THE MICHIGA DAILY I ______________________________________________________________________________________________ Senate Probers Hear Evidence From Patterson Admits May Asked For His Assistance WASHINGTON, July 9-(P)-Se- cretary of War Patterson acknow- ledged today that he had given his personal attention to the wartime complaints of Illinois munitions makers at request from Rep. May (Dem., Ky.), but firmly denied that he had done them "favors." In sworn testimony before the Senate War Investigating Com- mittee, Patterson produced these de- velopments in the inquiry into the in- dustrial combine's complicated op- erations and profits: 1. A statement that he went to May's office at the congressman's summons a few days after govern- ment payments to the Erie Basin Metal Products Company had been "frozen" to insure recapture of ex- cessive profits. At the Congress- man's office, he conferred with two men whom he said he could not iden- tify. 2. An acknowledgement that May had complained to him over a War Production Board order halting work on a contract held by Batavia Metal Products Company, another of the associated firms, and that he had a subordinate look into it. 3. A declaration that he had in- tervened with the War Manpower Commission to obtain additional la- bor for Batavia. 4. A flat denial that May had asked him for, or that he had or- dered, award of a big shell contract to Batavia. AVC Asks Adoption Of Revolving Fund (Continued from Page 1) financed. We believe," said Staebler, "that these funds should come from an income tax and are advocating a one-half to one per cent tax on all incomes above $3,000 to finance our proposal for the revolving fund. "The AVC," Staebler concluded, "feels that this is a question to be decided by the people of the State of Michigan and, urges- that the pro- posal to establish a "revolving fund and the plan to finance it by an in- come tax be placed before the people in the referendum this fall along with the bonus proposal." TESTIFIES BEFORE WAR IN- VESTIGATORS-Thomas O'Con- nell (above), committee investiga- tor, testifies before Senate ' War Investigating Committee in Wash- ington, saying he was handed $500 in a Chicago hotel with under- standing he would resign and with- draw from his investigation. He said he gave the money back next day. His was one of the opening blasts in testimony which has in- volved Rep. May and other top government officials. Village ToHave More in14Fall Residence at Willow Village which has fallen to 300 this summer will jump to keep pace with the expected record enrollment this September, a University official revealed yesterday. The University's all-veteran com- munity near the big Willow Run air- ports expects to house from 1,200 to 1,500 married couples and 1,700 to 1,900 single students this Fall, the official said. Seventy-two single women, former WAC's and nurses, will swell the Wil- low Village enrollment. They will be housed in dormitory number eight, located across from the community center. New University plans call for in- auguration of an extensive recrea- tion and athletic program with a full time social and athletic director for single students. For married students and their wives two social directors will be pro- Vided by the University. Hold Your Bonds Non-cooperation Plan Intensifies Palestine Row JERUSALEM, July 9-(P) - The Inner Zionist Council today empow- ered three Jewish groups to draft de- tailed proposals for a campaign of non-cooperation with the Palestine government until arrested Jewish leaders are freed from detention and operations against Palestine Jews are suspended.. At the same time, the Arab High- er Committee weighed its own pro- posals for non-cooperation with the British. The Inner Zionist Council gave the go-ahead signal to its own presi- dium, to the Jewish Agency's execu- tive committee and to the National Council of Palestine Jews to work out plans for non-cooperation. Dr. Chaim Weizman, President of the World Zionist Organization, who said Great Britain had "missed its chance" to restore peace and that the Jews now would "never give up their arms," today visited Moshe Shertok and other arrested Jewish Agency members in Latrun detention camp. The Jewish leaders were in- terned June 29 following two weeks of disorders throughout the Holy Land. A member of the Arab Higher Com- mittee who declined to be quoted by name said the committee already had drawn up a program to tighten the Arab boycott of Jewish goods and to use non-cooperation as a "prelim- inary weapon" in opposition to con- tinued Jewish immigration. Palestine remained outwardly quiet. Clover To Visit Guatemala City Elzada U. Clover, assistant profes- sor of botany and assistant curator in the Botanical Gardens at the Uni- versity, will leave today for Guate- mala City, Guatemala, where she will carry on an ecological study of cacti. While in Guatemala, Prof. Clover will make her headquarters in Guate- mala City, making side-trips on horseback to the smaller villages in the desert area, which are said to offer some fine cactus specimens. She will send the specimens she collects back to the University Herbarium and the Botanical Gardens. Prof. Clover's plans to join a Seven Seas Expedition were changed when the schooner was damaged at Hono- lulu by the recent tdial wave. In The Good Old Days In 1933 The Daily conducted a bitter campaign protesting against the high cost of haircuts at the Union. The price charged was a phe- nomenal forty-five cents. Six 'U' Students Join Food Relief Project Fellows from two University stu- dent church guilds are joining college students from all over the country to serve as cattle tenders on live- stock ships being sent to Europe by the Brethern Heifer Project com- mittee. The students are Harvey Ander- son of the Roger Williams Guild of the First Baptist Church, and Gale Potee, Bruce Morrison, and Bruce Edwards of the Congregational Dis- ciples Guild. Other students who have signed for the service are Dwight Walsh, and Buck Springer. Members of the guilds have contribu- ted money to buy heifers. Anderson graduated from the Uni- versity as a pre-medical student and will enter Vanderbilt University next year. Potee graduated from the Uni- versity in 1945, while Edwards and Morrison, Walsh and Springer are undergraduates. The heifer propect will provide cattle for starving Europe, since pro- tein foods and milk are lacking in the diets of the Europeans after thousands of dairy cattle were killed during the war. Bloom Supports British Loan, Disassociates Palestine Question WASHINGTON, July 9- (/P) - Chairman Bloom (Dem., N.Y.) of the House Foreign Affairs Committee appealed to the House today to ap- prove the $3,750,000,000 British loan, declaring "this is not a Jewish ques- tion. It has nothing to do with the Jewish question in Palestine.," "I'm voting as an American and not as a Jew," he declared, "I in- tend to vote for the British loan." In a move designed to offset pos- sible loss of House votes for the loan, because of British handling of the Jewish problem, Bloom had the House Clerk read a statement by RabbiI SVETERANS NOT ES Veterans in school under the GI Bill of Rights can receive vacation subsistence allowances in propor- tion to their length of time in school, according to W. L. Wallace of the local VA office. Wallace explained that veterans vacation allowances are earned at the rate of two and a half days per month of time in training, the sane as furlough or leave- time was ac- crued in the service. Veterans who have been in school less than a full year, therefore will not be eligible for a full month's vacation allow- ance this summer. Wallace warned, that vacation al- lowances count against the total eli- gibility, and suggested that veter- ans who are planning to use all of their eligible time for schooling fore- go the vacation allowance. Stephen S. Wise, a leader of the Zionist movement. Wise said: "Whatever the wrong doing of the British Government in Palestine cannot alter my conviction that the British loan is imperatively needed." Both Democratic and- Republican House leaders predicted, privately that the loan will be approved al- though probably by a narrow mar- gin, Supporters of the credit greeted with satisfaction the defeat of Sena- tor Henrik Shipstead, foe of the loan, by Gov. Edward J. Thye in the Min- nesota Republican primary. Rep. Buf- fett (Rep., Neb.), a leader of the loan opposition, told reporters, how- ever, thftt he doubted the Minnesota result would change any House votes, Eugene Meyer, President of the In- ternational Bank, issued a state- ment, meanwhile, declaring that the loan "is a vital part of a greater plan in which the monetary fund, the bank and other organizations also were to play their parts." Museum To Open Water Color Exhibit Here Today An exhibit of water colors dealing with the countries around the Carib- bean is being shown especially for children beginning today and con- tinuing through July 24 on the fourth floor of the University Museum. The paintings were done by C. X. Carlson. Loaned by the Council of Inter- American Cooperation, they are be- ing shown as an example of the facilities which the Council offers to schools and other persons interested in such exhibits. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING LOST AND FOUND MISCELLANEOUS LOST: Eversharp pen. Name print- ed "Leonard A. Parr." Reward. Phone 2-1679. (11 LOST: Miniature gold football. Vic- inity of South University and U High. Call James Moon at 6557, or leave at Education Library. Re- ward. (8 LOST: Tuesday Sargent key on or near campus. Phone 7036. Frank Murphy Asked To Mediate Philippine Fight MANILA, July 9-({P)-Less than a week after establishment of the New Philippine Republic an appeal was made today for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Frank Murphy to in- tercede in the conflict between armed peasants and military police in cent- ral Luzon which has accounted for 159 deaths thus far. Luis Taruc, leader of the Hukbal- ahap Agarian Reform Movement, said land owners were pushing the Roxas government toward a policy of "bloody subjugation" of the peasants. He asked that an impartial inves- tigation be undertaken to determine who was the true agressor in the fighting, and suggested Murphy as mediator. BUYING A NEW CAR? See me first for an economical plan of insur- ing and financing it. Bob Craw- ford. Phone 2-7521 in Ann Arbor. Res. 1662 Monson, Willow Run. (13 PLAN for your fall suits and formals now. Expert workmanship on cus- tom-made clothes and alterations. Hildegarde Shop, .116 E. Huron., Phone 2-4669. (10 "WHY PAY MORE than $3.00 for a tennis restringing," said over 50 happy customers.. Ph. 2-7360, Dean McClusky, 417 8th St. (6 MARJORIE JACKSON: Please call me and pick up your racquet. Dean McClusky. Ph. 2-7360. (5 Al ;;- WANTED OPENING TONITE WANTED: Sewing-alterations and refitting of young women's cloth- ing. Mlss Livingston, 315 S. Divi- sion. 2nd floor, front. FOR SALE MAN'S Schwinn lightweight bike. Basket $27.00. Baby buggy, ex- cellent condition. Ph. 2-1938. (12 A-1 CONDITION, Underwood Cham- pion portable typewriter. Phone 9034 afternoons or evenings. (9 DICTAPHONE (used), Universal Mercury Candid Camera (new). loth. reasonable. Call 2-7232 or 813 Granger. (7 BOIS BLANC ISLAND: A beautiful cabin with 2-story living room and cobblestone fire place completely furnished. I ': acres overlooking Mackinaw Island. Ready to move in. Complete book of pictures available. A bargain. Don't miss this one. Inquire Wm. G. Kirby, Realtor, 500 Michigan Bank Bldg., Detroit. hl Ili 1 'HELP WANTED HELP WANTED: Experienced lino- type operator in union shop. Per- manent position. No layoffs. For- ty hour week. Scale, $1.55 an hour, highest in state for comparable cities. Modern plant in residential suburban city. Daily Tribune, Roy- al Oak, Michigan. MEN'S USED CLOTHES wanted. A better price paid. Sam's Store. 122 E. Washington St. (4 HI M.M.F.: Recognize me? Having fun? I'm not. R.S.V.P. Love, J.L.C. (2 ALL MEMBERS of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity enrolled in the summer session contact Bernard E. Burke, K.R.S. 311 Glen Ave., by postal card. BROKEN STRINGS in your tennis racquet? Call at 2-7360 for over- night service or restringing. I pick up and deliver. Dean McClusky, 417 8th St. WANTED TO RENT MARRIED VETERAN desires one or two furnished rooms for fall se- mester. No children. Excellent re- ferences. Junion in Engr. College. Address, W. Burmeister, 403 Doug- las Ave., Elgin, Ill. (3 WANTED: Veteran graduate stu- dent and wife urgently need a small, furnished apartment im- mediately for fall and spring se- mesters. No children, wife em- ployed. Phone 6286. (14 Today thru Thursday -- KISS AND TELL with Shirley Temple and THE MADONNA'S SECRET with Francis Lederer and Gail Patrick No. Main - Opposite Court House MICHIGAN TICKETS $1.20 - 90c - 60c (Tax mcl.) Box Office Phone 6300 WILL JAMES'. MOST EXCITING STORY! LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE Is THE DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH Presents THE MICHIGAN REPERTORY PLAYERS in "PAPA IS ALL" Comedy by PATTERSON GREENE TONIGHT through Saturday - 8:30 P.M. Saturday Matinee m 2:30 P.M. Etiing Today''' Is Continuous from 1 P.M. Week Days COOL! 30c to 5 P.M. EUZITE I 7N ' . a+ Al I "p I K% Coming Thursday THAT IS OFTEN DREAMED :r ABOUT... BUT SELDOM SHARED! - Starting Today - Sidney Toler in DARK ALIBI r % ' /~' '.j M' plus Johnny Mack Brown in THE HAUNTED MINE ..... i , ......_._.... f , ° / o' :p'n #+ f. \ > t F ART CINEMA LEAGUE Mark STE VE S is .A- ;.- .- INTERNATIONAL FILM PROGRAM SAVE TIME AND MONEY -BUY A SEASON PASS NOW Series of Five,$1.85 (tax inel.) Singles 42e Available at all Bookstores, Union, League WEDNESDAY and "HEART OF PARIS" (FRENCH) THURSDAY ... . . with Raimu, Michelle Morgan THURSDAY, July 18 FRIDAY, July 19 THURSDAY July 25 "THE WILDFLOWER" (Spanish) with Dolores Del Rio "I6ARRIAGE AND JUBILEE" (Russian) 11 I [ iVi\. .., ~r