DEr ERIORATION' Y A61F A6 tii FAIR, WARMER See Page 4 VOL. LVI, No. 9S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JULY 14, 1946 PRICE FIVE Cl Congress Gives Approval to British I -oa * * * * * * * * Board Plans College Integration Legislators Ask Advice Dr.ve Opens Of Educators 'U' Delegate Will Assist in Study Study of methods to unify the state's system of higher education has been turned over to educators from Michigan universities and col- leges, Lewis G. Christman, second district representative in the state legislature, said yesterday. The five-man jont House-Senate committee of which Christman is a member voted to establish a seven- man board, authorizing the latter group to submit proposals for a more closely-knit higher education system. Elliott Heads Board. Dr. Eugene Elliott, State Superin- tendent of Public Instruction, will act as mediator and chairman of the educator's board, with one delegate to be appointed from each of the following groups: the Board of Re- gents of the University; the Board in Control of Michigan State College; the Board of Education of the City of Detroit (representing Wayne Uni- versity); the Michigan Colleges Asso- ciation (representing Michigan's smaller colleges; the Junior Colleges Association; and the ,"oard in Con- trol of the Michigan College of Mines at Houghton. All delegates will be educators, Christman said. Educator Get Study Christman explained that the leg- islators had decided to turn the study over to educators because "expert ~towle gewill b.ecessary... it. this. important phase of education de-. velopment" is to be properly handled. He pointed out that the new board will be empowered to make recom- mendations to the legislative com- mittee, which retains its authority of approval. It is expected that the recommend- ations of the new board will be sub- mitted to representatives from all colleges and junior colleges in the state before final action is taken by the legislature, Christman said. University plans to open a network of junior colleges throughout the state will be given full consideration in the investigation, Christman said. 'U' Favors Integration Integration of the state's colleges is strongly favored by numerous Uni- versity administrators. Over-lapping of function between the various sphools can be eliminated and subse- quent savings of tax funds made through a single policy-making or, administrative board, these support- ers claim. However, such a change in the See INTEGRATION, Page 2 Council Seeks Truman's Aid In Education WASHINGTON, July 13-()-The American Council on Education ask- ed President Truman today to de- clare a national emergency in edu- cation and to appoint a commission to help solve problems that threaten the success of the veteran program. A council committee on emergency problems, representing colleges and universities throughout the United States, stressed these "bottlenecks:" 1. The shortage of competent fac- ulty members "which threatens fail- ure in the attempt of this nation to provide the promised educational op- portunities' for veterans." 2. The housing and materials short- ages. During the three day meeting speakers estimated a shortage of as many as 10,000 faculty members may exist within a year. The conference . adopted a resolu- tion appraving pending congression- al legislation to provide $100,000,000 for temporary educational facilities and $~250f.000f.000 lforprmanent, REFUSES TO TESTIFY .... Ben- jamin Franklin Fields, Washing- ton press agent under accusation of attempting to bribe a senator, sits mum in the witness chair at a hearing, in Washington, D.C., be- fore the Mead War Investigating Committee as he refuses to testify at the munitions inquiry. * * * May'fnable To Explain' --Senate Group Decides Sharply Worded Notes Exchanged in Probe WASHINGTON, July.13-()-In a .gloves-off exchange, the Senate War Investigating Committee concluded today that Rep. May (Dem.-Ky.) is "unable to explain or contradict" evidence linking him with munitions makers and the House military chair- man in reply challenged the general "conduct of your hearings." Dropping the polite formalities of congressional exchanges, the com- mittee wrote May directly that it could find no alternative to the con- clusion that "you admit the facts" gathered in its inquiry "to be true." May snapped back a formal reply that such a conclusion is "unwar- ranted" and added that "it paral- lels other characteristics of the con- duct of your hearings to which I ob- ject." The committee turned thumbs down on the conditions with which May hedged an agreement to "con- sider" a personal appearance to tell of his acknowledged help to an in- dustrial combine headed by Dr. Henry Garsson. It contended that the- im- port of those demands constituted a refusal to appear in its inquiry into the group's profits on $78,000,000 in war contracts and its Washington in- fluence. "I have not so declined," May de- clared in his reply. "Before accept- ing, I am simply seeking a basis upon which such acceptance can be made without being denied the rights and privileges specified.". OPA Control Expect Showdown On Issue Tuesday By The Associated Press WASHINGTON; July 13 -With strong Republican backing, a drive got under way today in the House to send a revised price control bill to president Truman exactly as the Senate passed it early this morning. However, an informal but bind- ing "gentlemen's agreement" to de- fer the showdown until Tuesday gave Administration leaders a long weekend to organize a fight for removal of Senate-voted decon- trols on major food items. The agreement, made by Demo- cratic and Republican leaders to pro- tect many members who will be ab- sent Monday, nullified the House Rules Committee's speedy action in recommending that the controver- sial bill be sent immediately to a Senate-House conference for adjust- ment of differences. That situation left the country without national price or rent con- trols for another weekend. They went off July 1 when OPA legal- ly lapsed. After President Truman had vetoed on June 29 a previous OPA extension bill on the grounds it was "unwork- able" the House had voted a 20- day, full authority extension of OPA. But the Senate, after a week of debate, finally passed at 1:56 a.m. (E.S.T.) today a bill which exempted major food items, among other things, from any further federal price control. Senator Taft (Rep.-Ohio) said today the Senate's 62 to 15 vote for the modified price control bill was a notice to President Truman and Congress does not like the "out- rageous methods of 'he OPA." Veto of Rent Control Asked "Veto the Rent Control Bill passed by the Michigan Legislature," asked the State of Michigan Veterans As- sociation in a telegram and letter to Governor Kelly yesterday. "This state bill has no real force or power and will be a fast sure step toward inflation," the veterans de- clared. "Furthermore," they said, "the pas- sage of such a bill at the present time will exempt the State of Michi- gan from the controls in the Federal Bill now before Congress." "We are strongly in favor of a bill which will more effectively control rents and make adjustments as ne- cessary," the statement concluded, "and in the best interests of the state, the Veterans Association asks for the veto of this state Rent Con- trol Bill." SENATOR'S DAUGHTER IN PICKET LINE... "Father and I no longer agree on labor matters," Mrs. Francis Sayler (second from right), daughter of Sen. Burton K. Wheeler of Montana, was quoted as saying as she joined pickets in the strike at Whyte Electric Co., plant at Mt. Clemens, Mich. She is the wife of a United Auto Workers union or- ^ ganizer. Other pickets are unidentified. BACK TO BIKINI AGAIN: Atomic Scientists Forecast Results of Second T'est Bomb v: House Vote Send Bill to Presiden Russia Looms Large in Bitter Debate Before Representatives Pass Measure By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 13-Congress gave final approval today to $3,750,000,000 loan to Great Britain, sending the legislation to Pres dent Truman by a House vote of 219 to 155. The Senate already had authorized the huge fund intended to reha tate England's war-disorganized international trade. 1 In closing debate, proponents shouted that the decision on aid for wartime ally would determine whether the world will turn to Washin or Moscow for leadership. Russia loomed large in the long and bitter House arguments, w ended with Speaker Rayburn (Dem., Tex.) appealing for approval of credit, lest England and Western Europe "be pushed into an ideolo despise." Final Congressional approval occurred after the House had beaten 219 to 154 an effort to require Britain to put up "merchantable" collat beyond that government's pledge toy * * * Aboard U.S.S. Mount McKinley, July 13-(P)-Scientists expect strong magic to be conjured by Bikini's second atomic bomb, such as rolling back the waters of the lagoon like a biblical Red Sea. They expect the lagoon's bottom to be left dry for several seconds, be- fore the waters rush back. Here are other magic tricks ex- pected of the atomic bomb when it is touched off beneath the waters of Bikini Lagoon July 25 (July. 24, U.S. time.) : To Form Water Spout Throwing five to 15 million tons of water in solid or spray form as high as 25,000 feet; creating an enor- mous bubble g. owing at a fantastic rate which, upon bursting, will form a tremendous waterspout and leave momentarily- a great cavity in the water. Crunching the hulls of some ships, overwhelming others with waves tow- ering more than 100 feet which will race out from the base of the water- spout. Scientists Forecast A group of task force scientists, whose forecasts on phenomena in the first tests proved highly accurate, made these predictions today for the underwater blast at the urging of re- porters, but explained that nothing was sure in this business. They included Dr. Ralph Sawyer, Technical Director of the Task Force; Dr. M. P. O'Brien, Oceanographer and Dean of Engineering at the Uni- versity of California; Dr. N. E. Brad- bury of the Los Alamos, N. M., Lab- oratory; Dr. G. K. Hartman, civilian Students Plan Homecoming Plans for Homecoming Weekend and pep rallies for next fall will be discussed at the first meeting of the Varsity Committee of Student Legis- lature at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Rm. 306 of the Union. All students who plan to be on campus during the fall term and who are interested in becoming perman- scientist of the Navy Bureau of Ord-f nance. The news conference brought new details of the elaborate safety pre- cautions for firing the nuclear fission depth charge. pay. Likewise, the House rejected all amendments seeking possession, in return for the loan, of British island bases now held by the United States ,on 99-year lease. Rep. Dirksen (Rep., Ill.), author of the collateral amendment sug- gested that in consideration for the credit, Britain might put its middle east oil resources, its wool, gold mines, insurance companies and "other security of a merchantable nature." Passage of any amendment would have wrecked the financial agree- ment, which was ratified by the Bri- tish Parliament last December. In brief, the loan agreement pro- vides: The loan would be made on a 50 year basis, repayable by the year 2001. There would be no interest during the next five .years, but interest at 2 per cent would be- gin in 1951. In return, the British agree: 1. To* wipe out, within one year, the entire dollar pool established in wartime to give British absolute con- trol over dollars flowing into the Middle East, India, and other em- pire regions whose currency as based on the. pound sterling. 2. Britain will begin negotiations with Empire countries, particularly India and the Middle East, for a reduction in the $14,000,000,000 debt which Britain owes there. 3. Further, she agrees to support American proposals for removal or reduction of barriers to international trade. Just before the House started vot- ing, Rep. Taber of New York, senior Republican on.the House appropria- tions commiittee, took the floor brief- ly and declared: "The United States must stand by the only ally standing by her in the negotiations for peace." Rep. Wolcott of Michigan, leading Republican proponent of the legis- lation declared the credit would help "prevent the spread of those forces throughout the world which are des- tructive to the American way of life." Willow Run to 'Put Heat on Congress' Individual pledges to buy only es- sential goods and petitions, to be sent to Michigan representatives, de- manding effective price control, will be signed Tuesday night at the giant "Save OPA" rally at Willow Village. Great Britain Hails 3-Billion Loan By U.S. LONDON, July 13-(A'P)-Great B tain's labor government tonight of cially welcomed the $3,750,000,C United States loan "as a sign American friends want to work w: us just as we want to work w them." In a statement reflecting natk wide relief at the House of Repri entatives' approval of the lor awaited grant, Chancellor of the E chequer Hugh Dalton said on bel of his government: "The American Congress has a proved the loan. This does not me that we can now relax our efforts will hasten the time when we c once more play full part in a vig ous and expanding system of inti zonal trade. "I take the approval of the It as a sign that our American frier want to work with us just as we wz to work with themt "We have a common interest reviving trade throughout the wc and providing good standards of : ing for men and women everywher Early press and public reaction the granting of the loan inclui some resentment of criticisms Great Britain voiced in the Uni States during the last six moni Some British feared also that ris American prices would cut the vs of the loan., U.S. Proposes A-Bomb Veto Be Eliminated NEW YORK, July 13--P)t--The United States proposed tonight that the veto on atomic questions be eliminated by international treaty rather than by amendment to the United Nations Charter. In a new memorandum, submitted to the U.N. Atomic Energy Commis- sion, U.S. Representative Bernard M. Baruch proposed that the veto issue be disposed of in the proposed treaty setting up an atomic control system. This would make it unnecessary to amend the charter, which some of the atomic commission delegates have admitted would be difficult, if not impossible, in view of Russia's avowed opposition. There was no indication, however, that Russia would be any more will- ing to surrender her veto rights by treaty than by amendment. INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTION: Liberal Arts Honors Program To B e Resumed in Fall Term Campus, AVC Plans To Fight Risn Prices The campus branch of the Ameri can Veterans Committee announce plans yesterday for a long-rang campaign to fight rent and price rise which will include a rally Wednes day on the steps of the Rackhan Auditorium to save OPA. The first big step in the campaig will be taken tomorrow when a spec ial committee of Ann Arbor civi groups under AVC leadership wi petition the city Common Council fa a temporary price stabilization la to hold city prices at OPA leve pending final Congressional action Newcomb To Speak Speakers at Wednesday's OPA rall at 4 p.m. will be Prof. Theodore New comb of the sociology- departmen Assistant Dean of Women Mar Bromage, and Jack Weiss, chairma of the University Chapter of th AVC. Rally chairman is Victor Baur AVC vice-chairman, who said th is the first time in many years tha a rally of this type has been held c the campus proper. The police department will rerou traffic in case the expected crowd a the rally overflows into the stree AVC has been told. Parade Planned Planned for Friday afternoon a march downtown "to demand e fective over-all price control" wil other veteran organizations and in terested civic and campus groups. Baum summarized the AVC star on the continuance of OPA by warn ing that "many student veterans, ne stretching to make ends meet, w be driven from universities by THE LONE DISSENTER: Christman Contends Bonus Bill Was 'Rammed Through' The Honors Program in Liberal Arts, cut short during the war, will resume with the Fall semester, As- sociate Dean Erich A. Walter of the literary college ahnounced yes- terday. Applications for the program are now being received at Dean Walter's office or by Prof. John Arthos of the English department. 'B' Average Necessary Applicants must be entering the first semester of their junior year in the Fall, must have completed their group requirements, and must have obtained at least a "B" average in their previous work. When the program is resumed this Fall. it is nManned to ofe initially for specially qualified juniors and seniors. In place of a program of study within a department, students in the Program undertake a two-year course of study in a central subject involv- ing reading in various fields of know- ledge. In these programs groups of from six to ten students worked with a tutor during their two-year program, meeting each week as a group and also individually with the tutor. Five Hours Credit The Honors Group as such ac- counts for five hours' credit a semes- ter, and according to the individual student's needs and interests, the tutor recommends other courses in By WILL HARDY Lewis G. Christman, local repre- sentative in the state legislature, is back in Ann Arbor today fully con- vinced that his lone dissenting vote in the House against the proposed $270,000,000 state veterans bonus was "right." The towering university law school graduate, who also serves ,as secre- tary to the Chamber of Commerce, minced no words as he earnestly ex- plained to The Daily his vote in a booming, sometimes indignant, voice. Says Bonus Not Necessary "I'm convinced that the veterans do not want the bonus, that it is not say in November that they turned the matter 'over to the people'," he said. Vets Will Be Taxed The result will be that if the bonus is approved, veterans, who will com- pose 30 percent of the wage-earning population in another five years, will have to pay off the bonds through taxation, Christman said. "And when pay-off time comes, the cost will be close to $400,000,000," he added. He supported his reasons for op- posing the bill with these explana- tions: 1. Influential veteran leaders (in-