LKNOW, YOUR CANDIDATES See Page 2 wi Latest Deadline ine the State :I4iAl CONTINUED FAIR VOL. LVI, No. 13 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8 PRICE FIVE CENTS UN Atomic Energy Scientists Questioned on Mexican Plan Nervo Asks Whether Simultaneous Operation Of National, International Plants Is Possible By The Associated Press NEW YORK, Oct. 7-United Nations Atomic Energy Commission scien- tists were represented tonight as feeling that Mexico's compromise plan on production of atomic energy has far-reaching political implications. Some were said authoritatively to feel that the hot issue was beyond the score of their deliberations. The Mexican delegate, Luis Padilla Nervo, wants to know if the scien- tists think it is possible to operate under international authority and in inter- * * * Prof. Preuss Cites US Atom Control Scheme Believes Baruch Plan AbolishesVeto Power Because the production of atomic energy is "revolutionary," there must be a "revolutionary" type of super- vision to control it, Prof. Lawrence Preuss, of the political science de- partment, declared yesterday. Prof. Preuss pointed out that the Baruch Plan, which was based on the Acheson - Lilienthal Report to the State Department, has a "promise of effectiveness." The plan, providing for an international atomic develop- ment authority, places all uranium in the hands of an international group. Supervision would extend over all phases of ownership and operation of atomic energy plants. Any unlicen- sed use of uranium would be con- sidered, ipso facto, an act of aggres- sion, he reported. Since any nation using atomic weapons would naturally make use of the surprise technique, Prof. Preuss added, there would be no time for de- liberation of the matter in the UN Security Council. The United States plan therefore abolishes the veto of the permanent members of this group. Russia refuses to agree to this. He pointed out that all the nem- bers of the committee of the Atomic Energy Commission studying techno- logical aspects of the problem were in agreement regarding the dangers of diverting atomic materials from legal production and the feasibility of con- trol. However, Prof. Preuss said, the Russian delegate to the commission as a whole has not agreed to any of the political implications of the com- mittee report. "I think," Prof. Preuss indicated. "that if the Baruch plan were accept- able to other nations, the American people would probably agree to it. The only opposition might possibly be that created by Henry Wallace." Wallace Replies To Post Charge WASHINGTON, Oct. 7 - (P) - Henry A. Wallace, in a letter to the Washington Post tonight, writes that he agrees with Bernard M. Baruch that an inspection system should be part of any international atomic con- trol and is "aware" that the Russians have opposed it. But he says that the Soviet opposi- tion on this point "may not be unre- lated to our inflexibility on the issue of our continuing to produce and stockpile atomic bombs." "What I am pleading for," Wallace writes, "is 'give' on both sides." The letter was prompted by an edi- torial which said that Wallace's criti- cism of the Baruch plan seems "to have a good deal of validity" on "at least one count" - the question whether the United States should continue making atomic bombs dur- ing the negotiations. The editorial urged that the manufacture be stopped, commenting that "it must certainly be a real irritant to the Rus- sians and a real determent" to mu- tual trust. But it went on to call Wallace "at once naive and vague" respecting a "second basic point of disagreement with the Russians"-the matter of an international inspection system. Wallace's letter said in part: "I am aware, as indicated in my statement of Oct. 4, that it is the Russians who have opposed a system of international inspection. I agree with you that a "relationship of mu- tual trust and confidence must be two-sided." It is precisely for this reason that I think it not "at once naive and vague" to believe that Rus- sian intransigeance on this point may not be unrelated to our inflexibility on the issue of our continuing to pro- duce and stock-pile atomic bombs. 11 ,national zones plants producing atomic fuels for other weapons and peaceful uses and to operate in indi- vidual nations under national con- trols secondary plants producing atomic fuel for peaceful purposes, Closed Meeting He raised the question last week at a closed meeting of Committee No. 2, the political body of the commission. Prof. H. A. Kramers, chairman of the scientific committee, will give an an- swer, as yet undisclosed, to Commit- tee No. 2 at a closed session tomorrow at Lake Success. Kramers was said to feel that the Nervo query has wide political ramifications. International Jurisdiction Padilla Nervo put this question to the scientists: "Whether it would be possible in their opinion to have the extensive separation plants (which produce nu- clear fuel for reactors, suitable after only minor operations for use in weapons) and primary reactors (which regenerate nuclear fuels) un- der some international organization and in territory subject to interna- tional jurisdiction rather than in na- tional territory; and to have within nations only reactors that do not re- generate nuclear fuel and could be more suitable for peaceful purposes." P i * .lt Policy -Obsolete, Suit Stalls Council OK Of 'U' Offer Claim City Should Not Rush Contract Early action by Ann Arbor Com- mon Council on the University offer of $97,600 for the expansion of local water and sewage disposal plants was forestalled last night by the interven- tion of a taxpayer's suit brought by William A. Lucking, Detroit attorney. The University offer was made in order to insure adequate services to the University, bearing in mind the present building program. Under the agreement the University would con- tinue to pay the same water and sew- age disposal rates as those charged the general taxpayers. Also in the proposed agreement was an offer by the University to pay the city $20,000 annually to provide for the salaries of seven policemen. This payment would be made over a ten-year period. In his suit, Lucking has alleged that the city could have entered into a more equitable agreement. He told newsmen that he also objected to the ten-year period mentioned in the po- lice salary agreement. Lucking point- ed out that salary costs may exceed the amount specified over a ten year period. "The city should not rush into an agreement of this kind," he added. The city of Ann Arbor has been in- structed by the court to appear Oct. 12, to show cause why an injunction should not be granted. The injunc- tion further asks that the court issue an order restraining the city of Ann Arbor from entering into any settle- ment with the University of Michigan without court approval. City Attorney William M. Laird told Common Council last night that legally they could act on the Univer- sity offer immediately. He pointed out, however, that action taken by council in the face of a request to appear in court was bad policy. Grid Ticket Favors Denied by Baker University athletic department ticket manager Andrew Baker vigorously denied last night that his office showed favoritism in football ticket distribution this fall. His statement followed on the heels of a letter to The Daily Sun- day which stated that civic clubs and prominent politicians were of- fered "a flood of tickets" to Wol- verine games. "The charges contained in that letter are all false," Baker de- clared. "I don't know where the writer got her information but it certainly has no foundation in f act." "Our records are open to any- one's inspection," he added. '.Hurricane Strikes Ao--, Qd Coast, Tampa Bay Citrus Region; U.S. Stands Pat On Trie ste Issue Newcomb Says The belief of most of the American people in "old-fashioned armed rights" will be a big obstacle to con- trol of the atomic bomb by an inter- national authority, according to Prof. Theodore Newcomb, of the so- ciology department. American participation in interna- tional control is probably a political impossibility at present, Prof. New- comb said, because most Americans, particularly those who can bring po- litical pressure to bear, are still think- ing in terms of nation-sovereignty of the kind which is incompatible with international control. Most Americans have shown that they're afraid of Russia, and they're sticking to their deeply ingrained at- titude of national defense, he said. Ile thinks, however, that a skill- ful political leader might be able gradually to swing public opinion over to the view that international control of the bomb is necessary and feasible, without prejudicing Ameri- can interests. We st Florida Smuts Pleads For Tolerance In Controversy Sen. Connally Makes American Declaration By The Associated Press PARIS, Oct. 7-The United States served notice on the European Peace Conference today that it will make r further concessions in the east-west struggle over the Trieste Free Zone as the delegates began final considera- tion of peace pacts for the five former satellites of Nazi Germany. The American declaration was fol- lowed by immediate charges by a member of the Slav bloc that the United States had insulted both Yugoslavia and France during draft- ing of the Italian peace treaty. Thus, delegates of the east and west at a Conference plenary ses- sion locked horns in their last ef- fort to write their ideas of peace into the treaties for Italy, Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary and Finland. And into the struggle plunged Field Marshal Jan Christian Smuts of South Africa, white-haired veteran of Versailles, who pleaded for "unity and tolerance" between the eastern and western powers as he urged dele- gates of the 21 nations not to turn their peace-writing efforts into "an overture to bigger struggles to come." America's stand-pat policy on Trieste was made by Senator Tom Connally (Dem.-Tex.), who, in urg- ing Conference approval of the re- port drawn up by the Italian Po- litical Commission, declared that "a just solution" of the Trieste and Yugo-Slav- Italian frontier prob- lem was the "keystone of a peace settlement with Italy." The white-maned Texan repeated previous American warnings that the United States considers the Italo- Yugoslav frontier and Trieste as "one decision, one agreement" in which "no part can be separated from the whole." The Texan reminded delegates that the outline of principles for the projected free zone had been attacked by two-thirds of the Ital- ian Political Commission, then add- ed: "It outlines principles without which no settlement is possible." He denied Slav assertions that the zone's governor, representing the United Nations Security Council, could be regarded "as a dictator or as the agent for any one foreign group of powers striving to use Trieste for their own ends." The zone's governor, Conally said, "must have sufficient powers to ful- fill his responsibilities." The Slavic bloc has maintained that the popular legislative assem- bly of the free zone must be su- preme, with the governor a mere Security Council observer there. Connally denied Yugoslav charges that Britain and the United States wanted to make a joint military base out of Trieste for their future opera- tions, adding: "Our proposal is that the territory shall be and shall remain de-militar- ized, and that no military, naval or air forces, installations or equipment will be maintained, built or manu- factured in the free territory." Book Exchange Checks Ready Today and tomorrow are the last days that students may pick up their checks or unsold books from the Stu- dent Book Exchange, according to Dick Burton, director of the ex- change. Students who left books at the Union last Spring can pick up their books or checks on Wednesday only. More than 500 students have checks waiting for them now at the game room of the Michigan League. The book exchange will be open from 1 Rn ffr. n rl na n d .-A nrrnxx n -- Serious Effect LAUGHS FOR HIS CANDY ... Hjalmar Schacht, former Nazi finan- cier acquitted in the Nuernberg trial, jokes at a press conference in Nuernberg, Germany, after agreeing to sign autographs in exchange for bars of chocolate for his children. "Protected" by American and German police, he is hidden away from the public in a private Nuern- berg residence. VAUGHN TO SPEAK: Results of Graduate Record Exams Will Be Interpreted World News at a Glance By the Associated Press No Increase in Meat Supply Seen' Continued light receipts of livestock in principal terminals yesterday offered no encouragement for easing of the meat shortage. Presidential Secretary Charles Ross said the President "Is considering every possible aspect of the meat situation." The American Meat Institute reported that packers were now produc- ing pork and beef "at only about 10 per cent of capacity, a record low." The Institute said that pork stocks of all kinds on Sept. 28 were approxi- mately a third less than two weeks earlier and 50 per cent under the same day a year ago. * * * * Auto Plants Lay Off Workers DETROIT, Oct. 7-(P)-A walkout of 500 auto workers tonight snagged production at Kaiser-Frazer Corp. plant as two other automotive firms be- gan cutting production because of material shortages. Kaiser-Frazer officials and representatives of Local 142, CIO United Auto Workers, said the men walked out protesting discharge of a foreman in the body welding department. Chrysler Corp. and the Briggs Manufacturing Co. today began laying off workers and cutting down production because of sheet steel shortages. It was expected 25,000 men would be affected, with Briggs laying off 7,000 workers and Chrysler reportedly planning on sending 18,000 home. Hull Shows Gradual Improvement WASHINGTON, Oct. 7-(P)-Cordell Hull was reported today to be showing "Gradual but definite improvement" at Bethesda Naval Hospital, where he suffered a stroke a week ago. A p C s u * Atstempt at Chinese Truce Rumored The 1,100 students who took Grad- uate Record Examinations as second- semester sophomores and seniors last May will have results of them inter- preted at a meeting to be held at 8 p.m. today in the Rackham Lecture Hall. Dr. Kenneth Vaughn, author of the examinations and director of all measurement projects of the Car- William Green Urges End to Price Controls CHICAGO, Oct. 7-VP)-AFL Presi- dent William Green today cited John L. Lewis' Miners Welfare Fund as an "objective" for All American Federa- tion of Labor Unions as a means of providing security for the organiza- tion. Green urged in his keynote address opening the federation's 65th annual convention, an end to price controls, except rent ceilings and said that workers must share by fresh wage boosts in greater profits which he said better production efficiency learned in wartime is bringing to American industry. Green's statement charted new AFL policy because the federation, together with the CIO, strongly sup- ported a firm price control law be- fore Congress this summer. However, Green said the present law was much weaker than the "fairly decent gov- ernment control exercised by the government up to June 30th." "With the exception of perhaps continued control of rent and some other items comparable to that," he said, "we believe the time has come when price control, along with wage control, should be lifted by the gov- ernment of the United States." Bonfire To Climax Pep Rally Friday A fire-building ceremony will be one of the highlights of the pep rally planned for Friday night before the Wolverines meet Army on Saturday. Each student in the torchlight pa- negie Foundation, will be the' lecturer at this meeting in addition to deliv- ering a public lecture at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre and meeting with academic counselors and concentration advisors. Possibilities of Measurement The topic of Dr. Vaughn's after- noon lecture will be "Possibilities of Measurement in Higher Education." Dean Hayward Keniston, sponsor of the tests for the literary college, will preside at the evening meeting in which students will havehan oppor- tunity to ask questions either on their individual profiles or on group re- sults. The tests were part of a na- tionwide inquiry by the Carnegie Foundation as to post-war conditions in American colleges and were con- ducted here by the Bureau of Psycho- logical Services, a unit of the Insti- tute of Human Adjustment. Recognized as Outstanding Dr. Vaughn, who is associated with the American Council on Edu- cation, is recognized by colleagues as the most outstanding man in the na- tional testing movement. After Dr. Vaughn's interpretation of the Graduate Record Examina- tions, students who took them will be able to consult with their concentra- tion advisors about the profiles which they picked up last week. Ticket Filchers To Face Inquiry The stream of notices summoning underclassmen who did not heed the Student Legislature warning to a Ju- diciary Committee hearing will begin today. Working with ticket stubs sorted into sections by the athletic depart- ment, the committee is checking seat numbers against University files to determine the underclassmen subject to disciplinary action because of their failure to turn in upperclass seats. Postcards will be sent to these un- derclassmen immediately, Seymour Chase, chairman of the committee, said last night, and the first hearing will be held Thursday. Chase said that many of the regis- tration coupons show obvious era- sures and substitutions, simplifying the committee's check. All student Not Yet Known, Reports Reveal Inhabitants Seek Safety, Flee Area * By The Associated Press TAMPA, Fla., Oct. 8.-The tropical hurricane roaring out of the Gulf of Mexico struck Tampa Bay at mid- night last night-on schedule-the Storm Warning Service reported, but no serious effect was immediately apparent inland. Clustering around Tampa Bay were the cities of Tampa and St. Petersburg and many smaller co- munities-the most thickly popu- lated area on the Florida West Coast. Already thousands of inhabitants had fled from exposed areas to places of greater safety. In a 10 p.m. advisory, the Federal Storm Warning Service said the hur- ricane with winds up to 100 miles an hour was whirling like a meteor- ological buzz saw toward Tampa Bay. At that hour it was 60 miles west northwest of Fort Myers and travel- ing north northeastward at 16 miles per hour. The lashing winds were roaring directly towards the state's citrus area, where most of an estimated 102,000,000 boxes of oranges, grape- and tangerines were approaching maturity. The value of the 1946 crop has been estimated at between $150,000,000 and $200,000,000. At midnight, Egmont Key, at the mouth of Tampa Bay, reported winds up to 55 miles an hour with gusts considerably higher. Lakeland, 30 miles inland, had winds of about 45 miles an hour-hardly strong enough to wreak widespread destruction. The wind dropped to 16 miles an hour at Tampa's McDill Field-but that may have been the lull before the storm. The barometer was drop- ping fast. A few telephone poles were down 10 miles south of Tampa, but they were leveled before the hurricane's schedulel arrival by advance gusts. Radio amateurs, on the alert for the high wind's approach, reported they had detected no havoc at mid- night. The Coast Guard warned residents of Davis Islands, a rich residential section in Tampa Bay, and those along Bayshore Drive, paralleling the bay, to evacuate. The Coast Guard said there was danger from high tides rather than winds. Peake Named Assistant Dean Appointed To Succeed Walter at L.S.&A. Post Dean Hayward Keniston announ- ced yesterday that Dr. Charles How- ard Peake, instructor in English and academic counselor, has been named Assistant Dean of the literary college. Dr. Peake will succeed Associate Dean Erich A. Walter, who will be- come Director of the new Office of Student Affairs Feb. 1, 1947. 'U' Graduate Born in Medina, O., Dr. Peake graduated from Southeastern High .School in Detroit and received his bachelor's degree in education from the University in 1928. In 1935 he re- ceived the master's degree in English and in 1941 the. doctor's degree, both from the Universiy. Dr. Peake has served as a teaching fellow and as an instructor in the English department and as chief resi- dent adviser for West Quadrangle from 1937-42. From 1942-45 he was on leave of absence for military duty, holding the rank of first lieutenant in the Army and serving 11 months in the Southwest Pacific. Academic Counselor Dr. Peake returned to the campus last year as an instructor in English and as counselor with the Veterans' I