', THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, ..... Overseas Army Schools Need Givilian Teachers FALL PLANS LISTED: Business School Schedules Grad Real Estate Program ,r._ Civilian instructors for the Army Education Program in Japan, Korea, Manila, Okinawa and Germany are needed for the Army of Occupation schools for military personnel, the War Department announced yester- day. Instructors who meet army require- ments will teach in schools open to officers and enlisted men alike at the high, school, junior college, trade and technical school levels. Salaries ranging from $3,600 to $5,100 while overseas will be paid to instructors with a bachelor's, or in some cases a master's degree or its equivalent, plus at least two years of "successful teaching experience" in accredited educational institutions. These qual- ification do not apply to trade school subject teachers. Federal Tax Revenues Drop, Reports Show, Liquor, Tobacco, Night Club Collections Rise WASHINGTON, Aug. 20-- (W) - Federal tax revenues dropped $3,128,- 290,000 last fiscal year, due princi- pally to decline in collections from the excess profits tax,repealed after V-J Day. An Internal Revenue breakdown today showed total revenues for the 12 months ended last June 30 of $40,- 672,096,000. The Excess Profits Tax alone declined $3,181,031,000. Corporation and individual income taxes (including withholdings from wages) dropped $239,766,000 and $329,777,000 respectively, but there were offsetting increases resulting from the buying boom and spending for pleasure,. Liquor tax collections increased $216,298,000 and tobacco taxes $233,- 374,000. Taxes on admissions to night clubs, theaters and the like rose $57,- 801,000; those on club dues and in- itiation fees $4,739,000. Retail consumption tax on jewelry, furs, cosmetics and luggage brought the government $67,941,000 more than a year earlier, and manufacturers' excise taxes on various goods-au- tos, gasoline, radios, phonograph records, musical instruments and others - yielded $140,160,100 more than in fiscal 1945. Transportation to and from the overseas theatre will be supplied; families will not accompany the in- structors. Contracts run for 12 months, and, in exceptional cases, for nine months. Instructors are being hired for the following subjects: accounting, art, business administration, English, gov- ernment and political science, math- ematics, music, physical sciences, psychology, social studies, mechan- ical, electrical, agricultural, aeronau- tical and automotive engineering, and others. These instructors will have a stand- dard work week of 40, hours, with overtime payments in cases when they are required to work up to 48 hours. The schols are distinct from those established for children of military personnel overseas. They are design- ed to help troops to complete their high school training, prepare for entering college, acquire skills in mechanical trades. Qualified teachers can learn more about jobs by writing the Army Edu- cation Instructor Selection Office, 641 Washington St., New York 14, N. Y. Joos Discusses Spectrograph In Talk Today -The use of the sound spectro- graph as the future source of phonet- ic data for linguistics studies will be. 'discussed by Prof. Martin Joos in a" lecture on "Acoustic Phonetics" at 7:30 p.m. today in the Rackham Am- phitheatre. The recent development of the. spectrograph has revealed for the first time the possibility of obtain- ing a detailed and precise study of the acoustic side of speech. The instrumental records made by the spectrograph provides a syn- thesis of acoustic and articulatory phonetics which can be discussed in terms familiar to phoneticians'|"eat- ly facilitating the problems of the study of acoustics. Sample spectrographs will be given the audience at Prof. Joos' lecture. During the war Prof. Joos, who is a member of the faculty of the Uni- versity of Wisconsin, was in the office of the Chief Signal Officer / COL. E. R. BRADLEY BURIED-Negro servants from Col. Edward R. Bradley's Idle Hour Stock Farm are shown carrying the casket of the noted sportsman out of St. Paul Catholic church, Lexington Ky. following funeral services for the 86-year old horseman who died last Thursday. in Review By ELINOR MOXNESS . Plans of the School of Business1 Administration for the fall semester include a revival of the graduate pro- gram in real estate and the expan- sion of courses in the field of foreign trade. The one year real estate program, which was offered before the war and is believed to be the only one of its kind on the graduate level, is ar- ranged especially for graduates of a general business course and is in;- tended to give the student a year of intensive work in the field of real estate which will prepare him to go into professional practice. In additiona to basic courses offered in the busi- ness administration school, 22 courses in other schools and departments of the University will afford the student an opportunity toselect a particular phase of real estate for more inten- sive study.' A one year scholarship to be awarded by the faculty of the school and open to graduates of accredited schools or colleges who have a bache- lor's degree, has been offered by the' Ann Arbor Board of Realtors for the program. Additional courses in foreign trade wil be offered in the fall by Prof. Dudley M. Phelps, who re- cently returned to the school after several years with the State De- partment both here and in South America. Two additions to the business ad- ministration faculty for the fall have been made. They are Herbert B. Mil-j ler, associate professor of accounting, and Howard Westing, associate pro- fessor of marketing. Prof. Miller, formerly of the Uni- versity of 'Minnesota, will teach courses in public accounting. He has been review editor of the "Account- ing Review" for several years. At the time he took his Certified Public Ac- Peace Wanted ByCor-nmunists Chinese Spokesman Denies War Motives NANKING, Aug. 20-G)-Wang Ping-Nan, Communist spokesman, told the Associated Press tonight that the Chinese Communists "have no de- sire to overthrow the government." Commenting on a broadcast Mon- day by the Communist Yenan radio urging the Communist liberated areas to "mobilize," Wang said: "This (the broadcast) was not a declaration of war. It was in no way a mobilization of troops but merely moral mobilization." "We have no desire to overthrow the government." The Communists, Wang said in an interview, want only unconditional peace and a resolution of all problems according to the decisions reached at the all-party conference last Febr- uary. countant examination, he took top honors in the country. Prof. Westing is a graduate of the University and taught here several years ago. Since then, he has served as a lieutenant in the Navy, with the Office of Price Ad- ministration in Washington, with the Foreign Economic Administra- tion and with the Department of Commerce. Construction is now under way on the new building of the School of Business Administration, to be lo- cated on the corner of Tappan and Monroe Streets, British Accused Of Censoring IndianNews By The Associated Press The Calcutta riots brought death to posibly 3,000 Moslems and Hindus, yet dispatches published in this country mention no damage to for- eign-or British-personnel or pro- perty. The British Administration in In- dia has been known to censor news before, and there is circumstantial evidence it still is on the job-such as ordering American correspon- dents out of government headquart- ers, and issuing a vague communi- que saying the "situation had im- proved" just as the rioting had spread to its maximum extent to the Hoogh- ly River. Newsworthy Facts Withheld In view of the anti-British and an- ti-foreign sentiment marking earlier Indian riots (as last February, when even American GI's got banged up) the fact that there was none this time-if there were none--should have been newsworthy. Yet no cor- respondent seems to have advanced that claim. If all this suggests that the full story of the riots hasn't yet been re= ported, it also suggests the possibly terrifying tension which may have prevented it. Nehru Favors Rusisa Jawaharlal Nehru, the Hindu lea- der, declared last Thursday that In- dia should "develop closer relations with Russia," and that he hoped Rus- sia would take part in an "inter-As- ian bloc" which he is promoting. IL CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING / rr iirirrr rrir s raiai rnrrri rrr HELP WANTED FEMALE HELP WANTED: School secretary. This position requires both training and experience in typewriting and shorthand. This is a fine position -for a responsible, capable person. Steady work and good wages. Apply Dr. M. B. Rogers, Superin- tendent of Schools at Willow Run Vil- lage. Phone Ypsilanti 423. Ii evening phone Ypsilanti 1413. (3 HELP . WANTED: Stenographer for part- time work. Hours can be arranged. Phone University ext. 433.,EVenings 3291. (2 TRANSPORTATION AM DRIVING TO FORT WORTH, TEXAS: Starting Wednesday, Aug. 28. Can take single woman or couple. References ex- changed. Write M. Emswiler, North Lake, Gregory, Mich. WANTED: 3 passengers to Los Angeles. Share expenses, leaving Sept. 5, 42 Chev- rolet in good condition. Call 2-4263. ANYONE driving to Yellowstone or nearby, willing to take passenger, call George Smith, 7219, evenings. WANTED: Ride to northern part of south- ern peninsula,near Petoskey, either Sat- urday or Sunday, August 25. Wiii share expenses and will aid in driving if de- sired. Phone Bill Langford 8177. (16 WANTED: Ride to Omaha or Soo City. About 26 August. Share expenses and driving. Write 1135 Southwick, Willow Run. References exchanged. (8I WANTED: Ride for two to vicinity of Omaha, Nebra., leaving any time be- tween August 22 and Sept. 7. L. H. Red- fern 1067 Goshen Ct., Willow Run, Mich. (5 LOST AND FOUND LOST: Parker "51". Silver cap with blue body. Ttirn in to Daily, Box 55. Reward. WILL THE PERSON who has taken a biege Season Skipper coat from the League lounge get in touch with Mar- guerite Yagel, 914 Hill, or call 4546 and get her own coat. (13 LOST: Large yellow, male, angora cat. Has been gone since first of week. Telephone 2-3781. (9 WANTED TO RENT WANTED: Room reasonably near campus for veteran returning to school. Contact Bob McFee, 311 Wenley House, 2-4401. WANTED: School teacher and student hus- band want apartment or rooms with kitchen priveleges. Winn consider partI time service. Permanent residents, good references. Call Ryland, 8891. WANTED: Veteran and wife to exchange housework for board and room. Catho- lics perferred but not essential. Call Mr. Kennedy at 2-4282. (38 WANTED: Apartment for school teacher and husband, good references, phone Page 8891. 2-ROOM furnished apartment, Evanston, Ill., on NU campus, all facilities, $50 per month. Will exchange for furnished, unfurnished small apartment or house in Ann Arbor. Veteran and wife. Refer- ence: Immediate occupancy. Write or phone R. H. Galloway, 1730 Melrose St., Rockford, Ill., Main 2923. HAVE NO HOPES but optimistic veteran returning to academic life and working wife urgently need furnished apt., room, or what have you? Please call Detroit, University 3-6286 collect day, night, or anytime. WANTED: Quiet room in private home for Junior medical student. Fall and Spring terms. Will considernworking for room. Call 2-2521, Ext. 353 evenings, or 4662. MISCELLANEOUS ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS SALES * John Jadwin * Service. 855 Tappan Avenue,Ann Arbor. Call 2-7412 for dem- onstration. (30 PLAN for you fall suits and formals now. Expert workmanship on custom-made clothes and alterations. Hildegarde Shop. 116 E. Huron. Phone 2-4669. (10 MEN'S USED CLOTHES wanted. A better price paid. Sam's Store. 122 E. Washing- ton St. (4 ALL MEMBERS of Tau Kappa Epsilon please contact John Sellars, 715 Oak- land, or Thomas Stinson, 1324 North University, or Dr. Charles Stocking, 250 Chemistry Building. BOOKKEEPING: Monthly audits, state- ments for fraternities, sororities, and campus organizations. Nominal fee, call Charles Koethen. Days, 2-7330. Evenings, 2-4925. (42 FOR SALE BARGAIN? Army officer will sell the fol- lowing quality wearing apparel: 1. Blue pin stripe suit, size 39. 2. Grey plaid sport coat, size 37. 3. Palm Beach Suit, size 38. All apparel made by Rogers Peet co., N.Y. Boston, worn only few times. Sixty dollars will take the field. Phone 8000 or 1334 Hutchins St. after 4:00 p.m. FOR SALE: New, 1946 Smith-Corona port- able. Phone 2-7294. PORTABLE TYPEWRITER FOR SALE: See D. Walter, 3297 Forest Drive, East Ann Arbor. By RICHARD W. FINK Over 50 new grasses have been bred at the University of California, Dr. R. M. Love of California's College of Agriculture announced. With the aid of a plant-mutating chemical known as colchicine, the experimentors have developed new grasses which will remain green and tender even during hot, dry summer months.The new strains, including over 20 new species, survive admirably under dry condi- tions on therplains. The scientists are now selecting the finest of the 50 new grasses for vigor and growth, and seed is being grown in large scale tests. * * * Fly Murder.. . An electrified screen, available to fit windows and doors, consists of two sets of bars, supported in a metal frame. The bars, which are electrified by a transformer oper- ating at 10 milliamperes, set up an electrical field which serves as a barrier to insects, according to Business Week. The moisture with- in the bodies of insects, it is be- lieved, causes the electric current to complete a circuit from one bar to another, and the device thus uses only a dime's worth of current per month and is harmless to humans and animals. * * * * Sum mer 'Stains ... The United States Department of Agriculture recommends ammonia or vinegar for removal of perspiration stains from summer clothes. If the stains are fresh, the spot is moisten- ed with water and held over the fumes from household ammonia wa- ter. If the stains are a few days old, however, and have turned alkaline, moistening with very dilute vinegar sometimes restores the color. Radioactive Iodine .- Radioactive preparations contain- ing iodine are now the prescribed curative for certain types of goiter, which is a disease caused by mal- functioning of the thyroid gland. Administered by mouth, the cost is as low as three dollars and eliminates the necessity of surgical operation, Dr. Earle M. Chapman of the Massa- chusetts General Hospital, Boston, re- ports. The ray-emitting element is now procurable from the fission piles at Oak Ridge, Tennessee. * * * War Reversed,.. . Man's usual warfare on insects, to prevent their ruining his crops, is being reversed in California, where ranchers are planning to pit insects against the prickly pear cactus, which is enroaching upon their grazing land, Business Week reports. Two bugs of the squash type have long sucking beaks and suck the cactus pads dry in addi- tion to spreading a bacterial di- sease Two moths lay sticks of 50 eggs on prickly pear cacti spines and their larvae pierce the pads, eating the flesh and leaving the cactus as a dead shell. More Pineapples ... The newly-synthesized weed killer, 2, 4-D, has been found to increase the yield and quality of pineapples in Hawaii when it is sprayed on in highly diluted form. The results are so marked that producers have in- stituted 2, 4-D spraying as a regul- ar routine on pineapple plantations. The chemical apparently has a growth stimulating effect on pine- apples. Other fruits are being tested to discover other possible effects of 2, 4-D;upon growth. Scientists Honored .. . Plastics developed from acetylene have won a Stalin prize for Dr. Ivan Nazarov, director of the organic chemistry laboratory of the Academy of Sciences in Moscow, Russia, ac- cording to Science News Letter. The research work produced a ser- ies of organic compoundp of the vin- lyacetylene homologues. These com- pounds find applications in strong glues to adhere glass, plastics, woods, metals, stones, and other solids. Dr. Nazarov produced other resins of transparency by polymerization of esters, glycols, and ethers produced through the condensation of vinyl- acetylene with certain keto com- pounds. The Russian scientist is known for his work on other organic compounds as well. Stalin Prize , , , Dr. Marie Petrova, famed woman physiologist of the U.S.S.R., has been awarded the Stalin Prize for her researches upon conditioned re- flexes in animals. In spite of the terible conditions of besieged Len- ingrad where Dr. Petrova did her work, her investigations did not cease. * * * Rug Safety .,.. Husbands, whose wives delight in laying slippery little ornamental rugs on waxed floors, will now have little to worry about. Rubber anchors for these scatter rugs will reduce acci- dents by keeping rugs from slipping on highly polished floors. The protec- tive underlay, which is a sponge rub- ber cushion, can be cut to fit any size rug or runner. It can be cleaned with damp cloths. Glass Research.. . Windshield icing and .interior fog- ging are said to be eliminated by a new development in glass research, according to reports in Business Week. The idea involves the use of a permanent transparent coating that successfully conducts an electrical current over the glass panel. The de- velopment is credited to William 0. Lytle, a research engineer. New Science Journal . .. The newly-organized Michigan Junior Academy of Science, Arts, and Letters is planning to issue the first edition of its new Journal in September, according to Prof.. G. W. Prescott of the Department of Botany, Michigan State College. The Junior Academy is fostered by the Michigan Senior Academy of Science, which is affiliated with the American Association for the Ad- vancement of Science. All science, art, English, literature, camera, and other such high school clubs in Michigan are eligible for membership in the Junior Academy, whose headquarters may be reached by writing to Prof. Prescott at Michi- gan State College. Prof. Prescott, who served as visiting professor at the University's biological station in Cheboygan during the summer, is serving as Junior Academy sponsor and correlator. * * * Fluorescein Dye . Fluorescein, one of the most pow- erful fluorescent chemicals known, has long been used to trace under- ground sources of contamination in cases of typhoid fever. The crystal- lized dye is thrown into the contam- inated well and the wells in the neighborhood are tested to observe the fluorescence, if any. If any ap- pears, the contamination is getting into the second well. T ' Students Are Living at Co-op University students Marjorie Lamb, Rachiel Shields and George Cross- man are among 56 college students at Camp George West in Golden Col. living this summer in a cooperative community under the auspices of the Lisle Fellowship. The students participate in lec- ture and discussion groups and in community activities designed to promote a "world-minded" point of view through contacts with students from all over the world. 18 states, Hawaii and eight foreign nations are represented. Today and Thursday ROAD TO UTOPIA with Bing- Crosby, Bob Hope Dorothy Lamour and MURDER IN THE MUSIC HALL Continuous from 1 P.M. ALWAYS COOL! - Now Thru Saturday - 1# ..r. .. A North Main Opposite Court, House - Starts Today- Eddie Albert in "STRANGE VOYAGE" plus Albert Dekker in - "THE FRENCH KEY" 4 ex ctiOnzr.MO.ern -Cool zn EN DING TODAY! *1 I Also Disney Cartoon 0 News I Thursday BEN FECHT' (Author of "Spellbound") Latest Mystery "SPmECTER. "I TN EY DPNT ANSJWER MADAM,/ "'tiY MLJ1 1Sr tSNNca 'o 'WPAG 1 I On the air 7:00 A.M. to 7:30 P.M. in August Dial 1050 OF THE ~4: I