THE MICHIGAN DAILY COLLEGE ROUND-UP: Minnesota 'U' Fights Polio; Purdue Turns Away 5.000 THE OLD ARMY GAME: The University of Minnesota con- tinued its fight on the polio epidemic this week. the biggest epidemic that has occurred in the United States, according to Dr. Donald Cown, assist- ant director of the Minnesota Health Service. Although 21 children be- tween the ages of five and 16 have been treated there, no new cases among University students have been reported since the two recent fatali- ties. A plan for full utilization of higher education facilities in Minnesota through a process of joint registra- tion will be inaugurated this fall as a measure aimed at giving the esti- mated 41,000 college students in the state their chance for a college edu- cation. The University of Ilinois campus newspaper, "The Daily Illini," re- ported this week a strong possibility that 30,000 prospective college stu- dents from Illinois will be barred from entrance to any branch of high- er education in the state because of over-crowded conditions. According to an estimate based on the study of the education facilities of the state, AF oL VLabar' Racketeering' $.060 Faces Inquiry DETROIT, Aug. 17--(P)-Eighteen officers and business agents of the AFL Teamsters Union were accused of an extortion conspiracy and viola- tion of the State Labor Law in war- rants announced tonight by Circuit Judge George B. Murphy. Judge Murphy, who has been sit- ting as a one-man grand jury investi- gating charges of labor racketeering. said the warrants were the first of, "what may proveeto be a long series. The inquiry has been going on since June. A grand jury investigation was ord- ered by the Wayne (Detroit) County courts after food merchants of the metropolitan area, protesting union tactics in an organizing drive, had accused the teamsters of illegal prac- tices. A 3,500,000 damage suit was brought against the union by the Detroit Re-i tail Meat Merchants Association last1 May. The suit alleged a "coercive and monopolistic" campaign on the union's part in seeking "unlawful1 labor objectives." , The union had set out to- organize the clerks of the metropolitan area's1 6,000 food stores. A court injunction( restrained the union from picketingl the stores and from demanding thatl merchants buy 35 monthly permitsf from the union in order to pick upi foodstuffs at markets.N there is room for probably not more than 100,000 students. A campaign to fight discrimina- tion against Negroes is underway at the University of Illinois under the, direction of the Student-Commun- ity Interracial committee. with the public commendation of President George ). Stoddard. Six campus restaurants have been picketed by members and sympathizers of the committee for unequal services to Negroes. Efforts to salvage the. academic careers of numerous junior and sen- ior girls at the University of Illinois who were displaced by sale of 10 houses in which they had been liv- ing, resulted in formation of a par- ents' cooperative, which purchased three houses in the campus area. *~ * * A "split-shift"- work plan for stu- 'lent veterans at Michigan State Col- lege is being considered as a pogsible answer to the problem of increased t cod and housing costs. Although :till in the idea stage, it shows prom- ise of enabling the veterans to make $100 per month to supplement their overnment incomes. The central idea of the plan is for veterans to Iivide a full shift at the larger in- lustria- concerns in the Lansing area. A draft of plans for a cooper- ative tore at the trailer camp at Michigan State College were present- 2d to President John A. Hannah this week. * * * The Purdue University has been forced to deny entrance this fall to approximately 5,000 students, large- ly out-of-state residents, due to the critical housing situation and limited instructional facilities. The estimat- ed total resident enrollment at the University is expectedto approximate 12,000, as compared tp the pre-war peak of 7,121. In addition, 1,000 freshmen students will be admitted at IS centers maintained by the Purdue Extension division. Another headache at Purdue Uni- sity concerns the housing prob- lem. University officials have made an appeal to all householders in nearby small towns in an effort to provide accommodations for approximately 3,000 students who must be housed in private homes or be forced to stay out of school. * * * An editorial campaign-in the Uni- versity of Indiana. "Daily Student" has been launched against the illicit sale of marijuana, a quantity of the sensation - provoking weed having been discovered in a private automo- bile in Indianapolis last week. In the midst of the phenomenal, housing difficulties at the University of Indiana, as elsewhere, a coed there has rejected her educational career because the only room she could find was papered and decorated in pink, to which color she claimed she was violently allergic! Rules, Redtape, Petty Officials Obstruct InternationalFlying By The Associated Press because he spent only 125 hours in NEW YORK, Aug. 17-People who the air. The way it was, the flight own airplanes and are planning in- took him 100 days-from Jan. 9 to ternational pleasure flights would do April 19. He lost eight days because well to heed the sad story of Alberto of weather. He lost 55 days waiting Carrasco. for permission to fly from one place The 26-year-old pilot, Buenos Aires to the other. born and United States trained, flew The surplus trainers cost him some more than 10,000 miles from St. Pet- $5,000-a sale price of about $1.904 ersburg, Fla., to his home town in each plus license fees and the like. a surplus U.S. Army trainer. Weather With no other expenses but gasoline was a cinch, he says. Human hurdles and oil, he could have got them both -rules and red-tape and petty offi- home for $1,000. Landing fees, over- cial:-were another thing, time to customs men, hotel bills in- Carrasco told of the troubles he'd crred in enforced waiting and other seen when he came back to New such items ran the cost up to $7,000. York with a crew of the Brazilian Slowed 1;y Weather airline, Aero Navigacion de Dodero,.Slowe ather to ferry a newly bought D-4 passenger Bad weather slowed Carrasco on plane to Buenos Aires. the Gulf coast and he spent six days On most of that first homeward getting from St. Petersburg to flight, Carrasco had with him his Brownsville, where du Temple joined one-time instructor, Octave du Tem- him. There were weather delays in ple of Plainfield, Ind. The men pilot- Cayenne, French Guiana, and in ed two open-cockpit Fairchild PT- Caravellas, Brazil. 19's which Carrasco had bought from These things were comparatively the Reconstruction Finance Corp, at minor. Sky Harbor in Indianapolis. In Brownsville, Carasco had to wait Trip Possible in 14 Days 15 days, paying for outdoor storage Without human and meteorological of the planes, for export licenses on interference, Carrasco figured he the planes and clearances from the could have made the trip in 14 days, Civil Aeronautics Administration and Mexican Direccion de Aeronautica Civil. Ship Fire Reported Off Newfoundland NEW YORK, Aug. 17-()-The Coast Guard announced today that the steamer Benjamin Milan sent a radio message that it was afire 500 miles east of Newfoundland. The radio message, received at 2 p.m., (EDT) said "Fire in coal car- go; condition serious but not criti- ^al." Arthur Hensen, master of the freighter, added in his message that he was attempting to make St. John's, Newfoundland. The freighter, shippings lists show- ed, is owned by the War Shipping Administration, and was last listed as operated by the American South African Line. Yon A PRESIDENT GOES ABOARD YACHT-Smiling and bareheaded, Presi- dent Truman walks up the gangplank to board the yacht Williams- burgh at Washington. He was bound for an 18-day vacation cruise in the Narragansett bay area and along the cost of Maine in his first' offi- cial vacation since entering the White House. * * * * * * MacArthur Is Reported To Have. Refuted Presidential Candidacy By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, President Truman is reported to have the assurance of at least one sometimes-mentioned presidential prospect that he will not be a candidate to succeed him. When a Senate committee recently visited the Orient, one member is said to have borne a message from the President to Gen. Douglas Mac- Arthur, assuring the General of the President's backing in his job of governing Japan. The President also story, that if MacArthur wanted Mr. Truman's job, to just come and get it. MacArthur, mentioned as a possible Republican nominee, was said to have sent word to the President that if Mr. Truman found any general run- ing against him in 1948, it would not be MacArthur. Watch for of Student Announcement Book Exchange DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN WHAT' SHAL.L WE BRIN4G IN rWIRST7 LADY? MOVIG 56 OF To VHY THE RAQIO COURSE!' 1'VE GOT on the air Li STE N TO 7:00A.s.to 7:30 P.M. T Ain August Dial 1050 W AO (Continued from Page 4) Speech, in conjunction with the School of Music Monday, Aug. 19, 8:30 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn The- atre. The regular meeting of the Uni- versity Women's Veterans Associa- tion will be held at 7:00 p.m. Mon- day, Aug. 19, at the Michigan League. Plans for the fall program will be discussed, and all interested women veterans are urged to attend. "The Late Christopher Bean," com- edy by Sidney Howard, will be pre-. sented by the department of speech Wednesday at 8:00 p.m. in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, admission free to the public. This play will be staged by advanced students in dramatics as a laboratory production showing the type of play which can be done in 1000 HEADS WANTED!! Be they round, square, flat -for that Michigan "Crew- Cut" at the DASCOLA BARBERS Between State & Michigan Theaters the average High School. Tickets are available at the theatre box office. Churches First Church of Christ, Scientist, 409 S. Division Street. Wednesday evening service at 8:00. Sunday morning service at 10:30. Subject: "Soul." Sunday school at 11:45. A special reading room is main- tained by this church at 106 Wolver- ine Building, Washington at Fourth where the Bible, also the Christian Science textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures," and other writings by Mary Baker Eddy may be read, borrowed or pur- chased. Open daily except Sundays and holidays from 11:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. The subjects of coming Sunday morning services are as follows: Aug. 25-"Mind." Sept. 1--"Christ Jesus." Sept. 8- "Man." Sept. 15-"Substance." Sept. 22-"Matter." Sept. 29-"Reality." Lutheran Student Association-On Sunday afternoon at 4:00 the Luther- an Student Association will meet at Zion Lutheran Parish Hall and leave from there for the home of Edith Ols- son, Dexter Avenue, for a picnic sup- per and short devotional service. First Presbyterian Church: Morning Worship, 10:45 a.m. Ser- mon, "Some Things Fundamental" by Dr. R. Worth Frank, Professor of Philosophy of Religion and Ethics at McCormick Seminary in Chicago. The Summer Westminister Guild will meet for supper at 6:00 p.m. at the Council Ring on the church grounds. There will be a discussion on "A Developing Religious Outlool." Memorial Christian Church (Dis- ciples of Christ). Morning Worship 10:50. Rev. F. E. Zendt will deliver the morning message. The Congre- gational-Disciples Guild will meet at the Guild House, 438 Maynard St., at 4:30 p.m. today and will go to West Park for supper, recreation, singing and worship. , LCO E ETERA s! 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