TIIURSDAY, MARCH 119 I9 PAGE SICK TRE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SIX THURSDAY, MARUR 1I;'IWS- ~.. FDR Hands Congress Blueprint for Future (Continued from Page 1) "2. Government provision of work for all adults who are willing and able to work, if private industry is unable to provide employment. "3. Appropriate measures to equip young persons beyond the compulsory school-attendance age for assuming the full responsibil- ity of citizenship. "4. Assurance of basic minimum security through social insurance, so far as possible. "5. Establishment of a compre- hensive underpinning general pub- lic assistance system providing aid on the basis of need, to complete the framework of protection against economic insecurity. "6. Expansion of social services which are essential for the health, welfare, and efficiency of the whole population; this expansion should be as wide and as rapid as possible." To carry out these objectives, aside from the increased insurance program, it proposed: A federal works agency "estab- lished on a permanent basis" charged with responsibility for de- veloping and operating works pro- grams. Work projects, it said, should be suited to the commun- ity and the performance required of workers and the pay should be equal to those in private industry. Combination of the Civilian Con- servation Corps and the National Youth Administration into a "uni- fied administration" to direct a many-sided youth program provid- ing federal grants to those needing it for education, counselors for young people, and programs stress- ing "the inculcation of work habits and disciplines and familiarity with the use of a. variety of tools." Further study, it was recommend- ed, should be given to development of therapeutic work programs fxN those with special physical and men- tal handicaps. As for general public assistance, it was proposed that these plans be placed on "a basis reflecting differ- ences in need and economic and fis- cal capacity as between the states." Thus the federal government would pay a larger share, for instance, of old age assistance in a poor state than in a wealthy one instead of basing federal aid on the amount provided by the state. In the field of public social ser- vices, the provision of essential medical care, including. "promot- ing' the health of mothers and children," was stressed. Also rec- Ommended were free lunches for school children, and distribution of, surplus commodities by the stamp plan to the "entire lo'w- income population." On the point of putting the pro- gram into effect now, the Board's introduction to its report said: "Some may urge that such n pro- gram must be set aside until the war emergency is ended. But to postpone until the war is over will be too late. We should move now on the major changes needed to set our house in order. "It is easier to make these changes when employment is high, and it is easier to keep employment high than to lift it once it has declined. Furthermore, we cannot be blind to the fact that national morale is mightily influenced by consideration of what will come when a warring world will be replaced with one more devoted to the arts of peace. Shall that period be a return to the in- equities of the past, or a forward movement toward the promise of the future?" Five ERC Orders Revoked for 'U' Men Revoking orders for five men pre- viously called to active Army from the Army Enlisted Reserve Corps were received yesterday by the Uni- versity War Board. "We. are still waiting rescinding orders for five more men who were on the deferred list," Dr. Burton Thuma, armed service representative, said, "and there is no reason to be- lieve these won't be received in the next few days." Republicans in House Ready To Pass Rumi Plan By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 10.-House Republicans will hold a conference Monday to array party strength in an effort to pass the Ruml pay-as-you- go tax plan, it was learned tonight. Rep. Martin of Massachusetts, the Republican leader, announced the conference, and other prominent Re- publicans said it will seek to put the party's representatives behind the plan to skip an income tax year in arriving at a current-payment basis. The Republican meeting was ar- ranged shortly after the House Ways and Means Committee, following weeks of study, approved a compro- mise income tax collection plan put- ting pay-as-you-go on an optional basis for each taxpayer, without any tax abatement, and imposing a 20 per cent withholding levy against the taxable portions of pay envelopes and salary checks. Dissatisfied with this compromise, Martin predicted "an overwhelming majority" of Republicans will fight it on the House floor and battle for the Rumlplan, as modified and embraced in a bill by Rep. Carlson (Rep.-Kan.). Republicans now have 209 seats in the house to 222 for the Democrats and some Republicans expressed con- fidence that the Ruml plan would gather a substantial number of Dem- ocratic votes. It was not expected, however, that making the skip-a-year proposal a party issue would bring in all Repub- lican votes, since Rep. Gearhart (Rep.-Calif.) is one of the most ac- tive opponents of the Ruml plan, contending it would "mushroom 100,- 000 or more war millionaires." ASSOCIATED PACTU RE NEWSV N PRESS W A I T I N G - Nurse Eliza- beth Thomas works in the hos- pital unit of the Servel war plant at Evansville, Ind., while 'wait- ing word from her husband, Ma- jor William H. Thomas, captdred at Bataan and believed held in the Philippines. E V E R Y B O D Y 0 U T, F O L K S !-- Hatless congressmen, along with visitors to the nation's ' capitol, leave for shelters in nearby buildings as Washington undergoes an air raid drill. SIGNS OF THE TIMES: Dramatic Season Calls First Production Halt in 14 Years e The Ann Arbor Dramatic Season, an organization designed to bring Broadway productions to the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, has called a halt to activities for the first time in 14 years, Daniel L. Quirk, Jr., chair- man of the committee, announced yesterday. In commenting on the closing, of the organization Quirk said, "After careful consideration of current pro- duction problems, the Ann Arbor Dramatic Season committee has re- luctantly concluded to cancel the Dramatic Season for this year. The complications brought on by the war situation,-the adjustment of the University calendar, the difficulties of casting actors, railroading from New York or California, as well as local problems of transportation and housing,-have made this resolution seem expedient at the present time." "It is the hope of the committee that the Season, which has become well established in Ann Arbor and vicinity for the past 14 years, may be resumed at an early date," he added. The members of the committee prior to the dissolution of the organi- zation were Quirk, chairman; Mrs. I. L. Sharfman, Secretary; Mrs. M. Rees Hutchins, treasurer; Dean Alice Lloyd, Dean Bursley, Niel Staebler, and Harold Golds. Most of these members are now in active war ser- vice. i C O S T A R I C A' S GIRL E N G I N E E R-carmen Vene- gas, in the U. S. to do war work for Westinghouse, inspects an electric locomotive. Miss Venegas, at 14 Latin America's first licensed woman locomotive engineer, is a Virginia Poly grad. AS LON S I N C E R S A N D A S O N C-Anne Brown, (left) Ameri- can soprano, goes over, a song withLotte Lehmann. L L A M A S- These heads in east stone by Marina, Nunez 'dd Prado. Bolivian sculptress, are exhibits at the Latin-Amtrican^ show of the Society of the Four. Arts at Palm Beach, Fla., which also ,.includes works in water color and oil.', DONIT let that 'PURPLE HEART' FOR F0RTRESS--Aproud member of the crew points to the "Pur- ple Iieart" decoratin 3wbiciI crewmen have bestowed upon this Flying Fortress based somewhere in Australia. Other symbols indicate the plane had been on 10 bombing missions and had sunk two enemy vessels, in addition to bringing down five Japanese float planes and two Zeros. "gremlin" kid onul "Gremlins" are strange little fellows who get airplanes all out of kilter and worry our fliers. Sometimes those "gremlins" bother others, too. When you're telephoning, for instance, they'll urge you to talk a long while, and to use Long Distance a lot. ive to the I I