THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRMAV. XAW- %- .t Hr E,... +...a Jw .a 1.1 1 V J. Y 1 \ dl .ss. ..4a 1a .. .. WYl1Z :aj . A j ., ug !i LEGISIATIVE MESSA GIM. Cov, Kelly Outines Goals ASSOCIATED PRESS . By The Associated Press LANSING, Jan. 4.-Governor Kelly today outlined to the legislature goals he hopes to attain through enactment of laws in his next two years in office, but left for the future disclosure of the heart of his pro- gram. His message, which he read for 75 minutes to -the house and senate in joint session, drew from several leg- islative leaders statements that they considered the legislature would have to return in a special session in 1946 if even most of Kelly's program is to become law. To Benefit Hospitals The document featured requests that funds be provided for immediate relief of overcrowding in state hos- pitals, including expansion of exist- ing facilities and plans for construc- tion of a new hospital in Wayne County, for a liberalization of state grants to the needy, and a $30,000,- 000 addition to the post-war state building construction program. Kelly left to future messages dis- closure of what he will ask of the legislature in the form of tax law revision, liquor law reform, appro- priations for the public schools and sinpication of the formula for dis- tributing the money, expansion of veterans' care programs and some other items, all of which await re- ports by study groups. Tourist Industry He described the tourist industry as a prop to help the state in the expected post-war depression when industry suspends to re-tool for civ- ilian production, and declared this great industry can be "trebled" with proper . encouragement from the state. He endorsed creation of a tourist council to integrate promo- tional activity. Kelly asked the legislature to raise average old age assistance grants' from $29.78 a month to $35; average grant for aid to dependent children from $60.10 per family to $71 a month; and to make an unspecified increase in aid to the blind grants, plus an expanded program of train- ing sightless persons for gainful em- ployment. Over-Crowded Conditions Proposing immediate steps to re- lieve over-crowded conditions in state mental hospitals, which now have no room to receive several hun- dred patients in need of care, Kelly High lights On Ca~mpus. Father Bernard Kearns, on leave from the Navy, will attend the party to be held by the Newman Club of St. Mary's Chapel from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. today in the Newman Club Rooms for student members and servicemen. Father Kearns, previously assis- tant at the Chapel, left last February to become a chaplain in the Navy. He has been stationed in California. An open house from 9 p.m. to mid- night will be the regular program tomorrow in the club rooms. The Inter-Cooperative Council will sponsor a dinner party at 6:30 p.m. today at the Robert Owens House, 1017 Oakland. Prof. Norman E. Nels.n of the W ar Contract Englishbdepartment will discuss W~r G o tr ctthe subject of "Cooperatives- Their Role in Past, Present and Course Begins Future" at 8 p.m. This will be follbwed by folk dancing and j nuary,22 games. Michigan Youth for Democratic .yAction invites veterans, students Offered by Business and servicemen to a get-together in Administration School the Women's Athletic Building from 7 to 10 p.m. Sunday. A War Contract Settlement Course. This party will enable students, sponsored by the School of Business veterans and servicemen to become Administration, is scheduled to be- acquainted, Belle Rosenthal, presi- gin on Mon., Jan.. 22, in Rackham dent, explained. Entertainment and Memorial Building, in Detroit, Prof. refreshments will be provided. Merwin H. Waterman, Secretary of the School, announced yesterday. ada me W ei The three-day course, limited pri- marily to employees of war contract- ors, emphasizes the following topics: To Speak Here preparing claims, disposing of ter- mination inventories, removing sur- plus properties, interim financing and, D ughter of Mandarin dealings between prime and subcon- is Chinese Lawyer tractors. Lt. Col. Michael L. Looney, of the Madame Wei Tao-ming, wife of Termination Division of J. A. G.; the Chinese Ambassador to the Unit- Prof. Waterman and Prof. E. H. Gault ed States, will lecture at 8:30 p. m. of the business administration school; Thursday in Hill Auditorium, under Prof. J. W. Ruswinckel of Michigan the auspices of the Oratorical Asso- State College and members of the ciation. armed services compose the faculty. Madame Wei, first woman lawyerj Bendix Aviation Corporation, Bohn in Shanghai, was nominated in the Aluminum and Brass Corporation, '20's as president of the Shanghai Chrysler Corporation, Eaton Manu- District Court. She served as a mem- facturing Co., Nash-Kelvinator Cor- ber of the Provincial Government of poration, and Packard Motor Car Co. Kiangsu, as Chinese envoy extra- are some of the 70-odd Detroit com- ordinary to France, as a member of panies whose representatives have at- the Executive Yuan, and as a member tended the course in the past. of the commission for the draft of Blaw-Knox Company, Martin Fer- China's Civil Code. ry, Ohio, sent a Priorities Director, Dr Wei Made Ambassador a Contract Claims Analyst, an Ad- In 1941 her husband was appoint- ministrative Advisor and a Contract ed Ambassador to France and in Claims Analyst to attend the course. August of that year he and Madame Ford Motor Company, Dearborn, Wei arrived in Washington enroute the Chief Clerk of their Contract to Paris. They remained in Wash- Termination Division. The Evans- ington and had been living in Wash- ville, Indiana, division of Republic ington for several months when Dr.' Aviation sent two representatives to Wei was appointed China's new Am-! take the course. bassador to this country. While attending in Paris Dr. Wei Briggs Manufacturing Co., Detroit, met his future wife, Suomay Tcheng, sent twelve men to take the course; who was taking her degree of doctor Firestone Tire and Rubber Co., Ak- of law there. Although a daughter ron, Ohio, and General Motors Cor- of a Chinese mandarin of the Man- poration, Milford, Detroit and Lan- chu dynasty she had participated in sing sent six each; and Lima Loco- the Chinese Revolution of 1911 and motive Works, Inc., Lima, Ohio, sent had already plead China's case in the five. Shantung problem in the United recommended appropriations for ex- pansion of the Pontiac State Hos- pital, Caro State Hospital and Cold- water Home and Training School, in addition to a request for forwarding plans for construction of a state hos- pital for insane in Wayne County. Deficiencies in state contributions to teacher, non-teaching school'm- ploye, and state employe pension funds should be "reduced," he said, urging the legislature also to provide a $1,000,000 fund for state participa- tion in expected "bargain sale" of federal surplus.war property. State Planning Laws Strengthening of state planning laws to allow regional planning of slum clearance and other projects; addition of $30,000,000 to the five- year post-war state building con- struction program to bring it up to $90,000,000; a broad program of state park improvement, preparation of land use and forest surveys were among other points he requested. The Governor cautioned lawmak- ers that when his tax program is submitted, they should approach it "with open minds, seeking t find solutions that will be best for all the pecple, and not measure our judg- ments with what is best for just part of the people." Kelly asked for "serious considera- tior" of demands of the University of Michigan and Michigan State Col lege for increases in their appropria- tions, and recommended appropria- tion of an additional $2,500,000 for financing local post-war planning projects. UAW To Vote On No-Strike Referendum DETROIT, Jan. 4-()-Ballots for votes of members of the United Auto- mobile Workers (CIO) now in the armed forces on revocation of the "no-strike" pledge were in the mails today, the first of some 1,200,000 bal- lots to be sent to UAW-CIO members in a nation-wide referendum. The union approved the referen- dum at its national convention in Grand Rapids, Mich., last September, when it heard demands for rescinding the pledge. Results of the vote are not ex- pected to be determined until March. Union members in the armed forces have until Feb. 28 to return their bal- lots, while ballots from civilian rem- bers of the union must be mailed for return by Feb. 17. International officers of the union have announced they favored retain- ing the no-strike pledge in war plants. Opposition to the pledge is headed by the UAW rank-and-file steering committee, a group headed by Larry Yost, chairman of the Ford Local 600 Aircraft Union. Soldier Workers 1 Offered UA W Crds DETROIT, Jan. 4-()-The Unit- ed Automobile Workers (CIO) Union today offered honorary membership to any soldier furloughed by the Army to work in war plants with which the union has contracts. Announcing the offer, R. J. Thom- as, President of the International UJAW-CIO said the memberships would continue for the duration of the soldiers' employment in the plants. The furloughed soldiers he said, would not be required to pay dues or initiation fees but would receive all privileges of the union and all benefits of union contracts. The membership cards issued to them are to be similar to those given UAW- CIO members in the armed forces. ei Society To Hold! .4 S U P P L I E S F 0 R T H E P A C I F I C F R O N T - Carefully paclkaged to guard against breakage, supplies for the far-flung Pacific front are loaded aboard a Naval Air Transport Service plane for dispatch to fighting zones by air. PddUwmTUREM E S, lm s VERSATILE- This all- around coat, designed for either rain or shine, is made of lustrous: ,elan - treated gabardine with satin side out, in black, navy or natural color. ST E A K S F R OM S W O R D F IS H -- Meat shortages in New York City made Fulton fish " market even busier than usual. Here three-workers saw- up a 329-pound swordfish into steaks. Army and Navy officers have attended the course in the past. also Touchy Issues Introduced by New State Bills LANSING, Jan. 4-(P1)-Two sure- fire controversies were broached in the legislature today as bills to re- open the "fast vs. slow" time ques- tion and to reduce small loan inter- est rates went into the hoppers. Senator Elmer R. Porter, Bliss- field Republican, introduced a bill to repeal the "local option" provi- sion of the war time statue. He would force the entire state to fol- low Central War (slow) Time. Cities now have the privilege of following Eastern War (fast) time if they wish. Asserting fast time has not aided the war effort as its sponsors con- tended, Porter said "Wayne county is a sort of island in a midwestern sea of slow time. All of Ohio and States. Author of Many Books She is the author of many books, the most outstanding being "The Constitutional Movement in China" and "A Girl From China." The University of Michigan was recently made one of the four col- leges in this country to receive a $1,000 scholarship for Chinese stu- dents, the presentation being made through Dr. Wei. Auditor General Retains Shepler LANSING, Jan. 4-to)-John D. Morrison, new Auditor General, said today that Richard C. Shepler, one of his assistants, who for months has been a storm center at the Liquor Control Commission as an "outside" accountant criticizing publicly its procedures, will remain at this job. Morrison said Shepler's assignment as the auditor general department's auditor of Liquor Commission books and records, and observer of its ad- ministration, would be continued "be- I ALLEN IN GYM WORKOUT -- Comedian Fred Al- len (right), back from making a movie in Hollywood, runs a lap with Mike Pedbereznak as the latter completed his 21,000th mile . in 21 years at the West Side Y.M.C.A., New York City./- ill d 111(1 e(1144 The Latin-American Society will sponsor a semi-formal dance to be held from 8:30 p. m. to midnight tomorrow at the Rackham Building. The theme of the dance will be the commemoration of the "Dia de Reyes," a traditional Spanish festi- val. On this day the children receive gifts from the Three Wise Men of the Orient, rather than on Christmas, as according to American custom. Spanish music will be featured, and Latin-American students and their friends are invited, Natalie Bel- lei;, chairman of the social commit- tee, announced. Farm Exemptions To Be Reviewed LANSING, Jan. 4-State Selective Service headquarters today directed all local draft boards to review the deferments of all farm workers be- tween the ages of 18 and 26, follow- j B L O OD S H I PM ENTT--Anassistant in the blood bank at Kalamazoo, Mich., checks a shipment of blood donations in a Church refrigerated container, used to keep temperature constant en route to laboratory where plasma is made.. _, V r. t r , .