SAGINAW EXTENSION SERVICE See Page 6 LIT W4A6 A6F 4:3 kit t Ig wr Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVII, No. 77 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1947 -IR-Ar PRICE FIVE CENTS * * * * *R A VC Asks VA To Pay Vets Cash Urge Paymaster In Proposed Plan Special To The Daily WASHINGTON Jan. 7 - The American Veterans Committee urged the Veterans Administra- tion today to adopt a dcentra1- ized system of payin subsistence allowances to veterans attending colleges. (The proposed system original- ly appeared on the editorial page of The Michigan Daily, November 17.) In a letter to General Brad- ley, AVC's national legislative representative, Chat Patterson recommended that a "qualified disbursing officer by appointed to make payments of allowances directly to student veterans; that payroll lists be prepared monthly from the records of lo- cal VA offices; that the disburs-i ing officer receive a single check from the Treasury covering the entire payroll; and that the dis- bursing officer make cash pay- ments as indicated on the pay- roll." Patterson cited figures at the University of Michigan. to show that the present check system is "working hardship on students." Local Officials Of VA Defend Present Plan Local VA officials say that the present, pay system is better than the plan proposed by The Daily, in spite of the delay in subsistence payment this semester. Harold Haakon, chief of the training section in the local office, said yesterday that the proposed plan would affordsno short-cut to quick payments, since authoriza- tion for subsistence payments must be made by the VA regional office in Detroit. Pay vouchers would have to clear the Detroit office just as the finance office rosters do. Under the present sys- tem address plates are cut for the entire semester from these lists. One of the bottlenecks causing payments to be delayed this sem- ester was the shortage of help in certain divisions when the peak load of GT Bill applications was being handled last fall, Haakon said. Now the Civil Service has given the VA permission to redis- tribute personnel as it is needed. This is expected to relieve tle dif- ficulty incurred last fall. Gamma Phis Still Homeless Members of Gamma Phi Beta sorority were still homeless last night when the Office of the Dean of Women, acting on a recon,- mendation of Health Service, bar- red them from the chapter house at °1520 S. University. The sanitarian of Health Ser- vice and a representative from the Office inspected the house yester- day morning, finding evidence of extensive leakage of carbon mon- oxide and other gases from the furnace. Until the sanitarian declares that the house is safe for occu- pancy, the 32 homeless Gamma Phi members will live in the Un- ion and in other sororities which have made space available. Dalisay J. Aldaba Will Sing- Today A program, including an aria from Puccini's "Madame Butter- Chemistry Teachers Lose Positions After Explosion Action Taken Monday by Department Staff Following Report of New Year's Day Blast Gaylord Finch and Edwin Campbell, teaching fellows in the chemistry department, who were injured when a New Year's "ex- periment" exploded, were relieved yesterday of their teaching duties in the dep irtment. Their future relationship to the department will be decided by the Executive Committee of the liter- ary college, Dean Hayward Ken- iston announced. Taber Warns Against High Budget Figure Clash over Expected Proposal Threatened WASHINGTON, Jan. 7- ('P) - Rep. Taber (Rep., N.Y.), chair- man of the House Appropriations Committee, threatened tonight to "use a sledgehammer" on Presi- dent Truman's expected proposal for a $37,000,000,000 budget. Tab- er called for lopping 1,000,000 em- ployes off the Federal payroll. Signalling the first major clash between the Democratic admin- istration and the Republican-con- trolled congress, Taber told news- men: "If the President presents any- thing like a $37,000,000,000 out- lay for expenditures next year, we will use a sledgehammer as well as a meat axe to bring down that figure. "My budget figure is $29,140,- 000,000," Taber said, "and I have not changed it. "We are going to cut down gov- ernment expenditures toba point where the budget can be balanced, a payment made on the national debt, and we will still have room to reduce taxes." Governmentsofficials predicted Mr. Truman will submit to Con- gress on Friday a budget close to the $37,000,000,000 mark. This would be for the next fiscal year, beginning July 1, 1947. Lin Tung-Chi To Talk Here Dr. Lin Tung-chi, professor of government and history at Na- tional Futan University, China, will speak on "The Aristocratic Antecedent" at 4:15 p.m., Friday in the Rackham Amphitheatre. This is the first of a series of four lectures on "The Quest of the Chinese Mind" which Dr. Lin will deliver here under the joint auspices of the history department and the Oriental Civilization Pro- gram. Dr. Lin, 'who received his B.A. from the University in 1928, re- turned to the United States in June, 1945 as a guest of the De- partment of State under its Cu- tural Cooperation Program. Since his arrival, he has been confer- ring with officials at various Americanuniversities as head of the Librarydof Western Thought, a Chinese endowed institution to be erected in Shanghai for the specific purpose of studying the basic ideas and institutions of the West. The remaining lectures of the series to be given by Dr. Lin in- clude: "The Enlightenment: Prize and Price" at 8:10 p.m. Monday; "Humanism or Beyond Human- ism" at 4:15 p.m., Jan. 15; and "The Emerging Ethos" at 4:15 p.m., Jan. 17, in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Heirens Now The action was taken following a meeting of the chemistry de- partment staff Monday to con- sider possible changes in Finch's and Campbell's faculty status fol- lowing the blast, which caused damage estimated at $500 to Finch's University Terrace apart- ment. Changing their original story of accidentally dropping a piece of metal sodium into water, the stu- dents told University officials that the explosion was caused by mix- ing red phosphorus and potassium chlorate. Finch is still a patient at Uni- versity Hospital after suffering burns on his face, stomach, hands and wrists. His condition was re- ported as improving. Campbell and Lee Miller, the building manager, also suffered cuts and burns and were treated at the hospital. The Dean of Students Office conducted an earlier investigation of the incident to determine whether action should be taken against the teaching fellows as graduate students of the Univer- sity. They decded that it was an accident which did not call for action by their office. Finch's wife and infant son; were in other rooms of the apart- ment at the time of the explosion and escaped injury. Case Set For Alleged 'Fix' Of Pro Game NEW YORK, Jan. 7 - (1) - After Alvin J. Paris' purported confession had been admitted in evidence and two New York Giants' backfield stars had told of1 alleged bribe offers, the State to- night completed its case in which it seems to prove Paris tried to "fix" the Giants-Chicago Bears1 Dec. 15 game. Assistant District Attorney' George P. Monaghan read to the' jury of two women and 10 men the statement in which Paris al-? legedly admitted offering bribes to Frank Filchock and Merle' Hapes to throw the National Pro-1 fessional Football League title contest. The 25-page statement was made at 5:15 a.m. the day of the game, Monaghan said. When the state rested, Judge Saul S. Streit adjourned court for the day and ordered the jury locked up for the second succes- sive night. * * * Paris Trul Juror Excusedr NEW YORK, Jan. 7-(/')-The New York Stock Exchange and a brokerage firm today dismissed at customer's man who said he could not serve on a jury trying the Al-1 vin J. Paris football bribe cases because "I'm a gambling man my- self." William H. Haskell, the excused juror, had his registration as a representative on the stock ex- change cancelled because, Presi- dent Emil Schram said, he "hass a misconception of the businessr in which he has been engaged."a The Student Legislature willA meet at 7:30 p.m. today in theL Hussey Room of the League.V Tough Task Lies Ahead For Marshall Change Enhances Political Position By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON, Jan. 7-Gn. George C. Marshall's new post will bring him face-to-face with some of the toughest problems in world history and-whether he likes it or not-will plunge him into the midst of 1948 presidential specula- tion. The two biggest problems con- fronting the General-turned-dip- lomat are: 1. How to deal with the Rus- sians in completing the structure of world peace. 2. How to work with the new Republican Congress in the con- duct of foreign affairs. Political Status As for politics, his selection as Secretary of State makes him the No. 2 man in the Truman Admin- istration-the man who would be- come President if a vacancy should occur in the White House in the next two years. Looking ahead to 1948, some Democrats already have men- tioned his name privately as among the possible standard bear- ers if for any reason Mr. Truman should not be the nominee. Mar- shall, as a soldier, has steered clear of politics, but there are those who would like to see him at the top of the ticket. If a full-fledged "draft Mar- shall movement should develop, it might hie helped along by the fact that Marshall, as secretary of state, would be continuously in the public eye. Friends say, how- ever, that Marshall has never dis- played the slightest political am- bition. The diplomatic tasks confront- ing Marshall are enormous and in some instances urgent. In two months, according to present schedules, he will have to set out for Moscow to begin nego- tiating a German peace treaty with the Russian, British and French foreign ministers. Unless the Moscow meeting is only the fundamentals of the delayed-should Marshall request more time to prepare for it-he must master in the meantime not German problem but also other current thorny issues over Pales- tine, Argentina, Poland, and Ja- Horowitz Will Give Concert Here Friday Presenting the seventh concert of the Choral Union Series, Vladi- mir Horowitz, pianist, will appear Friday, Jan. 17, in Hill Auditori- um. Horowitz began his musical ca- reer in Russia, where he became famous almost immediately after his debut in 1920. Because of the disturbed post-revolution condi- tions, however, he was unknown outside that country until his first European recital in 1926. Exten- sive tours followed and Horowitz made his first American appear- ance two years later. Horowitz has chosen the follow- ing numbers for his Ann Arbor perfoirmance: Mozart: Sonata in A major; Mendel- ssohn: Two Songs Without Words (B minor, Op. 67; 0 major, Op. 62); Kab- alevsky: Sonata No. 2. Schumann: Variations on a theme by Clara Wieck; Chopin: Impromptu in A-flat ma or; Four Etudes, Op. 10; Lizt: Legend: St. Francis of Paola Walking on the Waters. -h resident Names General Marshall ToSucceed Hi*m Cabinet Minister Forced To Resign After Doctors Advise 'Slow Down' By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Jan. 7--James F. Byrnes resigned tonight as Secretary of State and President Truman chose as his successor the man who guided America's military fortunes in the war-General George C. Marshall. Byrnes declared the doctors had warned him he must "slow GEN. GEORGE C. MARSHALL JAMES F. BYRNES EDUCATED POOL: Billiard Exhibition Features Willie Hoppe and Prof. Moore By PAUL HARSHA Willie Hoppe, billiards' champ- ion of champions, had his cue ball analyzed last night by Prof. A. D. Moore, head mentor of the Col- lege of Engineering. Hoppe and Charles Peterson, trick artist, entertainted 250 mem- bers of the Science Research Club, while Prof. Moore explained how Hoppe's cue ball did somersaults. President Alexander G. Ruth- Portal Claims Rise Toward Expected Peak WASHINGTON, Jan. 7 - (W) - Portal to portal wage suits-now nearing the $3,500,000,000 'mark -mounted slowly but steadily Tuesday toward the industry-pre- dicted $5,000,000,000 peak as both houses of Congress considered bills to curb them. A total of $181,030,540 in new claims was filed Tuesday to build the overall unofficial total to $3,- 499,425,690. Rep. Gwynne (Rep., Iowa) in- troduced a bill in the House Tues- day which would limit the back pay claims to one year on pending suits and require that suits in the future be filed within a year. Senators Wiley (Rep., Wis.) and Capehart (Rep., Ind.) previously had introduced bills in the Senate. All suits such as those pending would be barred under one section of Wiley's measure, while most of them would be placed outside the domain of the courts by Cape- hart's bill. NewROTC Plan Released WASHINGTON, Jan. 7- (/P) - Gen Jacob L. Devers, Command- ing General of the Army Ground Forces,ntoday announced plans to resume the ROTC summer train- ing periods, which were suspend- ed after 1941. Six week training courses will be1 given at selected camps through- out the United States commencing next summer. The training will be mandatory for students in the advanced course of the senior ROTC (third and fourth year college level). They will attend one summer ses- sion, normally during the summer+ preceding their final college year,+ in addition to training received during the regular school year, ven and Dean Ralph A. Sawyer of the Graduate School were among the spectators. Prof. Moore, campus billiard expert who has played and stud- ied the game for 30 years, be- came serious five years ago when he secured Life Magazine's file of repetitive-flash photographs showing split-second details of Hoppe's shots. His study revealed: Gyroscopic action wheels a cush- ioned ball as much as two inches in six feet. Hoppe's normal stroke travels ten feet per second; his powerful nine-cushion shot probably spins through the air at 40 feet per second. The "coefficient of restitu- tion," or "bouncability," of cue against cue ball is .81. an ex- tremely high degree. "Monkey business" enters in the nine-cushion shot when on the sixth and eight cushions the ball both loses and gains velocity. Prof. Moore said cushion con- tact always reduces the speed of the ball. "The ball slows down after the cushion contact because its axis tilts," he explained. "Ro- tational energy thereby is built up causing the ball to speed up on many occasions." Hoppe, who has been world's billiard champion since 1906, said that the analysis came a little late to help his game. "I've tried the trial and error and practice method since I was five," Hoppe, who is nearing 60, said. "But maybe this will help newcomers." Time Schedules Time schedules for the spring semester will be available the first part of next week at Rm. 4 University Hall, according to spokesmen for the Editorial Office of the University Press. The 20,000 copies ordered are now in the hands of the print- er. Assault From Chinese Communists Feared PEIPING, Jan. 7.-(A')-An im- Communist troops on the long-be- sieged, Government-held capital minent assault by 80,000 Chinese city of Paoting in Hopeh Province was reported today along with Communist successes creatng a crtcal government stuaton ii-i-ii critical government situation in South Shantung Province. Paoting is 90 miles south of Peiping. down" and that he couldn't slow State. Marshall, Army Chief of Staff presidential mission to China. The announcement of his s almost the exact hour, 6:15 p. Marshall left for home by plane from Nanking. The change in the top diplo- matic post was a surprise. It had been known that Byrnes had grown tired some months ago, but the 67-year-old South Carolinian seemed to be in very good health lately. With Senate confirmation of Marshall-and no one doubted that it was sure-the change means that Marshall instead of Byrnes stands next in line for the presidency in the next two years. There is no Vice Presi- dent now and the Secretary of Stateheads the line of succes- sion under law. Marshall turned 66 last Decem- ber 31, having retired earlier as Chief of Staff. Hailed as one of America's military geniuses, the five-starred general was President Truman's pick to try to unsnary the affairs of unhappy China. In a report today, Marshall said that China won't be saved until, extremists of the right and left give way in the government to middle-of-the-roaders. Now, he will transfer his tal- ents to the world. Foremost among the jobs he faces is get- ting along with the Russians with anything like the success he did during the war. The White House made public an exchange of telegrams in which the President accepted "with great reluctance and heartfelt regret" Byrnes' resignation, to become ef- fective January 10. Marshall, who has been Mr. Truman's special envoy to China, is now enroute to Washington from Nanking. He will stop sev- eral days in Hawaii enroute to Washington. World News Roundup By Th Associated Press LAKE SUCCESS, N.Y., Jan. 7.- The Security Council tonight post- poned action on the Big Four plan to place the Adriatic port of Tri- este under United Nations juris- diction after Australia questioned the legality of the plan and Bel- gium demanded more time to study it. COLUMBUS, O., Jan. 7. - Bond of $5,000 was set for Rob- ert H. Flemming, 42, ex-convict, today when the man accused of kidnapping pretty Mary Vir- ginia Kimberly, 20-year-old Ohio State University coed, was arraigned on two charges of writing bad checks. Munieipal Judge Rodney Ross, who set the bond, held Hemming to the grand jury, which also will consider a kidnaping charge filed by the girl's mother, Mrs. Emerson E. Kimberly, against fnpmt. -;n down in the job of Secretary of f in the war, is presently ending a election to the cabinet came at m. Central Standard Time, that Congress men Compliment Byrnes' Work WASHINGTON, Jan. 7- Con- gressional expressions of regret that Secretary of State Byrnes is quitting were tempered tonight by an outpouring of general praise for Gen. George C. Marshall as his successor. Senator Vandenberg (Rep., Mich.), said in a typical state- ment: "I deeply regret the resignation of Secretary Byrnes. He has been an able, courageous, effective sec- retary in the finest American tra- dition. He has been a staunch defender of American ideals when they needed defense in a critical period. He has made a tremendous con- tribution to peace. His departure is a major loss. "General Marshall is rich in useful experience. He has always enjoyed the total confidence of Congress as well as of his mili- tary and civilian colleagues at home and abroad. I wish him well in his great responsibility." Typical of the sentiments ex- pressed by House members were those voiced by Rep. Wadsworth (Rep., N.Y.), a member of the committee. Wadsworth termed Marshall a man with "everything necessary to make him one of the greatest secretaries of state in the coun- try's history." 'U' Teaching Fellow's Play Opens Feb. 9 The political exploits of an Ar- my veteran who tries to become President constitute the plot of "O'Daniel," a play written by Glendon F. Swarthout, teaching fellow in the English department, scheduled to open on Broadway February 9. The vet-hero, whose outstanding trait is that he has learned to achieve his own ends with a min- imum of effort, unites the veterans of the country into one organiza- tion which backs him when he attempts to get the nomination for the presidency. The play was outlined overseas during the summer of 1944 while Swarthout and his co-author John Savacool of Summit, New Jersey were serving in the Army. The inspiration for the plot came dir- ectly from the nmilitaryvexpriences STARTING OFF THE YEAR WRONG: Garg To Be Thrust Upon Unwidlng Campus Monday I I