LEG ION ATTACKED See Page 4 -jL Latest Deadline in the State 4 ait FAIR., WARMER VOL. LVI, No. 19 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1946 PRICE FIVE CENTS Truman lifts Price Controls on Meat * * : a * * * MY ACHIN' ARM: 'U' Students Offered Free Influenza Shots Foreseeing the seriousness of a possible influenza epidemic hitting the most crowded campus in Michi- gan's history. Health Service yes- terday announced plans for volun- tary, free innoculation of University students, faculty and personnel dur- ing the week of Oct. 28. Proven Effective1 "The A and B vaccine, which will be used here, proved very effective in Army use in 1945," Dr. Margaret Bell, Molotov Assails Portions of Five Peace Treaties PARIS, Oct. 14-(P)-The Parisj conference completed tonight its task of writing peace treaties for five former Nazi satellite nations after Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molo- tov assailed portions of the pacts as "unsatisfactory." Accuses U.S. Molotov accused the United States1 of attempting to dominate the con- ference, and said he would insist f that the Big Four foreign ministers, who will meet in New York, Nov. 4, reconsider parts of the treaties, with Italy, Finland, Romania, Bulgaria,( and Hungary. The ministers also will take up the treaty with Germany. A French spokesman said the ministers would devote two weeks to7 completing work on the satellite treaties, then would start considera-1 tion of the German pact. Tackled in New York1 He added that the fundamental aspects of the German problem' would not be tackled in New York, but that the ministers would try to' discover whether there was enough grounds for agreement to justify the1 holding of a later meeting in Europe.1 Mootov's attack on the work of' the conference was deliveredrat a plenary session on the eve of the ad- journment of the 21-nation parley.] The issues he raised suggested a pos-I sible showdown between the east and the west at the New York meeting. Supreme Court Denies Appeals In Army Cases WASHINGTON, Oct. 14.-( )-The Supreme Court refused today to over- ride military justice in a series of cases including that of the WAC Captain convicted of helping steal $1,500,000 in Hesse crown jewels from a German castle. The WAC Captain, Kathleen Nash Durant, had asked the court to re- lease her on a writ of habeas corpus. Her attorney argued that she had been discharged from service and as a civilian was illegally taken to Frankfurt, Germany, for a military trial. Mrs. Durant was convicted at Frankfurt, the sentence carrying a dishonorable discharge and five years in prison. The Supreme Court de- clined today to interfere with that sentence. Also, the court refused to order the release of Ralph K. Betz of Willough- by, O., a former GI arrested by mili- tary police for allegedly illegal entry into Germany. Further, the Court held it has no jurisdiction in the cases of three other military prisoners whose attor- neys asked for release on writs of habeas corpus. Tickets Available Tickets for the special concert which Dorothy Maynor will present Oct. 28 are still available at the of- fices of the University Musical So- ciety, Burton Memorial Tower. The concert, will be the first in a series of special concerts planned by the society because of the large stu- dent enrollment. I ' n '- acting director of the Health Service, said. "The innoculation program is essential in view of the crowded liv- ing conditions this year and," she continued, "we were very pleased by the administration's enthusiastic re- sponse to the plan which enables us to offer the needed protection to Michigan students." Tentative plans are set up to spear- head the campaign by a 100 per cent innoculation of Stockwell and Mosh- er-Jordan residents next week, which would take in approximately 1,000 students. Perfected in 1941 The A and B vaccine was perfected in work done at the School of Public Health in 1941 under the direction of Dr. Thomas Francis, Jr., sponsored by the Commission of Influenza set up by the Army Surgeon General's Of- fice. Dr. Francis and Dr. Jones E. Salk, both of the department of epi- demiology in the School of Public Health and Dr. A. C. Furstenburg, dean of the Medical School and ad- visor to Health Service, will cooper- ate with Health Service in setting up and carrying out the plan. Immunity is acquired within seven to 10 days after vaccination with the A and B vaccine, Dr. Francis said, and endures at its height between seven months and a year. Working like any other vaccine, re- action occurs in from 10 to 15 per cent of those immunized, and a local reaction at the site of the reactions such as chilliness and mild fever sometimes occur. Not for Everyone Not everyone will need or be able to be immunized, Dr. Bellsaid, as some may have been vaccinated by private physicians. Others who have asthma. or severe sensitivity especially to chickens or chicken eggs, will not be able to be immunized because of the danger of severe reactions. The program here will probably be the largest innoculation campaign in history, including 18,513 students and 4,500 faculty and personnel. Plans Set Up. Plans are set up for the vaccination program to be carried out in Water- man Gymnasium from 8 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. each day and will continue through Fridy, Nov;. 1. Identification and immunization data will be carried on a card to be used at the time of vaccination. The data will be compiled under the direction of Dr. Francis for further research work on influenza. Michigan State College, Yale Uni- versity and the University of Chi- cago have already conducted mass immunization programs with from 90 to 95 per cent of the students par- ticipating, Dr. Bell said and North- western University is considering plans for a similar program. Control Council Issues Order Additional Nazis Are Subject to Prosecution BERLIN, Oct. 14-(P)-The Allied Control Council's coordinating com- mittee promulgated today a direc- tive for all Germany which means that hundreds of thousands of Ger- man war criminals, militarists and Nazis now can be arrested and pun- lished according to a common set of principles. The directive, aimed at the "com- plete and lasting destruction of Nazi- ism and militarism," is patterned af- ter the denazification law which has been in effect since June in the American zone. Actual implementation of the di- rective is left to each zonal com mander. The object of the directive, the Control Council said, was to estab- lish a common policy covering: "The punishment of war criminals, Nazis, militarists and industrialists who encouraged and supported the Nazi regime. "The complete and lasting des- truction of Nazism and militarism by imprisoning and restrictng the activities of important participants or adherents to these creeds. President Assaiils 'Selfish' Politicians Decontrol Program I'o Be Speeded As Administration Does About Face By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 14-Angrily assailing "selfish" politicians, Presi- dent Truman tonight abandoned price controls on meat and announced that the whole decontrol program will be speeded up. Thus, three weeks before the Congressional elections, the President al- tered the course he previously had set, removed the administration's hand from the meat situation completely and for good, and put it up to the in- dustry to restock the housewife's icebox. He said it was the "only remedy" for the shortage. The action had been urged by many within his own party. And as he castigated congressmen and candidates whom he blamed for the meat shortage and failure of controls, he * made no attempt to pin responsibility solefy to Republicans. aj or Packers "The responsibility rests squarely on a few men in the Congress who, in P i',diet G radual the service of selfish interests, have been determined for some time to R of M eat wreck price controlsnocmatter what Reo metgrbtofpe the cost might be to our people," he STEAKS ON THE HOOF-Here is a sample of what awaits the American dinner table now that price con- trols on meat have been lifted, by President Truman. The cattle pictured above stretch to the horizon in the feeding pens of the Nebraska Feed Lot Company near Omaha, Neb., where the animals are held for fattening. Slav Officials Banished from Catholic Church VATICAN CITY, Oct. 14-(P)- The Roman Catholic Church de- clared today that all Yugoslav gov- ernment officials of that faith res- ponsible for the trial and conviction in Zagreb of Archbishop Alojzijc Stepinac had incurred the grave penalty of excommunication. Council Announces The announcement was made by the Congregation of the Council, which said that the trial of the Archbishop, head of the Catholic Church in Yugoslavia, "had made a profound impression in all the Cath- olic world and in civilized society it- self." , Archbishop Stepinac was sen- tenced to 16 years at hard labor fol- lowing his conviction on charges of collaborating with the Axis and the Ustachi of the Croatian puppet re- gime, and of forcing Yugoslavs to be- come Roman Catholics. Tito Excommunicated Several Italian newspapers inter- preted the announcement to mean that Marshal Tito, head of the Yu- goslav government,hhad been ex- communicated, and announced this in bold headlines. Authoritative Vatican quarters, said, however, that Tito's "exact sta- tus is not known," and added that "the Vatican has made no announce- ment of this kind." A Catholic Pre- late said last week that the Vatican had no information that Tito was, or ever had been, a Catholic. Some observers speculated that the excommunication might be followed by rupture of diplomatic relations between the Vatican and Yugoslavia. Ball and Chain Now Offictal Evidently, the gals believe in calling a spade a spade. So now the women who formuerly bid be- hMd the prosaic front of the Vet- erans Wives club, quite frankly call themselves the Ball and Chain Club. Mrs. Haskell Conlin, president of the Club, claiiehowever, that not too much significance is to be -attached to the new title. She said, "We were tired of being designated as a "veterans" group. We wanted something a little more punchy and we thought that the Ball and Chain Club sounded cute." GET THEM SIGNED: Petitions for Student Elections Must Meet Saurday Deadline In order to run for the positions of senior class officers, Union vice- presidents and co-chairmen of the freshman, sophomore and junior dances, students must turn in elec- tion petitions before noon Saturday. Board Election The election for these offices and for three student members of the Board in Control of Student Publi- cations will be held Oct. 29. Petition blanks may be obtained froin 3 to 5 p.m. tomorrow through Friday in the Union Student Offices. Candidates for all positons must pre- sent eligibility cards. No Petitions Candidates for Board membership Signed Truce Ends Warfare In Inidonesia BATAVIA, Oct. 14--()-The Neth- erlands Government and the Repub- lic of Indonesia today signed a truce agreement calling for an end to 14 months of bloody warfare in Java and nearby islands. It was hoped the truce would es- tablish peaceful conditions for con- tinuing political negotiations on In- donesian demands for independence. Three Part Truce A third party to the truce was Britain's special commissioner for Southeast Asia, Lord Killearn, gen- erally credited here with bringing the warring sides together. No "cease fire" order has been issued, and informed sources said some local Indonesian colnmands, particularly on the island of Su- matra. might refuse to obey orders from the government of Premier Sutan Sjahrir. Called in Leaders Sjahrir had taken the precaution to call in his top military leaders and make them party to the truce, but one element considered dubious was the leftwing "People's Army," which maintains only tenuoi s links with the government. Lt.-Gen. S. B. Spoor, conimander- -in-chief of the Netherlands forces in the Indies, declared Dutch troops would "loyally" obey th-' truce and he expressed the hope that the In- donesian Army would do likewise. are not required to present petitions. Students desiring to run for these positions may contact Terrell Whit- sitt, chairman of the election com- mittee, from 3 to 4 p.m. tomorrow through Friday in the Union Student Of ices. A member of the Board may not hold any position of the staff of any student publication. Because senior officers will be chosen for both the literary end en- gineering colleges, petitions for these positions must be signed by members of the candidate's college. Fifty sig- natures are required for all petitions. Signed Petitions Union vice-presidents will be chos- en for the literary and engineering colleges, law, dental and medical schools and for all other schools. Pe- titions must therefore be signed by members of the candidate's school. Candidates must plan to attend school here for two more terms. Petitions for the dance chairman- ships must also be signed by mem- bers of the candidate's school. The Student Legislature, which is conducting the elections, will meet at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Union to discuss election procedures. U.S. Says No Atom Bombs Sent Abroad WASHINGTON, Oct. 14-(P)-The White House assured the atomic- worried world today that this country has sent no atom bombs to England or any other place abroad. The statement was an apparent step to squelch fears that the United States is picking partners for' possi- ble future use of the dread weapon. Eben Ayers, assistant White House press secretary, told reporters: "The only atomic bombs that ever got out of the United States were those used in the Bikini test and those dropped on Japan" Ayers said he was speaking "on the authority of the President.' Only last Thursday, at a news con- ference, Mr. Truman stated categori- cally that Great Britain did not have any atomic bombs. He made his statement in denial of what a newsman said was a report that the British were stockpiling them or had some in their possession. declared. And again: "The real blame lies at the door of the reckless group ofI selfish men who, in the hope of gain- Republican To Answer WASHINGTON, Oct. 14-()- The Columbia Broadcasting Sys-1 tenannounced tonight that a Re-- publican party spokesman wouldl be given an opportunity tomorrow night from 10 to 10:15 p.m. to reply to President Truman's talk on meat tonight.j ing political advantage, have encour- aged sellers to gamble on the de- struction of price control." The ceilings on livestock and the food and feed derived from it go off tomorrow. That will mean, Mr. Tru- man announced, that the decontrol of all other items "will have to be ac- celerated under existing legal stand- ards." Included in the hastened decontrol process will be the wage controls, the President made clear-"we all rec- ognize the close relationship between wages and prices." But he refused to abolish the wage controls simultane- ously with the' meat ceilings, as those labor leaders favoring meat decon- trol have insisted. Slaughtering quotas now imposed on the packers are covered by separ- ate OPA orders. These quotas were removed temporarily at the time price controls lapsed in mid-summer and presumably they will be abolished now. "Moreover," he said that "this does not mean the end of controls now." "Some items, like rent, will make to be controlled for a long time to come," he continued. "Other items, consisting of certain basic materials and other commodities of which there is now a grave shortage, will have to remain under control until produc- tion of them has been greatly in- creased." The price control act expires June 30. But Mr. Truman's statement on rent appeared to foreshadow a fight to extend that control, at least, be- yond the deadline. yon e n. By The Associated Press The meat industry acclaimed im- mediate removal of price controls from meat and livestock Monday night and spokesmen predicted a gradual return of meat to the nation's dinner tables. Some said meat prices immediately would be higher than OPA retail ceil- ings but that they gradually would become lower. The American Meat Institute, spokesman for major packers, said there wouldn't be "muh more meat for consumers in the immediate fu- ture" but asserted the industry "now can go to work to provide meat just as quickly as possible." It said meat stocks are at a record low and "the distribution pipelines are completely empty." Because the national meat "scarcity is even more acute" than prior to temporary de- control last July, the Institute said, "a longer period will be required now than was necessary then to get meat back into satisfactory quantity to normal distribution." The Institute statement did not comment on price effects of the Presi- dent's announcement. Meat Decontrol Wins Chorus Of Approval By The Associated Press Lifting of meat controls won a general chorus of approval last night, but the nature of congres- sional comment split largely along party lines. Republicans called President Tru- man's action a "confession of fail- ure" and "locking the barn after the horse has been taken to the butcher shop." Democrats stressed the President's declaration that responsibility for the situation lies with those in Con- gress "in the service of selfish inter- ests." Along that line, Senator Lucas (Dem., 111) told a reporter, "I saw throughout the war repeated efforts to wreck price controls by those with selfish reasons. That was particularly true of the cattle barons." Senator Brewster (Rep., Maine) commented, "it is better late than never. I think it has been conclu- sively demonstrated that the Ameri- can people are ready for this step." On the Democratic side, Rep. Harris (Ark) remarked the "con- trols on meat have been a complete failure since they were reimposed" and "I don't see that the President could have taken any other course." Senator Elbert D. Thomas (Dem., Utah) said that "I trust President Truman's action will bring the re- sult he expects and that it will turn out for the benefit of the whole country " Senator Taft (Rep., Ohio) com- mented that removal of the meat ceilings is "what I've been urging all along." Draftee Induction Will End Tuesday LANSING, Oct. 14-(iP)-State Se- lective Service headuarters today directed local draft boards not to forward any more registrants for in- duction or preinduction physical Roundup of World Events Strike News In Brief By The Associated Press MARITIME: Atlantic and Gulf Coast ship owners were urged by Sec- retary of Labor Schwellenbach to re- sume negotiations with striking CIO marine engineers and AFL masters, mates and pilots in Washington to- day, and negotiators for the CIO union called in Harry Bridges and Joseph Curran, co-chairmen of the Committee for Maritime Unity, for a special strategy meeting in a 14- day-old strike. The engineers seek a 35 per cent wage increase and the deck officers a 30 per cent boost, with both asking preferential hiring. FILMS: Technicians of the AFL In- ternational Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE) declined to respect picket lines set up at nine major movie studios by a rival, the AFL conference of studio unions; 200 pickets were arrested at the main gates of Columbia Studio because, po- By The Associated Press BERLIN, Oct. 14-German news- papers and politicians in all four zones of occupation are forbidden to criticize the decisions of Potsdam and any future conferences of the Allied powers on Germany in a new directive published today by the Al- lied Control Authority, The new code also prohibits spread- ing of nationalistic and pan-Ger- manic ideas and the dissemination of rumors aimed at disrupting unity among the occupying powers. weapon "until the Red Army is ready once again to get on the move." DETROIT, Oct. 14-Two of three prisoners who escaped Thursday from the Federal Correctional Institution at Milan, Mich., were re-captured this afternoon after an all-day man- hunt through the woods and swamps of Grosse Ile. A party of marines from the Grosse Ile Naval Air Station who had been called into the search by the FBI and Speaking at Massachusetts Gen- eral Hospital's Ether Centenary Celebration, Br. Bittner revealed a "simple, effective method" of pre- venting mammary cancer in mice- immediate foster nursing of litters born to females of cancerous strains. * * * NUERNBERG, Germany, Oct. 14- Prison officials responsible for the 11 condemned German war leaders said today the hangings would take place Wednesday morning, but beyond that refused to confirm or deny that the exeitins would h in Nie'n-