CONTROVERSIAL REPORTER Y £Uw A6 I~itP CLOUDY, WARM See Page 2 VOL. LVI, No. 26S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1946 PRICE FIVE CENTS Axis States Invited To Peace Parley Italy, Finland, and Balkan States To Join Paris Conference Saturday v By The Associated Press PARIS, Aug. 7- The 21-nation European Peace Conference today in- vited the five former enemy nations to participate in their deliberations beginning Saturday as the rules committee, putting aside acrimony, moved, with high speed and a show of harmony toward completion of its tasks. Under an amendment offered by U.S. Secretary of State Byrnes and adopted unanimously by the commit- tee, representatives of Italy, Ro- mania, Bulgaria, Hungary and Fin- land will be heard in the plenary sessions of the conference, as well as appear before cor mittees. Western Powers Vicorious Rules Committee members plainly showed the strain of yesterday's long and tempestuous session, which broke up at 2:30 a.m. in a victory of the western powers over the Soviet Un- ion on a procedural matter. However, neither Byrnes nor For- eign Minister Molotov~made any ref- Preuss Says MorseBli'T o Indicate Apathiy Expresses 'Lack of Confidence' in Court The United States Senate has passed the Morse Resolution, provid- ing for adherence to the coipulsory jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice, but instead of this step expressing the confidence of the United States in..the rule of law ver- sus the arbitrariness of the Security Council, it expresses a "lack of conli- dence" in this principle. Prof. Lewrence Preuss, of the polit- ical science department, who was in- strumental in drawing up both the charter of the International Court and the Morse resolution, expressed this opinion yesterday in reference to the Connally amendment to the reso- lution. Witnesses Approved Resolution Adoption of the original resolution was urged and approved by numer- ous witnesses before the Senate For- eign Relations sub-committee. Prof. Preuss was among this group, which included representatives of the American and Federal Bar Associ- ations and the American Society of International Law. In addition, he pointed out, both the President and the Secretary of State publicly en- dorsed the resolution. It was report- ed unanimously out of committee. Acceptance of the measure was to mark a great step in the advance of international cooperation on the part of the United States, Prof. Preuss de- clared. Therefore, it was "discour- aging" when a veto measure was "un- expectedly" brought up by Sen. Con- nally at the last session. Only International Jurisdiction The resolution provided that the court shall not take jurisdiction in matters which are essentially domes- tic in nature, he explained. This res- ervation is proper, but not necessary since the Court, when applying inter- national law, would in no case take jurisdiction in a domestic case, such as immigration or tariff. Under the terms by which other nations adhere to the court, disputes over the nature of jurisdiction are decided ,by the court itself, Prof. Preuss said. These were the terms embodied in the Morse resolution be- See PREUSS, Page 3 AVC Will Ask T' Recognit ion Members Vote To Aid Fight Against Apathy The campus chapter of the Amer- ican Veterans Committee voted last night to petition the University to become a recognized organization, af- filiated with the school, president Jack Weiss announced. "This will mean," declared Weiss, "that AVC can proceed with the Uni- versity's sanction and support in its fight against apathy on the campus as well as on the national level." The local chapter, in conjunction ith the Willow Villiae croup is erence to the unprecedented diplo- matic battle of words which had pre- ceded final adoption of a British amendment providing that recom- mendations both of a two-thirds vote and a simple majority would be sub- mitted by the conference to the Big Four Council of Foreign Ministers. The committee cleared its decks by 7:30 p.m., and was ready to report to a plenary session tomorrow after- noon. Adopt Procedure Principles One flurry of argument came in a final move before the committee adopted principles of United Nations procedure in the conference and con- ference committees for questions not, covered by the conference's own rules. Chairman Paul Henri Spaak of Belgium had proposed, with the sup- 'port of Britain and the United States, that rules of the general assembly of the U.N. be applied to any questions not covered by the rules of this con- ference. Russia and Norway said the proposal was unnecessary, but it was adopted with a Russian- amendment which said the U.N. rules would be the guide "on all questions of pro- cedure" not covered in conference rules. Approve Yugoslav Proposal Rules on committee procedure were adopted in quick succession and unanimously after the committee, without dissent, approved a Yugoslav proposal permitting states heighbor- ing Germany and Italy to present proposals directly to the Big Four without previous reference to the council. Yugoslavia withdrew a proposal to invite Albania to attend the plenary session at which Italy is to state her case, after British delegate Hector McNeil said it was a question for the conference itself to decide. Byrnes and Molotov joined in ask- ing unanimous action in the adoption of the section on .committee pro- cedure rules outlined in advance by the Foreign Ministers' Council, and it was adopted with two amend- ments offered by the American dele- gate. Student Special Train To Rdun India Relief Tag Day Is Tomorrow Drive Sponsored By Hindustan Group A campus-wide tag day will be held tomorow to aid India's starving mil- lions, sponsored by the Hindustan Association. Four posts will be set up, opposite the library, under the Engine Arch, near the League, and near the Union, where Association members will sell tags, according to Vasant 'Rajad- hyaksha, chairman of the tag day and president of the Association. Money from the drive will be sent to relief organizations to be spent on food for India. No tags will be sold in downtown Ann Arbor. Rajadhyaksha, in a statement yes- terday, urged every student to buy a tag to aid millions of Indians who are desparately in need of food. He cited a report of the American Fam- ine Mission, made July 25, to Sec- retary of Agriculture Clinton P. An- derson. According to the report, India's ra- tion system affecting 160 million people will collapse if two million tons of food are not sent. Of this 750,- 000 tons of wheat would have to be sent from the United States. Student Affairs Committee permis- sion for the tag day was granted last week, Rajadhyaksha said. In April the Hindustan Association made a private relief collection from its members; these funds were given to the American Friends Relief Society, he said. Theros To Be First Witness In Probe Today Nick Theros, local numbers racke- teer, is scheduled to be the first wit- ness today when police commission hearings on charges of bribery against Sherman Mortenson and Eugene Gehringer, suspended officers, moves into its third day. Theros appeared on the stand late yesterday afternoon and was about to relate the details of an alleged "pay-off" to Mortenson, suspended chief of the department, when Ralph Keyes, Gehringer's attorney, warned that Theros' statements might result in charges against him. Refuses To Testify Theros then refused to testify and Prof. Orlando Stephenson, commis- sion chairman, adjourned the session until today. Special Prosecutor Wil- liam D. Brusstar insisted that Theros' grant of immunity given by Circuit Court Judge James R. Breakey, jr., would cover his testimony before the commission. However, the numbers operator refused to talk until the matter was cleared up. See MORTENSON, Page 4 Vandenberg To Speak in City Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg will be the principal speaker at the city's first post-war Victory Day celebra- tion on Friday, August 14. Michigan's senior Senator, who was a delegate to the foreign ministers meeting in Paris, will speak at the ceremony held at 4:00 p.m. at Ferry Field by the Association of Ann Arbor Veterans Organizations. Preceding this program, more than 1,000 marchers, twelve floats, and several bands will participate in a city-wide parade which will start from downtown at 3:00 p.m., march up Liberty to S. State and thence to Ferry 'Field. To complete the holiday celebra- tion the American Legion has sched- uled a "welcome home" dance in the Armory from 9:30 to 2:00 and the combined veterans groups are work- ing out plans for a street dance to be held from 7:00 to 9:00. To Stop Illegal CabinetConfers With Army, Navy ; 7I....... aI44.fi. Refugee Ships Reported ..."{:..... i.L... . ........ Curfew Im posed .'.' ., x L4.. .....}S Britain Plans Palestine Blockade Jewish Entry As Troops At Haifa; Bevin Declines Comment Haganah Asserts Britain Has Concentrated By The Associated Press LONDON, Aug. 7-A British official source said today Britain has pre- pared to blockade Palestine and launch naval and army operations - per- haps by the end of this week - to choke the flow of thousands of illegal Jewish immigrants into the Holy Land. In Paris, a spokesman for the Jewish Agency executive declared that if Britain turned back illegal Jewish immigrants at the shores of Palestine, "the result may be statstrophic." The British Colonial Office said it ;> SLAUGHTER CHECKS ELECTION RESULTS --Rep. Roger C. Slaughter (left), whose defeat for Democratic renomination in the primary election was hailed yesterday by administration supporters, checks Kansas City election wards against vote tabulations with Stephen C. Higginbotham, a campaign worker. President Truman earlier had registered his opposition to Slaughter's renomination. * * ** * * Slaughter Loss Hailed as Sign Of Administration Sanetion To OSUT Game r For the first time in five years, a special student train will be run to the Ohio State-Michigan game, Nov.. 23, in Columbus, Ohio, Lynne Ford, chairman of the Varsity Committee of Student Legislature announced last night. Special student rates will be set for both train fare and admission. One thousand tickets for the game have been reserved by the committee and will be placed on sale during the first three days of the fall semester. The usual Ohio State ticket price of $3.50 has been reduced to $2.50 for the special game. The special train will leave Ann Arbor the morning of Nov. 23 and will return after the game. The exact price for the round trip will be an- nounced in The Daily later. Robert Taylor was named to head the Legislature's Complaints Com- mittee which will function as a stu- dent voice in investigating complaints of groups or individuals and in con- tacting the appropriate University officials when action is necessary. Students wishing to contact his committee can do so by writing to the Legislature in care of the Michigan Union or by calling Taylor at 2-3089. Under a recent ruling of the Stu- dent Affairs Committee, approval for all social functions to be held on campus is now being cleared through the Legislature. The end of the third week of the fall semester was voted by the Legis- lature last night as the deadline for all campus groups to petition for so- cial functions to be held during the first term. According to President Ray Davis, any requests submitted after that date will be given consideration only if they do not conflict with events al- ready approved in accordance with this ruling. Stason, Shuster To Give Talks Today By The Associated Press President Truman's supporters yesterday hailed the defeat of Rep. Slaughter (D-Mo) for renomination in Tuesday's promary as a sign of en- dorsement of administration policies. Slaughter himself said if the Democratic party is to succeed this fall and in 1948 "the alliance exist- ing between the CIO-Political Action Committee and the Democratic Nat- ional Committee must be speedily dissolved." Polio Epidemic Hits Midwest, South and West By The Associated Press The worst wave of infantile para- lysis since 1916, reaching epidemic proportions in some localities, has struck scattered sections of the South, West and Middlewest. Health authorities took steps to check the spread of the disease as the U.S. Public Health Service re- ported a cumulative total of 5,454 cases throughout the nation, includ- ing all st'ates but West Virginia. This total compared with 29,000 cases in 1916, 2,913 for the same per- iod in 1945 and 3,992 in 1944, the next worst year since 1916. In some of the worst areas, the number of cases rose to 10 times as heavy as a year ago. In New England, some other Eas- tern states and at least two western states reported the incidence of the disease was below last year. Some other areas reported the number of cases at "about normal." Epidemics were reported in Minn- eapolis, an Arknasas county and three Mississippi counties and the Ohio state health director predicted an epidemic year unles as "sharp drop" was noted within 10 days. The President, the CIO-PAC, and the Pendergast political organization of Kansas City backed Enos A. Ax- tell, 37-year-old attorney and navy veteran, who defeated Slaughter by an unofficial 2,301 votes in a total of 42,880. The vote was Axtell 19,878; Slaughter 17,577, and Jerome Walsh 5,425. Axtell's Republican opponent will be Albert L. Reeves Jr., nominated without opposition. Reeves, also a veteran, is the son of a long-time federal district judge in Missouri. A second congressman-Ralph H. Daughton (D-Va)-was defeated in the Tuesday balloting in six states, bringing to 14 the total house mem- bers thus far failing of renomination. Thirteen of them are Democrats. Five senators have lost out. While the CIO-PAC backed a win- ner in the nationally-watched Mis- souri fifth district, it lost in its ef- fort to eliminate Senator Harry F. Byrd (D-Va) who won easily over Martin A. Hutchinson, Richmond at- torney. Byrd said he had been No. 1 on the labor organization's "purge list." Robert E. Hannegan, Democratic, national chairman, issued a state- ment on his home state primary say- ing that by the defeat of Slaughter "the people of the fifth district of Missouri have registered a strong vote of confidence in President Harry S. Truman - confidence which is shared by the people of the nation." Rep. Sabath (D-Ill), chairman of the rules committee of which Slaugh- ter is a member, commented that the Slaughter defeat "shows that not- withstanding the Republican effort to nominate Slaughter the people are following the Roosevelt-Truman pol- icy. Axtell was nominated because he is following those policies. Slaughter was not in accord with the policy and principles of the President and the party, and was in fact op- posed to everything the Democratic party stood for." could not comment on unconfirmed reports that two Jewish refugee ships, verdue at Haifa, had been inter- cepted by British Navy shipt and tak- en to Cyprus. Meanwhile, press dispatches from Nicosia, capital of the British eastern Mediterranean island, said a "strong- ly wired" camp was being prepared there for "a few hundred sentenced terrorists whose dispersal would be helpful to Palestine." The dispatches said reports that thousands of Jews would be taken to Cyprus were un- founded. In Palestine, the secret radio of Haganah, Jewish underground, said Britain has concentrated troops around Haifa, the main port for the inflow of Jewish immigrants, and de- clared this "foreshadows complete stoppage of immigration" followed "by renewed police and military op- erations." The radio did not say what course might be followed by Palmach, Hag- anah's well-disciplined army. The British Army, meanwhile, im- posed a 5 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew on shops in the border area of Tel Aviv and Jaffa. The British cruiser Ajax has been dispatched from Malta to Haifa, where two ships carrying ref- ugees from Europe still lie in the har- bor. The British cabinet met in special session for two hours today and called in Field Marshal Lord Mont- gomery and top ranking officers of the three fighting services, including the First Sea Lord, Adm., Sir John Cunningham. Not a word leaked from the cabinet session, and Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin-back at his desk today after a 10 days' rest-declined to discuss the natter. Advisers Differ on Holy Land Policy Evidence of sharp differences among government's advisers on Palestine appeared tonight as two groups ended a day's round of ses- sions at the State Department under tight secrecy restrictions. At the same time there was some talk among diplomats that the United States might urge upon the British Government a "policy of generos- ity" in dealing with illegal immigra- tion of Jews into Palestine. London dispatches foretold a British crack- down on illegal entries. Pepe Le Moko.' To Be Shown Tonight "Pepe Le Moko" starring Jean Ga- bin and Julian Duvivier will b'e shown at 8:30 tonight under the aus- pices of the Art Cinema League and tomorow in the Rackham Auditor- ium. The film, presented by the Art Ci- nema League, is a tale of intrigue in the Casbah, the native quarter of Al- giers, with Gabin playing the crim- inal "Pepe" later portrayed by Charles Boyer in the American ver- sion of the story. Jap Officers Claim Worked For Surrender Two Peace-Makers Are Criminal 'Suspects TOKYO, Aug. 7-(P)-A strangely assorted group of a half dozen top ranking Japanese-including three who have been named as war crimin- al suspects-worked for two years behind the scenes to maneuver Ja- pan into a position to surrender, for- mer Premier Adm. Keisuke Okada said today. The group had the ear of Emperor Hirohito, and on at least one occa- sion his active intervention. But it was not until the night of Aug. 13, 1945, Okada said in an interview, that the ruler broke up a stormy ses- sion of the cabinet and made the fateful decision by which Japan ac- cepted the terms of Potsdam. Peace overtures were started through Soviet officials in February 1945, Okada disclosed. The basic point of these peace feelers was the retention of 'the emperor, although the army also insisted that Japan not be occupied. The admiral said Japan would have been torn by an "internal upheaval" if the Allies had insisted on remov- al of the emperor. Okada, who is highly regarded in Japan today, escaped an assasinas- tion attempt when he was premier in the uprising in February of 1936. It was only after the outbreak of the Pacific conflict that he returned to an active role in political affairs. He said he was anxious to restore peace "because the 'war was wrong from the start" and he wanted to save Ja- pan from annihilation. La Guardia .Asks That UN.*RRA'. Be -Liquidated' GENEVA, Aug. 7--(P)--Forello La- Guardia, Director-General of the UNRRA, recomended today that the Relief Agency which has spent 32,- 937,000,000 in aiding the world's needy people be liquidated about Oct. 1. 'STEP IN RIGHT DIRECTION': Puerto Ricans Comment on Abolition of Island Governor " U.S. asistant Secretary, of State Will Clayton supported the recom- mendation, made to the UNRRA council meeting. Now that the im- mediate postwar emergency is drawing to an end, Clayton said, the "proper solution for any country that may require assistance is to apply on an individual basis to another country which in its opinion is able and prepared to furnish this assis- tance." LaGuardia irr a quarterly report to the council said he would go to, China "to make a little noise there and see what I can do," after which he would like to be relieved as direc- tor-general. Clayton said. he agreed with La- Guardiathat UNRRA should be au- thorized to continue operations for the care of displaced persons for a reasonable time until the Interna- tional Refugee Organization of the United Nations can make prepara- tions to take over. He said it might also be desirable to allocate some UNRRA funds for social welfare and health until the ecnnnmic and socia1 r By PHYLLIS KAYE The abolition of a foreign gover- nor, classed by the New York Times as the "most obnoxious symbol of the colonial system," has recently taken place in the territorial possession of Puerto Rico. President Has Power of Dismissal Defendini, who is an instructor in the Department of Romance Lang- uages, stated that this move, as the beginning of a trend, is something the Island has long waited for. He added, however, that while the nowers When questioned concerning the controversy of independence versus statehood for Puerto Rico, Defendini declared, this problem is of "minor importance," but a prominent ques- tion is the solution of the problem of the colonial status of Puerto Rico. North American Economic Control Defendini pointed out that tIe Puerto Rican people definitely feel they are subject to North Americag economic control. An example of this economic domination is the ab- sentee ownership of sugar cane nian-