STASSEN STRATEGY See Page 2 Y Latest Deadline in the State ~~Iaii4 CLOUDY, SNOW VOL. LVII, 'No. 76 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 7, 1947 PRICE FIVE CJ I Clay, New Chief in Ex-Regent Europe, Plans No Shields, 7q5, a e l "i , t fY. f i J / R 7 1 t t t t - 3 J Changes at Present McNarney Named to UN Military Staff; Clark Recalled From Austria By The Associated Press BERLIN, Jan. 6-Lt. Gen. Lucius D. Clay, new commander in chief of American forces in Europe, said today he would move his headquarters from Frankfart to Berlin, but had no immediate plans for reorganizing the military government setup in Germany. Clay said he would confer at length with the retiring commander, Gen. Joseph T. McNarney, before making any changes. McNarney -has been named Senior Repre- sentative to the Military Staff J-H op Tickets Committee of the United Nations. Clay's promotion came as a re- sult of a major three-way shake- V 0up in the Army's European com- mand involving Clay, McNarney At End of Week and Gen. Mark Clark, who has £~ AEE,~/ J'P'C~iIbeen called home from Austria. To Name Commander Dance Band Name Clay said he intended to name a troop commander to relieve him Not Yet Disclosed of details in connection with that Name of the band which will function of the European Theatre Command, but only after talking play for the 1947 J-Hop was still first with McNarney. a secret yesterday as the Hop Several hours before a Wash- committee announced that.ticket ington announcement of his ap- sales for the biggest social event pointment Clay held a news con- ference in his capacity as Deputy of the year will be held Thurs- Military Governor. He disclosed day, Friday, and Saturday. that: Hours of the sales will be from 1. The industrial output in the 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday and U.S. zone had been cut at least Friday, and from 9 a.m. to noon 25 per cent because of a sub- Saturday at a booth in Univer- zero cold wave now gripping this Sity Hall. battered and fuel-short country. Students will receive their ap- French Saar Problem plications today or tomorrow, and 2. The U.S. State Department accepted applications and iderti- had informed him that the French fication cards must be presented action in establishing a customs in order to purchase tickets. The frontier around the coal-rich Saar tickets will cost $6, and the pur- would be threshed out at the chasers should bring the exact March meeting of the Foreign change. Checks will be accepted Ministers Council in Moscow. He if they are made out to the Uni- said he had received no reply from versity. the French to his query about Tickets will be sold to appli- whether German machinery from cants this week only, and stu- elsewhere in the French occupa- dents who do not pick up their tion zone was being moved into tickets then will not be able to the Saar. get them later, according to Nan- 3. The United States is advo- cy Neumann, ticket chairman. cating a moratorium on all for- The 1947 J-Hop will be held eign investments in Germany, un- between semesters, from 10 p.m,. til the German economy becomes to 2 a.m. Friday and Saturday, stabilized. Feb. 7 and 8 in the Intramural De-Nazification Plans Building. 4. German handling .of the de- nazification program has improv- ed to such an extent that the Bunyan Dance U.S. is withdrawing its threat to take over the job. W ill Feature The 90-day plan of economic retreat involves the conservinlg -ed W er m sof coal by closing down the least essential industries, and is de- signed to keep food production T dor W n i rhesra and transport in operation. Dies Here Funeral services will be held tomorrow in Lansing for Edmund Claude Shields, former University regent and former Democratic na- tional committeeman from Mich- igan, who died yesterday at Uni- versity Hospital. Shields observed his 75th birth- day anniversary Dec. 30, two days after he was admitted to the hos- pital. Death was attributed to a toxic condition resulting from a gan- grene infection in his left foot. Baseball Captain A graduate of the University in 1894, Shields received his bach- elor of laws degree here two years later. While at the Univer- sity, he served as captainnof the Wolverine baseball team in 1894 and as player-manager in 1896. He was a member of the football squad in 1895. During the Spanish-American war, the former regent was a sec- ond lieutenant in the 35th Mich- igan Infantry and was discharged with that rank in 1898. Shields began the practice of law in his father's office at How- ell, where he was born, and found- ed the law firm of Shields, Bal- lard, Jennings and Tabor in 1913 at Lansing. Democratic Committee Member He began his political career as Livingston county prosecutor, a position he held from 1901 to 1904. He later served as chairman of the Democratic State Central Committee and as a member of the Democratic National Com- mittee. Shields managed the successful gubernatorial campaigns of the late Woodbridge N. Ferris, in 1912 and 1914. During the first World War, Shields was head of a commis- sion to compile the state's stat- utes and chairman of the Four- Minute Men of Michigan. From 1934 to 1937 he was a member of the State Board of Examiners. Named As Regent Shields was named to the board of regents Jan. 9, 1933, by former Gov. William A. Comstock. De- feated when he ran for election in. 1935, he led the ticket when he ran in the 1937 campaign and served as regent from 1938 to 1945. He was president of the Central Trust Co. and the Michigan Sure- ty Co., both of Lansing; vice- president of W. S. Butterfield Theatres, Inc., and Bijou Theatri- cal Enterpries and a director of the Motor Wheel Corp., Grand Trunk and Western Railway, Mel- ling Forge Co. and Duplex Truck Co. Shields is survived by his wife, the former Mary Foley of Mil- wauke, Wis., whom he met while attending the University and mar- ried in 1900. New Dorm Is Planned by VT A new dormitory, to house from 500 to 1,000 men, is among Uni- versity plans for new construc- tions. With the announcement, during Wt th an o n e et duigthe Christmas vacation, that the University had accepted a $105,- 000 grant by the Federal Works, Agency to finance preparatory drawings and specifications, an estimate of $4,569,165 for the pro- posed structure was revealed. Cost of the project will be handled on a self-liquidating basis. The site for the new construc- tion has not been announced. Architectural style will be similar to that of the East Quadrangle, although it may be several floors; higher, depending on the location. Truman Strikes, Marshall Urges Favors Ordered Home from Chr 41 General Will Make Reporti To President Qu~iestion of Return Goes Unanswered I33 The Assoiated Press WASHINGTON, Jan. 6-Presi- dent Truman today summoned General George C. Marshall home from China to report on condi- tions in that war ravaged country where American hopes for early unification of the Nationalists and Communists forces suffered a ma- jor setback. The White House announced the President's action, but when reporters inquired of press sec- retary Charles Ross whether Mar- shall would return to China, Ross said he could not amplify the of- ficial disclosure in any way. Marshall, the army's wartime chief of staff and one of the architects of allied victory over Germany and Japan, went to Nanking in December, 1945 as President Truman's special am- bassador to try to promote unity of the two great factions divid- ing the country. Officials here do not feel that he has failed in his effort but say rather that in the American view it is the Chinese who have thus far failed to achieve the political organization of their country which the United States considers essential to peace in the Far East. Indications were that the Presi- dent's action in directing Marshall to come home was based on the General's estimate that at least for the time being he had done all he could toward the accomplish- ment of a uniform political order throughout China. It is felt by authorities here that if there had been the slightest chance in the near fu- ture of persuading the north China Communists to enter the government of Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Chek and give up their independent armed forces, Marshall would have remained in China to see that possibility through. His order to come home follows what diplomatic authorities con- sidered his prime work there. He is credited with assisting Gen. Chiang in winning acceptance last month of a new Chinese consti- tution which may provide the framework for bringing the Com- munists into the government later on. The constitution in its main provisions had earlier won ap- proval of Communist leaders though they had refused to par- ticipate in the assembly that fin- ally adopted it. Garg Gives Qick .Rel ief Local students suffering from those New Year's hangovers and that post holiday depression will, be pleased to hear that relief is in the offing in the form of the January Gargoyle which will be deposited at strategic spots on the campus next Monday. Reports from the University Hospital show that in nine out of ten cases, patients forgot their headaches after one small dose of the Garg. "It's the greatest thing since penicillin," one doctor testi- fied. Chemistry Staff Considers Action on Freak Explosion President Mentions Forei Policy, Vets, Armed Forces By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Jan. 6-Smiling and conciliatory, Democr President Truman today laid before the Republican 80th Congre program to curb strikes, and asked continued high taxes. His state of the union message, applauded frequently by Joint Congressional Session, called for legislation to outlaw juris tional strikes, check secondary boycotts and for a commission to vise machinery for the prevention of "paralyzing" nation-wide str The message was in large part '" * * * The chemistry department staff met last night to discuss possible action against two teaching fel- lows in the department who were injured when an'experiment" ex- ploded early New Year's morning in a University Terrace apart- ment. The department will send its recommendation for action on the matter to the University admin- istration, Prof. Chester S. Schoe- pfle, chairman of the department said. The most seriously injured was Gaylord Finch, 23, a resident of the apartment, who was burned on his face, stomach, hands and wrist. The other student was Ed- win Campbell, 20, of 1014 Crom- well Pl. Campbell suffered burns on his face and hands and cuts on his hands. The building manager, Lee Mil- ler, 33, suffered cuts on his wrists when he smashed a window with his fists in an attempt to clear the apartment of fumes. The three were treated at Uni- versity Hospital and Finch was admitted as a patient. The hos- pital reported yesterday that he was resting comfortably and that his condition was improving. The blast was caused by mixing red phosphorus and potassium chlorate, Campbell told Uniyersity officials. The students originally told police and firemen that they had accidentally dropped a parti- cle of metal sodium into water, which reacted violently and ex- ploded. Commenting on the report of mixing red phophorus and potas- sium chlorate, a University chem- ist said that "no one with respect for his well-being would mix those two chemicals." The backs of two chairs were blown out and the interior and furnishings of the apartment were seriously damaged but the rest of the University Terrace apartment, building 7, was not damaged. Cost of destruction to the Finch's apartment was esti- mated at $500. University authorities investi- gated the incident to determine whether action should be taken against Finch and Campbell as U.S. Demands Free' Dairen Soviet Asked To Give Control to Chinese WASHINGTON, Jan. 6-(l)- The United States vigorously prodded Russia and China today with a demand that the Manchur- ian port of Dairen be opened to the world under Chinese civilian administration and free of Soviet military control. The State Department publish- ed the text of a crisply worded note which American diplomats delivered last Friday to the Soviet and Chinese foreign offices in Moscow and Nanking. This was the first formal re- action in Washington to the Sov- iet order of Dec. 20 which sum- marily ended the stay of a United States naval ship on a diplomatic mission in Dairen. The vessel was sent hurrying to sea under what some Americans called an out- and-out ultimatum. graduate students of the Univer- sity. Joseph A. Bursley, Dean of Stu- dents, reported that "it was an ac- cident which calls for no action by the office of the dean of stu- dents." The chemistry depart- ment staff meeting last night was held to consider whether the ex- plosion would affect the teaching fellows' faculty status. Finch's wife and infant son were in other rooms of the apart- ment at the time of the explo- sion and escaped injury. ingress To Continued 1ea eemrs anu ns orceu a will provide music for the plaid- shirted throngs at the Paul Bun- yan formal this Saturday instead of Bob Strong who was original- ly scheduled to play for the most informal formal of the year. Strong's orchestra has been stranded in Texas and is unable to fulfill the engagement. Ted Weems' entire orchestra will fly up to Ann Arbor for the big dun- garee dance. Just back from service with the U.S. Maritime Service, Ted Weems has the biggest band of his career now playing for him. Tiny Mar- tin, 300-pound ex-concert violin- ist, is the bass player and comedy singer with Weem's band. Vocal- ists with the orchestra are Shir- ley Richards and Bob Edwards. Informality will mark the Paul Bunyan dance, annually present- ed by the forestry school in honor of their hero, Paul Bunyan. Blue jeans and plaid shirts will be the only costume allowed, and the intermission program will include group singing.. Tckets for the dance which will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday at Waterman Gym are now on sale at the Union and League and will be sold until the night of the dance. Bills Presented On Portal Pay WASHINGTON, Jan. 5. - P)- Two Republican senators today introduced separate bills to out- law virtuily all portal-to-portal pay suits totalling more than $3,000,000,000. Sen. Wiley of Wisconsin said his measue was intended to bar all pending suits. Sen. Capehart of Indiana declared his would outlaw "a majority" of them. The suits have piled up since Col. Pacr Hits VA Pay Plant Suggests System Proposed by Daily LANSING, Jan. 6. - (R) - Col. Philip C. Pack, director of the state Office of Veterans' Affairs, today labeled the federal Veter- ans Administration's disbursement methods as "ridiculous," and charged many veterans attending schools under the GI Bill are in acute financial distress. In a telegram to Gen. Omar N. Bradley, federal administrator, Pack recommended that the Ad- ministration adopt the Army sys'- tem of designating an agent for small areas to prepare subsistence rolls, receive a federal check to cover these rolls and disburse ben- efits individually in cash. (The Wian recommended by Col. Pack is the same as that suggested in a Daily editorial of Nov. 23, 1946.) Pack wrote that under the pres- ent system of mailing checks from a regional office at Columbus, 0., "thousands of Michigan veterans attending school still fail to re- ceive their monthly subsistence checks reasonably on time." Prever Taxei DR. JOHN A. PERKINS * * k Perkins Quits 1rU in Favor of State Position Ford Takes Over as Institute Secretary Dr. John A. Perkins, now state budget director, has resigned his post here es assistant professor of political science and secretary to the Executive Committee of the Institute of Public Administration, University officials have disclosed. His resignation was effective Jan. 1 in order to accept his ap- pointment by Gov. Kim Sigler to the budget directorship. Prof. Robert Ford, director of the University Bureau of Govern- ment, was named by the Regents as acting secretary of the Insti- tute. His appointment is effective immediately. Dr. Perkins also has been named Ann Arbor's "young man of 1946" by the local Junior Chamber of Commerce. He will receive the JCC Distin- guished Service Award at a bosses' night dinner at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Union. State Reverses Stand on FEP LANSING, Jan. 6 - (P) - The Secretary of State was informed today by Attorney General Eugene F. Black that he had no legal right to prevent the legislature from considering a popularly-initiated; Fair Employment Practice Law. Black's predecessor, Foss O. El- dred, had held the petitions in- valid because the proposed law contained no title. a generalized one It renewed only in broad outline many rec- ommendations previously made in specific form, leaving details this time to Congress. On the main course of labor controls and taxes, where the GOP already has set sail, the Chief Executive's tack was this: Labor-Mr. Truman proposed legislation to outlaw those strikes and boycotts by which unions may seek to defeat rival unions or win undeserved bar- gaining recognition, and to pro- vide arbitration for disputes over existing contracts. None of this would cover wage disputes. Then for the "problem of na- tionwide strikes in vital indus- tries," he urged Congress to provide a 20-man study com- mission of Congressmen and representatives -of labor, man- agement and public which he said could recommend legisla- tion by March 15. A study com- mission is something Republi- can senators already have ve- toed' * * * Taxes-Without mentioning the 20 per cent income tax cut planned by GOP House leaders, Mr. Truman declared he antici- pates a "substantial surplus" which should be used to reduce the debt. He urged Congress to continue until June 30, 1948, the wartime excise taxes which some legislators propose to slash im- mediately. They are slated for au- tomatic reduction this coming June 30 under the proclamation which ended hostilities Dec. 31. The Chief Executive used the labor section of his message to declare the need for social legis- lation--"the extension and broadening of our social secur- ity system, better housing, a comprehensive national health program, - and provision for a fair minimum wage." On housing, he said that a law like the Wagner-Ellende-Taft Bill which passed the Senate last session but died in the House "is urgently required." Unification of the Army and Navy in a single department, another short subject, was treated in one paragraph emphasizing the economy angle. The President said he will send a separate mes- sage to Congress on the subject "in the near future." As for the future of the Draft Act, due to expire March 31, Mr. Truman reported that the Army cannot tell yet whether it can get along on voluntary enlist- ments but will make its recom- mendations before the deadline. Turning to the problems of vet- erans, the President said he be- lieves "that our program of bene- fits for veterans is now complete," except for minor adjustments. This appeared significant in view of bills already introduced to pay a bonus, higher subsistence and training grants and other benefits. In foreign affairs, the President reported that the peace treaties for Italy, Bulgaria, Rumania and Hungary will be submitted to the Senate for ratification after they are signed next month, an implied bid in advance for the Senate's approval. He conceded they are not "completely satisfactory" but insisted "that they are as good as we can hope to obtain." The President also urged that Congress "turn its attention" to the problem of admitting dis- placed foreigners to this country. Percy To Stay In Same Abode Congress Acts To End Taxes On .Luxuries Proposal Contrary To Truman's Plan WASHINGTON, Jan. 6-(P)-A bill to end immediately the spec- ial war-time excise taxes- esti- mated at $1,500,000,000 a year-- was rushed before Congress today even as President Truman urged a year's extension of these levies; Rep. O'Toole (Dem., N.Y.) in- troduced the measure to roll back the excise levies and a strong Re- publican move was afoot for simi- lar action. Quick Action Expected Rep. Knutson (Rep., Minn.) chairman of the tax-writing Ways and Means Committee, said the excise subject would get quick consideration. These are war taxes on liquor, telephone bills, furs, luggage, cos- metics and some other so-called "luxury items." As the law now stands, the taxes will drop back July 1 to pre-war rates. The liquor tax, for instance, will slide from $9 to $6 a gallon, that on furs from 20 per cent to 10 per cent. Truman Asked Continuation Instead of letting them end July 1, Mr. Truman asked their continuance for 12 months after that. Congress members who want to end them now say they inter- fere with business. The Administration vs. Con- gress fight on these taxes devel- oped as Mr. Truman side-stepped direct comment on Republican proposals to cut individual income taxes by $3,500,000,000 this year -an over-all reduction of 20 per cent. His failure to mention income taxes led to surmise by some con- gressmen that he is opposed to the proposed cuts. Mr. Truman is expected to speak his mind on that in his economic. or budget messages, to be sent to Congress later this week. Snow Removal Plan Revised Council Okays New Contract with Woodul A violent discussion in Ann Ar- bor Common Council last night culminated in a revised snow re- moval contract between the city and the Public Service Company. Dissatisfied with present ser- vice being given by the company headed by James W. Woodul, ex- University student, councilmen at first refused to approve a new contract presented by Woodul, of- fering to clean sidewalks of the entire city at a flat rate of $20,- 000. A former contract approved by the council stipulated that the contractor would clean only those walks uncleaned by property own- ers. Finally approving a revised con- tract, councilmen voted 11 to 2 for having local walks cleaned f snow on a cost plus 10 percent basis. Council also had hopes of hav- ing a long standing headache re- moved when a proposal aimed at solving the zoning problem was offered by the planning comnis- sion. Ray C. Eastman, chairman of the commission has pronosed that ON BASIS OF COMMITTEE REPORTS: Lederle Cites Seating of Bilbo as 'Doubtful' By PHYLLIS KAYE In view of the case made against Sen. Theodore Bilbo by the War Investigating Committee and the minority report of the Campaign Expenditures Committee. it is legislation governing corrupt elec- tion practices. He served as con- sultant to a similar committee set up in 1944. Returned from Washington Prof. Lederle just returned primary." Prof. Lederle pointed out that "time and again in hear- ings in Jackson, Miss., last month, Chairman Ellender had brought out that this was 'common knowl- edge' and that election officials tions and statements in his cam- paign, had violated certain sec- tions of the Criminal Code as well as the Hatch Act. Prof. Lederle said that statements alleged to have been made by Sen. Bilbo Question Still Open "Whether expressions of this kind are valid ground for exclu- sion of a man from the U.S. Sen- ate after election by his constitu-