FAIR AND WARMER Lw0 i1 AID FOR VETERANS See Page 3 VOL. LV, No. 36S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Hopwood Award, Winners Named Kathleen H. Thumin, Bernice Slote Win First Prizes in Summer Contests U.S. Seizes Illinois Central Railroad * * * * * * * * * * Campus literary talent was reward- ed yesterday when prizes for the an- nual summer Avery and Jule Hop- wood Contests were announced. Winners in the poetry division were 650 Foreign Students Are Expected in Fall Figure Shows Great Enrollment Increase From 650 to 1,000 foreign students representing 52 countries may be en- rolled in the University in the fall term, according to Dr. Eason M. Gale, director of the International Center. This will represent a 200 to 300 per- cent increase over the number at- tending the University in the last peace time year and, if 1,000 students enroll here this fall, they will com- prise 10 percent of the student body. We now have the principal foreign student body in the country. The reasons Gale gave for the in- definiteness of the number to enroll are two: (1) the Indian government is planning to ship a large block of- students to the United States, many of whom are probably destined for the University; and (2) the Chinese government has cancelled all restric- tions on students to be sent from their country. During the war the University has accepted many Chi- nese students who were unable to come during that time and who may suddenly come as a group this fall. OPA Assigns 1942 Price ceilings Again WASHINGTON, Aug. 23 -(P)- OPA today assigned 1942 price ceil- ings for new washing machines, iron- ers and aluminum kitchenware and it stated flatly that most other con- sumer goods will come back on the market at or near these ceilings. "We have our teeth set in the cost of living and we are going to hang on like a Boston bull pup until our services as inflationary watchdog are no longer necessary," Price Admini- strator Chester Bowles said in a statement at a news conference. Bowles denied published reports from Detroit that auto manufactur- ers havebeen given increases up to 14 per cent over 1942 ceilings. He declined to discuss whether any increases had been authorized for the auto makers, saying the OPA program on this would be announced early next week. He indicated that any increases allowed might be based on 1941 prices. The OPA chief also declined to answer a question whether dealers would be required to absorb any in- crease granted to manufacturers, in order to prevent a rise at retail. Bowles also announced that new small businesses, ranging from plas- tics and electronics down to better'. mousetraps, will "get their prices fast" under a new order allowing them to set their own ceilings in line with prices for a comparable product. Housing Expert Outlines Needs WASHINGTON, Aug. 23-(P)--The government's top housing expert said today the greatest need is a home for the man whose pocketbook can stand only $20 to $40 a month. John B. Blandford, Jr., national housing agency administrator, thinks private enterprise will provide homes for the $40-plus class and the gov- ernment low-rent program will take care of the. $20-minus class. But Blandford, who supervised the war housing program, said in an in- terview: "The big gap is the market between $20 and $40, or thereabout." CAMPUS EVENTS Friday Doc Fielding will furnish the entertainment for the Jordan Hall open house Bernice Slote of Norfolk, Neb., who got the first prize of $75.00 and Ferne Spielman of New York City who was awarded $50.00. Miss Slote also won an award in poetry in last summer's contest. Wins Essay Award Kathleen Hughes Thumin of De- troit, an award winner in fiction last summer, received the top prize of $75.00 in the essay division of the contest, and Robert Miller of Ann Ar- bor got the second prize of $50.00. Mrs. Thumin also won the first prize in the fiction division of the contest. Second prize winner in fic- tion was Gertrude Haan of Grand Rapids. No awards were made in the drama field of entry. Prizes Distributed Award winners were notified Wed- nesday by special delivery letter. Prizes were distributed in Dean Ken- iston's office at 4 p. m. EWT yes- terday. Judges for this summer's contest were Darrel Abel, Dr. Richard H. Fogle, and Prof. Morris Greenhut, all of the English department, for drama and poetry; and Robert E. Hayden, Prof. V. S. Ogden, both of the Eng- lish department, and Marianne Mei- sel for essay and fiction. Mrs. Meisel won a Hopwood award last spring for her novel "Years Before the Flood," written under the name Marianne Roane. Kaiser, Frazer May Build Cars At Willow Run By The Associated Press DETROIT, Aug. 23-The Kaiser- Frazer corporation, recently organ- ized by Henry J. Kaiser, west coast shipbuilder, and Joseph W. Frazer, acting for Graham-Paige' Motors Corporation, hopes to obtain the use of the big Willow Run bomber plant for the production of automobiles and farm implements. Confirming reports that his com- pany was negotiating for a lease on the big $100,000,000 property, Frazer said here today that "the main plant and the administration building at Willow Run are ideal for our needs. We are planning to begin the initial production at Willow Run of both the Kaiser automobile, an American-sized car in the popular-priced field, and the Frazer automobile, which will be in the medium priced bracket." He added that part of the plant also would be used for the manufac- ture of tractors and farm implements. Frazer said he recently had visited Kaiser on the west coast and they both were in complete agreement "that the most important task fac- ing American industry today is to get men and women back to work in pro- ductive jobs." Frazer said he and Kaiser disagreed with the thinking that Willow Run was "as expendable as a battleship." U AWSeeks Pay Increases DETROIT, Aug. 23-(AP)-The Unit- ed Automobile Workers (CIO) is seek- ing a 30 per cent wage increase for more than half a million automobile plant workers throughout the coun- try. The union today notified the Ford Motor Company that it intended to include such a demand in contract * negotiations scheduled to begin on September 24. It previously had served notice of similar demands upon General Motors Corporation and Chrysler Corporation. The three com- * panies which produce close to 90 per cent of all the nation's motor cars in normal times, employ approximately 500,000 production workers. As in the notices to General Mot- ors and Chrysler, the UAW-CIO in- formed the Ford Company that the increase is necessary to compensate for a sharp decline in the amount of take-home pay and asserted that it could be granted without an increase in the price of the Ford Company's products. "With the hours of work reduced to 40 a week, workers cannot possibly afford to support their families on the income they now receive," the no- .,_ _ ___ ,_ _3 -T Ickes 1 President Will Help Veterans Get Jobs Back Additional Legislation May Be Recommended By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 23-President Truman said today that Harold L. Ickes, secretary of the interior, will continue in his cabinet. The President told a news confer- ence he had discussed with Ickes, sole remaining member of the origi- nal Roosevelt cabinet still on the job, that Ickes will serve in the official family as long as he wants to stay. Ickes' Future Discussed They discussed Ickes' future yes- terday, the President said. The President added he believed Ickes is satisfied to remain. He said the secretary will go to London soon to renegotiate the Anglo- American oil treaty. . President Truman also said that he won't permit any veteran to be de- prived of his former job because of a legal technicality. Mr. Truman told a news conference that if additional legislation is need- ed, he will recommend specific changes to Congress. Million Jobs Guaranteed Of the men who will be out of ser- vice by Jan. 1, an estimated 1,000,000 have been guaranteed by law the right to return to their former jobs. But Major Gen. Lewis Hershey, Di- rector of Selective Service, brought out in Boston last night that, be- cause of an omission in present law, this legal right will expire "when Congress terminates hostilities." The figure of 1,000,000 is the off i- cially accepted estimate of the num- ber of drafted men who were taken of actual, continuing jobs. Act Changed Here is what the to-do is all about: In the original Selective Service Act Congress provided that every vet- eran who had a job would get it back if he asked for it in 90 days. It also provided that even though other pro- visions of the act should be abolish- ed, the job guarantees would go on. It was in the renewal of the Select- ive Service Act this spring that the change was made. The act is to run until May 15, 1946, or until "the date of the termination of hostilities in the present war." Sale of 'War P"lants Begins 252 Factories Given To RFC for Disposal WASHINGTON, Aug. 23 - (P) - War plants which cost $1,500,000,000 were offered to private industry to- day because the Army no longer needs them. The factories were built to turn out such things as tanks, radar, chemicals, plane engines and shells. Numbering 252, the plants were turned over to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation for disposal. Most of the machine tools and equip- ment in them also will be declared surplus by the Army and thus will be available for private industry. The ten largest plants, built at an estimated cost of $593,443,434, in- clude two government owned units of the Fort Motor Company's River Rouge Plant at Dearborn, Michigan. Most of the government owned plants operated by the Army which were not included on the surplus list will be kept on a standby basis or used for storage. A few, however, rvwill continue limited production of experimental items. The plants kept on the standby basis will, when possible, be leased to private industry for civilian produc- tion, the department said. Also where possible, the department said, the Army will release any of the standby plants which private interests may desire to purchase. Security Charter Ratified by England LONDON, Aug. 23 - (AP) -,Great 'o Stay at ost, Truman Says ODT Assumes Control of Line o Avert Threatened Waout Truman Authorizes Seizure After Meeting Is Unsuccessful in Settling Promotion Dispute By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 23-Government seizure of the Illinois Central Railroad was authorized tonight by President Truman. The Office of Defense Transportation will take over the road, which had been threatened with a strike at midnight. The dispute involved promotions, stemming from a jurisdictional con- flict with the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers. An all-day meeting called by Reconversion Director John W. Snyder at the President's request had failed CROWDS SEEK WORK--Left idle because of reconversion, part of an estimated 200,000 unemployed in Detroit, Mich., since the end of the war, wait in the street, for admittance to War Manpower Commission office to seek new jobs and file applications for unemployment compen- sation claims. Michign Field Day Entries Will Bedue Sept. 5; All Men Eligible All entries for the Michigan Field Day must be turned in by 5 p. m. EWT, Sept. 5, to the Student Offices in the Union. Any male is eligible to enter the Union-sponsored revival of an old Michigan custom to be held all day Sept. 5, at Ferry Field. Residence Halls, co-ops, fraternities and other groups are invited to enter contest- ants, the only stipulation being that Thomas Wants New Bureau UAW President Seeks Labor Board Changes DETROIT, Aug. 23-(P)-R. J. Thomas, International president of the United Automobile Workers (CIO) has recommended the estab- lishment of a bureau of labor pro- duction to Labor Secretary Lewis B. Schellenbach. Education Bureau Suggested Stating in a letter to Schwellen- back that he understood the secre- tary expected to conduct "an effect- ive reorganization of the Department of Labor," Thomas also suggested a bureau of worker's education and a bureau of cooperatives and consumer interests. The bureau of labor production, Thomas wrote, should be "staffed by labor men whose job it will be to give of labor's knowledge of experience in maintaining full production." Cites Great Need "We need this more than a bureau of statistics," he added. "We need a bureau of labor production to which labor can come with plans, that will bring these plans to the at- tention of other government agen- cies." Thomas cited services performed by the Department of Agriculture for rural workers through extension service and farmers cooperatives, and suggested that agricultural workers needed similar services from his pro- posed bureau of worker's educatior and bureau of cooperatives and con- sumer interest. -- - a fraternity pledge living in a resi- dence hall must run with his hall, not with the fraternity. s , The Intramural Department is cooperating in running the Feld Day,t taking charge of the timing, start- ing and judging. Any man may en-- ter any event, but only two men from any one group may participate in an event at a time. Planned for the morning are three swimming events, while eight track events, including relays, dashes, dis- tance runs, broad jumps and high jumps, will be held in the afternoon. It is hoped that the play-offs in the University baseball championship series may be worked into the day's program. At stake is the champion- ship of the four campus leagues. Japs Surrender In Hong Kong LONDON, Aug. 23 - (k') - Prime Minister Attlee told a cheering House of Commons today that "arrange- ments are being made for the Japa- nese surrender in Hong Kong to be accepted by a British force com- mander." The British determination to march rack into Hong Kong as soon as possible epitomized the attitude of western-European nations toward re- possession of their territories in the orient. The House cheered when Attlee assured opposition leader Winston Churchill that the government was taking action to restore British ad- ministration in the crown colony as soon as it receives the Japanese sur- render there. 1 The French, Dutch, and Portugese have displayed the same eagerness ' to restore their colonial empires since Japan went to her knees. With this issue, The Daily ceases publication for the summer. In- cluded in today's Daily is a spe- cial 20-page freshman supplemerj, copies of which will be mailed to all incoming freshmen. Publica- tion for the fall term will be re- sumed Thursday, Nov. 1. to vain any settlement of the dispute. The White House action was an- nounced at 10:30 u. m. EWT. 'Stoppage Unthinkable' A stoppage in the railroad industry at this time is unthinkable, President Truman said when he signed the seizure order, the White House re- port-d. The White House order did not de- fine the legal authority for the seiz- ure, but it aparently was on the ground that the dispute interfered with effective transition to a peace- time economy. Kirk Named Manager W. F. Kirk of Chicago, ODT's Western Railroad director, was nam- ed as Federal Manager by ODT Di- rector Col. J. Monroe Johnson. Kirk and Johnson immediately called upon' all employes of the Railroad to con- tinue in their jobs and report for work at the usual time., Army protection for persons em- ployed or seeking employment was guaranteed under Col. Johnson's or- der which follovied the Presidential directive. Jap Torpedo D)a mageUS PennsyIvcinia GUAM, Friday, Aug. 24-The bat- tleship Pennsylvania was struck by a Japanese aerial torpedo the night of Aug. 12 - a time when surrender negotiations were in progress - and heavily damaged, with 20 men killed or missing. The Navy disclosed the' action today. A Japanese plane swept in low in a sneak run, catching the 33,100-ton ship, once called the "luckiest battle- wagon in the fleet," unawares. The missile opened a gaping hole in the side of the warship. The torpedo struck the starboard side. The magazines were damaged but did not explode. The Japanese plane escaped. Most of the casual- ties occurred below in the naviga- tion department. Terms Given Enemy Modifiled, NEW YORK, Aug. 23 -(A~)- NBC corerspondent Merrill Mueller re- ported from Manila tonight that Gen. MacArthur has granted several Japanese requests to "modify the de- tails of the surrender terms" but probably will reject the enemy's sug- gestion that Bank of Japan money instead of occupation Yen be used when the U. S. troops enter. The reporter said the main lines of the Japanese railroad ferries will continue to operate, handling es- sential civilian traffic and a large share of Japanese troops evacuating the Tokyo occupation area. In addition, Mueller said, MacAr- thur will "excuse" any small ship- ping on voyages in violation of the surrender terms if they are not equipped with radios. BULLETIN * * * Nips, Struck by. Typhoon, Ask Landing Delay By The Associated Press MNILA, Friday, Aug. 24-The Jap- nese officially informed General MIacArthur today that an intense ty- phoon in the Tokyo district had ham- pered their preparations for arrival f American advance occupation parties. The radiogram, heard by the As- sociated Press here, failed to clarify whether the reported typhoon would interfere with the time-table of Mac- Arhtur's arrival, which is scheduled for Tuesday with 7,500 heavily-armed American airborne troops. 'Advance Party' The "advance party" mentioned by Tokyo apparently was a reference to Tokyo's announcement that an American entry was 'scheduled for Sunday, a report not confirmed by MacArthur. "We feel' it necessary to inform you that in spite of our best efforts, the preparations required by you for the entry of the advanced party are meeting some difficulties due to the heavy 740-millimeter typhoon which lasted from the evening of the 22nd until the morning of the 23rd," said the Japanese radio message, "and brought about considerable damage to the communications and transpor- tation in the Kanto district." 740-Millimeter The 740-millimeter reference ap- parently was to barometric reading, which would be approximately 29.13 inches of mercury, ordinarily indi- cative of a moderate storm. The Tokyo radio had reported the typhoon earlier but made no men- tion of the damage or casualties, leaving the impression that it was a small storm. The first inquired if MacArthur's directives, brought back by Japanese emissaries who met his aides in Ma- nila Aug. 20, carried the hours speci- fied in Japanese time. Million Japsw T1o Surrender Mainland Army.Yields To Chiang's Forces CHUNGKING, Aug. 23-(P)-More than 1,000,000 Japanese troops are to be surrendered to the forces of Generalisimo Chiang Kai-Shek, it was disclosed today, coincident with a report that the Communists in North and Central China had "gath- ered their strength in an all-out of- fensive." The 1,000,000 figure was disclosed in a battle order delivered by Nippon- ese envoys at Chungking to Gen. Ho Yingchin, commander of the Chinese forces. It was estimated that they represented one-half of the total Japanese military strength on the Asiatic mainland. The Communist New China Daily News, published in Chungking, re- ported the gathering of strength by the Communists, and said that Com- munist troops were approaching Wanping and Nanyuan, close to the ancient Chinese capital of Peiping. PRESIDENT CHAGRINED: Truman Scat hes French Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 23 - (P) - President Truman rocked a group of Frenchnnewsmen back on their heels today by asserting bluntly that this country has not been getting a square here over the position of the French Press, although there had been some comment that newspapers in that country had tended to minimize U. S. but that they did not represent the general tone of the nation's press. Most of the Frenchmen said they believed Mr. Truman based his re-