41w ujrn . +w I ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JULY 2, 1946 rRICE FIVE4 Extends OPA; Nation Holds Lin * * * * * * * * * r Is New Graduate Dean Senate Waits / Long-Range Bit 'N * * * * * V Post edil By Expert g1st Present .in Atoll Test A. Sawyer, technical )perations Crossroads, ew Dean of the Horace School of Graduate ost James P. Adams sterday at a special e Universiity Senate. cabled his acceptance p from the atom bomb. Bikini Atoll where he activities of over 500 unday's atom bombing. ne his new duties in h the beginning of the , filling the vacancy' 11 by the death of Dean 'oakun. Scientist in 1944 as one of the tanding scientists by 1 of Science, Dr. Saw- ae Navy in 1941 to su- perimental laboratories I Proving Ground at riginia. of 1943, he was pro- imander and assumed testing and research Dahlgren. m the Navy last Sep tered into further Navy ad of returning direct- iversity where he has 1919. ice Head Nlavy felt his war ex- particularly fitted him he Ordnance Division work on new weapons,' nted head of the Ord- mn of the Naval Ord- ation at Inyokern, Cal- Building Rate Highest Since 192e5 Boom First Wyatt Report Shows Goal in View By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 1-Housing construction has hit its highest rate since the record building boom of 1925, National Housing Administra- tor Wilson Wyatt reported tonight. Some 406,000 dwellings of all types have been started this year, or 34 per cent of President Truman's 1946 goal of 1,200,000 homes for veterans, Wyatt's first formal report revealed. Foresees Success "We have finished the steepest part'of the long uphill climb to reach our goal of starting 2,700,000 houses and apartments by the end of 1947," he declared. "The fact that we have gone this far this quickly shows that we can reach our goal." However, the whole low-cost phase of the drive is "seriously threatened," Wyatt said, by the precarious state of price control. NHA's new-home ceilings remain, but connot be held if building materials go sky high. Private Industry Helped Of the total new homes started, private industry came through with the "unusually good" showing of 268,000 conventional, or traditional houses and apartments, said the re- port on the first five months of the year. The rest were conversions, tem- porary public housing, housing-type trailers, and a fe wprefabricated dwellings. Wyatt called the build- ing record, "the biggest upsurge in history, after years of low produc- tion." Because of shortages in materials and strikes in the steel, coal and lumber industries, Wyatt reported thatt the emergency housing drive is "just hitting its stride." He said the likelihood is strong for starting the rest of the 1,200,000 scheduled for 1946. DR. RALPH A. SAWYER will return to the University of Michigan as Dean of the Horace Rackham School of Graduate Studies next fall after serving as technical director for Operations Crossroads. He super- vised 500 scientists in preparations for the dropping of the fourth atomic bomb at Bikini Atoll. He fills the vacancy created last fall by the death' of Dean Clarence S. Yoakum. Atomic Bomb Test wrasks ilavoc, Damage, SikstSips DR. JAMES P. ADAMS, Provost of the University, who extended a welcome to all Summer Session students. Students Greeted I extend a cordial welcome to all students who are pursuing their studies during the first post- war Summer Session of the Uni- versity of Michigan. The fac- ulties of the Schools and Colleges have made a special effort to meet your needs and serve your edu- cational interests in the programs of study which have been pro- vided. These opportunities for academic work will naturally re- present the primary purpose of your presence on the campus. However, in addition to these activities in the classroom, lab- oratory, library, and clinic, the University provides a wide range of special opportunities for the pursuit of your intellectual and aesthetic interests . during the, Summer Session. I call attention to the several series of public lec- tures on subjects of timely im- portance, the collections and, special exhibitions in the librar- ies and museums, the programs in music and the drama. These and other projects are a part of the educational resources of this aca- demic community. They are a part of the commonwealth of the mind and spirit which is rep- resented by this University. We hope that you will make them a fruitful part of your own educa- tional experience during this Summer Session. James P. Adams, Provost of the University 7,834 Enroll For Summer Session Here Occasional Rises Set Record Highs By The Associated Press The nation's retailers-despite lifting of Government controls--1 generally held prices at OPA levels yesterday in the face of near record-; high quotations in cattle and hog1 markets, grain, cotton and wool. Industrial stocks on the New York Exchange rose sharply in the morn- ing but extrene advances were re- duced ultimately and a number of losers appeared at the close. Rents advanced 15 to 33 1/3 per cent in many places and soared out of sight in a few in the first 24 hours of freedom from four-year-old fed- eral ceilings. Prospects of early Congressional action to restore some system of 'price control faded in a welter of parliamentary difficulties and die- hard oposition. A rising clamor for emergency state legislation was heard in some sectors, especially where rents shot up sharply. Most disturbing to hold-the-line adherents were market trends such as $20 hogs at Indianapolis-highest in 27 years, the first two dollar wheat since 1925 at Chicago and an all time $22 high for cattle compared to last week's $18 OPA ceiling. Such increases would be reflect- almost immediately in the retail price of meat and flour under nor- mal conditions, economists said. Similar advances were scored in wool and cotton futures, certain to be translated in increased clothing prices if the trend continues. The first reports of increases fol- lowing OPA's Sunday midnight de- mise came in rents and milk. Governors Act To Check State Rent By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 1 - T House tonight voted an "as you wer to the OPA until July 20 but t1 Senate leadership decided to use t bill as a basis for longer-range leg: lation, leaving price controls dead the interim-except perhaps on ren Senator Byrd (Dem., Va.) intr duced a measure to restore rent co trol immediately for another yea saying that "we ought to get start on retaining these controls while fight out the question of price ca trols." A group of Republicans draf ed a similar bill in the House. Spence Blocks Vote Rep. Wolcott (Rep., Mich.) soug unanimous consent for an immedia House vote on the rent bill but w blocked by Chairman Spence (Der :y.) of the banking committE Spence insisted that rents be co sidered with other controls in I long-range legislation. Stabilization Director Ches Bowles at the same time telegraph governors suggesting state action rent control "until federal act can be taken." Governors alrea had acted in Alabama, Massach setts, New Jersey and New York. Senate Fails To Act The House passed the stopgap 283 to 61, intending it to serve ul Congress says its final word in separate bill. But in the face Senate opposition, Democratic Lea er Barkley (Ky.) decided not to br it to a vote, as such. The House roll-call found 60'F publicans and one Democrat, R; Dudley G. Roe of Maryland, vot against the bill. For it were Demnrats. 105 Republicans andt In the East, few cities reported suf- ficient meat supplies to detect any rising price trend but farther West, at Phoenix, Ariz., for instance, one meat wholesaler announced a 25 per cent hike except on luncheon meats which were boosted 10 per cent. * * * April of this year, he was select- be the technical director of the bomb tests. Sawyer attended Atkinson zy from 1907 to 1911 and re- an A.B. degree from Dart- College in 1915. He was a rlin Fellow of Dartmouth Col- the University of Chicago 915 to 1917 and became an it in physics at the Univer- Chicago from 1917 to 1918. Aboard the U.S.S. Appalachian off Bikini, Tuesday, July 2-(P)-The atomic bomb - its wrath pitted against a Naval fleet for the first time - sank five of Bikini's target Commission Hears Atomic Control Plans array of 73 ships, wrecked six, dam- aged 25 and possibly damaged every other of the remaining vessels, of- ficial and unofficial surveys showed today. of Joined Faculty In 1919 Fom 1918 to 1919, he was on active duty as an ensign in the United States Naval Reserve. After completing the requirements for a Ph.D. degree at the University of Chi- cago, he joined the University of Michigan faculty in the fall of 1919 as an instructor in physics. He was promoted to assistant professor in 1922, became an associate professor in 1927 and was made a professor in 1930. Dr. Sawyer specializes in the fields of spectroscopy, radiometry,. extreme ultraviolet spectra, series analysis of line spectra, hyperfine structure of spectral lines, and quantitative spec- trographic analysis. He is a fellow of the American Physical Society, the Optical Society of America (serv- ing as director from 1941 to 1945) the society for Applied Spectroscopy, and the research club of the Univer- sity of Michigan. May Technic Issue Available at Office Students who have not received the May issue of the Michigan Tech- nic can obtain copies of the magaz- ine at the Technic office, 3036 E. Engineering Bldg., any afternoon, July 2-5, from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. The Technic offices will be open Monday and Thursday afternoons from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. during the summer session. Assembly Scheduled For Grad Students Arar itaf Q+nmn.A acomh, wil NEW YORK, July 1--P)-Six Pro- positions on which a charter for con- trolling atomic energy might be built were laid before a special subcom- mittee of the United Nations Atomic Energy Commission at its first closed meeting today by Dr. Herbert E. Evatt of Australia. Evatt, chairman of the atomic en- ergy commission, announced this morning that the United States, Rus- sia, Great Britain, France, Mexico, and Australia would make up the sub-committee. Single Control "1. There should be a single inter- national instrument embodying: (A) A comprehensive plan for in- ternational control and development of atomic energy, (B) An international atomic ener- gy authority to administer and carry out the plan and to be vested with discretionary powers, (C) As part of the plan there should be undertakings by member nations not to use atomic energy for purposes of war, "2. For purposes'of carrying out the plan an international authority should be vested with all necessary !rights relevant to raw materials, processes, plans, and products of plans. System of Control. "3. That effective systems should be established for preventing breach- es of the agreed restrictions and con- trols. "4. The international authority shall be 'required to promote and carry out plans for development of atomic energy for peaceful purposes. "5. That scientific information on nuclear processes and their applica- +,n +tn naefnii nuurnos hnuld be Latest vessel to succumb to the smashing power of the bomb was the Japanese cruiser Sakawa, which. sank quietly at its mooring this nmorning. It was under completely within 10 minutes after the stern started down. No Capital Ship Sunk However, not a capital ship was sunk by Monday's atomic blast- man's fourth such experiment-and goats chewed calmly on hay at the rim of the target fleet as the first observer craft poked into the lagoon three hours later. But the havoc wrought by the ter- rifying. power of the bomb was evi- dentgat every hand. Fires raged aboard at least eight of the vessels, including one ship two miles from the target center. One capital ship, the battle-scar- red light carrier Independence, was wrapped in smoke and convulsed by internal explosions of ammunition and gasoline, touched off six hours after the bomb let go in a blinding flash of light that outshone the sun. Carriers Not Obsolete Vice Adm. William H. P. Blandy, task force commander, told a press conference that despite the damage there was no reason to conclude the day of the carrier and the destroyer was done. Blandy declared that while the fire-swept Independence; was "not a carrier any more" with its flight deck destroyed and its bridge struc- ture over the side, he said he had seen ships that were damaged worse by raiders of the Kamikaze-the Japanese suicide pilots. He predicted it would require months to assess the full facts of thej test. Italo- Yugroslav ondar Set By Ministers PARIS, July 1-(Y')-The four- power Foreign Ministers Council ap- proved tonight a French-proposed boundary between Italy and Yugo- slavia and apeared to be within striking distance of a solution to a companion problem-the disposition of riot-torn Trieste. Russia accepted a plan to place Trieste under international control. Britain and the United States asked for further time to study this pro- posal on the Adriatic city, but prom- ised to give their answers tomor- row. British and American acceptance of the Trieste compromise, also of- fered by the French, would remove the last road-block to writing peace treaties for Italy and the Balkans and would pave the way for a Euro- pean peace conference. A British source said the foreign ministers had made "dramatic pro- gress." Yank Troops Stoned TRIESTE, July 1-()-American troops were stoned tonight when they broke up an attack by an angry mob on the Communist Party headquar- ters here, as a series of new riots broke out in this strike-paralyzed city claimed by both Italy and Yugo- slavia. Incomplete enrollment figures yes- terday showed that 7,834 students' had registered for the University's 53rd Summer Session, according to Registrar Ira M. Smith. Registrar Smith said this total did not include registrations in the Uni- versity's five camps operating this summer or of the many off-campus activities in Detroit. Dr. Louis A. Hopkins, director of the Summer Session, reported that the enrollment figure would be boost- ed considerably in August when 1,- 800 veterans report for a refresher course. Broken down, registration figures showed 5,730, men and 2,104 women are now attending school here in the University. 4,725 of these are vet- erans. Figures comparable to those an- nounced yesterday showed 1,586 had registered for the eight week Sum- mer Session offered last year and 1,723 for the 16-week SummerTerm, offered as part of the University's year-round wartime education pro- gram. Kelly Requested To Freeze Rents By The Associated Press Michigan warily watched changing price scales Monday in its readjust- ment to doing business without the OPA. Rents appeared to cause main con- cern, rising in some isolated instances in Detroit as much as a reported 300 per cent. As a result, there were two appeals to Governor Kelly for an execu- tive order freezing rents or a spe- cial session of the legislature for the same purpose. These came from the CIO United Auto Workers Union, which proposed a renters' strike as a counter move, and a Detroit consumers group. The auto union sought a meeting with Governor Kelly Tuesday. The union, which also suggested a buyers' strike, was called on by a group of lo- cal presidents in Flint to revise its wage policy and demand pay boosts from industry. Kelly said at Lansing he would await clarification, of Congress' at- titude on an extension of OPA before he would decide whether to seek con- trols under state law. Daily Tryouts There will be a brief meeting of all students interested in work- ig on The Daily editorial staff at 3 pm. today, ingthe Student Publications Building. Persons wishing to try out for the business staff should see'Janet Cork at the Student Publications Building between 1 and 4 p.m. today. Committee to be overhauled inte new one-year extension-with as f of the amendments which mov President Truman to veto the ori nal extender as may be possible. No Brake on Prices This will leave the country wit out a statutory brake on prices as long as it takes Congress to a but with officials hoping that volu tary restraints evident today will continued. Price Administrator Paul Pol expressed the belief that the pr line could be held by voluntary act for two or three, weeks. He also vo ed confidence that "we will get kind of price control that meets specifications laid down by the Pr dent." Catastrophe Predicted House debate on the stopgap. tension brought a prediction fr Chairman Spence (Dem., Ky.) of banking committee that "a gr catastrophe will come to the Amn can people" unless price controls revived. On the other hand I Allen (Rep., Ill.) asserted there be "no compromise" unless Cong "completely abdicates, comple surrenders to the bureaucratic ministrators of the OPA." A chorus of boos greeted Allen f the visitors' gallery. Speaker 1 burn sternly ordered them hus Proposals by Rep. Dirksen (F Ill.) to make the temporary ext sion only 10 days and by Rep. Sr (De., Va.) to make it 60 days u defeated. A move by' Rep. Baldwin (I N.Y.) to' continue the old law changed until Jan. 20, allowing new Congress to deal with the ma after the elections, also lost. Filpios Here Will Celebrate Festival Will Observe National Independeni SEPARATE ART MUSEUM NOW IN ALUMNI HALL: Prof.Slusser, New Director, Announces Exhibit Filipino students 'at the Univers: will celebrate their country's fi Independence Day with a progri and .dance at 9 p.m. July 3 in t Rackham Assembly Hall. Highlighting the program will a ."quasi historical pageant" depic in.g the past history of the Phil' pines directed by Leopoldo Tor balla of the math department, a Creation of a separate Museum ofI 1'ti _. YY.. .S ... ......... .1 .. ....i I-Y w. e+.L ew HVS+i..Vy.:Me!1._.ti'F WYff . . r . . _ __ _ .. _!1- _- +iiip. f the new museuim will be I the lUniversity, withshowings of Ma-I an exhibition selected from the Whit-