REHABILITATION uj Lw 41 Daii4F PARTLY CLOUDY, See Page 2 HUMID Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVI, No. 4S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JUNE 28, 1947 PRICE FIVE CENTS GreetingoTalk To Be Given Tomorrow Adams To Speak To Student Group Provost James P. Adams will de liver an address of welcome at a special Summer Session Assembly for students, faculty and interest ed townspeople to be held at 8 pm. tomorrow in Rackham Lec ture Hall. Also, included in the progran will be four vocal selections b Howard Hatton, baritone. He wil be accompanied by Robert Hen- derson. Both Hatton, of Trini- dad, Colo., and Henderson, of Jol- r let, Ill. are students in the music school, Hopkins To Preside Dr. Louis A. Hopkins, directo of the Summer Session, will pre- side at the assembly. The musical part of the pro- gram will include "Si trai ceppi and "How Willing My Paterna Love" by Handel, Brahms' "Di Mainacht" and "Evening Song" b Griffes. The opening convocation to- morrow night will be the first of a series of Sunday night program for University students and facul- i ty members. Future Programs The next program in the series will be held two weeks from to- morrow, Jul. 13, when Dean Ralp A. Sawyer, of the graduate school will deliver an illustrated lecture on "The Bikini Tests and Atomic Energy." Dean Sawyer served as technical director of the Bikini atom bomb test. Other programs will be planned by John Craig, program director of Lane Hall. Lectures have been planned for Jul. 20 and Aug. 3. according to Craig. Fierce Flood Still Sweeps F our States ST. LOUIS, June 27-(A)-De- structive floods on the Mississippi River and its rampant tributaries continued unabated today, caus- ing new and widespread damage in a four-state area. The American Red Cross revised upward to 33,657 its estimate of the number of persons homeless in Iowa, Nebraska, Missouri and Illinois. Record Levels Parts of several central Miss- ouri communities, including the state capital of Jefferson City, were partly flooded as the Miss- ouri River surged to record lev- els. The river spread to a width of two miles- there. Missouri's agriculture commis- sioner said the floods had cost Missouri at least $50,000,000 in crop losses alone. The Missouri Highway Department reported more than 50 northern Missouri highways closed, bridge damage piling up and said that the total damage would be "enormous - probably the worst we've ever had." Further Rise The north central Missouri town of Boonville reported its endanger- ed water system pump house was still operating despite a further rise in the Missouri River, which already had inundated part of the town. South of St. Louis the Mississip- pspilled over two levees between St. Louis and Chester, Ill., flood- ing an additional 20,000 to 40,000 acres of farmland. The people had moved out. Nearly 1,000 soldiers from Scott Field and Fort Sheridan, Ill., join- ed auxiliary coast guardsmen and civilian volunteers in a fight to save other threatened barriers. Most of them were working on the Degognia-Fountain bluff levees 30 miles south of Chester in an ef- fort to prevent flooding of a 29,000-acre district. Slosson Will Anealyze U.N. Prof. Preston W. Slosson, of the history department, will analyze the organization of the United Nations in a talk entitled "The Big Five and the Little Fifty-five" at 4:10 p.m. Monday in Rackham Amphitheatre. MOLOTOV ARRIVES IN PARIS-V. M. Molotov (right), Soviet foreign ,minister, leaves LeBourget Air Field at Paris, June 26, with French Foreign Minister George Bidault (left foreground) and Alexander E. Bogomolv (center, wearing glasses), the Russian ambassador to France. Molotov arrived by plane to confer with British and French foreign ministers on the American aid to Eur- ope program. MOUSETRAP PHYSICS: Congressmen LearnAbout Nuclear Fission "Easy Way' i# WASHINCTON, June 27-A)-It took 125 kitchen mousetraps and 251 rubber corks to make nuclear fission clear to the joint con- gressional committee on atomic energy. Chairman Bourke B. Hickenlooper, the junior Republican Sena- tor from Iowa, let the story out today. The joint committee is charged by law with keeping a running check on activities of the commission. The members went down to headquarters yesterday to. look things over. The commission politely detailed one 'of its scientists to strip down a few atoms-theoretically, *of course for the guests. The professor drew an atom, full D enny face and profile, on the black- board, Hickenlooper divulged. He Effect of FCC didn't seem to be getting any- TCj O where. So he led the lawmakers over to Funds Slash a glass showcase. It was jam full of ordinary spring mousetraps, set and ready for business. Poised on WASHINGTON, June 27-(,)-- each mousetrap were two rubber Charles R. Denny, chairman of the bottle-stoppers. Federal Communications Commis- "Imagine each mousetrap to be sion, said today a House cut of the nucleus of an atom," the Pro- $1,300,000 in proposed funds for fessor told the students. "Then the agency will haiper the de- each of the corks is a neutron. velopment of television next year. He tossed a cork at random Denny appeared before the Sen- through an aperture in the show- ate Appropriations Subcommittee case. which is considering the indepen- The neutron's stand-in hit the dent offices appropriation bill for triggel- of an atomic mousetrap. fiscal year beginning July Quicker than a Senator could 1. The House has trimmed the say "uranium isotope" things be- FCC's proposed budget to $6,000,- gan to happen. 000-$211,000 under the current Like bats out of Bikini, the year. whole showcase was filled with- He urged restoration of $875,- flying corks in an interval which 00 for additional salaries for em- Hickenlooper estimated in one ployes to handle a backlog of 964 second. broadcast applications now on The professor folded his arms. hand. ' He also said additional "That's like nuclear fission," he manpower will be needed to carry said. out decisions of international rad- The lawmakers were glad to un- io conferences now under way. derstand nuclear physics. DOCTOR REPORTS: Women South of the Border Are Entering the Professions 400,000 Soft Coal Miners 'On Vacation' Steel Industries CutProduction By The Associated Press PITTSBURGH, June 27- The nation's soft coal industry drifted toward complete paralysis at mid- night tonight when paid vacations begin for 400,000 union miners, most of them already idle in wild- cat stoppages protesting the Taft- Hartley law. Steel and other coal-dependent industries felt the impact of the shutdown before the 10-day vaca- tions pinched off the last bitumin- ous production and cast an uneasy hiatus over mining's labor trou- bles. Paid Vacations These paid vacations were granted under the government's contract with the AFL-United Mine Workers. The holiday comes as the navy coal mine administra- tion quits the coal business, an exit which becomes official next Monday, June 30. The anthracite miners, estimat- ed by Joseph Walsh, state deputy secretary of mines, at about 78,000 also start a 10-day vacation at midnight tonight. Some 6,000 miners walked out in the Lans- ford area ye' terday and were join- ed by 1,600 in the Hazelton district today. Drastic Cutback U.S. Steel Corp., biggest basic producer, the Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corp., announced the most drastic cutback due to coal short- ages induced uy the walkouts and the vacation. This bellwether in the steel industry set an imme- diate curtailment to 45 percent of peak operations in the Pittsburgh district, now at 104 percent of the- oretical capacity. The firm earlier had cut back equivalent to 41/2 blast furnaces of the 25 it, operates in the dis- trict. Other firms, including Youngstown Sheet & Tube and Sharon Steel, also reduced opera- tions to conserve scant coal sup- plies. Steel operations in the Youngs- town, O., district dropped from 93 to 64 percent today, after Repub- lic Steel Corp. banked a blast fur- nace and pared Bessemer op- erations to an average of one turn daily. Money Stolen From Three Fraternities Robberies totaling $253 were reported by three fraternities, Phi Sigma Delta, Kappa Sigma and Phi Kappa Psi, Thursday night. Approximately $180 in bills was stolen from Phi Sigma Delta, 1811 Washtenaw, by a thief who pre- sumably entered through un- locked doors members reported. No other valuables were touched, according to Ann Arbor detectives. One man lost $50, another $40, and 11 other members made up the balance. it was reported. At the Kappa Sigma house, 806 Hill St., the robbery amounted to about $57, aso all in bills from wallets lyir on dressers, police reported. One man at Phi Kappa Psi. 1550 Washtenaw. Bud Green was the sole victim. He lost $16. He reported that the doors of the house hadn't been locked in 15 years, as far as he knew. Again the method of rob- bery was the same. Ann Arbor chief of detectives Albert Heusel, investigating the case, reminded all organizations in the area to take precautionary measures. "With dormitory sleeping quar- ters on the second floor, and un- locked doors, fraternity houses are especially vulnerable," he said. "Valuables should be taken into the dormitories, and doors locked." Gas Cuts To Hit State Motorists DETROIT, June 27-(R)-Two more major gasoline companies today laced restriction on the amount of gasoline that will be available to Michigan motorists this summer.0 7 Cent Hourly Wage Increase Also Approved Agreements Affect 110,000 Workers By The Associated Press DETROIT, June 27-The Ford Motor Co., which pioneered the checkoff system df dues collection in the automobile industry, today became the first car manufactur- er to agree to an old-age retire- ment plan for its production work- ers. Nearing the end of almost two months of contract negotiations, the Ford management and the CIO United Automobile Workers' Union announced agreement had been reached for the setting up of a pension program and a straight seven cents an hour wage increase for some 110,000 production work- ers. The union in its drive to ob- tain the unique retirement plan. passed up a company offer of six paid holidays. Clauses for such holidays were included in some major auto company contracts for the first time this year. Richard T. Leonard, UAW-CIO Ford director, asserted the pen- sion plan will cost the Ford com- pany $200,000,000 the first year, and $15,000,000 for each year thereafter. The first year esti- mate covers the cost of the com- pany's assumed liability for past service of UAW workers on the payroll. Yet to be worked out are spe- cific details of the program, what if any contributions the workers will make to it once it has been established, and the effective date of its operation. One UAW-CIO officer said the scale of retirement payments probably would range between 50 and 60 percent of the workers' average annual earnings dur- ing his employment. The wage increase will be retro- active to May 31, 1947, the date on which the old contract expired. Greet Foreign Students Today The Board of Governors and staff of the International Center will welcome approximately 330 foreign students at a reception at 7:30 p.m. today in the Tackham Assembly Hall. The reception line will include Dean and Mrs. Erich A. Walter, Dean Alice Lloyd, Dean and Mrs. Ralph A. Sawyer, Prof. and Mrs. George E. Carrothers, Prof. Mar- tha G. Colby, and Dr. Walter F. Colby, Prof. and Mrs. Waiter J. Emmons and Miss Ethel McCor- mick, An informal dance will follow the reception. Women from Mosh- er-Jordan and Helen Newberry have been invited to meet the foreign guests., Refreshments will be served during the reception by women students of the various countries represented on campus. Ten Lose Jobs In Washington, On Red Charge Two Others Jailed For HidingAlliance WASHINGTON, June 27-(])- A crackdown on Communism and persons ,deemed "bad risks" from the national security standpoint today cost 10 State Department employees their jobs and brought jail sentences to two men. These were the developments: 1. The State Department an- nounced that in a search for dis- loyal employes it had summarily fired 10 persons judged "bad se- curity risks." Their names were not disclosed but some of them were responsible jobs paying as high as $8,000 a year. 2. German-born Gerhart Eis- ler, 51, alleged "supreme author- ity" of American Communists, drew the maximum sentence of one year in prison and $1,000 on his conviction for contempt of Congress. Released on $20,000 bail, Eisler also faces trial July 7 for alleged passport fraud. 3. Italian-born Carl Aldo Mar- zani, 35, former State Department sub-official, was sentenced to one to htree years in prison on a charge of hiding Communist Party affiliations in getting a govern- ment job. The maximum penalty in his case would have been 110 years in prison and $110,000 fines. 4. Eugene Dennis, 43, Secretary of the U.S. Communist Party, in- dicated through his attorney that he will carry to the Supreme Court a challenge of the constitutional- ity of the House Committee on Un-American Activities. Dennis was convicted by a fed- eral jury last night on charges, of contempt of Congress, growing out of his refusal to answer a sub- poena from the House committee. Eisler was convicted June 10 for refusing to take the oath as a committee witness. * * * Jury Finds Fast Guilty of Contempt WASHINGTON, June 27-(A4)- Novelist Howard Fast and 15 other executive board members of the Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Com- mittee were convicted today of contempt of Congress. If the conviction sticks they; each face as much as a year in jail and a $1,000 fine.; During the trial there were ac- cusations that the Anti-Fascist Committee was "honeycombed"i with Communists. C10 Leaders Reject ldea of Protest Strike WASHINGTON, June 27-VP)-The CIO leadership today rejected any idea of a general protest strike against the Taft-Hartley labor bill and instead invited leaders of the AFL and the railroad unions ta. join with it in fighting the law in the courts and at the polls. CIO President Philip Murray announced the two actidns at a news conference. President William Green of the AFL yesterday announced AFL opposition to a general strike. Murray told a news conference that the 51-member CIO executive board, in a day-long meeting, had decided to impress on CIO unions <- that they should live up to their Foreign Ministers Hold Secret 'Last Chance' Paris Conference; Ford, UAW Agree on Pensions contracts. Will Follow Contracts The idea is to seek meetings with management representatives serving notice on employers that the unions expect them likewise to live up .to their current con- tracts. A formal statement said the CIO will fight the provision in the Taft-Hartley bill against political contributions - a section which unions say may hamper their freedom of political expression in union halls and in official publi- cations. Will Not Comply "We will not comply with the unconstitutional limitations on political activity which are writ- ten into the Taft-Hartley bill," the statement said. "We propose, as good Ameri- cans, to fight the poltical re- straints in this legislation. The constitution remains the law of our land we propose to enjoy its protection." Congress Told, Navy Planning To Import Oil WASHINGTON, June 27-(1')_ Congressmen aroused by ship- ments of American oil to Russia were told today that the Navy is so short of oil it plans to buy 3,- 000,000 barrels from the Middle East. Chairman Weichel (Rep., Ohio) of the House Merchant Marine Committee promptly introduced a bill to clamp down on the exports. It differs from a control bill al- ready pending in Congress in that its curbs would be mandatory, and not left to the President's dis- cretion. Control Expires The President now has author- ity to control the export and im- port of some scare commodities, including oil, but it expires June 30. The Senate passed today andj sent to the House a stopgap reso- lution to continuew this authority until July 15 pending further con- gressional consideration. Chairman Brewster (Rep., Me.) of the Senate, War Investigating Committee meanwhile criticized the price of $1.05 a barrel the Navy will pay forthe foreign oil. Critical Shortage, John U. Sullivan, Undersecre- tary of the Navy, wrote the Sen- ate War Investigating Committee that the Navy will have to buy 500,000 ;.arrels of fuel oil a moi.th for six months in the Persian Gulf area and transport it to the east coast of the United States because of a "critical" shortage. Comment On Talks Withheld By Statesmen Parleys To Continue For Unified Europe By The Associated Press PARIS, June 27-The foreign ministers of France, Britain and Russia met for nearly four hours today in what the French Press called a "last chance" conference for the reconstruction of a uni- fied Europe. Strict secrecy ruled the proceed- ings. The ministers made no an- nouncement concerning the tenor of their talks, but planned to meet again tomorrow at 4 p.m. Emerging shortly after 8 p.m. British Foreign Secretary Er- nest Bevin told reporters only that "Paris is hotter than Lon- don." It was 92 in Paris. Although some quarters said the British may have adopted the si- lent treatment as a gesture to the Russians, others recalled that Bev- in has strongly criticised too de- tailed press coverage at other in- ternational conferences, contend- ing that more could be accomp- lished in negotiations if the min- isters could "think out loud" with- out being quoted in' the newspap- ers. Informed quarters said the success or failure of the three- power meeting in the French Foreign Ministry would be de- termined within a few days. The spotlight fell strong upon So- viet Foreign Minister V. M. Mol otov for some answer to the question: What is the Soviet attitude to- ward the offer of American aid made June 5 by U.S. Secretary of State George C. Marshall? The alternatives were either the sincere cooperaton of Russia in making a coordinated recovery program for Europe work, or a wider split than ever between a Western and an Eastern Europe. Some indication of the answer was expected within 48 hours as British Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin and French Foreign Min- ister Georges Bidault sat down with Molotov in the Hall of Par- rots on the second floor of the Foreign Ministry. Sigler Signs Callahan Bill Measure Cited As 'Good' by Governor LANSING, June 27-MP-The Callahan Bill, requiring the regis- tration of organizations influenced or dominated by foreign powers, was signed into law by Governor Sigler today. Legislative sponsors of the mea- sure have admitted it is aimed at groups allegedly dominated by the Communist Party. "I feel this is a good bill," said the Governor. "It afford the tools by which those who attempt to undermine our government and our institutions may be brought out in the open. Sigler replied to charges by re- ligious, racial, labor and minority groups that in the hands of a pre- judiced attorney general the bill could be used to discriminate against them. "I don't believe it will be used to persecute people because that could be applied to any bill," the Governor stated. The bill gives the state attor- ney general authority to take con- trol of any group proven to be dominated by foreign influences and to hold its funds until the membership elects officers loyal to the United States. ExchangeMayShip Old Texts Abroad By ANNETTE RICH Daily Special Writer Women south of the border a'e entering into professions in in- creasing numbers, according to Elizabeth Castro Gavitt, petite Mexican doctor now working at University Hospital. "There are probably proportion- ately more girls getting their med- ical degrees in Mexico than there are in the United States, she de- clared. Of her graduating class at the University of Mexico, 30 of the young physicians were wo- men. Opportunities Limited The people of Mexico readily accept the services of the women doctors. But, as in the United States, these young women scient- ists find it dilicult to establish themselves as surgeons, and most of them w.9'k in the field of - stetrics and child care. established a profesional prac- tice. Rural Medical System In Mexico, a student can ge'. an M.D. degree in six years following high school. Students interne its the fifth and sixth years, carrying' classes at the same time, Dr. Ga- vitt added.- According to Dr. Gavitt, Mexi- co has a unique way of supplying doctors for outlying districts. Each young doctor must spend six months of the last year as an un- dergraduate in a rural area before he may obtain his diploma. Only women students may spend' this period working in a hospital or established clinic, Dr. Gavitt said. Trade Pigs for Medicine "They take all the equipment they need-they take a drugstore, too, and set up a practice in places where there is no doctor. They get 90 pesos ($20) a month from the a min nm n . ad wna 'af'fr i-he KA LIEN1A CH SUR VEY: Few Changes Made In Local Goverment Ann Arbor is almost unique among the cities of Michigan in the number of changes that it hasn't made in its government, a recent survey made by Prof. Jo- seph E. Kallenbach of the politi- cal science department, discloses. Of 43 Michigan cities of 10,000 and over population, all but Ann Arbor have non-partisan election'; all but thirteen and Ann Arbor have the city manager or com- mission form; and of these four- teepn Ann Arbhaslr the second ent city charter are "antiquated", but that no major charter revision is necessary. The city manager from is "ideal", he said, but for a city the size of Ann Arbor a good city manager is hard to get. Cannot Hold City Manager If a manager is good the city would soon lose him to other cit- ies which would be able to pay more, Mayor Brown added. He also pointed out that Ann Arbor has been able to get good men whole, it is impossible to clarify responsibility for handling city problems. Nobody Is Responsible "Many problems that ought to be handled are not handled at all," he said, "and it is impossible un- der the present form of govern- ment to hold anybody responsible for major decisions or the solu- tion of major problems." One of the consequences of the present form of city government,