THE UN ARENA See Page 4 Sw A0 :43aittii RAIN, WARMER Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVII, No. 35 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1946 PRICE FIVE CENTS Sellout Crowd Will See Brown Jug Battle Today Michigan Heavy Favorite as Crisler Seeks UN Break With Franco First Victory over B By CLARK BAKER Special To The -Daily MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Nov. 1- It's Little Brown Jug Time again but this town doesn't seem to be'too op- timistic about Minnesota's chances of regaining the coveted trophy to- morrow when the big Gopher eleven clashes with Michigan at Memorial Stadium here. There's an air of David and Gol- iath about tomorrow's battle but ev- Release of Price Decontrol List Delayed by OPA Ceilings Off Machinery, Dairy Equipment, Cans WASHINGTON, Nov. 1-(P)-The OPA freed scores of additional items ranging from churns to matches from price ceilings today but delayed issuance of its master decontrol list. The agency originally had planned to complete its major decontrol pro- gram today. Officials said the neces- sity for consulting other govern- ment branches on various phases of it, however, will hold it up for anoth- er week or more. The miscellaneous items decon- trolled today made a six-page list. The OPA explained that the ceilings were removed "because their supply is in approximate balance with de- mand or because they are unimpor- tant in business or living costs." Dairy Equipment Off Included were matches, both paper and wooden, most machinery and equipment used on dairy farms; bod- ies and equipment parts for buses; several types of engines; a few lumb- ber, paper, metal and chemical prod- ucts, and bones of all types used for meal and mash. Also freed were notions sold at re- tail counters and used to mend or repair garments, such as collars, cuffs and neckbands for shirts, and a few textile items such as sleeve Drotectors, knitted arm warmers and dust caps. In addition to churns the new de- control ' list includes milking ma- chines, cream and milk separators, ice-refrigerated milk coolers and me- tal milk cans. Other farm equip- ment released includes hand-operat- ed sprayers and dusters. Luxury Lumber Freed Walnut lumber for luxury furni- ture cabinets, chests, specially de- signed store fixtures and interior trim also was freed. But OPA re- tained controls over walnut veneer, much used by the furniture trade. Other lumber products released in- clude redwood cigar box lumber and wooden circular heads for shipping drums. Machinery items freed includes certain gasoline and diesel engines and the small engines attached to furnish power for bicycles. Some commercial and industrial lighting fixtures were freed but fiourescent fixtures of all types re- mained under control. Village AVC To Start FEPC Petition Drive Every registered voter in Willow Village will be asked to sign a peti- tion for state FEP legislation, Wil- low Village AVC chairman Walt Hoffman announced yesterday. The village drive will be part of the state-wide campaign to get 150,- 000 signatures between Nov. 6 and Dec. 1. The chapter is pledged to get 1,000 signatures. Lists of the registered voters are now being prepared and the canvas- sing will start Wednesday. Ollie Lyon is chairman of the drive. The Village AVC plans to coordin- ate its campaign with the Ann Arbor drive being undertaken by the cam- pus AVC, MYDA, IRA, and the Ann Arbor Independent Citizens Commit- tee. If the 150,000 signatures are ob- tained, Hoffman explained, the state legislature must either accept or re- ject the FEPC bill, and if they choose to reject it, the bill will go to the people in the form of a referendum. Every petition signer must be a registered voter in the county, as must every petition solicitor. lerman at Minneapolis en the sellout throng of some 58,000 fans is just hopeful, and no more, of a Gopher upset. This once great capital of the football world has ac- cepted the fall in Minnesota grid fortunes soberly, awaiting the day when the tables will again be turned. Michigan Favored Local bookies have established Michigan as an 18-point favorite but there are few takers. Apparently the dismal showing of the Wolverines in their last two games with North- western and Illinois have raised little hope in the Golden Gopher camp. Minnesota mentor Bernie Bierman has not even bothered to cloak his preparations in secrecy. The gate to the practice field has been barred to all but the press, but there has been no attempt to hide the proceedings from spectators taking advantage of a section of uncovered fence en- closing the drill field. Minnesota Has Lost Three Minnesota has dropped its last eight Big Nine games in a row. Three of the losses came this fall to Indiana, Northwestern, and Ohio State. Indiana and Northwestern have also played the Wolverines, The Hoosiers fell before Michigan, 21-0, and then turned around to smash the Gophers by the same score. The Wildcats eked 'out a 14-7 win over Minnesota and then tied Michigan, '14-14. Crisler Seeks Win over Bierman Coach Fritz Crisler's crew will be seeking its initial Minneapolis win over Bierman. The last time Crisler and Bierman-coached teams met here was in 1942 when the Golden Gophers capitalized on a second- period field goal by Bill Garnaas to take a thrilling 16-14 contest. In 1944 Michigan tripped the Gophers at Memorial Stadium but Bierman was in the Navy.j Michigan will again be outweighed in the line. But the 200-pound Min- nesota forward wall has looked any- thing but impressive to date. In three Conference battles the Gopher front line has yielded an average of 262 yards per game on the ground. Along the airlanes the Minnesota defense has looked better, keeping its trio of Big Nine foes to an 81-yard game average. Minnesota Hit by Injuries The Minnesota camp has been hit by an injury jinx this fall and again tomorrow several key performers may see only limited action for the Gophers. There's the great tackle find, Dean Widseth. A 210-pound See 58,000, Page 5 Molotov Denies Disa greement NEW YORK, Nov. 1-Vyacheslav M. Molotov declared tonight that the opinion expressed by some Americans that there were disagreements be- tween his address to the United Na- tions Assembly Tuesday and Prime Minister Stalin's statement of last Monday "does not correspond to the facts." "Itsis not difficult to see this after careful study of the texts in ques- tion," Molotov said. The Associated Press submitted yesterday to Molotov, the Soviet For- eign Minister and chief of the Soviet del {,.f ion to the United Nations as- sembly, a list of six questions, noting thoughts reflected in American opin- ion. Is Demanded By Poland; British Deport Refugees . THE LITTLE BROWN JUG - Traditional symbol of the Michigan- Minnesota football rivalry, the Little Brown Jug will be at stake again today when a favored Wolverine eleven meets the Golden Gophers at Minneapolis. Although the jug travelled to Minnesota with the team Michigan fans are confident that it will return to its habitual resting place in the Administration Building early next week. HECTIC HALLOWEEN: Flowing Fire Hydrants Give Police, Firemen Busy Night. Pranksters joined forces with goblins and witches to make this year's Halloween celebration one of the busiest for police and fire department of- ficials. Scores of calls flooded the police and fire stations reporting pranks ranging from window smashing and minor thefts to flowing fire hydrants. Fire Chief Ben Zahn was kept busy hopping all over town in the wake of van- dals who turned on 20 hydrants. One hydrant located at Daniel and Par- 1,279 Illegal Jewish Entrants Sent to Cyprus Palestine Court to Test Legality of Deportation By The Associated Press JERUSALEM, Nov. 1 - Despite screams of protest and some physical resistance 1,279 Jewish refugees were transferred at Haifa today from the almost foundering immigrant ship San Dimitrio to the British deporta- tion vessels bound for detention camps on Cyprus. The ships were on their way tonight, an official an- nouncement said. In a new tactic against the depor- tation policy of the British, one Pal- estine Jew succeeded in obtaining a writ of Habeas Corpus in the Pales- tine supreme court for his brother, one of the immigrants aboard the ship. The court ordered a hearing expected to test the legality of send- ing uncertificated immigrants to Cy- prus. In London an authoritative govern- ment source said the British Colonial Office had instructed the Palestine administration to release about 700 Jews, including top Jewish agency leaders, from the Latrun detention camp, where they had been held since the British raids of last June.. The only major violence reported in the Holy Land today was an at- tack on two office clerks in Tel Aviv by three masked gunmen who es- caped with satchels containing $12,- 000. Five British soldiers have been killed in the past three days, includ- ing two killed last night when their truck hit a road mine near the all- Jewish city of Tel Aviv. Preceding the transfer of the immigrants front the San Dimitrio, 2,000 Jews left a mass meeting in Haifa and marched on barricades thrown up in the port area by British troops. Signs on the barri- Scades warned the marchers to "disperse or we fire" and they broke up after waving black flags of mourning and singing national- ist songs. The 2,000 marchers were part of the 60,000 Jews in Haifa who joined in a general protest strike lasting two hours and a half during the morning. Student Petition Time Extended don Streets, seriously damaged the roadway before discovery. Ruthven Home Quick action by Chief Zahn and his crew saved President Ruthven's residence from drifting away in the flood caused by opening hydrants in the front and rear of the house. Po- lice finally caught up with the pranksters, a group of Ann Arbor High School youths who were fined in Municipal Court yesterday. An old friend who preceded the G.I. all over the world during the war was also very active in Ann Arbor on this All Saint's even. The criptic in- scription, "Killroy was here," greet- ed early morning shoppers from the soaped windows of many downtown places. Windows Broken In the campus area, extensive damage was reported on column cor- nices at Hill Auditorium. Several windows in the Natural Science greenhouse were broken as well. Most of the Ann Arbor small fry were able to let off steam at a com- munity sponsored Halloween party held in Yost Field House. Roundup of World News By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Nov. 1-The Mar- itime Commission tonight extended to government ships on the West Coast, where shipping has been crippled by a month-long strike, the settlement terms of the East Coast maritime strike. The action is expected to free about half the West Coast ships now tied up. They commission said it acted "in the interest of uniformity." WASHINGTON, Nov. 1-Indi- cating that no further atomic bomb tests are planned for the foreseeable future, the Navy an- nounced today that the Army- Navy task force which exploded the atomic bombs at Bikini last July is being dissolved immediately. LONDON, Nov. 1 - Authoritative government quarters said today the colonial office had given instructions for the release of several high Jewish agency leaders and 700 other Jews held without charge in Palestine de- tention camps. At the some time government source said it was almost "certain" that Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin is now en route to New York for a meeting of the foreign ministers council. WASHINGTON, Nov. 1-(#)- Acceding to demands of Southern Congress members, Reconversion Director Steelman acted tonight to abolish certain OPA textile pric- ing regulations said to have "an unsettling effect on the cotton market." Specifically, Steelman said he was "requesting" OPA to eliminate an order which prohibits mills from pricing finished cotton goods ROSCOE O. BONISTEEL ... appointed to Board of Regents * * * Re 0. JBonisiteel Is Appointed New U'Regent Attorney Roscoe 0. Bonisteel, prominent in Washtenaw Republican politics for almost two decades, yes- terday was appointed to the Univer- sity Board of Regents, replacing R. Spencer Bishop, who died in Flint Monday. Bonisteel, past president of the State Bar, graduated from the Uni- versity Law School in 1912. He is county Republican committee chair- man. Bonisteel's term will expire Dec. 31, 1951. In announcing the appointment, Gov. Kelly said, "I am confident that Mr. Bonisteel will prove a worthy successor for Mr. Bishop who was known to alumni and friends of the University as a conscientious and able alumnus who gave unsparingly of his time and effort." Bonisteel began his practice in Ann Arbor the year of his graduation. A veteran of World War I, Bonisteel has been a leader in community and fraternal organizations. He was. appointed to the state board of bar examiners in 1946 and reappointed in 1946 to serve until June, 1951. Gov. Kelly added, "In addition to being an outstanding lawyer, Mr. Bonisteel has served so successfully as a leader in other fields that there cannot be any question of his grasp of the problems of Michigan as a whole and his acute perception of the needs and opportunities of our great university. Shots End Today This morning is the last oppor- tunity for University students, faculty and personnel to be in- noculated in the influenza im- munization program. The stations in Waterman Gymnasium will be open from 8 a.m. to noon today to take care of any latecomers. Dr. Margaret Bell, director of the program, said that over 10,004 students have been inoculated during the past week. United tates Balks at Paying Half UN Costs Vandenberg Rejects Figure Set by Experts LAKE SUCCESS, N.Y., Nov. 1-RP) -Poland demanded tonight that the United Nations break off diplomatic relations with Generalissimo Franco and bar his government from any or- ganization connected with the Unit- ed Nation~s Poland's foreign minister, Wincen- ty Rzymowski, chief of his country's delegation to the U.N. Assembly, filed a double-barrelled resolution with the United Nations little more than 24 hours before the deadline for bringing up matters for the agenda. Active Day His action came at the end of a day filled with committee meetings which was marked by the United States balking at paying half of the administrative costs of the United Nations for 1947. Poland filed a complaint against Franco Spain last April but the Unit- ed Nations Security Council, after a long wrangle, failed to act. Soviet Russia was assessed six per cent for that period and Great Brit- ain 10.50 per cent in the proposed budget, U. S. Senator Arthur H. Vanden- berg (Rep., Mich.), the United States member of the U. N. administrative- budgetary committee, made a strong statement to the committee rejecting the figure set by the United Nations experts. He said his delegation would rec- ommend to the United States Con- gress that this nation pay 33 per cent for 1947 on a temporary basis but that the U. S. felt a top limit of 25 per cent should be agreed upon for any one country after the world's economy has recovered from war. Permanent Site Wrangle In a bit of whimsy, he suggested that if the U. S. economy was so good, perhaps the United Nations ought to adopt "our economic sys- tem as standard practice for all of its membership." Participation by Vets in Local Affairs Urged Veterans must begin working for a bettei world by taking an active part in local affairs, Rev. John Iarris Burt, former Navy Chaplain, said yesterday at the first meeting of "Aunt Ruth" Buchanan's wartime "nephews" held in Rackham Lecture Hall. Rev. Burt pointed out the desire of many former servicemen to forget the troubles and conflicts about them and to retreat behind a "let some- one else do it" philosophy. Three factors of human behavior, Rev.bBurt said, conspire to cause trouble . They are the sin of indol- ence, the party spirit or factionalism, and private selfish interest. Fortun- ately antidotes exist for these irri- tants. If veterans will be actively confident, personally humble, and will endeavor to understand beyond their own horizons, the ideal of a better world may yet be saved, Rev. Burt concluded. Lt. Dennis Nelson, USNR, who was scheduled to speak was unable to appear. Frank J. Batchelder, who served as a junior officer under the Negro lieutenant during the war said that his experience working in coop- eration with Lt. Nelson had con- vinced him that whites and Negroes could work together successfully on a basis of comiplete equality. Requests Flood Service Bureau A steady stream of veterans, tot- aling more than 250, yesterday, swamped the Veterans Service Bur- eau with requests for compensation report forms, ' 1r-, rnnfcr c'A,4iin fin nnnnorn - Candidates Statements Must File Tuesday The deadline for turning in peti- tions for Student Legislature mem- bership has been extended to Tues- day, Terrell Whitsitt, election com- mittee chairman, said yesterday. Petition blanks will be available from 3 to 5 p.m. today and Monday in the Union Student Offices. Candidates will be required to sub- mit qualification statements of 50 words or less for publicity purposes. In addition, candidates must pay a registration fee of $1 and submit identificatin cards. The election for Student Legisla- ture members will be held Nov. 12 and 13. 'POOR SUBSTITUTE': Stumpf Criticizes Truman's 'Inadequate' Research Board (t>- The establishment of a Presiden- tial Research Board, made up of non- scientists, "to insure that the scien- tific personnel, training and research facilities of the nation are used most effectively in the national interest" was sharply criticized yesterday. Speaking as a representative of the Association of University of Michi- gan Scientists, Dr. Paul K. Stumpf, instructor in the department of epi- demiology in the School of Public Health, commented both on the Re- search board, which was set up re- cently as an administrative substi- tute for the National Science Foun- dation Bill, and on President Tru- man's appointment of the five-man ciiian Atomic Enerv Commission. NOVEMBER GOODIES: Enthusis tic Garg Salesmen Will Lighten Hearts, Purses what scientific problems are." he continued, the work sponsored will probably be directed into the applied science fields rather than pure re= search-probably into national de- fense. The Research Board, set up by the administration will lack the backing of a congressionally filled purse. If their funds are limited; the scope of their work will be limited, Dr. Stumpf said. He also expressed fear that the board's establishment would discourage further work on legisla- tion for a national science founda- tion. The appointment of David E. Lil- ienthal as the head of the Atomic Carried by airplane to strategic points all over the world every month for only a quarter, the first ,fall issue of the Gargoyle will light- en the hearts of a Daily-weary cam- pus Monday morning. Advance guards of enthusiastic Garg affiliates will swarm the cam- pus at 6:15 a.m., laden with Novem- ber goodies. When the first student appears at 7:55 a.m., a campus-wide effort to foist a Garg on him will get under way. from noted celebrities, who formly praise the high-quality used in the Garg. uni- paper Congratulations continuie to stream collect into the Garg wastebaskets. From Mexico City: "Caramba, Sen- ors! Stop. Another Gargoyle? Stop. So soon? Impossible!" It was signed Oliver Warbucks. Adolf Hitler cabled from a cave in Switzerland: "Verboten Stunken!" From the Kremlin: "Tovarisch! Glad to see the capitalists haven't i