POLICE FORCE See Page 2 Y 1MwF Latest Deadline in the State ~3uiit PARTLY CLOUDY, i WARMER VOL. LVII, No. 30S ANN ARBOR, MJCHGAN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1947 ViliaCE FINE, CENTS Ford Motors Averts Strike; Calls Layoff Acts Stem from Dispute on Law By The Associated Press 4 DETROIT, Aug. 5-The Ford Motor Co. avoided a strike of 107,- 000 workers today but at the same time announced a layoff of 51,000 starting within 24 hours. Each development st e m m e d from the same -general source-- the consequences of a dispute over penalty provisions of the Taft- Hartley labor law. Last Minute Truce In avoiding a strike, Ford com- promised its differences through a last minute truce with the CIO United Auto Workers and kept its car production moving. Less than six hours after the deadline for the strike that never came off, however, the company announced it would halt until next Tuesday all assembly operations at the close of tomorrow's work. This was necessary, the com- pany said, because of a parts shortage caused by the strike of 7,000 workers in a supplier firm over the Taft-Hartley penalty provisnons. Murray Strike The Murray Corp., of America, which supplies car bodies and parts to Ford and other auto man- ufacturers, has been closed for nearly two weeks by a CIO-UAW strike. The union at Murray de- mands an immunity clause in its contract to protect against em- ployer damage suits permitted un- der the new law. A scant eight hours before a strike deadline, Ford and the UAW sealed a truce providing for a joint effort to secure a "solution" to the Taft-Hartley union posed problem. The settlement gave the union at yeast a year's grace from any strike damage action under the law. The compromise allowed up to one year for a study of the Taft- Hartley penalty provisions by a bipartisan four-member commis- sion and deferred any strike ac- tion for at least 10 days. Willow Village STax Study Will Be Conducted A decision to conduct a tax study in order to readjust govern- ment payments to the county in the place of taxes that would ac- crue if Willow Village property were privately owned, was made Monday at a meeting of Washten- aw county officials, FPHA region- al agents and the housing pro- ject municipal group representa- tives. The meeting was the result of repeated requests by Willow Vil- lage residents for additional law enforcement and other municipal type services to be furnished by the county. Hugo C. Schwarz, FPHA reg- ional director for the area, said he was convinced of the real need for additional community service and that he believed the solution of the government's present pay- ments to the county, as well as the revision of the federal con- tract provides for police protec- tion by the county. Schwarz offered to send a gov- ernment tax expert to Willow Vil- lage to study and revise the base evaluation on which federal pay- ments are now paid in order to assure an equitable adjustment. The tax expert would work with the Superior and Ypsilanti town- ship sup'ervisors, and government approved recommendations would then be made to the supervisors, Schwarz said. He suggested that action to increase the federal pay- ments and provide for additional police protection be taken imme- diately. Arrangements for the tax study would be made in order for it to start within the next three weeks, Schwarz said. County Reports First Polio Case The first three polio cases in Washatenaw County this year Real Estate Lobby Calls 'Subversive' Label False Sees End to Housing Shortage in 1949; Registers Opposition to 'Socialized Housing' By TOM WALSH Special To The Daily EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the tenth in a series of interpretative articles on political trends and personalities in Washington by a Daily staff corres- pondent. WASHINGTON-Easily one of the most powerful of the "vested interest" lobbies is the National Association of Real Estate Boards which was branded as "clearly subversive" by President Truman last spring when he asked Congress to investigate it. The accusations were unfair and unfounded, according to public relations director Earl Brown who contends that "We testified as to amour views as did many groups who H igbie, D rake President attacked us because he disagreed with us." Services W ill "We helped to write rent con- trols and now that the war is over we feel that the government Be H eld Toda Tshould givethe property back to Yf the people," I was told by Brown who speaks for more than 1,000 Faculty Members local real estate boards through- out the country. Die over Weekend Cushion Decontrol Funeral services will be held to- The 15 per cent "voluntary" day for the two prominent mem- rent increase he labelled a "cush- bers of the University faculty ioned form of decontrol" which Prof. Harold H. Higbie and pro- fessor emeritus Joseph H. Drake, who died over the weekend. Prof. Higbie, of the engineer- ing department, died Sunday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital at the age of 64. Prof. Drake, formerly connect- ed with the law school, retired in 1930. He died Monday at his home, 903 Lincoln after a long illness at the age of 87. Teaching Career Prof. Higbie came to the Uni- versity in 1905 as an instructor in mechanical engineering. He was appointed an assistant professor in electrical engineering in 1909. During the years 1911-13; Prof. Highie established the department of electrical construction and op- eration atsWentworth Institute, Boston, Mass. From 1913 until his death he was professor of elec- trical and illuminating engineer- ing at the University. Won Scholarship At the time of his death he was writing a book dedicated to tht publisher, Joseph Pulitzer. Prof. Higbie received the Pulitzer schol- arship which enabled him to con- tinue his studies at Horace Mann High School and Columbia Uni- versity for being the outstanding member of his class. Prof. Higbie is survived by his wife and son, Alltn L., and daugh- ter, Edith A. Prof. Drake was an active mem- ber of the faculty for 42 years, coming to the University in 1888 as a Latin instructor. Professor of Law In 1890 he was promoted to an assistant professor of Latin and in 1900 a lecturer in Roman Law. From 1906 to 1908 he was profess- or of Latin, Roman Law and Jur- isprudence. At a later date he was appointed professor of Law, the position he held until his re- tirement. Prof. Drake received the Will- iams professorship from the Board of Regents last July in recogni- tion of his outstanding career on the faculty. Survivors include a daughter, Mrs. Harold P. Rich and three sons, Joseph H. Jr., Charles M. and Robert L. Funeral services for Prof. Hig- bie will be held at 3 p.m. today at the Dolph Funeral Parlor. Services for Prof. Drake will be held at 2:30 p.m. today at the residence. the association looks upon with favor. They believe that the mill- ion and a half homes which Brown says will be built between now and January, 1949, will "take the edge off the housing shortage" at the time that present leases are expiring and eliminate the need for further controls. Brown assured me that it was no easier to evict a tenant through the courts now than it was through the OPA before June 30 and that there is no actual com- pulsion to force the tenant to agree to a rent increase. The CIO, he reminded me, has been urging its members not to sign leases and pay the increase and plans to fight for the continuation of rent controls beyond the present March 1 deadline. Representative John Dingell (D-Mich.) told me, how- ever, that there is little chance of the House mustering enough votes to extend rent controls further. Opposed To Public Housing "We are unalterably opposed to public 'oush-g," is a basic tenet of the real estate boards. The NAR EB has taken an active part in the lobbyists battle over the Taft- Ellender-Wagner Bill which it calls "socialized housing." De- spite the intense and almost uni- form support of all the "liberal" lobbies, the bill came nowhere near passage. It was reported out of committee favorably in the Senate but that body "hasn't bothered with it because the House doesn't have enough votes to pass it," Senator Ferguson (R- Mich.) told me. In the House, Rep. Jesse Wol- cott (R-Mich.), chairman of the Banking andC urrency Committee has not bothered to commence hearing on it. Wolcott has been openly accused by Franklin Roos- evelt Jr., AVC's housing chair- See LOBBY, Page 4 Exam Schedule Those few fatal hours, de- signed to spoil the perfect Michigan summertime, seem suddenly closer today. The schedule of final exams to be held Thursday and Fri- day, Aug. 14 and 15, appears in the Daily Official Bulletin, page 2. I UN Gets Plea To Evacuate BritishArmy Egypt's Request Said 'Unfounded' 'By The Associated Press LAKE SUCCESS, Aug. 5-Egypt today asked the United Nations Security Council to order the im- mediate evacuation of all British troops from her soil. Britain im- mediately countered with a de- mand that thecouncil throw out the complaint as unfounded. Appealing to the UN to free Egypt from "British Imperialism," Premier Nokrashy Pasha said "the very existence of Egypt as a sov- ereign state is here at stake" with the presence of British troops a "potential peril" to peace in the Middle East. Cadogan Replies Sir Alexander Cadogan, British delegate, said British troops were in Egypt under a 20-year treaty signed in 1936 and the Council could do nothing but dismiss the case. Cadogan said that if anybody was threatening peace in that area it was Egypt and not Britain. He added that Egypt was attempting to evade her international obliga- tions accepted in the Anglo - Egyptian treaty, which he said could be altered or terminated on- ly with the consent of both part- ies. One Real Issue "There is only one real issue before the Security Council, namely validity of the 1936 treaty, and that is a legal one," Cadogan declared. "The Security Council cannot, in conformity with the purposes of the United Nations, countenance any failure to fulfill treaty obligations which are con- sistent with the charter." Premier Pasha said that Egypt no longer felt bound by a 20-year treaty, signed in 1936, providing for stationing of British troops in the strategic Mediterranean coun- try. He said the pact was signed under duress and was contrary to the UN charter and a General Assembly resolution ruling out any occupation without the con- sent of the parties. Hot Weather Entices Coeds out on dawn The hot weather may not have brought out the best in us, but it has brought out the best among us. During the past two days young women have been lying in the sun-on the beaches, on the grass and on the roofs. Yesterday the girls were particularly noticeable on top of the WAB, evidence that tennis is too strenuous for above 90 degree temperature. A brief check of golf courses (nine holes) revealed that neith- er men nor women cared much for the game yesterday. At the University course everybody must have really cursed the weather, because you can't wear shorts out there. Surprising enough, the Health Service reported no cases of heat exhaustion and no cases of ex- treme sunburn. "The heat wave has to last for a longer time before we get heat exhaustion cases," a secretary re- ported. "Several years ago, during a hot spell, a few of the older stu- dents were overcome." There's no immediate relief in sight, according to the University weather station and the papers. Today is supposed to be hotter than yesterday, just as yesterday (93) was hotter than the day be- fore (92). Repertory Players To Give 'Carmen' The Michigan Repertory Play- ers, in conjunction with the music school and the University Orches- tra will present Georges Bizet's- colorful opera "Carmen" at 8 p.m. tomorrow through Saturday and at 8 p.m. Monday at Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. Carolyn Street Austin will play the leading role of the fickle gyp- sy girl, Carmen, with Morris Greer Violating Cease-Fire Orders; British Arrest Jewish Leaders Police Sieze 40in Swoop, Seek 20 More Official List Includes Stern, Businessmen - By The Associated Press JERUSALEM, Aug. 5-The Bri- tish began the biggest roundup of Jewish leaders since underground resistance turned the -Holy Land into a battlefield today-a round- up punctuated by a terror bomb which ripped off the front of the labor department building and killed three British policemen and probably an Arab watchman. More than 40 prominent Jews were seized in the swoop by the military and Palestine police, some of whom reportedly were marked for deportation. An official source said 20 more were being sought. The first official list of those ar- rested included David Stern, bro- ther of the late Abraham Stern, founder of the Stern Gang, and named 35 lawyers, businessmen, journalists and Jewish officials. Among those reported arrested were dissident members of Hag- ana, illegal Jewish defense or- ganization, who had opposed the organization's "moderate" policy of opposing terrorism, and the mayors of the four all-Jewish cit- ies of Tel Aviv, Ram At Gan, Pe- tah Tikvah and Natanya. Among the arrested were top officials of the Revisionist Party, accused by the government last year of being the forerunner of Ir- gun Zvai Leumi, the underground organization. The bomb which tore off the front of the labor department building in the Street of the Pro- phets exploded just after a tele- phone call had warned "the build- ing is mined." The chief clerk just had time to halt a passing armored car and the police were trying to drag the bomb out of the hallway when the explosive let go. One of the police- men was killed outright, two oth- ers were buried under the debris. Some Jewish quarters believed the blast was a retaliation for the dynamiting of a house in Givat Shaul late yesterday by the mili- tary who had found a cache of arms there. VU'Starts on VA Research Research has been started on techniques for predicting success- ful clinical psychologists to be employed by the Veterans Admin- istration, the psychology depart- ment announced yesterday. The project, contracted for by the VA, is directed by Prof. E. Lowell Kelly, with Donald W. Fiske as assistant director. The VA needs more clinical psychologists than universities can supply. Because of this, the VA last year began a training pro- gram with a number of univer- sities which would select promis- ing students for a four-year grad- uate course combining academic study and work experience in vet- eran's hospitals and other agen- cies. Six classes representing 30 uni- versities are being moved to the campus this summer. Each group will remain, for seven days for written tests, interviews by staff psychologists, "situation" and work sample tests. MAKE FESTIVAL PLANS-Mrs. Kamla Chowdry of Lahore, In- dia, Prof. Hugh Norton, of the speech department, and Prof. Louis A. Hopkins, director of the Summer Session mnake plns for the Festival of Nations, to be held Sunday in Hill Auditorium. Mrs. Chowdry will perform an Indian Shadow Dance in the program which is directed by Prof. Norton. FESTIVAL OF NATIONS: Dances, Songs from Eight Countries in Pageant Sunday 6%$$4 Indonesians Say Dutch Troops Colorful folk dances and songs from eight foreign countries will highlight the program of the Fest- ival of Nations to be presented at 8 p.m. Sunday in Hill Auditorium under the direction of Prof. Hugh Norton, of the speech department. The festival will be opened by a Polish mixed choir of 30 from the World N"lews At a Glance By The Associated Press DETROIT, Aug. 5-The Pack- ard Motor Car Co., following in the line of General Motors Corp., announced today an immediate 5 per cent average price increase on all its current car models. The increases range from $92 to $200, Packard said. * * * WASHINGTON, Aug. 5-Elliott Roosevelt testified today he might be open to reprimand for letting plane manufacturer Howard Hughes foot a $576.83 hotel bill for him as "a wedding present." * * * WASHINGTON, Aug. 5-The State Department announced to- day the award of $82,400,000 in contracts to American construc- tion and engineering firms for work on Greek highways, rail- roads and principal ports. * * * ALBANY, N.Y., Aug. 5--Gov. Thomas E. Dewey today broke his silence on developing 1948 presi- dential campaign issues by speak- ing out for the preservation of "the principles of union organiza- tion and collectve bargaining." Hamtramck Lira Society singing "Chiopocy Krakowacy," one of the gayest of the national folk songs. The Lira Society has ap- peared on radio programs and re- presented the Polish section of Detroit at such city-wide events as International Night and the Golden Jubilee. Ukranian Music A group of Ukranian dances and songs will be presented by the De- troit Boyan Society. The dances, typify grace and rhythm of the peasant dance and will be per- formed in the traditional colorful costumes of the Ukraine. "Tzamiko," a dance of the Greek guerillas of World War II will be performed by Nicholas Nitsis, a former member of the guerilla forces. Two other patriotic dances commemorating the Greek War of Liberation will be presented by the Sons and Daughters of St. Nicholas. Hat Dance The traditional "Mexican Hat Dance" will be given by the Socie- dad Mutualista Mexicana of Pon- tiac. The folk songs "Jolisco, Jol- isco" and "El Son de Mi Tierra" will be sung by two members of the group. The Philippine Michigan Club will offer two Philippine field dances, including "Tinikling," a bamboo dance, which imitates field birds trying to avoid being caught. Edita Martelino will pre- sent a traditional Candle Dance. Nordic Dances Six folk dances representing Norway, Sweden and Denmark will be given by Gudren E. Niel- sen's Danish Folk Dancers. The entire Polish group of 70 dancers and singers will join in the finale which will include two numbers from Polish folk operas. "Mazur" from the opera "Cop- elia" will be performed by the children's dance group. Will Retaliate Shot- for- Shot In Resumption Charge Continuation Of Attack Last Night By The Associated Press BATAVIA, Java, Aug. 5-The Indonesian Army charged tonight that Dutch troops on two fronts had violated cease-fire orders in the East Indies, and both Dutch and Republican leaders indicated their forces would answer shot- for-shot any resumption of hostil- ities by opposing units. A Republican Army spokesman declared in a broadcast that a three-pronged Dutch force - op- erating in a central Java zone ap- proximately 60 miles west of Jog- jakarta - had continued attack- ing for two and a half hours aftei last midnight;, the cease-fire dead- line. As a result of this action, the spokesman declared, the Dutch seized the town of Gombong, on the trunk rail line linking Ba- tavia with Jogakarta, the Re- publican capital. The spokesman's accusation was repeated in a Republican commu- nique which declared a violation also had occurred near Demak, 15 miles east of the north coast city of Semarang. The Indones- ians claimed a Dutch amphibious force which landed near Semar- ang seized Demak and continued its advance southward after the deadline. There was no confirmation of these actions from the Dutch who previously had questioned whether the Indonesians could enforce a cease-fire among Re- publican troops. Fighting took place along the strategic north Java coast until shortly before midnight, a front dispatch said. Dutch columns speeding from opposite directions linked up a few hours before the deadline giving the Netherlands complete control of a coastal area extending from Batavia 218 air- line miles eastward to Semarang, this account said. Pollock Gets New Position Now Heads Political Science Department Appointment of Prof. James K. Pollock as chairman of the polit- ical science department, was an- nounced yesterday by Provost James P. Adams. At the same time, the provost announced that Prof. Mischa Ti- tiev will serve as acting chairman of the anthropology department next semester while Prof. Leslie A. White is on sabattical leave. Prof. Pollock, who will assume his new duties on Sept. 1, suc- ceeds Prof. Everett S. Brown, who asked to be relieved of the N01- tion after six years, in order to devote more of his time to re- search, writing and teaching. In addition to 22 years of teach- ing at the University, Prof. Pol- lock has long been active in gov- ernmental work. He served, with- in the past two years as adviser to the Office of Military Gov- ernment at Berlin and as consult- ant to the Secretary of War. Last month, Senator Arthur Vandenberg appointed Prof. Pol- lock to a 12-member commission which will investigate all govern- ment departments in the interests of economy, efficiency and im- proved service. 'Captain Tempest' Will Be Presented NON-SELF-RULING: UN Trustees Vitally Busied, With Interests of Governed The interests of the inhabitants of non-self-governing territories have been recognized in the UN's trusteeship system as the para- mount concern of administering states, according to Benjamin Gerig, deputy U.S. representative on the Trusteeship Council. Gerig, speaking here yesterday as part of the summer lecture ser- ies, "The United States in World Affairs," outlined the principles of the trusteeship system as they are related to the objectives of the United Nations. "The Charter goes far beyond the League covenant," he said, "in its comprehensive approach to what is called the 'colonial prob- Gerig commented. "It is composed of delegates equally representing states which administer trust ter- ritories and those that do not. So far, the group has demonstrated its ability to rise above particular interests, and toj deal with prob- lems objectively." Gerig outlined the four prin- ciples of the trusteeship system which bolster his claim that a new, far-sighted view of the prob- lem has been drafted into the charter. These, he said, were: "1. The administering govern- ments recognize that the interests of the inhabitants are paramount, that their policy decisions will be based on what is best for the peo- i U.S. AIMS IN JAPAN: Policy's Success Depends on Recovery The ultimate success of United States policies in occupied Japan depends upon the economic recov- however, democracy will not stand in Japan." The senator pointed out that sized that though the Japanese will be permitted some private trading after August 15, the real