TWO THE MICHI.GAN DAILY TRIDAY. AUGUST- 9 : -945 TII-y Fy :t i SmICVHYt1-V N.L-Y.V1.1 DAY ATTC11TL' 1. _I.. . .f'iviilFii r [ V V .7'iv 1~Yal f Army Rejects ischarge 101 BMW RimR-S 4"%'W T W= in- I v - I iQri 10 n ReparationsTaken From Each Zone C) Change IndPontRequirement Is No oIndefIiniely Postponed By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 2-The Army ttrned thumbs down today on proposals for faster demobilization and emphasized that stand by post- poning indefinitely any change in the 85 points required for soldier dis- charges. Earlier the service had expected to fix late in July a lower "critical" score for release under the point discharge system. The postponement means that eventually men now going to the Pacific will get point credits 4for combat and overseas service. New Men Head State. Prisons Temporarily Three Acting Wardens Appointed by Heyns By The Associated Press LANSING, Aug. 2-Garrett Heyns, State Corrections Director, today placed three temporary wardens in charge of Michigan penal institu- tions. He named Gerald F. Bush, a mem- ber of the State Parole Board, to be acting warden of the Marquette branch prison. Dr. David P. Phillips, psychiatrist -at the Ionia reformatory, was made acting warden of that institution. Heyns named Warden Ralph E. Benson of the Marquette prison to be acting warden of the State Prison of Southern Michigan to operate that peitentiary until the State Civil Ser- vice Commission has decided wheher Harry H. Jackson,sdismissedrwarden, and six of his assistants, are to be reinstated to their jobs. They were removed on charges of maladmini- stration. Heyns said that Warden Joel R. Moore of the Ionia reformatory was seriously ill in a hospital and that William Bath, veteran captain of the guards was running the Marquette institution in Benson's absence. Heyns emphasized that the ap- pointments were purely temporary and that they did not indicate the Corrections Commission's plan for administration of the prisons in the future. Because he will have to be away from the Prison of Southern Michi- gan some of the time, Heyns said he wanted Benson's authority there clearly established. Heyns and Ben- son took over operation of the prison when Jackson was removed. Bush -was one of a group of prison officials and parole board members kidnapped by escaping convicts at the Marquette prison in September, 1939. SRA To Greet Student Grrou An inter-racial team of students travelling for the American Friends Service Committee will be guests at the Student Religious Association Coffee Hour, 4:30 p. m. EWT (3:30 p. m. CWT) today in Lane Hall. At the SRA luncheon, 12:30 p. m. EWT (11:30 p. m. CWT) tomorrow a book review and discussion on "They Seek a City" by Bontemps and Con- roy will be featured. Scott Mijaka- wa will lead the discussion. To re- serve a place at the cost luncheon, call Lane Hall. The public is invited to attend both affairs. Roy Is Named To County Assistant Probation Post Raymond L. Roy, former investi- gator for the Michigan Liquor Con- trol Commission, has been named assistant probation officer for the Washtenaw County Circuit Court. A former member of the Washte-~ naw County Sheriff's department,' Roy will assist Mrs. Carruth Cook, Chief Probation Officer. There is no change in the plan ulti- mately to fix another and probably lower. score. Retention, for the time, of the 85 point requirement was announced by Secretary Stimson. Cut to 7,000,000 Men The planned discharge rate con- templates cutting the Army back to 7,000,000 men by next June 1, with a total of 2,000,000 enlisted men and 100,000 officers to be released by that time. About 1,500,000 of the dis- charges will be on points and the remainder for such causes as wounds, age and illness. The discharges will not be net loss, part being offset by 800,000 inductions. The present discharge score of 85 will be continued, the Army said, until 800,000 now eligible on the basis of service, time overseas, combat and parenthood have been released. No date was even estimated for the fix- ing of the new count requirement for discharge of an additional 700,000. At that time credits built up since May, Stimson said. WAC Serve Unchanged Also unchanged is the 44-point score for WACs, of whom 5,000 have the required discharge total. Ap- proximately 6,000 additionalWACs, Stimsgn said, will be released by next June, Stimnon announced that 18,000 officers already have returned to civil- ian life since May. "But In accordance with the policy announced at the time the merit system was instituted," Stimson said, "there will be no critical score for officers, although their individual scores will also be recomputed. The element of military necessity will play a much greater r.ole in a decision as to whether an officer must be re- tained than it does in the case of an enlisted man." Labor Cof Is Endorsed WASHINGTON, Aug. 2-()-Sec- retary of Labor Schwellenbach en- dorsed today a suggestion that he sponsor a general industrial peace conference, but it may not be held until his contemplated departmental reorganization is accomplished. The proposal came from Senator Vandenberg (R.-Mich.- who wrote the new cabinet member a recom- mendation that leading Represent- atives of industry, labor and govern- ment be called together to seek a program for avoidance of strife in the reconversion period. Schwellenbach in an immediate re- ply assured his former senate col- league that he has "been thinking more and more during these last few weeks about the desirability of call- ing a conference of industry and labor." Vandenberg, who was a delegate to the San Francisco Conference which set up the United Nations organiza- tion, urged that top men in each of the nation's economic divisions fol- low the example set on the west coast when delegates from 50 nations sat together and "frankly faced" their problems in a "triumph of the council table." Two Dead As Plane Crashes Into House PONTIAC, Mich., Aug. 2 -(RP)- Two Army flers were killed this af- ternoon when an air transport train- ing plane crashed into a house and garage at John R. and Sixteen Mile Road in Oakland County. A mother and her six-year-old daughter who were in the house at the time were uninjured. The dead were identified by the Romulus Air Base as Second Lt. Stanley Perrin, 36, Pontiac, Mich. and Flight Officer Louis J. Mikola- jak, Buffalo, N. Y. BUY MORE BONDS Y (Continued from Page 1) framework for collecting reparations from Germany on the principle that Russia should collect its claims and thc~s of Poland from the Russian --- zone of occupation, while Britain, the United States and other coun- tries entitled to reparations should get theirs from the British, Ameri- an and French zones. Both the eastern and western claimants would also have access to "appropriate German external as- .ets." In addition. Russia also is to re-' o Ave from the western zones 15 per cent of certain types of machine 0wl, chemical and metalurgical man- ,faCtuSing equipment removed from those zones in exchange for an equiv- alent value of food, coal. oil and oth- er natural products of eastern Ger- many. Russia is also to receive 10 per cent of whatever industrial capital cquipment is extracted from the westorn zones without any exchange in return at all. The principle to be I applied in removing this equipment for reparations is that it should not be necessary for the German peace economy. A possible clue to duration of the initial period of occupation in Ger- many is found in two periods fixed carrier-based planes, burn over a in the communique. The amount of ack by Third Fleet fliers on July 15. equipment to be removed from the ________ western zones must be determined within six months from now, that is, by the end of next January. Beyond 'U'Ll , A, 8 e C ! that, removal of the equipment it- Ilf must be completed in two years, To A co Cn' that is, by the end of January, 1948. Five Years To Deliver On the other hand, the comnmuni- Far East Talk aahhth nnu 1, 4A. FI-,jttlf 18-1 T al 11que indicates that Russia has five years from the present in which to Understanding the people of the make the deliveries of natural pro- Far East will be the keynote of an ducts for which she is to get the 15 illustrated talk at 7:30 p. m. EWT per cent of chemical, metallurgical Monday in the amphitheatre of the and machine manufacturing equip- Rackham Building. ment from the western zones.' Films and slides will be shown On the western boundary of Po- and oriental music will be played land, it was determined that, pending with cemments by Dr. H. G. Callis, a final determination - presumably Research Associate and Lecturer in a peace treaty - the Poles should in the Eccnomics Department. get all German territory east of the Slides, made chiefly from pictures line from the Baltic Sea, west of taken by Dr. and Mrs. Callis on their Swinemunde, along the Oder River travels in the Orient, will show to the Neisse and' along the Neisse scenes of everyday China, Japan and - --- U. S. NAVY PLANES SET JAP VILLAGE AFIRE-Fir es, started by Navy wide area of the Japanese village of Nemuru on Hokk aido, after initial att - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - MUSIC CONFERENCES: Bowen resies in Morning, Meretta in Afternoon Session George Oscar Bowen of Tulsa, presiding as chairman. Marguerite Okla. will preside as chairman of Hood. president of the North Central the morning session of the Confer- Music Educators Conference will ence on School Vocal Music, to open speak on "Song Reading-Its Devel- at 9 a. m. EWT (8 a. m. CWT) today opment and Its Influence on the in the Grand Rapids Room of the Elementary School Music Program." League. "Music and the USO" The sessions today will close the The closing lecture of the. after- two day conference sponsored by the noon session will be delivered by School of Music. Mary Muldowney, a member of the High School Chorus national recreation staff of the USO, First item on the agenda is a dem- music division. Her subject will be onstration and discussion of the high "Music and the USO." school chorus to be led by Carol Pitts Odina Olson of University High of New Jersey State Teachers College.S Following this, Roxy Cowin of the School will preside over the conceg Ann Arbor Schools and Glenn Woodsat 7 p. m. EWT (6 p. m. CWT) in the of the Grosse Pointe schools will dis- Grand Rapids Room. "Forecasts on cuss "Problems Concerning Music in MscEuain ilb h ujc the "''" ""*'"""'' Music Education" will be the subject the Junior High School." of a roundtable discussion, with The afternoon session will open at George Oscar Bowen, Claude Rosen- 2:15 p. m. EWT (1:15 p. m. CWT) berry, and Ennis Davis acting as par-I in the Grand Rapids Room, with berryand EnsDvsatgaspr Leonard Meretta of the University ticipants. The conference will be closed with a demonstration of choral literature. l anee Tickets directed by Rose Marie Grentzer. The program for the demonstration is as i t to the Czechoslovak frontier. That gives to Poland also, all of East Prussia which is not taken over by the Soviet Union. Slap at Franco The slap at Franco', government in Spain came when the Big Three said that they were ready to support applications for United Nations membership fr om the European countries neutral in the recent war which conformed with requirements of being peace-loving states, but add- ed: "The three governments feel bound however to make it clear that they for their part would not favor any application for membership put for- ward by the present Spanish govern- ment, which, having been founded with the support of the Axis pow- ers, does not, in view of its origins, its nature, its record and its close association with the aggressor states, pc:sess the qualifications necessary to justify such membership." In charting plans for organizing peace in Europe, the Big Three said that the writing of a peace treaty for Italy should be the first task of the Foreign Ministers Council. It was at this point that the only men- tion of Japan by name came in the comunique to which Stalin sub- scribed, along with his two conferees. Italy Complimented "Italy," the ccmmuviique said, "was the first of the Axis powers to break with Germany, to whose defeat she has made a material contribution, and has now joined with the Allies in the struggle against Japan." Conclusion of- a peace treaty with Italy, the communique added, will make it possible for the United States, Britain and Russia to support an Italian request for membership in the United Nations. After Italy, the foreign ministers are charged with preparing peace treaties for Bulgaria, Finland, Hun- gary and Romania, which then also may have Big Three support for United Nations membership. On the question of Italian colonies Russia submitted a proposal to make them trusteeship territories under international control, according to the system set up by the United Na- tions at San Francisco. But this evidently was overruled, in favor of submitting the whole question of colonies to the foreign ministers' council when it writes the Italian peace treaty. Disagree -n Austria One proposal was a subject of con- siderable concern to the American delegation at Potsdam. Stalin ad- vocated extending the authority of the Austrian provisional government, which Russia sponsored -exclusively, to all of Austria. Mr. Truman and Attlee appeared to have opposed this for it was finally decided not to make an agreement on this point until after entry of British and American forces into the capital of Vienna. The Big Three also tackled the problem of removing German popu- lations from Poland, Czechoslovakia and Hungary. It was agreed that the Allied Control Council should ar- range for the equitable distribution of these Germans among the four Allied occupation zones so that they may be withdrawn from those three countries in an orderly manner. Disposal of German Fleet The communique caught up many points which have been under dis- cussion in diplomatic quarters for months. One concerns the use and disposal of Germany's surrendered war and merchant fleets. The Big Three decided to turn over to ex- perts the problem of working out plans for the disposition of these ships and agreed to issue another statement on this subject "in due course." BOOKBINDING BY HAND adds a pleasing touch of individuaity tyour library. Thesis bound over night. Free estimates, pick-up and de- HARALD OLSEN, Bookbinder 815 Brookwood - - - Phone 2-2915 Ready For Sale Bob Strong To Play At "Anvil Swing" Tickets go on sale today at the League and Union desks for the "An- vil Swing" to be held Friday, Aug. 17, in the Union ballroom. The revival of the traditional all- campus dance is being held for the first time since the start of the war. Bob Strong, known to Detroiters from down Eastwood way, will be on hand for the informal affair, and Nary students are to be granted late pernission. Valcans. senior honor society, and Triangles, the organization for jun- iors, are c -sponsors of the dance. Museum Curators eceive Promotions Two University Museum curators have been promotedstoeteaching fel- lowships, it was announced yester- day. Dr. James B. Griffin, curator of archaelogy, has been named an as- sociate profesor of anthropology andl Volney H. Jones, curator of ethnology, has been appointed assistant profes- sor of anthropology.s Dr. Thomas Francis, Jr., Returns From Pacific Dr. Thomas Francis, Jr., chairman of the epidermiology department in the School of Public Health, has re- turned after four weeks in the Pacific area. As consultant to the secretary of war, he was investigating health con- ditions among Army forces. follows: Schutz: Three Psalms; Da Victoria: Ave Maria; Gibbons: The Silver Swan; Greaves: Charm Me Asleep; Barlow: Madrigal for a Bright Morn- ing; Willan: How They Softly Rest; Schuman: Requiescot and Holiday Song. Medical Students Will Hold Dance The Galens Society's semi-formal "Stethoscope Ball" will be held from 9 p. m. to midnight EWT Saturday, Aug. 11, in the League Ballroom. Phil Brestoff and his 11-piece or- chestra will play for the dance which is a get-together for medical stu- dents. The orchestra, with vocalist, is the regular Michigan Theatre (De- troit) band and broadcasts over WXYZ. Tickets may be purchased from Galens members or at the Galens stand at University Hospital. India. The record program will consist of hymns and folksongs of India, and China, as well as modern hit tunes by the "singing policeman" a well-known Tokyo figure. In addition, the OWI films, "Here Is China," and-"Our Enemy, the Jap-E anese" will be shown. All interested persons are invited. 1iscrimination To Be Subject Of awyTalk "Employers, Real Estate Owners and Racial Discrimination" will be the subject of a lecture by Amos H. Hawley of the sociology department before the meeting of the Inter-Ra- cial Association at 7:30 p. m. EWT (6:30 p. m. CWT) Monday in the Union. Prof. Hawley's lecture will be the fifth in the current IRA series deal- ing with the elimination of racial prejudice and working for the goal of racial unity. Prof. Hawley will be introduced by Herbert Otto, president of IRA. INVEST IN VICTORY Need Ingenuity For Costuming (Continued from Page 1) men's costumes and a few of the women's will be rented. Work in Crews There are 21 girls in Miss Barton's class who are put into crews and are required to work eight hours a week in the costume room. When time presses they often put in more than the minimum number. Jean Loree and Betty Stacey, both graduates of the University, are assisting Miss Barton in her job to gain experience in this type of theatre work. Miss Barton stated that "the work- shop equipment is good and the irons and sewing machines are in fine con- dition. The costume room in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre is a good place to work." Four Seasons Miss Barton's four seasons with the Players have not been consecutive. In 1940 she directed the costuming of the celebration of Coronado's 500th Exploration Centennial in Albuquer- que, New Mexico. This is a federal sponsored project and Miss Barton designed and directed the making of 500 costumes. Her workshop consist- ed of about twenty helpers. The Centennial's production play- ed in ten towns through New Mexico, Arizona, and Texas and the cast was selected from each town they visited. Directors preceded the equipment and prepared the actors for the presenta- tion . The costumes had to be made so that they could easily be adjusted to fit any number of sizes and shapes. AROUND THE CLOCK WITH WPAG .r eCtion L tcdern NOW LOVE SET TO MUSIC **AND FUN FOR ALL! E Jane POWELL CRalph BELLAMY 4 Constance MOORE Morton GOULD . IFRI., AUG. 3, 1945 Eastern War Time 7:00--News. 7:05-Morning Round-up. 7:15--Sleepy Head Serenade 7:30-Musical Reveille 8:00-News. 8:15-1050 Club. 8:30-Breakfast Melodies. 8:45-Bouquet for Today. 8:55-Musical Interlude. 9:00--News.' 9:05-Music Box. 9:30-Little Show. 9:45--Lean Back & Listen. 10:00-News. ' 10:05-Music for Remem- brance. 10:15-What Do You Knew. 10:30-Broadway Melodies. 10:40-Women Today. 10:45-Waltz Time. 11:00-News. 11:05-Al & Lee Reiser. 11:15-Parson's Grist Mill. 11:30-Farm & Home Hour. 11:55-College & Martial Airs. 12:00-News. 12:15-Jesse Crawford. 12:20---Lani McIntyre. 12:25--College & Martial airs. 12:30--Trading Post. 12:45-Man on th4 Street. 1:00-News.. 1:05-Salon Music. 1:10-Dick Gilbert. 1:15-Salute To The Hits.- 1:30-Johnny Messner. 1:45-Dinah Shore. 1:55-Today's Hit Tune. 2:00-News. 2:05-Hal Stuart. 2:15-Frankie Masters. 2:00-News. 2:05-Hal Stuart. 2:15-Lawrence Welk. 11:15-Listen Ladies. 12:30-Veterans Counselor. 2:45-Ray Bloch's Swing 14 3:00-News. 3:05-Arthur Chapman. 3:15-John Kirby. 3:30-Band Music. 3:45-Lawrence Quintet. 4:00--News. 4:05--Vladimir Selinsky. 4:30-Art Dickson. 4:45-Misch Borr & Orch. 5:00-News. 5:05--Music for Listening. 5:10-Hollywood Reporter. 5:15--Mystery Melodies. 5:30-Rec. Room Rythms. 5:45-Sports Review. 6:00-News. 6:15-David Rose & Orch. 6:30-Telephone Quiz. 6:45-Flashes From Life. 6:55-Piano Interlude. 7:00-News. 7:15-Fireside Harmonies. 7:25-Band of the Week. 7:25--Popular Music. 7:30-Bill Urquhart 7:45-Evening Serenade. 8:00-News. 8:05-Dance Time. 8:15-Put & Take It. 8:30-String Trio. 8:45-Ray Bloch's Swing Fourteen. 9:00-News. 9:05-Jerry Sears. ALEXANDER DRUG STORE 727 NORTH UNIVERSITY Announces NEW STORE HOURS OPEN WEEK DAYS from 8:30 A.M. to 10:00 P.M. .1 f Continuous from 1 P.M. COOL! "al TODAY AND SATURDAY! i " , 'lilt i'4ftei'th Me 4/W- -TWICE AS ROMANTIC! with LIONEL BARRYMUE * GLORIA I i w-v-- r-".-- , I' DROP IN FOR A SNACK Hamburgers and French Fries MATINEE TOMORROW.,.2-30 P.M. I I I I III 11 41 I ii 1F II