FAIR WAME.4R. (fie '4 ' 443~fl DaIi VOL. LV, No. 268 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS r K'. 'U' Vets Charge State Veterans' Administration with Inefficiency VO President To Recommend Letter Be Sent to Congressmen Charging inefficiency, buck-pass- ing and general maladministration, a representative group of University World War II veterans indicated through a Daily poll that the pres- ent State Veterans Administration machinery is defective "all along the line."I Special emphasis was placed on the inadequacy of the Dearborn Veter- ans' Hospital to handle the task as- signed it. Robert Andrews, president of the Dean Ken ston Gives Romance Language Talk Members of the Linguistic Insti- tute, who several times this summer have heard talks on Middle Indic, Ibo, American Indian tongues, and other relatively unfamiliar languages were reminded last evening that even the languages they have most studied will present many unsolved problems, when Dean Hayward Keniston ad- dressed them on "The Romance Lan- guage Group as Material for Linguis- tic Study." The Romance languages, Dean Keniston observed, are all derived from Latin, a language of which ex- tensive records still survive, so that in the Romance group there exists actual documentary evidence of the manner in which one language may ,split up into several different tongues. Dr. Haugen To Speak Today "Language and Immigration" will be discussed by Dr. Einar Haugen, Professor of Scandinavian Languages at the University of Wisconsin, when he speaks at 7:30 p. m. EWT (6:30 p. m. CWT) today in the Rackham Amphitheatre. He is expected to illustrate his topic especially with materials drawn from his studies of the development of Norwegian in American commun- ities that were settled by immigrants from Norway. Dr. Haugen has taught at Wiscon- sin since 1931. He was guest lecturer at Oslo University, Norway, in 1938- 39, and held a Guggenheim fellow- ship in 1942-43. His book, "Voyages to Vinland," published in 1941, made available for modern American read- ers translations of the medieval Norse documents on which our know- ledge of the first voyages of the Norsemen to America is based. Dr. Haugen's is one of the series of weekly public lectures sponsored by the Linguistic Institute. Nazis To Move To Nnernberg LONDON, Aug. 7-(P)-Top rank- ing Nazis held as prisoners of war will be moved shortly from Mondorf, Luxembourg, to the Nuernberg jail, where they will be held for the ap- proaching major war crimes trial, it was 'disclosed today. They will lose their status as Noar prisoners and be held without bail as civil criminals. CAMPUS EVENTS Today through Saturday "Over 21 will be presented by the Michigan Repertory Play- er at 8:30 p. m. EWT (7:30 p: im. CWT) in the University Veterans Organization, only organized campus veterans' group, said he would recommend to his group that a letter be signed by the VO executive committee be sent to Congressmen requesting a federal investigation of the Michi- gan Veterans administration. Objection to the Dearborn VA of- fice set-up centered arond both medi- cal arid educational facilities. Fundamental objection to the Ad- ministration arises out of laxity in providing prompt action in the matter of allotments. Two veterans said, "We have been here since March, 1945. In this per- iod we have received no allotments. We can't go to the University much longer under this setup." See the Daily tomorrow for the first article in a series entitled, "What the University Is Doing for the World War II Veteran." On the University level, Andrews indicated that the "University on the whole has done an admirable job." The poll revealed the following sug- gestions from veterans to the Univer- sity administration: (1) Provide adequate housing facil- ities within Ann Arbor. Veterans urg- ed that the proposed married couple apartments be erected as soon as pos- sible; Married veterans with children re- ported "it is extremely difficult to find apartment owners who will rent to us." (2). Provide more recreational fa- cilities; (3) Provide more and intensified refresher courses. Refresher courses already initiated by the University were termed "very good"; (4) Integration of facilities now available to veterans; This integration would include defi- nite listings of counseling services of- fered, and bureaus and clinics which serve veterans. Among these are: The Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information, the Speech Clinic, the Psychological Clinic in ad- dition to special services such as refresher course schedules. Finally, the consensus of the 50 vet- erans polled, represting 15 per cent of vets on campus in and out of the VO, maintained that "there is room for improvement in the Veterans ServicekBureau machinery." Clark Tibbitts, director of the Bu- reau said, "I hope that we can achieve a full integration of academic and special services within the University on behalf of the veteran." He suggested: (1) "Expanded fa- cilities for personal guidance and academic counseling; (2) Adequate housing within range of the ability of the veteran to pay; (3) Ample opportunity for review of fundamen- tal subject matter and for redevelop- ing sound study habits after a period df absence from aca.demic work." Meanwhile, Marvin Niehuss, Uni- versity vice-president in charge of public relations said, "Our object is to serve the veterans. If there are shortcomings in the University pro- gram, the University is glad to hear suggestions for improving its ser- vice." Detroit Primary Picks Jef fries, Frankensteen Two Top Contenders Assured of Nomination By The Associated Press DETROIT, Aug. 7 - With votes from more than half of the city's pre- cincts tabulated in the municipal non-partsan primary, the two top contenders in the mayoralty race, Richard T. Frankensteen, Labor can- didate, and Mayor Edward J. Jeff- ries, were assured tonight of nomi- nation. They will oppose each other for the office in the run-off election Nov. 6. Unofficial returns from 600 of the city's 1,136 precincts '*gave 43,286 votes to Frankensteen, 33,738 to Jeff- ries and 18,768 to James D. Friel, chairman of Wayne County auditors. The sharp contest between Jeff- ries, who is seeking his fourth term, and Frankensteen, international vice president of the United Automobile Workers (CIO), brought out an es- tmated 200,000 voters, nearly double advance expectations. Doctor Foresees Development of New Drugs "In the future there will undoubt- edly be new drugs similar to peni- cillin which will not compete with it, but which will be useful where peni- cillin is of little value," Dr. John D. Adcock, Professor of Internal Medi- cine at the University Hospital, said today in a lecture sponsored by the Graduate Council, at the Rackham Amphitheatre. Penicillin is superior to any of the known chemical drugs, Dr. Adcock said. It cures pneumonia in a few hours, he continued. Within a short time venereal diseases are made non- communicable when treated vWith penicillin, he stated. In some infec- tuous diseases, like typhoid fever, and in virus diseases, like measles, penicillin is of little value, Dr. Ad- cock declared. Dr. Adcock received his degree at the University of Pennsylvania and is now doing research and teaching in the University Hospital. Edwards lWill Play at Dance Jerry Edwards and his ten piece band will play at the all-campus semi-formal dance, "Starlite Roof," to be sponsored by the Graduate Council from 9 p. m. to midnight EWT (3 to 11 p. in. CWT) Friday on the summer terrace of the Rack- ham Building. Tickets will be on sale every day this week at the Union and League. Entertainment will be furnished and refreshments are to be served. William Akers, president of the Graduate Council, is general chair- man of the dance. Wright, Sheean, Perkins, Stowe To Speak Here Others To Be Heard In Oratorical Series Ten distinguish~ed personalities, among them Congresswoman Helen Gahagan Douglas, Owen Lattimore, Vincent Sheean, Richard Wright, Frances Perkins and Leland Stowe, will discuss a wide variety of topics encompassing national and interna- tional problems as University Ora- torical Association speakers for the 1945-46 lecture course, it was an- nounced today. Opening the lecture course at Hill Auditorium, November 6, Miss Doug- las, member of the Huse Foreign Affairs Committee and wife of actor Melvin Douglas, will speak on "The Price of World Peace." She will be followed on Novem- ber 28 by Mr. Lattimore, political advisor to Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek, Director of Pacific Op- erations for OWI and of the School of International Relations at Johns Hopkins University. He will speak on "Solution to Asia," the title of his most recent book on Far Eastern problems. "Personal Opinion" will be the topic of Mr. Sheean, author of "Personal History," "Not Peace But a Sword," and war correspon- dent just returned after five months with the U. S. Third Army, when he lectures December 5. The fourth lecture will be given December 11 by Mr. Wright, author of "Native Son" and "Black Boy." He will speak on "The American Negro Discovers Himself." "The Destiny of American Labor" is the topic on whch Miss Perkins. Secretary of Labor from 1933 to 1945, when she speaks here January 16, 1946. Active in the Indian Nationalist movement, Madame Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit, sister of Jawaharal Nehru, Indian Nationalist leader, will speak February 5 on "The Coming Indan Democracy." "The Theatre, Reminiscences See ORATORICAL, Page 4 IRA Meeting H-easHaw..y Diffusion Visualized As Race Solution "Negroes and minority group shout be encouraged to scatte among different residential areas an into different occupations, if we are seriously interested in getting at th racial problem," Amos H. Hawley o the sociology department said. Speaking before the Monday night meeting of the Inter-Racial Associa- tion on the subject, "Employment Housing and the Race Problem,' Prof. Hawley claimed, "Negro resi- dence in a residential area is a symp- tom rather than the cause of low property values. Because these mi- nority groups are weak economically, they are limited in the selection of residential areas and have to choose obsolete housing units." Navy Planes Bomb Wake, China Coast Shipping, Buildings Are Targets of Raid By The Associated Press GUAM, Aug. 8, Wednesday-Car- rier planes of the U. S. Pacific Fleet raided Wake Island Monday and struck shipping off the coast of China Saturday, Sunday and Monday. Announced in a fleet communique today, it was the first disclosure of carrier action since Aug. 1. During July, Admiral Halsey's Third Fleet shelled and bombed Japan with un- precedented fury, destroying or dam- aging more than 1,300 vessels and more than 1,000 planes. Monday's carrier assault on the former American base of Wake, in which small shipping, buildings and installations were the targets, was the second this month. On Aug. 1 Wake was bombed by a battleship and hit by carrier aircraft. The three-day hunt, extending through Monday, along the China coast netted only small shipping vic- tims. The raiders shot down four enemy aircraft, destroyed a large barge, damaged a small coastal car- go vessel and military installations. The -target area was not specified. British Election Is Subject of Barnes' Talk "The Conservative Party could not have done a better job in the recent British election than they did," stat- ed Prof. E. H. Barnes of the history department last night. Speaking on the subject, "British Politics," Prof. Barnes told the meet- ing of the Post-War Council that the Conservatives had timed the election perfectly and had conducted their campaign according to traditional Conservative standards, but the sen- timent was entirely for the Labor Party. Prof. Barnes said that the bad handling of foreign policy by Con- servative governments under Bald- win and Chamberlain and to a cer- tain extent by Churchill had brought about the downfall of the party. "Labor has been the leading party since 1942, according to votes taken by polls and just before the election Labor polled a vote of 47 per cent and the Conservatives polled only 41 per cent. The election followed the poll very closely," Prof. Barnes claimed. Prof Barnes is now teaching in the history department and comes from the history departmient .of Western Reserve University. Eighth Witness Sentenced Here William Mahaley, 50 years old, of Ypsilanti, last night became the eighth witness to be sentenced for -ontempt by Judge James R. Breakey, Washtenaw County's one-man grand ury investigating gambling here for he last two months. Seven other witnesses, all of whom vere sentenced to 60 days in the ounty jail for contempt, have purged ;hemselves and all have been re- leased. 5 Major Industrial Targets Wiped Out Additional Damage Shown Outside Completely Devastated Area; Concussion Felt for 10 Miles Guam, Wednesday, Aug. 8-AP-Four and one tenth square miles "or 60 per cent" of Hiroshima were wiped out by the devastating atomic bomb dropped Monday by a B-29, the U. S. Army Strategic Air Force Headquarters reported today. Five major industrial targets were wiped out in the city of six and nine tenths square miles. "Additional damage was shown outside the completely destroyed area," said a communique based on reconnaissance photographs made over the city of 343,000 on the morning of the day the bomb was dropped by a Superfort which felt the concussion while 10 miles away. The men who participated could give no estimate of the damage other than that it "must have been extensive." Photographs, taken a few minutes after the atomic bomb blasted Hiroshima, showed a spectacular formation of white smoke rising like a long-necked mushroom over the city. Only several dots were (perceivable in the target city-the remainder was obscured by clouds of smoke. So, with a single bomb, a single Superfort accomplished as great damage as normally is inflicted by a large force of B-29s. Actually, the force of the atomic bomb is reported equivalent to 2,000 B-29s, which themselves carry a tremendous wallop in an average of six tons of bombs each. Crewmen related that the lone bomb struck squarely in the center of the industrial-military city of 343,000 on southern Honshu in the Japanese mainland Aug. 6 (Pacific time) with a flash and concussion that .brought an exclamation of "My God" from a battle-hardened Superfortress crew, 10 miles away. For following up on other enemy cities there are more B29s ready to carry more of the same awesome bombs. This was announced here by Gen. Carl S. Spaatz, commander of the U. S. Army Strategic Air Force. Japanese broadcasts warned they people to beready for more super- render ultimatum, or a Japanese de- bomb raids, and the Japanese cabi- cision to fight on or quit now, was net was reported meeting in special highly conjectural. session. But one able military authority NBC in New York picked up a here said "inevitably" Japan will be BBC broadcast which said Radio told-quickly-that she must quit or Tokyo indicated the cabinet had been face the onslaught of the most ter- summoned to discuss the new men- rible weapon ever devised. And an- ace. other declared the Japanese may be How soon the use of atomic bomb- ing may be followed by a new sur- 4 'Over 21' Will Be Presented Comedy Just Released To Non-Professionals "Over 21" will be presented by the Michigan Repertory Players at 8:30 p. m. EWT (7:30 p. m. CWT) today through Saturday and in a matinee performance at 2:30 p. m. EWT (1:30, p. m. CWT) Saturday in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Ruth Gordon's comedy, in which she also starred on Broadway, has just been released for non-profes- sional production. Phillis Petrikin will portray Paula Wharton, the spir- ited novelist who helps her husband through the Army Air Force officer candidate school. Petrikin, Mullin Leads Playing opposite Miss Petrikin is Dan Mullin as her husband, a for- mer newspaper editor. Mr. Mullin will be remembered by Ann Arbor audiences for his portrayal of Prof. Turner in "The Male Animal." Ethel Isenberg and Byron Mitchell are cast in the roles of the young people who precede the Whartons in their "convenient" tourist camp cot- tage. The rest of the cast includes Mar- tin Crowe, Mary Ellen Wood, Robert Webber, Janine Robinson, Arthur Shef, and Miriam McLaughlin. Lippman Director Monroe Lippman, head of the de- partment of speech and dramatic art at Tulane University, is directing the play. Dr. Lippman also directed "The Male Animal." The setting was designed by Her- bert Philippi of the speech depart- ment; costumes are under the super- vision of Lucy Barton; and Ernest Asmus and Ivard Strauss are the technical supervisors. Tickets may be purchased at the Lydia Mendelssohn box office. expected to make up their minds within six weeks whether to 'get out of the war or see their home islands devastated from the air. There was a possibility however that for the moment the Allies of the Pacific war would be content to cap- italize on the tremendous propaganda value of the first atomic bomb strike Sunday on the army city of Hiro- shima, and on the threat of repeat performances. 'UiP an~d Atom' LOS ANGELES, Aug. 7-(P)- The Herald-Express today pub- lished an open letter to Lt. Gen. James H. Doolittle, conveying a new slogan suggested by its tele- graph editor for use in pep talks to Jap-bombing pilots: "Up and atom." Atomic Bomb May Become Peace Weapon By The Associated Press LONDON, Aug. 7-The revolution- ary atomic bomb might become the peace-enforcing weapon of the Unit- ed Nations through a special air police force equipped with the secret, terrible missile by the United States and Britain, some diplomats suggest- ed tonight. They also speculated that the bomb would raise the question of putting all militarily-important scientific in- ventions under control of the United Nations Security Council when the new world organization is born. One prime question was whether the secret of the atomic bomb would be-or should be-shared with other Allied nations, and whether Russia already had been informed of the secret. There was general agreement that the weapon could become the "big stock" of peace and security, provided it did not fall into the wrong hands, and that it promised to change rad- ically the modern concepts of secur- i I. n n rl cd'~P~vO+( 'DRASTIC STEPS' NECESSARY 'U' Research Bureau Reports Critical Housing Situation In a survey made public last night, the University Bureau of Business Research reported that a "critical" student housing situation exists and that "drastic steps" must be taken by the University if the student body is not to be frozen at an abnormally low level this fall and throughout the postwar period through lack of housing facilities. Although it was not a specific recommendation, the Bureau report concluded that "any solution to the problem must come through a radical business management-off the campus, perhaps at Willow Run Village, jand send the instructors to the students. One University official who aided in the survey, said that a student body of approxicately 9,500 now appears to represent the physical limit of the University unless additional housing facilities are found. Total en- rollment in the spring term of this year amounted to 9,029. After War 4,000 Vets May Enroll University enrollment in 1940-41, the last peace-time academic year,