DIPLOMA FACTORY Lw& 6 Iaii4 FAIR, FARMER See Page2 VOL. LVI, No. 25S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1946 r PRICE FIVE CENTS Vets Subsistence Checks Piling Up In Quadrangles Peace C Majority onference Adopts Simple Rule Over Soviet Protest v By PAUL HARSHA Thousands of dollars worth of un- claimed veterans subsistence checks are piling up in campus residence hall post offices. Mail distributors at the East and West Quadrangles yesterday reported a total of .121 government checks for the month of July had not: been claimed at their offices. The checks are for a minimum of 65 dollars. Veterans Guidance Center auth- orities put the blame for the pile up on the fact that veterans who moved from their residence halls had not filled out official change of address cards, or that veterans had not filled out questionnaires at last semester's end telling of their intention to leave school or the Summer. W. L. Wallace, director of the Quid- ance Center, said the Veterans Ad- ministration directs the residence halls to send the unclaimed checks to the U.S. Finance Disbursing Office in Cleveland. But this rerouting would mean at least 30 days delay before veterans still on campus receive their subsis- tence allowances, he said. Although the residence hall post offices last month returned un- claimed checks, they are coninuing this week to hold the checks in the hope that veterans who have moved will call for them. Veterans Admin- AVC To Vote On Aff iliationt W With University In a move which is expected to in- crease its participation in campus affairs, the local AVC chapter will vote today on affiliation with the University. Jack Weiss, chairman of the cam- pus chapter of the American Vet- erans Committee, urged that every member and all interested veterans attend the meeting at 7:30 p.M. to- day in the Michigan Union. Weiss said that the plan proposed by the AVC executive committee af- ter a poll of the membership had been taken, might affect the whole future of the organization. "Under the proposed affiliation plan," Weiss said, "AVC would, as a recognized campus group, carry its 'battle against apathy' on a national scale onto the campus as well." Plans for a giant membership drive which will reach "every veteran on. campus" this fall, are also to be dis- cussed at the meeting. in the fall, AVC expects to spon- sor a series of "dynamic speakers" of national stature, a series of fam- ous war movies, and a drive to unify the campus behind the fight for de- cency and tolerance in race relations, according to Weiss. The AVC chairman cited a recent letter in the Michigan Daily which asked for AVC support in a drive for greater circulation of art master- pieces, and declared: "The campus is looking to the veterans and to the AVC for leadership in cultural and aesthetic ideas as well as social and political. Our new plan for affiliation will give us just such an opportun- ity." Student Group Petitions For Traffic Controls The Student Legislature petitioned the Ann Arbor City Council Monday to institute adequate traffic controls for the University. A fifteen mile per hour speed limit, enforced in the campus area, and the installation of traffic lights on the corner of S. University and S. State in front of the Michigan Union and on the corner of S. State and either N. University or E. Liberty were asked by the Legislature. In describing to the Council the urgent need for instituting these controls, Tom Walsh, spokesman for the Legislature, pointed out that the fall term beginning September 23 Will find twice as many students on the campus as are now present. "The need for an inforced speed limit and the traffic lights to protect' the hundreds of students and towns- istration rules forbid mailing the checks to new addresses once they have been received. Wallace urged all veterans to keep VA informed of their new address by filling out form 572, the official for- mal change of address. He estimated that the processing of this address change would require a minimum of two weeks. Wyatt Housing Drive Continues Despite Trouble Original New Home Estimate Still Likely WASHINGTON, Aug. 6 - (P) - Nearly 500;000 houses were started and 225,000 finished in the first half year of the housing drive, Wilson Wyatt announced today, but his re- port revealed a variety of housing troubles. The National Housing Adminis- trator called the results "encourag- ing" in view of the hurdles sur- mounted.There still is "strong like- lihood," he said, of reaching the 1946 goal of 1,200,000 rnewdwellings. These setbacks were recorded, however, in his second monthly pro- gress report, covering six months of the homes-for-veterans program: 1. The number of new home starts dropped in June to 92,500, or 12,000 under May instead of increasing as expected. 2. Factory-built housing has lag- ged so far behind expectations that the 1946 goal has been cut from 250,- 000 pre-fabs to 100,000. Building time has lengthened from a normal period of three to four months per house to six or seven months, because of slow deliveries of materials. Greater reliance'will be placed on traditional methods of building, Wy- att reported, since it appears that mass production of prefabricated homes "cannot be expected until 1947." Accordingly, the target for private, permanent homes of the traditional types has been boosted from 650,000 news starts this year to 738,000, be- cause of the "gratifying success" so far in getting such homes under con- sti uction. Although the number of starts slumped in June, the number of home completions has increased steadily every month, Wyatt said. Of the 225,00 units finished, 153,- 000 are 'new permanent houses and apartments, the rest temporary dwel- lings, conversions and trailers. Wirth Urges Develoingr of Social Sciences Branding the National Science Foundation as an "abortive legisla- tive enterprise," Dr. Louis Wirth, as- sociate dean of the University of Chicagodivision of the social sci- ences, said yesterday that continued advancement of "unharnassed" ma- terial power will lead to the destruc- tion of civilization. Speaking in the social implications of modern science lecture series, Dr. Wirth named the major tasks of the social sciences. They must '^_". us how society blocks progress in'. utilization of scientific knowledge. They must make "the physical world adjust to man" rather than the pre- sent converse situation. They must strive to maintain a neutral view re- garding values. The social sciences should inves- tigate and make known to the world its findings in the four broad fields of world organization, race relations, industrial relations and the perfec- tion of mass democracy. These fields must be studied from the smallest unit upwards, he said. Dr. Wirth said that the world could get along very well with only the amount of knowledge it now has in the physical sciences, and in medi- cine, if this knowledge was distrib- uted evenly. But, he said, unless the gap between knowledge in the social and physical sciences is lessened, we are headed for disaster. -4-_.. S4 \ I NI R i. q-w & *0 e Byrnes, Molotov Clash Over Voting Procedure By The Associated Press PARIS, Wednesday, Aug 7-The Peace Conference Rules Committee adopted today a British amendment on voting procedure permitting simple majority decisions to go before the Big Four Foreign Ministers Council as conference recommendations. The vote was 14 to six. One delegate abstained from voting. The ballotwas on a contested portion of the British amendment establish- ing two classes of conference recommendations - those backed by a simple majority and those supported by a two-thirds majority. Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov had fought to limit the recom- 1 Mortenson Says He Won't Seek Reinstatement . 4 .:, t w s "Aw, quitcher grousing. Yer getting two credits outt ter this, ain't yer?" - 'U' Foresters pursue studies at Camp Roth as interpreted by Ted Bank. * * * * * * * * * Forestry Students Purs*Ou-e Rugged Life in Wilds of Upper Peninsula Hearings Are Begun On City Police Officials By WILL HARDY Sherman Mortenson, suspended chief of police, yesterday told mem- bers of a three-man police commis- sion that he will not seek reinstate- ment when hearings on charges that he permitted gambling to flourish and accepted protection money are completed. The surprise statement was read to the commission by Louis Burke, Mortenson's attorney, only a few moments after Prof. Orlando Ste- phenson, commission ch airman, opened the hearing. Eugene J. Gehringer, suspended lieutenant, who faces the same charges as Mortenson, told the commission that he would con- tinue to seek reinstatement. Mortenson emphasized that he is not resigning from office now, but that he intends to submit a formal resignation later. He said he wanted to "clear his name" from rumors of "connection with the underworld." He requested that the commission conduct hearings only on charges of bribery so that the hearing time could be shortened. He said that he lacked funds to pay an attorney for a long period of time. mendations to those approved by a two-thirds majority. Nations voting for the British amendment were: The United States, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, China, Ethiopia, Great Britain, Greece, India, Norway, New Zealand, The Netherlands and the Union of South Africa. Those opposed were: Byelorussia, Poland, Czechoslovakia, the Ukraine, Russia and Yugoslavia. France abstained from voting. Committee Reverses Vote Previously the committee by an 11 to 9 vote rejected a New Zealand amendment which would have estab- lished a simple majority as the form for all Conference decisions. The voting climaxed more than two days of debate on a series of pro-, posals, counter-proposals, amend- ments and sub-amendments. By the time the committee came to a vote on the British proposal the situation was so confused that even the chairman, Paul Henri Spaak of Belgium, was not certain for a few minutes which portion of the British amendment was being voted upon. Yugoslavia Suggests Change Following the balloting on the British amendment Yugoslavia's for- eign minister, Edvard Kardelj, pro- posed a further change in conference procedure permitting nations border- ing on former enemy states to pre- sent requests directly to the Foreign Ministers Council. Andrei Vishinsky, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister, supported this re- quest, and U.S. Secretary of State James F. Byrnes announced that he had no objections. By TED P. BANK Way back in the deep, dark depths of the U.P., Michigan foresters are swinging into the sixth week of Camp Roth. Every morning at 6 a.m. they're up and out to tramp the forest trails until 5 that afternoon. Carrying compasses, axes, map boards, hyp- someters, and extra-huge lunch sacks, the embryo-foresters disappear into the tangled mass of Upper Mich- igan forests. There they learn "in the field" the hundred and one tech- nical phases of modern forestry. Woods resound with, "White pine ... tally two ten inchers" or "North twenty East fifty chains," and now and then even the traditional, "Tim- berrrr" rings out to be followed by the swish and dull boom of a felled giant. But only now and then. These days things are different. Today the successful forester is a combination Bunyan-scientist-engin- eer and businessman. To learn his profession he must spend long tedi- ous hours mastering such widely dif- ferent tools as axes, slide rules, microscopes, compound interest for- mulae, and compass. As part of this diversified training the would-be for- ester spends a summer at Filbert Roth. There he lives in the woods. He speaks. with logging operators, World News at a Glance Russian Critic... NEW YORK, Aug 6-Soviet dele- gate Andrei A. Gromyko today crit- icized the United States for continu- ing the production of atomic weapons while seeking to set up a world sys- tem to control atomic energy. The said the United States seemed. to consider this as a normal situation and to regard only the future as of any great importance. He added: "It is obvious that the present situation is abnormal." "I don't see how anyone can ask other states blindly to believe in the good intentions of the United States and to accept the United States pro- posals, and at the same time to doubt the position of others," he said. * * * Vets Housing.,.. WASHINGTON, Aug. 6 - The Civilian Production Administration today ordered that henceforth new aomes be held to sale to veterans for a period of 60 days, rather than 30 days as previously. The order applies to all dwel- lings built for sale under the Vet-. erans Emergency Housing Program. CIO Deficit... DETROIT, Aug. 6-George F. Ad- des, secretary-treasurer of the UAW- CIO, disclosed today that the union is operating at a deficit of $70,000 a month and has less than $100,000 cash on hand. Re recommended immediate finan- cial retrenchment and major staff reductions to cope with the emer- gency. Garsson Case... WASHINGTON, Aug. 6-Chair- fiscal agent in Kentucky. May has denied profiting from the firm's operations. * *'* Axtell Leads ... ST. LOUIS, Aug. 6-The Truman- endorsed candidate in the Missouri Fifth District, Enos A. Axtell, got off to a good lead in returns from 13 of 255 precincts in yesterday's (Tues- day) three-cornered race for the Democratic nomination for the U.S. House. Axtell had 2,034 to 478 for Rep. Roger C. Slaughter, openly opposed by the President and the CIO-PAC, and 133 for Jerome Walsh. The early count was from north side strongholds of the Pendergast organization which supported Axtell. Decontrol Board.. . WASHINGTON, Aug. 6-Three former aides of Chester Bowles, re- signed Economic Stabilizer, were appointed to the new Price De- control Board today. They include: Walter S. Salant, of New York City, who was Bowles' economic advisor until OPA ex- pired and who will serve the new board in the same capacity; Bice Clemow of Hartford, Conn., former executive assistant to Bowles who will serve as acting secretary of the board; and Delmar Beman, who served as information director when Bowles was OPA head. He will act as director of information for the Decontrol Board. Michigtan Vets Will .R .ceive U.S. Bonds LAi 'ING, Aug. 6-lP)-Michigan veterai will receive more than $36,- Ann An I TT fnrrn4 .... 1nt..A.- % visits ranger stations, and when the occasion demands actually helps fight fires. The long hours spent each day battling through tangled underbrush require stamina, and the mosquitoes calls for patience; the boys have both. They return to Ann Arbor in the fall a tanned and hard- ened crew. The Filbert Roth forester's day be-. gins like any student's - with an eight o'clock lecture, though he must be up and about two hours before that. After lecture the boys pile into the trucks which take them over dusty backroads and needle-carpeted trails to various lonely spots deep within the woods. Some days they must map a section of land. Other days the problem requires tramping over dry land and swamp alike to measure the riches locked within the forest. At times the boys wander in pairs or alone studying the smaller plants. Field trips to recently burned-over land may consume a day, or the Michigan foresters may string tele- phone wire between their two look- out stations. One day they dashed across tangled logs and waded steam- ing bogs to locate a fake forest fire "set" by Professor Young. It was a practical test . . . one crew couldn't find its way back for six hours. Hitting the books and finally the bunks completes the long day. A tired camp sleeps. And outside, grumbling bear, deer, and shuffling porcupine take over the trails. Vets Attack End Of Bus Subsidy William Dwire, chairman of the combined Willow Run veterans' com- mittee that was to go to Lansing to protest the proposed withdrawal of the state subsidy to bus service be- .tween Detroit and Willow Village, stated yesterday that Col. Pack, head of the Office of Veterans Affairs, "had handed the veterans another lie." Dwire said that he had in his hands a letter from Pack stating that the hearing on the subsidy had been, postponed indefinitely and that all, parties would receive a 30-day notice before the case would be reopened. According to a story in a Detroit newspaper yesterday, however, Pack has submitted a compromise plan whereby veterans working or study- ing in Detroit would pay 15 cents in- stead of the former dime rate and all others would pay 60 cents. This plan will be taken up by the State Admin- His request was overruled by the commisison and witnesses were called by William D. Brusstar, spe- cial prosecutor for the local one- man grand jury, which preferred the charges resulting in the sus- pension of the two officers. Joyce Whitman, Negro, of 159 E. Ann, testified under questioning by Brusstar that he had given Gehrin- ger "about $50," during 1945. He said the money was made in $10 payments and that he considered them as "gifts." At the time the payments were made, Whitman operated a card gambling racket in a pool room at 119 E. Ann. Under cross-examination, Whit- man said he did not consider that the money was for "protection," and that Gehringer had never asked him for money. Other witnesses were Carl Brein- ing, of 430 S. Fifth avenue, who tes- tified that he had seen Gehringer in the O.K. Poolroom at 212 N. Fourth street, and that the former vice squad detective entered the pool room, op- erated as a numbers headquarters, and received a sack from one of the operators. Under cross-examination, he said the only objects in the sack, to his knowledge, were bottles of pop. Samuel lliot, Negro, 516 Detroit, who owns a barber shop at 209 N. Fourth, said that he had seen Gehr- inger enter and leave the O.K. Pool- room "about twice a month," but the exact times of these events were not specified. Stason, Shuster To Speak Tomorrow Dean E. Blythe Stason, of the Law School, will speak on "Technology, Law and Administration" at 4:10 p.m. and President George N. Shus- ter, of Hunter College, will speak on "Good, Evil and Beyond" at 8:10 p.m. tomorrow in Rackham Amphi- theatre. I Dea in e for Vet. UNCommittee Tables Mongolia Admittance Plea NEW YORK,, Aug 6--(P)-A United Nations membership committee to- day temporarily tabled an application from Soviet-supported Outer Mon- golia after China demanded that consideration be delayed for a year or so until more informiation could be obtained about the rugged Asiatic country. Declaring that up until now outer Mongolia has exchanged no envoys with any nation except Russia, Dr. Shushi Hsu, Chinese representative, said "This may be an indication that she is not yet ready to take her place as a member of the world commun- ity." The committee decided to suspend further action until an accredited envoy from the country could be heard. Also awaiting more informa- tion is an application from Albania, who has the unqualified backing of Russia and Poland. Chinese Paper War Flares Up Communists Accuse Marines for Anipmg WASHINGTON, Wednesday, Aug. 7-P)-Propaganda warfare blazes to new heights in China, despite Gen. Marshall's stern warning to both sides some months ago to lay off if they really want peace. But the crossfire of words keeps up, and squarely in the middle today are the United States Marines, the prestige of America, and American policy in China. The Communists shout that the government used American planes to bomb their capital at Yenan. They want the Marines out and a revision o# flick Amrih nnrmim nirwuhi.4 nri a