Antilla, Alfred D.; Author Will Discuss Armstrong, Robert M.; Ash, Shur- ly J.; Baclawski, Joseph A.; Bean, W Vivian Bailey; Berry, Roger B.; *Bornstein, Morris; Bosworth, Mrs. Raymond Clapper, widow Franklin C.; Brown, Donald F. M.; of the nationally syndicated col- Brown, Roger W.; Buslee, "Roger umnist and news analyst who died M.; in an airplane crash in World War COAL FOR CRIPPLED BRITISH INDUSTRY SNOWBOUND IN FREIGHT YARDS - With all Britain in dire need of every ton of coal to keep its industry running and its homes warm, thou- sands of tons are tied up in "these hundreds of coal cars at Toton, Derby, largest marshalling yards in England, on Feb. 13 because of snow-clogged railroad tracks. This airview of the yards was made while the government was invoking war-time measures to combat coal shortages. IAJI 1 rims Sum Asked 56 Percent Ask OPA Reductio To Speed Liquidati By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Feb. 17 - Veterans Administration was chief target as the House Apj priations Committee cut Presk Truman's requests by 56 per c today in the first appropriat bill sent to the House floor s Republicans won control of C grass. Of a total reduction of $11 186,600 in an overall deficier measure approved by the A propriations Co m m i t t e e House action tomorrow, $1' 683,500 was applied to the V erans Administration. But the committee coupled - the proposed cut and with c cism of VA practices a promis review the agency's needs in tail later and provide additi funds as required. It said amount recommended, $136,2 000, 'would tide the VA over u the end of March. An OPA reduction was ord in the form of a recommenda that $9,000,000 of funds alri provided for that agency for fiscal yeal ending next June be cancelled. This was on assumption that economical o ation would permit OPA tc quidate its activities in June. OPA had indicated it would r about $6,000,000 more. The combination appropr tion-cutback measure carries total of $139,360,000 in i funds for the balance of I fiscal year. The bill has no effect on President's budget for the starting next July 1, sine deals only with current year erations. Reuther, HCou To TalkHerc Scientist Sees A-Bombs 1,000 Times Worse CHICAGO, Feb. 17-(P)-Future atomic bombs may be 1,000 times more powerful than those used on Jalpan and may devastate 400 square miles "at a single blow," Edward Teller, a leading atomic scientist, said tonight. And an enemy releasing them off the Pacific coast, he added, could endanger the entire United States by their radioactivity with- out delivering a single bomb into American territory. Teller, University of Chicago physics professor who worked on the atomic bomb, outlined the pos- sibilities in an article in the new "Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists," monthly publication of the scien- tific group. "The radioactivity produced by the Bikini bombs was detected within abo'ut one week in' the United States, he wrote. In the meantime the westerly winds had swept the air mass from Bikini to this country. The activity when it reached our shores was weak, completely harmless. Gripes Group T Open op The Student Legislature's Gripes Committee, designed as a sound- ing-board for student complaints and suggestions, opens for busi- ness at 3 p.m. today in the Union. Exercising for the first time its function of acting as a medium between the campus and the Leg- islature, the Committee will meet from 3 to 5 p.m. today, tomorrowi and Thursday in Rm. 306 of the Union. The Committee was estab- lished, according to Tom Walsh, its originator and chairman, to "provide a means through which a studentfor faculty member can present a complaint or suggestion for prompt action." "We hope," Walsh said, "that students who might shy away from complaining to University offi- cials will feel free to gripe to fellow students." Montihly Town Discussions To Chapin, Francis B.; Chover, Joshua; Comstock, Howard C.; Copeland, Arthur H., Jr.; Cran- dell, Jean R.; Decker, Donald M.; Dieffenbacher, Martha A.; DuBois, Barbara Rattray; Egan, Joseph G.; Eisner, Steve; Emerling, Stan- ley J.; Epstein, Robert M.; Farns- worth, Edward A.; Fink, Lucie French; Fleischer, Stephen; Fogel, Dorothy; Foote, John A.; Freimil- ler, Louis R.; Geiger, Monica A.; Gendzwill, Joyce A. Getz, John I.; Goldenberg, Ira S.; Goren, Alvin; Grothaus, Jane Alene; Haddock, Douglass A.; Ha- jos, Steven Cornell; Hecht, Karl T. Hespen, Richard C.; Hiscock, Roy B., Jr.; Hole, Jean L.; Jack- son, Joseph A.; Keck, Marilyn J.; Kendall, Edward L.; Kohn, Jack A.; Krause, Robert H.; LeClair, Hugh G; Litsey, Linus R.; Louisell, William H.; McNeill, Barbara; McNitt, Harold A.; Malmstrom, Vincent; Marin, Rose M.; Markman, Alan M.; May, George S.; Michaelson, David M.; (Continued on Page 4) I, and a popular author and lec- turer in her own right, will give the sixth of this year's Oratorical Association lectures at 8:30 p.m. Thursday in Hill Auditorium. Mrs. Clapper, who came to know our nation's capital and the politi- cal figures which dominate it dur- ing the years of her husband's prominence, will speak on the topic "Behind the Scenes in Washington." Tickets for Thursday's lecture will be on sale from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 2 to 5 p.m. tomorrow and from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 2 to 8:30 p.m. Thursday at the Hill Auditorium box office. A meeting for Daily editor- ial, women's and sports staff tryouts who are unable to at- tend afternoon meetings will be held at 7:30 p.m. today in the Conference Room of the Student Publications Building. At the first in a series of moni ly Student Town Hall meetin Victor Reuther and Andrew Cot of the Labor-Economics Divisi of the General Motors Corporati will discuss "The Wage Price sue and a Stabilized Economy" the Rackham Amphitheatre al p.m. Feb. 25. Prof. William Haber of the ei nomics department will be I moderator of the labor-manai ment discussion. Originated last spring by t Student Religious Association a The Daily, the Student Town B Committee now includes rep sentatives from the IFC, 1 League, Pan-Hel, Assemb MYDA, Newman Club, Int Guild, the Union, Hillel, IRA, t Unitarian Student Group, the St dent Legislature, and the camx and Willow Village chapters AVC. Repaired Homes Ready for Vets The ten families who w forced to vacate their homes the Veterans' Village at Hill a S. Fifth Ave., will be able to me back today, Ceylon Welch, ca taker of the project said yest day. The students and their fami are being temporarily housed the Union while the University pairs the five dwelling units we were damaged Friday when seve tons of ice and snow crashed dc on the Village from the Colise roof. Vets' Tutorial Service World News. at a Glance By The Associated Press LONDON, Feb. 17.-Britain's industrial shutdown and island-wide rationing of electric power to homes saved 202,750 tons of coal in its first week, the government announced tonight. It gave no indica- tion of when the restrictions, imposed last Monday, would be removed. * * * WASHINGTON, Feb. 17.-Industry demands that Congress smash alleged "monopolies" and "supergovernments" of big unions by carving them up into little ones reached the House Labor Committee today. And from one of its members, Rep. Nixon (Rep.-Calif.), the committee got a report that many rank and file union members fear their leaders and want a law passed to curb some of their powers. 17 A CDTTTf-_*'MN PYah ' 117 -A nnnQr ~n i~fnn1n rlaf 'DEMOCRA TIC VILLAGE' Willow Run Plans for New Government A planning committee of eight "Committee and editor of the new " FPHA Approval members was set up Sunday at a village paper-the "Willow Run- The FPHA management, which meeting of the Willow Run Citi- Around," was elected chairman of has charge of Willow Village, has tens Committee to plan for a the planning committee. Other given its consent and is backing "democratic village government" members include Mds. Lou North- the idea of a Village government,