DORA'S BOX See Page 2 443Ufl LVi, No. 49 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JULY 6, 1946 t ew Deadlock locks Peace Camps Add to 'U' Roll; Local Attendance 9,051 :onference Soviet Obstacles Holding Up Parley PA IS, July 5--(P)-Russia raised ojjatacles to the formal calling of a pean peace conference on July 29 and today's session of the four- power foreign ministers ended in a _,deadlock after almost,four hours of discussion, Senator Vandenberg (Rep.,uMch.) said tonight. Soviet oreign Miister V. M. Mo- lotov argued that China should not be one of the power, issuing the in- vitations along with the "Big Four," .nd insisted that rules of procedure should be drafted and approved by the ministers before formal invita- tions were issued for the 21-nation k nference, Vandenberg said. A deadlock arose on both questions, although U.S. Secretary of State James F. Byrnes indicated his will- ingness to capitulate to Russian ar- guments barring China as an invit- ing power if the invitations were Issued immiediately, one American informant explained. China is one of the members of the five-power foreign ministers council set up at Potsdam last Au- gust, and which met in London last fall. The present meeting is con- fined to the foreign ministers of the United States, Russia, France, and Britain. The ministers scheduled their next meeting tomorrow afternoon when their deputies are to report on the question of rules of procedure. Molotov suggested that the deput- ies take over the question of draft- ing the invitations and formulat- ing rules, and that the ministers themselves turn to the German ques- tion, the informant added. One American source said that this would have blocked further move by Byrnes to bring up the peace con- ference queeston, since Germany then would be considered the first order of business. Sigler's Slate Sweps GOP State Nominees DETROIT, Mich., July 5-(P)-,W Michigan's Republican convention{ went down the line today for Kim Sigler, the party's candidate for gov- ernor, and nominated his hand- picked slate for the top state offices. The Sigler forces took immediate command behind a Wayne County steamroller and chose the following, all given the nod by Sigler last night, to run with the silver-haired former grand jury prosecutor in the Novem- ber general election: Secretary of State--Fred M. Agler, of Grosse Pointe, Attorney General - Eugene F. Black, of Port Huron. Treasurer-D. Hale Brake, of Stanton. Auditor General-Murk K. Aten, of Jackson. Brake was the only incumbent re- nominated to his job. Discarded by convention vote were Secretary of State Herman H. Dig- nran, of Owosso, and Attorney Gen- eral John R. Dethmers, of Holland. Auditor General John D. Morrison, of Mlarquette, did not permit his name to go up for vote after Deth- mers moved that Black's nomination be made unanimous before the vote for attorney general was officially announced. Black was ahead at the time. The convention nominated Su- preme Court Justice Leland W. Carr, of Lansing, for an unexpired term on the high bench which expires Dec. 31, 1947. At present, he is an ap- pointee to the court. Sigler's crushing strength was ap- parent from the first and Dignan lost his job by a 949 to 618 vote. Dignan received only 17 of 467 Wayne county votes. Russian Expert, Defends Redin SEATTLE, July 5-(W)--A Russian shipping expert today refused under intensive cross examination in the Redin espionage-conspiracy trial to reveal items of information on an unidentified Russian destroyer tend- er, as it existed three or four years ago. Campus 'Reaches' To Mexico, West Off-campus activities usually over- looked by causual observers brought up the enrollment to the 11,000 fig- ure estimated before the opening of this semester, Dr. L. E. Hopkins, sum- mer session director, revealed yes- terday. Camps and summer courses from Wyoming to Old Mexico have swelled the enrollmert to the pre-season estimate, even though campus regis- tration stands at only 9,000, Dr. Hop- kins. said. University camps, which Dr. Hop- kins emphasized are an integral part bf the on-campus instructional pro- gram, range from the Fresh Air Camp near Ann Arbor to the Geo- logy and Surveying Camp in the highlands of western Wyoming. Camps having the largest enroll- ment are Filibert Roth, the forestry camp near Iron River; the National Music Camp at Interlochen: the Bio- logical Station at Cheboygan; and Camp Davis, the geology and geode- tic surveying camp in the Wyoming Jackson Hole country. Activities having an equal edu- cational value, Director Hopkins said, are the archaeological station across Lake Huron at Killarney, Ont., the geography station at Wilderness Park near Mackinaw City, operated in cooperation with the State De- partment of Conservation; the Fresh Air Camp offering study opportun- ities for education and sociology stu- dents to study child behavior: and the Speech Correction Clinic at Northport. Many graduate students, also, are working at the four state teacher's colleges at Ypsilanti, Kalamazoo, Mt. Pleasant, and Marquette. At Ypsi- lanti, as an example, handicapped children are being helped lead nor- mal lives and blind teachers are be- ing taught themselves in the meth- ods of instructing others. Even Mexico is feeling the impact of the University's summer program, Director Hopkins declared. With the cooperation of the Universities of California, Texas and the- National University of Mexico, a number of University students are studying courses in Spanish, and Mexican and Indian culture. City Restricts Food Drive To Restaurants The city drive to bring aid to the world's starving peoples will be li- mited this summer to a conservation program in local restaurants, Carl Cress, chairman of the Ann Arbor Famine Emergency Committee said yesterday.- Reporting that from $9,000 to $10,- 000 was raised in the combined city and University money collections during the spring, Cress said that, in view of the uncoordinated character of the national campaign, he con- sidered the city record an enviable one. Restaurants contacted by the Fa- mine Emergency Committee have cooperated in varying degree, Cress said, pointing out that some replied to the committee's conservation pleas with letters, while others failed to reply. 'Old Days' Back for Women on Campus Virtually complete registration fig- ures released yesterday by Registrar Ira M. Smith showed 9,051 students on campus for the summer session, with more than half of these veter- ans. The "good old days" were restor- ed for campus coeds with qiore than f our men on campus for every woman. Included in the total are 807 stu- dents for whom sufficient informa- tion has notyet been forwarded from the various off-campus activities to permit a breakdown of these names into men, women and veterans. Full information is available on 8,244 of the 9.051 students and shows the following: veterans total 4,839 126 of whom are women. Non- veterans number 1,212 men and 2,135 women or a total of 3,347, while 57 men are studying under special Army contracts. On campus, but not in the Summer Session totals are 106 fresh- man medical students. Louis A. Hopkins, director of the Summer Session, is expecting ap- proximately 1,800 veterans to arrive on campus in August. The addition of these students, he . pointed out, will bring the Summer Session total close to the predicted 11,000. Comparable figures show that 2,- 893 students (with 93 veterans) reg- istered for the eight-week Summer. Session in 1945, with 2,600 (including 292 veterans) attending the 16-week summer session. With 617 Army and 1,127 Navy students included this made the 1945 campus total reach 7,237. 369 Foreign Students Listed This Semester. Revised figures show that there is a total of 369 students from outside the continental United States en- rolled for the Summer Session, Dr. Esson M. Gale, director of the Inter- national Center, revealed yesterday. Of these students, 52 are United States citizens of Oriental ancestry or from the Canal Zone, Hawaii and Puerto Rico. The total of 369 compares with over 600 enrolled for the spring se- mester. The decrease is accounted for, Dr. Gale said, by the absence of foreign students who will reenroll in the fall. Over 100 of these are expected to return. On the other hand, he continued, of more than a hundred who grad- uated in June, only a handful is be- ing replaced by new arrivals. This, he explained, is due to the necessary limitation which has been imposed on out-of-state students because of congestion in certain departments and the scarcity of living accommo- dations now characterizing Ann Ar- bor. University authorities regard the situation as temporary,;Dr. Gale said. As soon as housing facilities are in- creased and returning veterans pro- vided for, some resumption of the foreign student enrollment may be anticipated. The foreign nations or U.S. posses- sions with the largest numbers of students enrolled here are China, with 70,. India, with 51, Canada, with: 39, Turkey, with 35, 'No New OPA Bill Before Monday; Rep. May 'Used High Pressure' For Friends, Says Gen. Cam-pbell House Military Chairman'Aided ar Contractor' War Profits Probe Hears Ordnance Head WASHINGTON, ,July 5-(VP)-MaJ. Gen. L. H. Campbell, Jr., wartime chief of Army Ordnance, compiain- ed today that Rep. May (Dem., Ky) put "special pressure" on him to help an Illinois munitions manufacturer. The General supplemented previous testimony that May, chairman of the House Military Committee, had been active in behalf of an industrial com- bine that reaped big profits from war contracts. He told the Senate War Investigat- ing Committee that he "got reu un- der the collar" over May's insistence. "It was unfair to me," said Camp- bell, now a vice president of the In- ternational Harvester Company. He said That at the time he was "up to the neck" in the gigantic job of arming the U.S. forces and didn't have time for that sort of thing. His testimony came as the com- mittee pried deeper into the affairs of 19 closely linked concerns and their officials. It produced these developments: 1. An assertion by Brig. Gen. T. S. Hammond that the Erie Basin Metal Products Company had beea given the Army-Navy "E" award for pro- duction over the obkections of the Chicago Ordnance Office that it "didn't meet half the requirements.' 2. Testimony by Campbell that May had introduced Henry Garsson to him over the telephone and asked him to see Garsson. The latter has been described by Army officials os "the brains" behind the Illinois com- bine. 3. Introduction of a War Depart- ment transscript of a telephone con- versation which quoted Col. John Slezak as saying Garsson "uses Con- gressman May and Congressman May goes beyond the limits of propriety in getting things done." 4. Signs of resentment among mem- bers of Congress over the practice of recording congressional ' calls. Speaker Rayburn (Dem., Tex.) ex- pressed displeasure and Republican Leader Martin of Massachusetts termed it a "mean practice." 5. A denial from Campbell that Secretary of War Patterson, as un- der secretary, had discussed with him a war contract for the Garssons. World News At A Glance MAKE READY FOR SECOND ATOM TEST-Old Glory waves over apparently unharmed palm trees on Bikini atoll as Seabees, using an amphibious truck, work on the beach in preparation for the second atom bomb test scheduled for the near future. This photo was trans- mnitted from the U.S.S. Appalachian to San Francisco via joint Army- Navy Task Force One radiophoto. * * * * * * U.S. Proposes International Ownershi of All Atomic Ores Palestine Arms Cache . . . IT CAN BE DONE: Eighty-Two Michigan Students Win All 'A' Scholastic Honors Eighty-two University of Michi- gan undergraduates made the vaunt- ed all-A list for the spring term of 1946, the University Registrar's of- fice announced yesterday. Headed by a group of 63 students from the College of Literature, Sci- ence, and the Arts, with 19 more from the other various colleges and schools, the list includes twelve grad- uating seniors. Seven students from the School of Fore try and Conservation, five from the chool of Public Health, two from the College of Architecture and Design, three from the School of Education, and two from the School of Music, plus the Literary College students, make up the list. The following students are listed: Literary College: Edward G. Baker; William W. Baker; Murray G. Bar- on; Victor J. Baum; Morris Bern- c-.4,"4R. * Un rFa r A- * TinQ lin ,rC. A Richard Ray Horning; Ivan Ishiguri; Esther M. Jackson; Edward P. Kane; Marilyn Jean Keck; Jack Arnold Koh; Robert H. Krause; William D. LaBaw; Miriam Levy; John W. Lin- coln. Dolores D. Marsik; Richard K. Meinke; Joyce Pearlman; Helen J. Perry, Eleanore Putter; Nancy Raush; Nancy Ringland; Ann Robin- son; Mary Margaret Robinson; Gret- el Shinnerer; Carol Ann Schneider; Ann Eva Schultz; Betty Lou Sikke- ma; William G. Sinnigen; Phyllis Smith; Warren L. Smith; Willis B. Snell I; Sue Ann Snyder; Melvin J. Spencer; Barbara Storgaard; Rob- ert L. Taylor, John Brandt Trezise; Alvan Uhle; Marjorie Van-Eenam; Grace Wood; Frank A. Woods; Rob- ert D. Woodward. Forestry school: John J. Baldwin; JERUSALEM, July 5-(A)-British military authorities pressing their hunt through the tense Holy Land for illegal arms said today they had seized 667 German mortar bombs and a large amount of British battle dress hidden in a bull's stall at Mesheq Yagur, Jewish settlement near Haifa. Red Press Hits U.S... MOSCOW, July 5- - Three Russian newspapers assailed Amer- ican actions in China today, de- claring that U.S. capital was help- ing to push China backward into the position of a semi-colonial country and that Americans were politically supporting reactionary forces. Challenges War Trials ... NUERNBERG, July 5-(P)-Coun- sel for Joachim Von Ribbentrop to- day challenged the right of the Allies to try Germans as war criminals, contending the Potsdam Agreement recognized that Germany would con- tinue as a nation and therefore that only Germany should be conducting such prosecutions. * * * French Seat Reynaud,. .. PARIS, July 5-(P)-The Consti- tuent Assembly, over Communist opposition, voted 298 to 132 today.