POTOMAC FEVER See Page 4 rm"m Nor Latest Deadline in the State 41 CLOUDY AND COOLER ILVIII, No. 170 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, JUNE 24, 1948 PRICE FIVE CENTS _ .... . - - - - f Soviets Talk Withi Heads Of Satellites Divided Germany Rumored Topic WARSAW, June 23 - (1) - Soviet Foreign Minister Molotov flew to Warsaw today for a hush- hush conference with representa- tives of seven Eastern European satellites. Authoritative reports said they are considering creation of a sep- arate East German State. Discuss London Conference (The Moscow radio, heard in London, said the conference would discuss the decisions of the recent six-nation London Conference which drafted a plan for eventual s .elf-government for the three western occupation zones of Ger- many. The participating nations were United States, Britain, France, Belgium, The Netherlands and Luxembourg.) Official Hint Molotov gave the only official hint of what he and the foreign ministers of Hungary, Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, Romania, Bul- garia, Alba--da and Poland will discuss. Wheh he arrived at Okecie Air- 'Att from Moscow, he spoke of the necessity for security against :'New German imperialist aggres- ion." He spoke of the brother- hood between the Slavic nations. Molotov's brief remarks were generally construed as indicating the conferees will devote their ma- or talks to German problems. Numerous Reports There were many reports to- night that out of the parley may evolve an announcement that "Russia favors setting up an East German State as an answer to the Western allies proposed Federal- ized Western Germany. An official announcement dis- . closed these top-ranking officials are joining Molotov in the talks: Foreign Ministers Eric Molnar of Hungary, Stanoje Simic of Yu- goslavia, Vladimir Clementis of. Czechoslovakia Anna Pauker of Romania, Vassil Kolaron of Bul- garia and Enver Hodza of Albania ' and Poland's ldremier Josef Cy- rankiewicz and Foreign Minister Zygmunt Modzelewski. SL Proposes New Activities For Summer At the first meeting of the Sum- mer Session Student Legislature last night a number of proposals ยข for action during the summer were made and discussed. Proposals were made for a fresh air dance, for further investigation of the rental system now in force won the University tennis courts, for research into the history of the University Health Service, and for the appointment of a student rep- resentative to work with the local rent control board. It was decided that the possi- bility of holding a fresh air dance i on the campus parking lot would be gone into and a report submit- ted at the next meeting. A pro- posal was made that the dance be given on a non-profit basis and that other campus organizations be asked to make donations for this purpose. Richard Burton, acting chair- man during the summer, entered a plea for summer students to work with the Legislature. The experi- ence that may be gained in this way will be of great advantage to those interested in running for Legislature offices at the next election, he said. Meetings of the Student Legisla- ture will be held every Wednesday night at the Union. Art Prints Ready For Blank Walls There's no excuse for students f staring at four blank walls this summer, according to Eloise Wil- kinson, director of the Student Loan Collection. . The collecton of 320 framed , prints, 45 of which are new, are available for student loan for the summer at a cost of 35 cents each. The paintings, all by well-known artists, are on display in the West FI,,11zv of Albimi~ UpA'mni,'al .11l 'Considerable Progress' In Coal Talks Is Reported Board Announces Both Sides Are Ready To Extend Present Contract if Necessary WASHINGTON, June 23-(P)- Hope for swift and peaceful settle- ment of terms for a new coal min- ing contract mounted tonight with a double-barreled announcement by a presidential inquiry board. The board said: 1. John L. Lewis and the coal August Date Set for Draft Registration Calling of Men May Start Next Fall WASHINGTON, June 23 - ('P) -Selective Service officials said today it's a safe guess that draft registration will start about Au- gust 16. Actual drafting of men 19 through 25 may begin early in Oc- tober, officials estimated. By that time, registration of men 18 through 25 should be finished. The Draft Bill itself has not been signed by President Truman. Passed by Congress Saturday, it has not reached the White House. He has ten days to act after he gets it. Induction Date Undecided Induction date hinges on when the bill is signed. The legislation provides that no men will be drafted until 90 days after the bill becomes law. Meanwhile, the flood of enlist- ments of draft age men in the National Guard is pushing the en- rollment of the Guard well beyond its quota fixed a few dags ago. Enlistment in the Guard or in organized reserves of the Navy, Army or Air Force before the bill becmes law exempts a man from the draft. In Michigan, less than 1,000 more enlistments will be accepted by the Michigan National Guard, the State Adjutant General's Of- fice announced today. The Federal Gvernment has no- tified the Michigan National Guard that its total strength can not exceed 7,209. Total Guard strength on June 15 was 6,221. Enlistm nt Ceiling The ceiling on enlistments was expected to intensify the rush of draft-eligible men to sign up with the Guard. Those who are mem- bers of the National Guard and other organized reserves before the President signs the new draft bill will be exempt from the draft. Spokesmen said today that Na- tional Guard enrollments may reach 375,000 by the end of this week. The earlier ceiling was 341,- 000. Its ultimate planned strength by 1952 is 682,000. There is little likelihood that men already enlisted will be dis- charged, officials said. National Round-Up By The Associated Press HYDRO, Okla., June 23--At least seven persons are known dead in a flash flood that struck this West Central Oklahoma town during the night. Hundred ofsacres are under water in scattered areas throughout Oklahoma. Rampag- ing streams also are out of their banks in Nebraska, Kansas and Missouri after 24 hours of heavy rainfall. DETROIT, June 23-Kaiser- Frazer's car production was halted today by the industry's first reported "heat strike" of the season. A company spokesman said about 45 workers on the en- gine assembly line, complaining of the heat and humidity, walked out. The stoppage forced the company to send home all of its 8,500 production workers, the spokesman added. * * * NEW YORK, June 23-A Fed- eral Judge today issued an injunc- tion under the Taft.-Hartley Act restraining the CIO National Mar-. itime Union and two affiliated unions from taking strike action for 80 days. operators reported "considerable progress toward a complete settle- ment." 2.mBoth sides had agreed that if they saw it would be impossible to reach a complete contract they would seek to agree on extending the present contract. That would provide time for additional negotiations and pre- vent the danger of a nationwide summer coal strike. Less than an hour after its cheering announcement of prog- ress, the inquiry board got a 24- hour extension of its deadline for reporting to President Tru- man on the dispute. The report now is due at 3 p.m. tomorrow, two hours after a scheduled meeting of Lewis withhis UMW policy committee. Board chairman David Cole told reporters he does not know any details of the negotiations between Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers, and the opera ors, but that they have advised the board they are making consider- able progress toward writing a new contract. The present union-management agreement expires June 30. There was no official word whether the coal operators had agreed to accept a Federal court's approval of Lewis' $100 monthly pension plans. But the UMW chief previously had in- sisted that the operators accept the pension plan before he would talk contract terms. The three-man board has em- phasized it is most interested in promoting collective bargaining between the two sides. Should it report an impasse endangering national health and safety, the government likely would seek, an injunction to block a strike. Edmonson Sees Greater Need For Teachers American schools will need a million more teachers in 12 years, Dean James B. Edmonson, of the education school, predicted Wed- nesday, opening a series of sum- mer' lectures on education. "The shortage of teacher's today is primarily due to the competi- tion of other fields of work where financial rewards are higher," Dean Edmonson said. He pointed to the growing enrollments of schools at the elementary levels in the past few years and added that replacements would be need- ed for those that drop out of teaching between now and 1960. "Should any measure of unem- ployment develop in the fields that compete with the teaching profession, there will be a corre- sponding increase in the number of candidates for teaching posi- tions," he commented. He said the teaching profession is making headway in the im- provement of its status and pro- phesied that teaching would be- come more attractive in the fu- ture. He estimated that competi- tion would increas'e in school sys- tems which provide attractive sal- aries, adequate housing for teach- ing and maximum security-eco- nomic and psychological. Lectures to be given at 4:05 p.m. today and tomorrow include dis- cussions by Prof. Leonard A. Stid- ley, of Oberlin College, and T. Lu- ther Purdom, director of the Bu- reau of Appointments and Occu- pational Information. A total of twenty-six lectures, sponsored by the education school, will be presented during the sum- mer term. Soviets Halt Berlin Rail Traffic Again Money Dispute Held Responsible BERLIN, Thursday, June 24 - (A')-The Russians halted all rail- way traffic into the western sec- tors of Berlin early today. They also shut off that part of the western sector's electric power generated in the Soviet sector. Western circles viewed these two moves as Soviet retaliation for the refusal of the United States, Brit- ain and France to accept the Soviet zone mark as Berlin's only legal currency. The Russian-licensed German News Agency said, however, the Soviets halted all freight and pas- senger traffic between Berlin and the western zone railhead at Helmstedt because of a "technical disturbance." It did not explain the nature of the disturbance. British Report British sources said the Soviets notified the Berlin electricity works that electric power used in the western sectors in the future will have to be produced in the west. Normally, power stations in the western sectors produce only one-half of the electricity used in those sectors. All freight for Berlin's western sectors moves over the Helmstedt- Berlin line. Late yesterday, Herman Rau, chairman of the Soviet Zone's German economic commission, told newsmen that "unless sup- plies come by air, serious economic difficulties will develop for the western sectors" of Berlin. Sanctions Threatened Earlier the Russians officially threatened economic sanctions against western Berlin if the United States, France and Britain refused to accept the Soviet zone mark as Berlin's only legal cur- rency. The three western powers, how- ever, voided yesterday a Russian decree making a new Soviet- stamped mark the only legal ten- der in Berlin and ordered issuance of the new western German Deutsche Mark in their three sec- tors. The effect was to erect a paper currency wall through the heart of Berlin, 100 miles behind the iron curtain. Thus Berlin's 3,400,000 people were caught in the middle of an East-West money fight. Whether today's announcement meant the Russians had made their first economic sanction move was not immediately clear. Sanitation Men Continue Talks Panels Will Discuss Operation Problems Proposals affecting the entire population of the country promise to emanate from the National Sanitation Clinic which entered its third day of operations on campus this morning. The clinic, which is being at- tended by approximately 380 dele- gates, has brought together the first time officials from public health and industry to discuss mutual problems. Representatives will split into 12 separate panels today to thrash out problems ranging from food protection to rodent and insect control in an effort to establish clear-cut recommendations for sanitary control. Final progress reports will be collected and presented in the closing session tomorrow after- noon at the School of Public Health. Dewey eads Nomination Lists Navy Planes Crash over Detroit Two Airmen Die, Fires Set 9 OR By Colliso Wreckage Destroys Four Homes in Area DETROIT, June 23-(P)-Two Navy planes, flying in a seven- ship formation, crashed and burned today after colliding over the heavily-populated East Side area of Detroit. The flaming wreckage set fire to four houses and a tool shop, but scores of residents fled to safety. The two pilots of the single- seater planes died in the crash, and one tool shop employe was slightly injured when struck by flaming wreckage. Lieut.-Commander David A. Black, public relations officer, said that when the two planes collided, the others scattered hurriedly. This led some ground spectators to believe three planes had crashed, he said. Wreckage of the falling fighter planes spread a disas- trous blaze through a one-block area including the four houses and the tool shop. Fire and rescue crews made a preliminary search of the burning structures and expressed belief all occupants had escaped. Live wires were felled by the falling wreckage and added to the fire menace as scores of police were mobilized to keep large crowds of spectators away from. danger zones. Edward Stewart, 32, an em- ploye of the Putnam Tool and Die Company, said he and 20 other workers were on 'their jobs in his department at the plant when they heard a terrific explosion. "We all rushed to the win-. .dows and saw the wreckage of a plane fall near a house a short distance away," he said. Stewart continued, "It seemed only a second later that we heard a crash and saw the second plane come through the roof of our plant and land a few feet from us. If some of us had been atbour work benches, we would have been killed." Police reports indicated the wreckage that plunged into the tool shop was a Corsair-type, while the wreckage of the sec- ond plane-a Hellcat-struck a house and set it afire. The flaming gasoline show- ered over three adjacent houses setting them afire as their occu- pants rushed to safety. Three of the homes were nearly de- stroyed, but the fourth was only slightly damaged. The planes had passed over Briggs Stadium only a minute or two before the crash and some of the spectators at the Detroit- Washington game saw the mid- air collision. The Navy identified the two dead pilots as Ensign J. H. Nich- olson, 25, of Scranton, Ia., and Ensign Roy E. Schultheiss, 24, of Port Huron, Mich Both students at Michigan State College in East Lansing, the vic- tims were on a two week's tour -of active duty at the Grosse Ile Station. They had been wartime pilots, but had not seen foreign duty. Officials said the Corsair plane was nearly cut in two by the col- lision which occurred at about 1,100 feet. The engine of the plane landed nearly a block from where the tail assembly fell. Martin Cites CAN WE LOSE-Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, (left) and Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg, both graduates of the University, are now in the thick of the battle at Philadelphia for the Republican presidential nomination. Although no predictions can be made as to who will win the political derby, at least the University has two con- tenders going to the post. NO SLUMP HERE: Business Rides High in Philly On Crest of Convention Wave CONVENTION HALL, Philadel- phia, June 23-(1)-This city forked out $250,000. for the Re- publican National Convention. The consensus today is that it's going to get its money back. There doesn't seem to be any concerted effort to put the bite on the GOP and its assorted follow- ers. 70 Cents an Egg But it's still easy to pay 70 cents for an egg sulking on limp lettuce between two slices of bread. Or to Jewish Arms Supply Cut Off Flow of Machinery Blocked inCyprus FAMAGUSTA, Cyprus, June 23 -(P)-The Jewish arms supply route from Europe and America has hit a bottleneck in Cyprus. On docks, vacant lots and store- houses here and at other Cyprus ports and beaches there are acres of crates awaiting shipment to Israel. When war in Palestine began outright on May 14 several ships carrying cargo for Haifa and Tel Aviv put in here, once the war stores capital of the Phonecians. The ships unloaded rather than chance Arab bombings. Most of the crates are marked "farm machinery." The British when asked about these marks chuckle sarcastically. Jewish Agency representatives will not discuss the matter. One crate was marked "auto- mobile," but stencilled on the side was a weight marking of 18 tons. One crate was so big it had not been moved from its barge in Lar- naca Harbor. It was marked "35 tons." Truman Signs Railroad Retirement Benefit Act WASHINGTON, June 23-(AP')-_ President Truman signed into law today a measure raising retire- ment benefits under the Railroad Retirement Act by 20 per cent. The new act cuts the railroads' contribution to the Unemployment Insurance Fund, the reduction to be effective as long as the fund stays above $450,000,000. put out $13 apiece to sleep two in a room. Yet no matter how happily the cash register may ring, a lot of people around here will be just as glad when we go home. Taxi drivers, for instance. Their business was hurt when a motor car company decided to help advertise its new model by turning a fleet of cars over to the convention. Low-Tip Taxi Riders "And this crowd," a cabbie mourned as we crept along Broad Street. "You can't move, chum, These people are no fancy tippers, either. I'm running $2 below what I do on a normal day. "It's nothing- like that Foun- dryman's Convention we had here. That, chum, was a convention." A 13-year-old sidewalk shoe- shine boy said his business was terrible. "They all wear shoes," he said, "but they never shine 'em." Other business reports , were more encouraging. A fellow I know got interested in this type of research, and vol- unteered to go out and interview a bartender. He came back to say: "That bartender was so busy I couldn't catch his eye, much less his ear." He was a very sad researcher. Faculty Lists 7, V isi tIng Summer Posts Seventy-one visiting faculty members have been added, to the University teaching staff for the summer session. Six of the group are educators from England, the Netherlands, and Canada, while the remainder are on the regular faculties of other American colleges and uni versities. Lit School Visitors In the literary college, the twenty-two visiting faculty mem- bers have been distributed among ten different departments. K. C. Wheare of Oxford University and F. W. Coker of Yale are tempo- rary additions to the faculty of the political science department. On the physics department for the summer session is H. B. Casim~er, of Eindhoven, Netherlands. A variety of educators repre- senting universities from all over the United States and Canada have augmented the teaching staff of the education school for the summer session, From All Over Other visitors from England in- clude James L. Brierly of Oxford, an addition to the law school fac- ulty, and J. R. Firth of the Uni- versity of London, who will teach at the Linguistic Institute. Visiting faculty members will also instruct summer session Governor As Next President Lodge Hands Support To Sen. Vandenberg .CONVENTION HALL, Philadel- phia, June 23-(P)-The G.O.P. confidently and noisily pitched in- to its main business of picking a presidential candidate tonight and -amid boos and cheers-the name of Thomas E. Dewey led all the rest. The New York Governor's name was placed in nomination first, and then in order followed: Senator Robert A. Taft of Ohio, Gov. Earl Warren of California, former Governor Harold E. Stas- sen of Minnesota; Senator Ray- mond Baldwin of Connecticut Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg of Michigan; Gen. Douglas MacAr- thur of Wisconsin. Governor Dewey of New York was the leader in votes, too. But he had no chance to prove it un- til tomorrow's actual balloting. And a coalition of anxious rivals was trying desperately to slap a road block in his path.; And they were saying they would do it, even as Senator Ed- ward Martin of Pennsylvania offered Dewey to the Convention as 'the next President of the United States." * * * Dewey Boom... It was Martin who started a big Dewey boom yesterday by giving up as a favorite son and joining forces with the New Yorker. "This," Martin began, "is the greatest honor of my life-." "BOO-O-0-! BOO-O-O-! It bellowed up from delegates themselves and from the distant reaches of double balconies almost hidden behind a' blaze of lights and tobacco haze. But when he finished a great chorus of cheers and applause exploded in the Convention chambar. Delegates grabbed up state standards and waiting Dewey banners and cascaded into the aisles in one of those merry, mad parades which are the custom of these big political get-togethers. While the demonstration was on, Gov. Robert F. Bradford of. Massachusetts threw in his lot with Dewey. But the delegation he heads is ready to split after it tosses two complementary ballots to Senator Leverett Saltonstall. Back Vandenberg ... Earlier tonight, .Senator Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts had tossed his backing to Senator Ar- thur H. Vandenberg of Michigan. Three Michigan GOP leaders reiterated their belief that Sen- ator Vandenberg is"the best qual- ified man in America for the pres- idency." In a joint statement, Gov. Kim Sigler, Senator Homer Ferguson and National Com- mitteeman Arthur Summerfield said they believe "that the crisis that faces the nation in the next - four years is such that no man's nersonal reluctance should be permitted to stand in the way of selecting" him for leadership. They said the statement was prepared "without the consent or knowledge of Senator Vanden- berg." "The biggest issue before the American people is whether their sons and daughters will again have to go to war," they said. "Senator Vandenberg has the greatest first-hand knowledge of the biggest problem that will face the American people in the next four years-the issue of war or peace." Here in Convention Hail, it looked like a long night of ora- tory- and drama, and of sweating it out through nominating and seconding speeches and through more demonstrations like the 32-minute show for Dewey. Tonight the show, tomorrow the showdown. And Dewey backers were aiming at victory by the CONVENTION CLOSE UPS: Vandenberg Backers Seek Powerful Outstate Support e By JOHN CAMPBELL Daily Special Wrter PHILADELPHIA, June 22 - (Delayed) - Two big question marks for the Michigan delega- tion supporting Senator Arthur Vandenberg are Pennsylvania and Ne.w Jersey. delegation may split on the first ballot. Up until now, the Vandenberg campaign has lacked almost all semblance of organization. Even men close to the leaders of the Michigan delegation don't seem other delegation to its feet. Prev- iously there had been reports that Dewey leaders would be hard pressed to hold down Vandenberg boosters in several New England delegations. The only support Michigan got was from the vis- mean being in the driver's seat. It does mean, however, being con- stantly trampled underneath a horde of press photographers. * * * Mrs. Regina Hay, first woman secretary of the Republican Can-