LEGISLATURE WELCOME See Page 4 i £rt 4M 743 ai1is FAIR, COOL ... . ............ . ....... . .. . , LVIII, No. 1 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TIESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1947 PRICE FIVE CENTS U' enrollment Hits New Peak of urope Asks .S- for $19 iion in Aid lcononic Parley n Paris Closes ARIS, Tuesday, Sept. 23-(P) British messenger travelling ommercial plane left Paris jor United States early today, ng to U.S. Secretary of State shall a request for $19,300,- 00 to carry 16 western Euro- i nations through, the next years. ie Trans World Airlines plane Paris at 9:13 p.m. ie European economic confer- closed yesterday with the ng ;of a 20,000-word report, >dying the request for finan- aid, which warned of possible omic "catastrophe"-and revo- rd with Plan presentatives of the 16 coun- which are looped like a giant e geographically around west- Russia and her associates, ally signed a report of their s in accordance with a request e by Secretary of State Mar- in a speech at Harvard Uni- ty on June 5. itish Foreign Secretary E1,- Bevin who flew from Lon- for the signing of the re- said: rell, here is our report. It is for the American people and American congress to decide her this program, undertaken Mr. Marshall's invitation, Ld be fulfilled and whether pe can by this means con- te to the peace and prosper- f the world. .nmediate Aid vi declared that immediate vas necessary in order to re- the threat of a crisis for h "there is nor pcedent in ry for Judging what shape it take." ly an abstract of the report made public. It made clear aside from the 16 nations rn Geriany was also in- d in the calculations.; a Abstained sia and the states within her e of influence have not par-, ted in drawing up the re- Bevin expressed regret at absence today and added:a >r the future, as in the past, loor remains wide open to hose of good will who will to contribute to the healthy >f Europe and thereby end ilsery which war has left be- Pushbutton Plane Makes First Transatlantic Hop . Crew Tunes in Destination, Remains Idle While Radio ;Beam Guides Craft to Field WASHINGTON, Sept. 22-3P)_- A robot plane with an amazing mechanical brain completed a 2,- 400-mile transatlantic flight to- day opening vast possibilities for Expressmlen Are On Strike In New York All Shipments from Area Are Tied Up Students from New York who shipped their baggage via Railway Express after Sept. 18 will be forced to remain burdens to their roommates. The strike of 4,000 Railway Ex- press truckmen in the New York metropolitan area, Sept. 19, has tied up all railway express s.hip- ments by air and rail into or out of New York City, Jersey City, Long Island, Staten Island, Ho- boken and Weehawken. None Received No material is being received from these points, and no ship- ments will be made there until the strike is over, according to Percy Newhouse, manager of the office here. Stores selling ready-to-wear goods have also been hit by the strike. Although some stocks have been built up, clothing stores will be "materially affected" if the strike continues, according to the manager of mne large Ann Arbor store. Intervention Posole The National Mediatior, Board an Washington called a meeting yesterday to consider interven- tion in the strike, under its power to administer the railway labor act. The truckmen's union, Local 808 of the International Brother- hood of Teamsters, AFL, is seek- ing a 40-hour work week instead of the present 44 hours, and a wage increase of at least 15 /2 cents an hour. More tha'n 7,000 non-striking workers have been laid off because of the strike. Railway expressmen in Ann Ar- bor are not entirely unhappy about the stopping of shipments from NewYork. Already swamped by more than 8,000 heavy, trunks and 500 bicycles, railway express has had to borrow trucks and hire extra men to get the shipments to the students, according to Don Mynning, manager. Stoves and Iceboxes Even ,stoves and iceboxes have been brought to the University by some students to add to the regu- lar burden, Mynning said. He added: "We are using 15 trucks and two men on a truck for heavy stu- dent luggage, and we'll get the baggage to the students as fast as possible." Individual Concert Tickets Available Individual concert tickets for the Choral Union programs are now on sale in the office of the University Musical Society in Bur- ton Memorial Tower. A few season tickets for the regular Choral Union Series of ten concerts, and the shorter five concert extra series, are still avail- able, according to Dr. Charles Sink, president. push-button aeronautics in war and peace. Crewmen sitting in the plane on a Newfoundland field "tuned in" a British airport yesterday- much like picking a station on a push-button radio-and climbed out of the plane on the English field today without doing any- thing else to get there. It was the first fully automatic transatlantic f" ru, and the U. S. Air Force, which carried out the project, declared: "Not even so much as a little: finger was placed by any human being on the mechanism from the time the plane took to the air until after it had landed." The actal takeoff and landing were directed, the Air Force said, by beam control, but that was from outside the plane. An Air Force official pointed out that the demonstration was a long step toward the day when loaded bombers might be sent over targets without humans aboard, or cargo planes might be sent automatically to destina- tions. Other air experts said, however, the operation of the automatically piloted craft required a rmdio beam from takeoff point to des- tination and added that an en- emy would be unlikely to cooper- ate by lining up beams on his best targets. These experts did not deny, however, that the flight had great implications for the fu- ture. World News At a Glanice By The Associated Press MIAMI, Fla., Sept. 22-A new tropical storm lunged at south- ern Florida from the Gulf of Mexico tonight, pleting flooded lowlands with fresh downpour and raising potential hurricanemen- ace for the Atlantic seaboard. TRIESTE F2EE TERRI- TORY, Sept. 2 '-A United States officer and two enlisted men were taken captive on the Trieste Free Territory frontier by Yugoslavs at about noon yes- terday, an official report from headquarters of the U. S. troops in Trieste said early. The men were "forced across the frontier at gunpoint," the official account stated. * * * NEW YORK, Sept. 22-Yugo-, slav Foreign Minister Stanoji Simic late today accused the Unit- ed States of trying to isolate Rus- sia and her Eastern European fol- lowers behind "a dollar curtain:" Simic told the United Nations assembly that the Marshall plan1 for economic aid to Europe was "really aimed at splitting Europe; and creating a Veteran bloc sub-j servient to the United States and directed against the U.S.S.R. and; the new democracies." * * * DETROIT, Sept. 22-Three high1 officers of the CIO United Auto Workers announced tonight that1 they would ask the union's inter-1 national executive board to re-c buke and censure President Wal- ter P. Reuther "for betraying thec trust of his high office."c They accused him of subjecting "our union and its officers and board members to unwarranted; slanders" in his "report to thee membership" in the last issue of the United Auto Worker, UAWf publication. 'U' Officials Halt Student Housing Jam Long-Range Plan Eases Problems University authorities yesterday reported that all students who have contacted them concerning housing have been placed in living quarters. Long range planning this year prevented the jam which found the housing question unsolved several months after the begin- ning of the Fall term last year. All during the summer University au- thorities in charge of housing ar- rangements carried on corres- pondence with student and facul- ty members in need of living quar- ters. Francis Shiel, director of resi- dence halls, reported that not un- expected problems had cropped up during registration from harassed students who found themselves without a place to live. And at the latest report the housing bulletin board in the Office of Student Affairs still carried numerous list- ings of rooms available on the outskirts of Ann Arbor. One interesting sidelight of the housing situation this year finds scores of male students en- joying a temporary taste of bar- rack life while awaiting comple- tion of the East Quadrangle addi- tion. The men are living in tem- porary barracks erected in the basement recreation rooms of the East and West Quads. They will move to the completed addition sometime in the middle of Octo- ber. . Women, too, have been given a glimpse of barracks-style living, with temporary accommodations in the recreation rooms of Helen Newberry and Betsy Barbour. Only eight women desiring dormi- tory assignment remain to be placed, however. Supplementary housing in League houses and private rooms has been provided for all women who have applied for these ac- See HOUSING, Page 2 Food Export Gap Revealed Truman To Report On World'sShortage WASHINGTON, Sept. 22- (P) -The President's Cabinet Food Committee was reported tonight to have told President Truman that a gap of 4,000,000 to 5,000,- 000 tons exists between what this country can now spare hungry Europe and what it received last year. Europe received some 17,000,000 tons from U. S. crops last year. That a gap exists between the supplies which Europe has asked for and what it may get'this year became known on good authority after a White t. use announce- ment that Mr. Truman expects to make a statement on world food problems within a few days. The Cabinet Food Committee had met during the day and sup- plied Mr. Truman its recommen- dation on how this country can continue to help Europe and still cope with the problem of high commodity prices at home. The Cabinet committee's talk with the President was one of a series of foreign policy confer- ences held as 16 European nations asked $19,330;000,000 in U.S. aid for a four-year recovery program based on the Marshall plan. 20,190 Expect Final Figure To Be Even Higher FLEEING THE FLOOD-This unidentified man and his wife take what belongings they can on their rubber boat and attempt to reach higher ground as a large portion of the residential and outlying district of New Orleans, La., were under water from overflow waters of Lake Ponchar- train and Lake Borgne. Responsibility Deied by Taft Tells Democrats To Solve Price Problem. LAKE TAHOE, Nev., Sept. 22 -(AP)-Senator Taft (Rep., Ohio) today branded "intemperate and untrue" Democrtic charges that Taft was one of those primarily responsible for high prices, and he challenged Democratic spokes- men to "state their solution in- stead of calling names." eft was retorting to state- ments by Senator Lucas (Dem., Ill.) and Sen. O'Mahoney (Dem., Wyo.) issued through the Demo- cratic National Committee that he led the drive to repeal OPA. "The Democratic high com- mand." Taft told a news confer- ence, "has been planning to blame the Republicans for high prices, and from the intemperate and un- true personal attacks in a state- ment by Senator Lucas and O'Ma- honey they are very much upset indeed that anyone should point out the obvious truth. "As for the OPA bills of 1946, of 'which the senators complain,. they were passed by a Democratic Congress. Controls were finally removed by President Truman be- fore the Republicans took over Congress." Yom Kippur Services Services to commemorate Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the UAN President Denies Floor To Vishinsky General Assembly To HearTrygve Lie NW YORK, Sept. 22-()- United Nations Assembly Presi- dent Oswaldo Aranha said tonight he had turned down a request from Andrei Vishinsky of Russia for opportunity to follow up his "warmongering" attack on the United States with a second speech in the Assembly's general debate. This development came as the battle between Russia and the Western Powers raged hot and heavy through a round of speeches this afternoon. Formal Apeal The situation had reached such a point of tension by the day's end that Secretary-General Try- gve Lie decided to make a formal appeal at tomorrow's session for the great powers to put aside their differences and cooperate for peace. His office announced his speech would close the general de- bate. In today's debate Hector Mc- Neil, British Minister of State, charged that if Russia continues her present policies the United Nations will be destroyed and "the unstable peace of the world will crumble and fall" with "hideous consequences." Yugoslav Warning Spokesmen for Yugoslavia and the Soviet Ukraine, both in the Moscow orbit, blamed the pres- ent state of world upset mainly on the United States. Yugoslav warned of a "growing danger of a new conflagration." IFC Registration To End Thursday Registration for all men in-' terested in the fall rushing pro- gram, which opens Sunday, Sept. 28, is being held from 3 to5 p.m. daily through Thursday in Rm. 304 of the Union. Payment of a one dollar fee is required of each rushee. Rushees who have previously registered must also appear at the 1)FC of- fice, according to Henry Meyer, president. One Term Paper Costs Student $30 It may not rate an A, but there will be one term paper written this semester with a cash value of $30.00. Explanation: A student had to pay for the privilege of writing a term paper because it meant the difference between two hours credit and three hours credit. The extra hour changed her "reduced program" into a "full-time pro- gram" and added $30.00 to her tuition fees. Student Football Ticket Student rooms will have a "new look" of their own this fall when prints of famous paintings are added to pennants and Petty girls as decoration for drab walls. The framed prints, on exhibit from now until Oct. 4 in West Gallery of Alumni Memorial Hall, will be available for loan to Uni- versity students for one semester at a time for a. 50 cent rental fee 4o cover repair costs. Only single prints will be available to each student at the present time. Students may sign up for rental of the prints from Wednesday to* the clse of the exhibit. They will be distributed the week oof Oct. 5, under the direction of Mrs. Eloise Wilkinson, of the Scholar- ship Office, who is in charge of the reprint library. Obtained through a gift of 450 prints from the J. L. Hudson Company of Detroit, to which Dr. Lloyd S. Woodburne, associate dean of the literary college, added a gift of 21 prints, the majority of the pictures belong to the French Impressionist period. Prints of paintings by Cezanne, Corot, Van Gogh, van der Weyden, Roualt, Thomas Hart Benton and Grant Wood are included in the group, which were selected by Prof. George Forsyth, Jr. and Prof. Harold E. Wethey of the fine arts department. Prof. Jean P. Slusser, director Protest Village School Syst-em Irate Parents Hit NegroSegregation A meeting held last night to settle the schooling problem at Willow Village resulted in an- other deadlock, with the Negro parents living on Walpole Court refusing to send their children to a segregated school. The parents picketed the Sim- monds school Thursday, portest- ing the re-zoning of school dis- tricts, and asking for a hearing by the board of education. Mrs. T. Snyder, a member of the Walpole Committee to inves- tigate the situation, claims that' the re-zoning of the Village, which switches the children from Ross school to the all-Negro Simmonds school, was done to segregate the Negro pupils. She further states that lack of adequate protection on main streets between their homes and Simmonds school will endanger the safety of the children. Superintendent of Schools Dr. Malcolm Rogers attempted to rec- oncile the outraged parents to the new situation, and said that the re-zoning had nothing to do with the race of the children. He added that the facilities of the Sim- monds school were far superior to those of the Ross school. of the Museum of Art and;Prof. Karl A. Kasten of the architecture school, were in charge of framing the prints. NSA Elects U' Stude nt Region Head Harvey Weisberg, law student, was elected president of the Mich- igan Region of the National Stu- dent Association at the organiza- tion's constitutional convention held early this Fall at the Univer-, sity of Wisconsin. Weisberg, who is president of the Student Legislature, was elect- ed by 34 delegates representing 77,000 students at 18 Michigan ss colleges and universities. He will represent the region on the Na- tional Executive Committee of the Association. Set Up Machinery The convention, attended by representatives of more than a million students at 350 colleges and universities throughout the Unite.l States, set up the official national machinery of the Asso- ciation. With primary aims the promo- tion of student government, the broadening of educational opport- unities and the promotion of clos- er relations between students at home and abroad, the NSA will work on campus, regional and na- tional levels, with the cooperation of other student organizations, Weisberg said. Immediate Plans Immediate regional plans, in line with NSA activities will be discussed at the first regional meeting to be held Sunday at Nazareth College in Kalamazoo. They include the formation of a Student Government Clinic to in- troduce discussions of the various forms of student government, to survey the types and to formally report on their efficiency to the national organization with the eventual goal of generally stren- gthening student governments. Daily Tryouts All eligible students interest- .'d in working on the news and ditotrial stiff of Thy Dail' hculd attfnd a tryout mee w 'ng at 4 ".m. tomorrow in P dailyconf;rence room. A meeting for business staff tryouts will be held at 4 p.m. Thursday in the conference room. Interested students who can- not attend the meeting should contact The Daily. ASIDE, PETTY GIRLS! Prints of Famous Paintings Will Adorn Students' Walls - o Men Outnumber Women by 3-1 First reports on fall enrollment at the University indicate that an all time high of 20,190 students have signed up for classes, shat- tering all previous records. University second-guessers had predicted a fall enrollment of 20,500, but late registrations are expected to swell the final figure 'past this amount. More than 500 students registered late for special courses or off-campus activities last fall. 3-1 Ratio A breakdown of the peak en- rollment figures reveals that 5,063 women and 15,127 men students have registered at the University. Some 11,013 veterans are included in the record shattering enroll- ment, 361 of them being women. Authorities have predicted that the enrollment figures will start a down hill trek after this fall's peak, eventually leveling off at the 18,000 marker in several years. Meanwhile emergency measures nave been taken by the University to meet the temporary oveload. Orderly Registration Despite the record shattering enrollment, Registrar Ira Smith, who co-ordinated the registration and classification procedure in Waterman Gymnasium, said the registration system "clicked bet- ter than ever before." Only one small jam was reported on the first day when large groups of freshmen ano transfer students caused a slowdown in the regis- tration machinery. And, surprisingly enough, Reg- istrar Smith said that relatively few students had registered late yesterday for oi-campus classes. Evidently the pre-war practice of late registration has disappeared since students fear they may not be admitted to the University if they show up late, according to Smith. Classroom Allocation - Reports from authorities in charge of classroom allocation in- See HUGE, Page 2 Students Get Fall Preview Rising Temperatures Will Follow Frost Although Fallwasn't slated to start officially until today stu- dents hurrying to classes yester- day morning got a preview of crisp autumn weather as the mer- cury skidded below the forty mark. A light frost covered most of lower Michigan early this morn- ing and in the north and central portions of the state freezing temperatures have been predicted, However, the weatherman says that later this afternoon the mer- cury will climb somewhat with fair skies slated to let the sin warm up the campus. Itn other parts of the nation the Associated Press reported that growers were fearful of the cold snap' effect on the corn crop. The corn crop, already slashed far be- low last year's record yield, may be further curtailed by the pre- dicted frost. However it is hoped that a quick return to normal temperatures will prevent large- scale damage to the crop. Vets Absence Veterans attending the Uni- ~crsity under the benefits of the G. I. Bill need no longer file ab- ence reports, Robert A. Waldrop, director of the Veterans Service Bureau disclosed yesterday. Those veterans who come under the previsions of Public Law 16. however, are required to file single, overall report of absence at the close of the semester. Form; were distributed at registration. LONGER WAITS EXPECTED: Avalanche of Students Packs Restaurants By HAROLD JACKSON, JR. Campus eating establishments are recovering slowly today from the avalanche of hungry students who yesterday packed every res- taurant, cafeteria, drug store, tea room, snack bar and beanery they still needs many students to work during the noon rush hours. Kuenzel and Mrs. Benjamin Wheeler, manager of the League both said that the Union and League are trying their best to keep the prices of staple foods like diners who line up sometimes as early as 4:30 p.m. for supper. Elsewhere in the campus area, owners questioned estimated that prices on some items have risen as high as 15 per cent since the spring semester. All, however, in- dicated a desire to keep their NOTICE! 1. 11