I________ LaGuardia Halts Relief to China, Excepts Food UNRRA Workers Hit Chinese Supply Waste WASHINGTON, July 9--()-UN- RRA Director General Fiorello H. La- Guardia announced today he has stopped the shipment of all relief goods to China, except vital foods. He said the action was taken be- cause of China's inability to trans- port goods inland to needy areas. A Shanghai dispatch said that more than 250 UNRRA employes there messaged LeGuardia that val- uable relief supplies were being wast- ed, were deteriorating and were be- ing stolen "while the starving con- tinue to starve and the needy re- main without." (The message said it was the con- sidered judgment of the signers that the Chinese government was im- properly handling UNRRA supplies and services.) Cheng Pao Nan, representative here of the Chinese National Relief and Rehabilitation Administraftion, said LaGuardia's action means stoppage, of the major portion of the entire UNRRA program for China, amount- ing to about $600,000,000. Cheng, back from Shanghai only two days, told a reporter "I am sur- prised at LaGuardia's unilateral ac- tion." Cheng denied that there is a heavy accumulation of UNRRA goods in Shanghai or other Chinese ports. Stuart Gets China Post WASHINGTON, July- 9-- (AP) - President Truman today nominated J. Leighton Stuart of New York to be Ambassador to China. Stuart's nomination went to the Senate along with that of Robert Butler of Minnesota to be the first United States Ambassador to Aus- tralia. Other envoys to Australia have had the rank of Minister.. Stuart succeeds to the vacancy created by the resignation of Maj. Gen. Patrick Hurley. Grad Coffee Hour Today The Graduate Student Council will hold a Coffee Hour from 4 to 5:30 p.m. today in the Rackham Building. A record concert will furnish the entertainment and refreshments will be served. Although primarily 'for graduate students, the gathering is open to all those interested. Independence of Philippines Ends Imperialistic Era, Slosson Says Philippine independence marks the end of the imperialistic era, Prof. Preston W. Slosson said yesterday in his weekly lecture series inter- preting the news at the Rackham Building. The grant of independence to the Philippines and the British efforts to make a dominion of India which will give the latter colony dominion status are indications of this trend away from imperialism, he said. .He described the establishment of Philippine independence as the "biggest news of the week," The Philippines have a fairly good prospect of success in spite of eco- Linguist Will Show. Skills Pike Will 'Acquire' Language in Hour How the trained linguist can ac- quire in an hour's time a basic know- ledge of a language he has never heard before will be shown by Prof. Kenneth L. Pike in a public lecture demonstration at 7:30 p.m.. today in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Prof. Pike, Director of the Sum- mer Institute of Linguistics centered in Mexico and professor of linguistics at the University of Oklahoma, is here as a member of the staff of the Michigan Linguistic Institute, spon- sor of. the lecture. In his demonstration Prof. Pike will attempt the beginning of a des- criptive analysis of a language un- known to him. On the platform he will meet a speaker of this language which he has never heard before and he will use during the demonstration only Mixteco, the language of an Indian tribe of southwestern Mexico, to preclude the possibility of his in- formant's being able to understand him. At the end of a 40-minute period. during which Prof. Pike will, with words and gestures and without bene- fit of a bi-lingual interpreter attempt to communicate with his informant, he will tell the audience what he has learned concerning the sound system, structure and vocabulary of the for- eign language. Hold Your Bonds nomic blows resulting from the war and Japanese occuption, he said. He pointed out that although the people of the islands are not wealthy, they havevaluable natural resources to exploit. Commenting on other significant events of the week, Prof. Slosson said that the settlement of the con- troversy over the Italo-Yugoslav boundary is a mark of encourage- ment although the four-power minis- ters seem stalled on the issue of the peace conference. The Polish election was merely a test of strength of the two parties in- volved, he stated, and since the op- posing conservative force is contest- ing the 60% majority claimed by the government it is as yet mpossible to tell which party the people favor. In the United states, Prof. Slos- son declared, the success of Bilbo and Rankin in Mississippi is un- fortunate, as it gives a poor impres- son of both the indiyidual state and the nation to the .rest of the world. Stassen's victorious candidatesfor office in Minnesota, he said, places Stassen In good light for the con- tinuation of his presidental boom when the Republcan primaries come up in .198. On the question of continuation of the O.P.A., Prof. Slosson said that in spite of the backing by many of de- controlling industry, Gallup polls and the like indicate that the people would prefer controls. Whether we will have a great in- flation, he declared, is unknown and quoting Stephan Leacock, the Ca- nadian humorist, he said, "If you lay a thousand economists end to end you still won't reach any con- clusion at all." Quarterdeck Society Elects New Officers The Quarterdeck Society of Naval architects and Marine engineers, re- latively inactive during the war, now plan to resume an active part in both the academic and social life of the campus, by giving lectures, miovies, banquets, and at least one all-campus dance, it was announced yesterday. Stanley Stianson has been elected commodore. Other new officers are Albert H. Bell, vice-commodore; Jo- seph °Hyder, purser; Augusto Mala- bet, steward; William W. Hamilton, membership chairman; Robert De Roo, program chairman; and Jonas G. Kristinsson, publicity chairman. < .Svn It "SeA erUvper&" f y. r r 3 P 4 l 1 .r ,~. r Now's the time to go into the cotton patches and take your pick of dresses and playclothes. Two-piece play suits for swimming or just sun- ning on the beach, gay and colorful, they add zest to your leisure time. Stripes, prints,.or solids in tailored or sissy styles. Priced $6.50 - $14.95 Look through our as- sortment of cotton dresses - clever, smart little styles that take you here, there and ev- erywhere. Priced 57.95 - S2! nn GIs TEST 104-MAN LIFE RAFT - One Hundred a nd four GIs from Wright Field in Dayton, Ohio, test the new 104-man life raft developed by the Army Air Forces for use in event of a major marine disaster, The raft is 38 feet in circumference and weighs only 7 9 pounds. . Jir W H I T E .- White Indian] broadtail is the fur used by Dein-Bacher in this unusual' seven-eighths coat with whit Aft