COMMON SENSE See Faire 4 Sw uAuu ~~aiti W ARER, RAIN Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVIII, No. 46 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1947 PRICE FTVE CENTS National Resources Board Established To Advise Truman Members Will Supervise Wartime Mobilization of American Strength By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Nov. 13-President Truman today formed a Na- tional Resources Board to advise the White House, in event of war, on the best way to mobilize America's military, industrial and civilian strength. It immediately held a meetin Secretary of the Treasury Snyd Secretary of the Interior Krug, Secretary of Commerce Harriman Export Curbs Asked To Halt Soviet Power AFL, CIO Support Marshall Program WASHINGTON, Nov. 13-(A)- Rigid curbs on U.S. exports, to prevent strengthening the military power of the Soviet bloc, were pro- posed today during critical study y House and Senate committees of the administration's $597.000,- *00 emergency aid to Europe pro- gram. Rep. Lodge (R.-Conn.), a mem- ber of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, urged that the U.S. "use an economic pistol on So- viet Union" in the form of eco- nomic sanctions (pressure). The suggestion won partial agreement' from Secretary of Commerce Har- riman, former ambassador to Rus- sia. Harriman Testifies "I don't think it would be proper to shut off trade, but I believe we should not ship our materials which are a direct contribution to the military strength-of-the. east- ern European countries," said Harriman, who testified before the House Committee in favor of the short-term aid program. The former envoy to Moscow said also that he would "lose in- terest," so far as further Amer- ican help was concerned, in any western European country which went into the Soviet orbit. Labor Support Firm support for the Marshall proposals came meanwhile from the American Federation of La- bor, which announced that it would call a conference of labor representatives from the 16 "Mar- shall Plan" nations of Western Europe to help fit labor into those countries' rehabilitation efforts. 1CIO President Philip Murray likewise issued a statement en- dorsing the Marshall program and pledging his organization's sup- port. Vets register Fewer Gripes Gregory Answers Complaint on Check Student veterans have regis- tered fewer complaints over fail- ure to receive subsistence checks this month than at any time in the past, Leonard S. Gregory, Vet- erans Administration training su- pervisor, declared yesterday. Replying to a letter by Standish S. Howe printed in The Daily yes- terday which argued that check disbursement was probably being delayed by VA "red-tape," Greg- ory pointed out that the lack of complaints indicated checks had already been received by most vet- erans. Failure of veterans to report changes in address or C-numbers may account for the delay in ar- rival or non-receipt of subsistence fchecks in some cases, he said. Gregory advised veterans who L do not receive their checks by to- morrow to report to the Veterans Service Bureau in Rm. 1514 of the Rackham Building. Three Men Added g at the White House. Members are er, Secretary of Defense Forrestal, Secretary of Agriculture Anderson, and Secretary of Labor Schwellen- _t ;each. The chairman is Arthur M. Hill of Charleston, W. Va.,, who took office last September 26. Finance Marshall Plan Mr. Truman told of the cabinet appointments to the new board at a news conference in which he also announced the appointment of Adm. Louis E. Denfeld as Chief of Naval Operations and said the Marshall Plan of aid to Europe will have to be financed through taxes. The work of the board will in- clude drafting of programs for use in time of war and the natural and industrial resources for mil- itary and civilian needs and for stabilization of the civilian econ- omy. To Coordinate Policies It also is charged with coordi- nating: "Policies for unifying, in time of war, the activities of federal agencies and departments engaged or concerned with- production, procurement, distribution, or transportation of military or civil- ian supplies, materials, and prod- ucts. Ret he rfMe 3Gain Control Of UAW Board ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Nov. 13 --(')~-The last-barrier to complete control of the CIO United Auto Workers by Walter Reuther forces was cleared today when his can- didates scored a decisive 18 to 4 majority of the UAW Interna- tional Executive Board. El~e'<-'- of regional directors at the union convention gave Reu- therites better than a 10-to-i vot- ing margin on the board. They always had been outnumbered on factional issues since Reuther won the presidency more than a year ago. Reuther has often said he was president "in name only." This was because the anti-Reuther fac- tion led by George F. Addes has had about a two-to-one majority on the executive board. Addes was defeated for reelection by mil Mazey Tuesday, when Reuther was returned to office with little opposition. Yesterday the Reuther forces completed the sweep of top of- fices when Dick Gosser of To- ledo and John Livingston of St. Louis won the Vice Presidencies from R. J. Thomas and Dick Leon- ard. The four top offices, now all Reuther men, and the 18 regional directors make up the executive board. They have varying voting strength. There are only 16 UAW regions but the two in Detroit each have two directors. Among today's results in the regional elections: Hearing on Local Rents ToBeHeld May Determine Rate Increases Possible rent increases loomed yesterday for an estimated 10,000 students living outside University residences, with the announce- ment that the local Rent Advisory Board will conduct an open hear- ing on the question of a general change in the level, of rents in Washtenaw County. Students and townspeople have been invited to attend and testify at the open hearing slated for 7:30 p.m. Nov. 24 at Washtenaw Coun- ty Courthouse. To Hear Testimony Wilson H. White, chairman of the Rent Advisory Board which is made up of six local citizens, has asked any persons interested in testifying at the meeting to con- tact him at 1008 First National Bank Building, Ann Arbor, be- fore Nov. 21. After hearing testimony of wit- nesses, the local board will make a recommendation, for or against a general rent increase, to a four- county rent group in Detroit. The Detroit group will in turn refer the recommendation to the federal rent control authorities who have final jurisdiction on a possible change in rents here. Campus Reactions The announcement of the pub- lic hearings brought immediate reactions from several campus groups contacted by The Daily. Already the campus chapter of the AVC, the Student Legislature and the Interfraternity Council are planning to send delegates to tes- tify at the open hearing. About half of the more than 20,000 students live in residences not controlled by the University. However, a rent increase granted by the board would not affect stu- dents living in dorms, Willow Vil- lage units or fraternity and soror- ity houses owned by alumni or- ganizations. Set Svanhohn Will Present Concert 'loday Set Svanholm, Metropolitan Opera tenor, will appear in the fourth concert of the regular Choral.Union Series at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. Svanholm received his formal musical training at the Royal Conservatory in Stockholm, fol- lowing which he led a Stockholm choir and sang several roles in the Royal Opera. The young Swede started sing- ing as a baritone, but when he decided to try a higher voice it was the turning point of his ca- reer. Bruno Walter, the conduc- tor, hear' nim sing Radames in Verdi's "Aida," and invited him to Vienna. Since that time, he has climbed to heights which he never dreamed of as a choirmaster. Known chiefly as a Wagnerian tenor, he made his New York debut in 1946 at the Metropolitan. He has appeared since with the San Francisco Opera, the Chicago Opera and the Philadelphia La Scala Company ii Detroit. Svanholm's concert today will mark his first Ann Arbor appear- ance. Governents Clash with As UN I Approves L Violence Increases in France, Italy; Boycott Threat From Russian Bloc Ignored Britain Rejects Plan To Divide Palestine By The Associated Press NEW YORK, Nov. 13 - The United Nations Assembly tonight rejected a Russian boycott threat and approved by a large majority Secretary of State Marshall's pro- posal for a year-round sitting of the "Little Assembly." The vote was 41 to 6. The six nations of the Russian group voted against it while the Arab nations abstained. Arabs Abstain Before the vote, which climaxed a stiff battle by the Soviet group against the U.S. propasal, Russia's Andrei Y. Vishinsky assailed the majority-approved plan as "scan- dalous." He announced again thatJ Russia would boycott it. In the debate, delegates of Po- land, White Russia, and the So- viet Ukraine also said their coun- tries would not serve on the "Little Assembly." Troops "Not Available" Elsewhere on the UN front: 1. At Lake Success Britain told a UN Palestine subcommittee that British troops would not be "avail- able" to carry out any Palestine solution which the Arabs and Jews did not accept. This was in- terpreted as a rejection of a So- viet-Armerican compromise plan for implementation of partition- ing the Holy Land into separate Jewish and Arab countries but Britain said LdPr questioning that she would not oppose any majority-endorsed partition plan. 2. The Soviet Ukraine was elected to the Security Council to replace Poland Jan. 1, after U.S.- supported India withdrew from the contest. 3. The Philippines and Costa Rica were elected to the Trustee- ship Council. Five Dead in New Palestine Reprisal .Raids JERUSALEM, Friday, Nov. 14- ()-Attacking bands described by police as Jewish underground "re- prisal squads" killed at least five British men and wounded 29 others in two machine gun and grenade raids in Jerusalem and Haifa last night as the Holy Land experienced its bloodiest outbreak of violence in six weeks. An army communique early to- day said 28 British soldiers were wounded, five seriously,.when two hand grenades were tossed into a downtown Jerusalem cafe. A British policeman was killed and another was wounded by gunfire from confederates of the grenade hurlers. Four British civilians, employes of the Shell Petroleum Company, were mowed down by gunfire in front of a Haifa motion picture theater. Two were killed instantly and two died later in a hospital. An unofficial police report that two soldiers were killed in the Jerusalem blast was not verified immediately. British officials said the Stern gang directed the attacks as an underground reprisal for the deaths of two Jewish youths and three girls. The five were killed yesterday in a British police and military raid on a house in a set- tement north of Tel Aviv, be- lievedt have been atrroris training school. Registrations Due for Test All applicants for admission to Year-Round WHERE NEWARK'S "NAVY" IS ON PATROL: Photo diagram shows Port Newark area1 the decommissioned battleship New Mexico is scheduled to be scrapped at pier leased by Nar sub-leased to a salvage firm. Newark's city-operated fire boats (circled) patrol mouth of ch in a move designed to block entry of the 30,000 ton battleship. * * * * I Communists OPERATION NEWARK: Tiny Fireboats Defend Port Against U.S.S. New Mexico NEWARK, N.J., Nov. 13-(o)- Moving ponderously toward its final rendezvous, the decommis- sioned battleship New Mexico headed for hostile Newar4 Har- bor tonight and her civilian high command snorted that H-Hour had been set for tomorrow morn- ing. Awaiting the once valiant dreadnaught, now dubbed "The Reluctant" by waterfront wags, were two dinky fireboats armed with water and fire-chemical spouts and a determination that "she shall not pass." The latest communique on the impending engagement between the New Mexico, its towing craft and the Newark "fleet" came from Walter P. Meseck, president of the towing company, who set the hour for a showdown at 10:15 a.m. (EST) tomorrow and declared de- fiantly: Dalton Out in 'Leak' Scandal LONDON, Nov. 13-(P)-Chan- cellor of the Exchequer Hugh Dal- ton was dropped from the Brit- ish Cabinet tonight in a swiftly developing budget "leak" scandal that shook Labor's crisis-harried government., Sir Stafford Cripps, Minister of Economics, was named to succeed Dalton as Treasury Chief. He re- tained his recently assumed duties as Coordinator of Britain's Indus- trial Export Drive. Cripps, hailed by Labor and Conservatives alike for his recent exposition of Brit- ain's economic position, thus emerged as the undisputed "strong man" of the government. Palton, officially the fourth ranking member of Prime Minis- ter Attlee's cabinet, resigned after apologizing to the House of Com- mons for "a grave indiscretion" in disclosing tax secrets to a re- porter a few minutes before he announced an emergency interim budget in Parliament yesterday. "We're headed right for Port Newark and that blockade we've been reading so much about. Those little boats had better run for cover when we get there, too." Full Speed Ahead The New Mexico, under way at the breakneck speed of four knots, had broken out of battle formation last night a consider- able distance out of New York. A Coast Guard plane found the battleship 58 miles from the har- bor entrance this morning and di- rected two tugs which had cut her loose yesterday in heavy seas to take her in tow for her target -a Newark scrapyard, which city officials say she must not reach. Officials have ordered that no more ships be junked within the city. 'En Garde' Guarding the Newark Channel entrance are two fireboats com- manded by Public Safety Difec- tor John B. (Admiral for the Du- ration) Keenan who regarded the snail-like approach of the enemy suspiciously. He trumpeted to his fleet: "It may be a plot. Hold your formation!" One patriotic Newarker tele- phoned New Jersey's best known naval authority-Adm. William (Bull) Halsey, formerly of Eliza- beth, for strategic advice. No Help from Halsey "I can't help Newark on strat- egy," said Halsey from his Vir- ginia home. "I don't know a damn thing about patrolling channels. I patrolled oceans. Let your own admirals work out their blockade." Mayor Vincent J. Murphy said earlier, after a conference with the Navy Department, there might be a Washington-enforced truce. The impending Battle of New- ark aroused the ire of New Mex- icans who viewed Newark's atti- tude toward the ship as a "direct insult" to the state. One veteran demanded that the governor "call out the Rio Grande fleet for coun- ter-action." Panel Agre4 Graduated Best System Regressive Plan 'Ruthless,' Says Three views of Michig dilemma merged last nigh need for a graduated inc to replace what was called gressive sales tax" now i Lt. Gov. Eugene C. Key nomics lecturer George R son and Municipal Leagi John A. Huss agreed, at a sponsored panel discussi the sales tax places an unc den on lower-income brack was, therefore, undesirabl Dr. Keyes, surveying I problem from the viewpoi high state official, blur nounced the sales tax as th ruthless, meanest tax sys vised by man.". "The sales tax," Dr. Key tinued, "penalizes a man ing children, for buying f for wearing shoes." The lieutenant-govern that he's all for the into but expressed serious dot the party in power or th themselves could easily be the idea. Anderson, presenting th omist's point of view, both the property tax sales tax as regressive raising revenue. The property tax, as i ministered, he said, invari sults in unfair assessmen Huss attacked the state tion policies as the panel's ity on municipal proble view was that the state c adequately handle taxa tration because "it was c to satisfy all financialc with a single formula." Fire Destro' BowlingAl] PROVIDENCE, R.I., No, (/D\ A rl.... fire.. n.A Assembly Marseille Port Strangled by Strikes,_Riots Terror Aimed at Present Government By The Associated Press PARIS, Nov. 13-Violence in Southern France and the length f Italy brought governments of he two countries into head-on ollision tonight with left-wing po- litical forces and a reference by he Italian Communist chief to Democratic revolution." French Premier Paul Ramadier peaking to Communist deputies n the National Assembly, charged heir party with responsibility for 'larseille riots yesterday in which one person was killed and 30 .to 50 where njured when a mob invaded the vy and 'ity Hall and attacked the De- hyannel aullist mayor. Communist labor eaders tied up the Marseille port nd threatened the Rhone Delta ith a general strike. halenge Communists es ."If you want a dictatorship, we sill fight you to the end," the So- Tax ialist Premier said to the Con nunist deputies. In Italy, a wave of terror that 1 ook on a pattern of nation-wide 'iolence directed at the Christian ~emocrat government of Premier Is \lcide De Gasperi, had resulted in Ke even assassinations or deaths in eyes me days. o Democratic Revolution an's ta Palmiro Togliatti, Italian Com t on the nunist chief, told reporters his ome ta arty intended to stay on the the re- parliamentary plane as long as n effect hat is possible." But he said to yes, eco- me of them, the representative of Ander- r liberal newspaper: "For the rest, ue hea iou who are a liberal show me n AVC- hat it is possible to organize on, thaI emocratic revolution." due bur- Naples police fired on Commu- ets, an( ist rioters, and Interior Minister e. tarlo Scelba declared in the con the tai tituent assembly that "attempts lt of £ -gainst the state and against de- ttly de- locracy will not be tolerated." e "most tem de j Nobel Prizes yes con for hav oo4d anAre Awarded or sa( British Scientists, ibt tha' French Author Win ie voter: sold or STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Nov. 13 he econ -(IP)-Nobel prizes in physics and attacke hemistry were awarded tonight to and the wo British scientists while the ways o terature award went to Andre wayso: ide a French author who fr- is ad terly was an enthusiast for Com- t is d unism. abl Sir Edward Appleton, 55, who it 's taxa elped lay the groundwork for ra- author- ar, received the award in physics. ims. Hip le was cited for "his contributions ould no n exploring the ionosphere, i.e., adminis- lectrically conductive strata in alled or herupper atmosphere on the emand: arth." Sir Robert Robinson, 61, an or- _anic chemist, received the chem- stry award "for his research re- s arding biological significant sub- tances from the vegetable king- Iey lom, especially alkaloids." The prizes are worth about $40,- )00 each. Gide, the eighth French writer v. 13 -' o win the literature award, was through onored by the Swedish Academy ionCen->f Literature "for his extensive jey, th- nd artistically important author- red. h ip, in which he has exposed the jfig.ht-3roblems and conditions of hu- fh ankind with fearless love of sections Truth and psychological percep- by Paw- Lion." area of he Paw- ent into lUech Moite seen for Continues Run from all tions in Art Cinema League will continue t. its showing of "The Barge-Keep- HE STUMPED EXPERTS: Forged Works of Dutch Artist Will Not Appear in Ann Arbor I By MARY STEIN An Amsterdam art forger who out-swindled Goering and "took" Dutch museums for a cool two million won't get a chance to palm off any phony masterpieces in Ann Arbor. There's not a single Jan Ver- meer painting among the 46 brought here from Holland for the current Museum of Art ex- hibit, and it's not hard to take a guess at the reason. One Hans Van Meegeren faked the style of the 17th century artist so well that he fooled Dutch art experts for had been sold to the Nazi bigwig. The deal was traced back to Van Meegeren, who was promptly picked up for selling prized na- tional art to the enemy. When he said he'd painted the picture himself ( along with seven other "old masters" no one would believe Van Meegeren. He'd been so careful to use pigment and oil formulas identcial to Vermeer's that the pictures even fooled the fluoroscope. To prove his case to scoffing art authorities, Van Meegeren painted (,W___ _ _ _)-A fliiash iire raedi the Rhode Island Recreati NO PRODUCTION KNOWLEDGE: ter housing 30 bowling al night and police estimat U'' Scientists Doubtful That 'dozens' of people were in SFour alarms brought firs ing equipment from all Russia Knows Bomb Secret of the city and from near tucket. Police roped off the By JIM MARCHEWKA engineering and production se- North Main Street, near t Skepticism mounted among crets have still been retained by tucket line, as firemen w University scientists today in re- the U. S.," he added. the debris in rescue work. sponse to a recent Soviet dispatch It is likely that the Russians The flames could be& regarding an atomic bomb experi- will work out the technical prob- several miles. ment in Siberia. lems involved in the atomic bomb Ambulances were sentf It is very unlikely that the dis- assembly but their efforts would hospitals and police stai patch is authentic, according to require more time and a greater Providence and Pawtucke