PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN. DAILY House Naval Committee Reco mends U' S. Retain Ownership of Some Pacific Islands France, Australia, Great Britain Now ity of the western hemisphere and Have Claims to Some of Named Territory the peace of the Pacific, the United States should have at least dominat- By The Associated Pressrh WASHINGTON, Aug. 18--Outright retention by the United States rng conltiol over the former Japanese PLAN FOR FEDERAL WORKERS: U. S.Civil Service Promises Veterans Job Opportunities of a group of Pacific Islands, including some now claimed by France, Australia and Great Britain, was recommended today by a House Naval subcommittee. They must be kept as Naval and military bases if the United States is to assume responsibility for keeping peace in the Pacific, the committee -asserted in a report made public by Reuther Asks General Motors To' Raise Wages 30 Per Cent Increase Demanded by Union By The Associated Pressk DETROIT, Aug. 18 - Walter P. Reuther, vice-president of the Unitedi Automobile Workers (CIO) disclosed today that he had forwarded to Gen- eral Motors Corporation a demand for a 30 percent wage increase for 300,000 unionized automobile workers in the corporation's plants through- out the country. Reuther, who is director of the UAW's General Motors Department, indicated, that the demand upon General Motors may be the forerun- ner of similar action throughout the industry. Letter to Wilson In a letter to C. E. Wilson, presi- dent of General Motors, he proposed that Wilson take the initiative in bringing about a conference looking to an industry-wide application of the wage increase. In that case, Reuther said, the demandtupon Gen- eral Motors would be withdrawn in favor of the industry-wide negotia- tion. The union leader pointed out in his letter to Wilson that under a new government policy, wage in- creases are permissible provided they do not necessitate increases in prices. '"The profit and reserve position of General Motors," he asserted, "provides ample margin for absorp- tion of the wage adjustment with- out necessitating price increases.,, GM Profits Reuther asserted that General Motors had made "tremendous" pro- fits during the war period and said that labor productivity had increased sharply. The demand for a 30 per cent wage increase, he said, is necessary to maintain take-home pay of the work- ers which has dropped 30 per cent by a reduction of the work week from 48 hours to 40 hours. Witness Testifies To Accepting Bets Edward Howard, clerk for a local cigar store, testified in municipal court Friday that he had accepted bets on horses from customers and had placed the money from these wagers on the desk of Wilson Haight, proprietor of the store. Howard was serving as a witness for the State at the hearing of Haight, who is charged with maintaining and operating a gambling establish- ment at 118 E. Huron St. Chairman Vinson (Dem.-GA.). Based on Inspection rp The report, 300 pages long, was based on a 21,000-mile inspection trip made by a subcommittee composed of Representatives Izac (Dem.-Calif.), I Biemiller (Dem.-Wis.), Bishop (Rep.- Ill.), and Delegate Farrington (Rep.- Hawaii). It did not suggest how this nation should go about obtaining title to islands claimed by friendly nations. but emphasized that it is essential that the United States have free and unrestrained access to them. 'For Own Security' Specifically, the committee recom- mended that: 1. For our own security, the secur- M ern etroi Transit System Is Proposed DETROIT, Aug. 18-(/P)--A mod- ernization of Detroit's local trans- portation system at an expenditure in excess of $25,000,000 was proposed today by Mayor Edward Jeffries and the Street Railway Commission. The plan calls for the establish- ment of rapid transit bus service, re- habilitation of the city-owned rail- way system's rolling stock, construc- tion of four downtown underground passenger loading terminals and con- struction of seven neighborhood off- street passenger terminals. The proposed four downtown un- derground terminals would be linked by a pedestrian concourse. The Street Railway Commission estimat- ed this phase of the program would cost $15,000,000 including land costs. The cost of new silent type street cars and large capacity buses is placed at $6,500,000 and the pedes- trian concourse providing access to the downtown terminals and major buildings in the area was estimated to cost $3,500,000.I * * * State To Build Three Armorpies inDetroit DETROIT, Aug. 18 ---(P)- Three armories are expected to be built in Detroit by the State Military Department at a total cost of $4,000,- 000, Col. Harry E. Loomis, Quarter- master General of Michigan, said at, Lansing. The old armory, which was de- stroyed by fire last April, will not be rebuilt, Loomis said. He esti- mated that it would take $1,500,000 to rebuild it. BU-M-EBOD mandated islands of the Marshalls, the Carolines and the Marianas- commonly known as "Micronesia"'- and over the outlying Japanese islands of the Izus, Bonins and Ryu- kus. 2. The United States should be given specific and substantial right~s Wo the sites where American bases have been constructed on island ter- ritories of Alied nations. Chain of Security 3. With respect to Manus, Noumea, Espiritu Santo, Guadalcanal and oth- er sites of American bases on islands tandated to, or claimed by, other nations, full title to those bases should be given to the United State because "these other nations are not capable of defending such islands ... and "as these bases are links in our chain of security . . . we cannot per- mit any link to be in the hands of those who will not or cannot defend it. 4. The United States must not per- mit its Pacific bases to lapse back into a state of unpreparedness, as in the instances of Guam and Wake, prior to the present war. UNIDENTIFIED CIRCUS DEAD HONORED-Six-year-old Patricia Murphy of Plainville, Conn. places a rose on a headstone in Northwoods cemetery, Windsor, Conn., as she selects the stone for the grave of "Little Miss Number 1565" from among six unidentified victims of Hart- ford, Conn. circus fire in 1944. Patricia herself was a victim of the fire, being released from the hospital a few months ago. Her parents and brother perished in the holocaust. M. L T. LAB MANUAL NOTES: Stude(ntTells ofA torm Bomb Research By VIVIAN VIEWEG EDITOR'S NOTE: Miss Vieweg is a grad- uate of Washington University, St. Louis; student of atomic physics at Harvard University; former research assistant in the department of physics and student of electronics training at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. NEW YORK, Aug. 18-(/P)--The tremendous destructive violence back of the atomic bomb-or at least the theory back of it-has been known for 40 years. The mechanical perfection of the weapon is another story of combined American skill, but to scientists and students of physics there is nothing spectacular about the theory. Machinery Covered Nightly I worked as a research assistant in the department of physics at Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology, where much of the experimentation in energy transformation in this country took place. There, certain complicated experi-I mental machinery are "put to bed" each night under a shroud of sheets. Not even the janitor could enter the room unless the equipment was con- cealed properly. Keys to the room were turned in each night. The great secret of the atomic bomb is how the tremendous volt- 18 Airmen Killed In -29 ('olision ages necessary to disintegrate an atom j are generated in the relatively small space inside the atomic bomb. In the laboratory, equipment at least 50 times the size of the bomb is re- quired. Like Giant Mound Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology has one of the largest and most active atom bombarding ma- chines in the world. It looks like a giant concrete mound similar to a turret on the Maginot line. The work there was until recently under the direction of Dr. M. Stanley Livingston, pupil of America's pioneer atomic researcher, Dr. Ernest Orlando Lawrence. Under Dr. Lawrence's direction, principles were worked out which are now used on all modern atom-smash- ing machines throughout the country. These machines are known as cyclo- trons. The cyclotron has had its great- est development in America. There are about 37 cyclotrons in the world, more than 20 of which are in this country.. 50,000 to 200,000 Watts Cyclotrons require power of 50,000 to 200,000 watts, comparable to that of a major broadcasting station. They combine magnetic and electrical fields in a circular vacuum chamber. Enormous magnets, weighing 70 tons and more, guide the particles of matter which are to be used in bom- barding the atom. Alternating elec- trical current is timed to the motion of the particles so that they jump a series of gaps between electrodes, ac- cumulating pushes of higher and' higher energy. Danger of Burning They leave the machine with volt- ages terrific enough to enable them to penetrate the strong electrical fortress of the atom and release its mighty energy. If energy is taken from the line at 150,000 volts, the atomic stream makes its 100th jump with 15,000,000 volts. At this voltage the particles issue Library Books Due, Summer session students are re- minded that all books they have withdrawn from the General Library will be due Tuesday. Names of students who have not cleared up their records by Friday will be sent to the Recorder's Office, and .their credits will be held up un- til such records are clear. from the circular vacuum chamber in a bluish-purple stream and are fired directly at the atomic material to be bombarded. So penetrating is this beam that a hand in its path would instantly be crisped. The op- erator works at a remote. control panel, well shielded from every stray radiations. Shielded by Water Tanks The M.I.T. cyclotron has an output of 14 to 15 million electron volts. Lawrence's early group of pioneers was overjoyed to obtain one million. M.I.T. workers are shielded from the radiations by tanks of water six feet thick and ceiling-high. These surround the cyclotron like a wall. Even so, with some cyclotrons the operators work from another build- ing, about 50 feet away and protect- ed by 25 feet of earth. The two buildings are connected by a winding corridor. Many War Plants Closed inMichigan DETROIT, Aug. 18-(P)--The full impact of the war's end will hit thousands of Michigan wage earners next week. War contracts aggregating in ex- cess of $1,500,000,000 have been can- celled since the factories closed Wed- nesday morning. Monday most of the men and women who halted work to celebrate the Japanese sur- render will report at employment offices to learn whether there is further work for them at this time. Management and labor in Michi- gan plants, usually differing on most matters affecting the worker, have agreed that the sudden termination of war production will throw at least 300,000 workers into idleness. Neither side ventured to predict how long the period of idleness will continue. The number of workers to be laid off by each of the scores of Michigan plants remains to be determined, but no plant engaged in war work es- caped contract cancellations. The Ford Motor Company was one of the first to announce that vir- tually all its contracts had been ter- minated. Today Chrysler Corpora- tion reported the cancellation in whole or in part of practically all its war work. It added that "eventually all people employed on these jobs (war contract work) will have to be sent home if they cannot be immed- iately placed on reconversion work." The United States Civil Service Commission announced by special re- lease from Chicago yesterday that it has distributed the details of a com- prehensive program designed to pro- vide returning war veterans and dis- placed Federal workers with the max- imum possible opportunity for fu- ture employment in the Federal ser- vice. The principal points in the Com- mission's program are as follows- 1. Applications for employment from disabled veterans of World War I and World War II, and from non- disabled veterans of World War II who file within one year of their dis- charge from active service or from hospitalization, will be received at any time. These veterans will be examined and will be assigned nu- merical ratings. Their names will then be entered on the Commission's lists of eligibles in such a manner that they will be given the preference to which they are entitled under the Veterans Preference Act of 1944. No Further Applications 2. Except where the needs of the service absolutely require it, no fur- ther applications will be received from other persons who are -not now a part of the Federal service. 3. Where Federal employees are scheduled for discharge, arrange- ments will be made immediately for representatives of other agencies that are hiring new personnel to interview those who are about to be discharged. Where the appointing officers decide that the persons interviewed meet the qualification standards establish- ed by the Civil Service Commission, they will be authorized to hire such employees on the spot without the prior approval of the Commission. Apply for Reemployment 4. When present Federal employ- ees are not hired by another agency prior to their discharge, they may file, within a period of 60 days, an appli- Harris Will Talk At aekham Prof. Zeling S.fHarris, of the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania, will speak on the subject, "From Morpheme to Utterance" before members of the Linguistic Institute at 7:30 p. m EWT Wednesday in the Rackham mphitheatre. Prof. Harris has taught Semitic languages at Pennsylvania since1931. He is also interested in American Indian languages, having been co- editor of. a volume of "Hidatsa 'Texts." He is now doing researchl work on Cherokee. He has also pub- lished various articles on linguistic analysis. Ir 1939-40 he held a Guggenheim Founuation fellowship. Beginning linguists who wonde what the word "morpheme" in the title of Prof. Harris's talk may mear will have the opportunity of finding out when the Institute holds its question-and-answer period at .7 p m. EWT Tuesday in Rackham Am- phitheatre. All members of the In- stitute who have questions aout terminology, theory, or practice ir the linguistic field are urged to sub- mit questions to be discussed by a panel of Institute faculty members at this session. Speed Limit Lifted WASHINGTON, Aug. 18-(/P)-The government tomorrow lifts its war time request for a nationwide 35-mil an hour motoring speed limit. State: which made that the legal top spee are expected to boost it quickly. cation for reemployment in the Fed- eral service. Such employees will be examined and assigned numerical ratings. As they pass the examina- tions, their names will be entered in the proper order on the Commission's lists of eligibles. 5. All vacancies in positions sub- ject to the Civil Service Act will be filledhby persons whose names appear on the Commission's lists of eligibles. These lists, as a result of this new program, will contain the names of ,)ualifled veterans for whom examina- tions were reopened, the names of Federal workers who have qualified for reappointment in accordance with the procedure as above outlined; and the names of qualified persons whose applications were received prior to the decision to stop receiving appli- cations. Sharp Reductions "Although there are bound to be sharp reductions in the war agencies of the Federal Government during the next few months," the Commis- mion stated in announcing its pro- gram, "many openings will develop as a result of expansion in some agen- cies, and'as a result of persons leav- ing their positions to return to pri- vate industry." "This program will result, in our judgment, in filling speedily these positions with returning veterans and displaced Federal workers," the state- ment:continued. "Whenever, in a given occupational area, these two groups can not furnish a sufficient number of persons to meet the de- mands of the service, applications will be solicited from the general public. Continuous from 1 P.M. COOL! Starts Today i - =-_ - -- _ ___-_-= i(I[ 1111 III C ~ya e2oowe 1 5 oTUV r1205 SOUTH U.NIVERSITY AMPUS CHARM ampus charm begins with a new rnanent wave and a professional wnicure. Visit Groomwell's for ese and our skilled operators will ylle your hair to suit you. Make mr appointment now! WEATHERFORD, Tex., Aug. 18- (/P)-The bodies of 18 airmen, recov- ered after the crash of two B-29 Superfortresses high above Weather- ford, Tex., were brought to Fort Worth Army.Air Field today. Two injured survivors were in the Camp Wolters, Tex., Hospital. The planes, on flights from Ala- mogordo and Clovis, N. M., Army Air Fields, collided at 15,000 feet last night with a terrific, flaming explo- sion, which threw 'Weatherford into wild excitement, and was seen from as far away as 30 miles. World News - Coming - "On Stage Everybody" t III Ii 11 CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY er action. , Modern CColin~ Iil 0 1 0.5¢audj atou, ' PHONE 4818 1, 171, i ____ = == -x-= iii i - . . K. . _ _- - e. i l ENSIAN S 0 LOST AND FOUND - LOST: Keys on chain. Tuesday on State street. Call Audrey, 24547. LOST: Brown wallet near library or Angell Hall. Contains identifica- tion card. Call Peggy Casto, 22755. LOST: One Alpha Delt fraternity pin Thursday afternoon, August 9 in vicinity of campus. Reward, call 21561. LOST: Eversharp pen and pencil in red leather case in rear of woman's League. Reward. Call 8994 or 26064. LOST: Black prayer book with Mas- sachusetts license on fly leaf. Con- tact Freedman, 319 E. Williams. ROOM AND BOARD MEALS SERVED: BREAKFASTS AND DINNERS AT CHI OMEGA SORORITY. 1503HWASHTENAW, FOR LAST EIGHT WEEKS OF SUMMER. RESERVATIONS AC- CEPTED NOW WITH DOWN PAYMENT. FOR SALE FOR SALE: A memento of V-J night. A limited number of Daily SUN., AUG. 19, 1945 Eastern War Time 8:00--News. 8:05-Organ Music. 8:15-Jimmy wakely. 8:30-Frankie Masters. 9:00-News. 9:05-Ralph Ginsburg. 9:30-Ava Maria Hour. 10:00-News. 10:15-Edmond Pierson. 10:30-Charlie Barnett. 10:45-Jesse Crawford. 11:00-News. 11:05-Pilgrim Holiness Church. 12:00-News. 12:05-Mario Morelli. 12:15-Christian Herald. 12:30-Music & Verse. 12:45-Paul Baron. 1:00-News. 1:15-Baseball Brevities. 1:25-Baseball (Phila. at Detroit). 5:00-News. 5:15-Johnny Long. 5:30-Wake Up America. AROUND THE CLOCK WITH WPAG 6:00-News. 6:05-Wilson Ames. 6:15-Grace Bible Fellow- ship. 6:30-Concert Hall. 6:45-Concert Hall. 7:00-News. 7:05-Music for Sunday. 7:25-Popular Music. 7:30-Jerry Sears. 7:45-Eleanor Meston. 8:00-News. 8:05-Dance Time. 8:15-Howard Farrar. Due to publishing difficulties, the Ensian will not be available before the end of the summer session. All those who are leaving after eight weeks and will not be back in the fall, please IRISH LINEN TOWELS Yes, we have them - pure Irish linen huck towels in white and gay pastels. You'll want them for yourself because you'll be proud to give your guests such lovely linens and M- I '-. F V - . ' er II !]I