WAR TRANSPORT EXPERIMENTS See page :1 4bp A6F 'Ah- ldh 411 t t Ilan Amko r 471 a tiiq COLDER, WITH SNOW FLURRIES VOL. LVI, No. 50 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JANUARY 13, 1946 President'slnterventionHaltsSteelSl PRICE FIVE CENTS rike Vets Elect Akers Group Chairman; VORa lyPlanned Campus March of Dimes Drive Begins State Meeting Adopts 6 Points An all-campus Rally, sponsored by the Veterans International Student Exchange Committee of the VO, will be held 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the In- ternational Center to acquaint stu-; dents and veterans on campus with the need for greater student exchange and to present the plans of the com- mittee. Foreign speakers, discussing stut-. dent problems existing in their na- tive countries will include Enrique Rogers of Chile and Eric S. W. Cheo, the secretary and depart- mental head of the Dental College of the West China Union, who will tell how organized groups of Uni- versity students served during the war as emergency medical corps to help the bombed civilian population of China. A nation-wide program aiming at international exchange of undergrad- uate students and government sup- port of the students while in a for- eign country is the purpose of the Veterans International Student Ex- change Committee. "Our program is concerned with creating public opinion on the part of student organization and social- minded groups in an effort to have Congress pass legislation providing miass exchange of undergraduate students," Homer E. Underwood, director of the Executive Commit- tee said. Letters explaining the program and' Srequesting support have been-sent-to universities throughott the country and many have replied in favor of such a movement. Vets Approve Exchange lan The Veterans International Stu- dent Exchange Committee went on record yesterday as favoring pro- posed legislation introduced by Sena- tor William Fulbright (Dem-Ark) de- signed to expedite the inauguration and operation of a system of foreign student exchanges. Announcement of the adoption of the resolution by this veterans com- mittee affiliated with VO was made by Homer C. Underwood, director of the VO Executive Committee. Senator Fulbright's measure would give the state department use of gov- ernment funds, to dispatch and maintain American students at for- eign universities., U. S. Attitude Blamed by Ike TORONTO, Ont., Jan. 12-(P)- The wave of "bring them home" pub- lic opinion in the United States is blinding American occupation troops to the importance of the allies "un- finished task" in Germany and Ja- pan, General Dwight D. Eisenhower told a news conference today. Blaming this condition for much of the current unrest in the Euro- pean and Pacific theaters, the for- mer supreme allied commander in Europe said: "This clamor to bring the boys home gets back to the soldier and has a very definite influence on his atti- tude and morale. He thinks 'Well, if everyone says bring us on home we must not have much to do over here.' "It's extremely difficult for a com- manding officer-in the face of this kind of thing-to convince the men of the real importance of their as- signment. Strikers To Vote On Wage Increase A compromise wage solution to the Vets To Discuss Exchange Need William Akers, president of the Veterans Organization yesterday was named chairman of the newly-formed Michigan Student Veterans at that group's first conference, held in De- troit at Wayne University's Macken- zie Unio. Representatives from more than a dozen universities and colleges in Michigan attended the meeting. Ul- timately, the group will represent approximately 70 state higher edu- cational institutions at which World War veterans are enrolled. Draws 6 Point Program The Student Veterans drew up a six-point program which will be sub- mitted to Gov. Kelly next week.! It includes: (1) Requesting the State to dis- card veterans bonus plans as a means of allocating Michigan's $50,000,000 veteran reserve fund. ,(2) A recommendation that the fund be used to supplement the veteran's GI Bill income and spent for unem- ployment compensation to veterans. (3) A recommendation that the State provide colleges and universities with funds which would be used for loans to breach the gap between en- rollment and receipt of federal funds. Requests Housing (4) Requesting the State to assist municipalities in the immediate con- struction of low-cost housing. 5) A request that the State gp- ply funds for emergency housing. (6) An appeal to the State to support federal price control legisla- tion and help obtain priorities for low-cost veterans' housing. Akers said that these resolutions would be presented to the Young Vet- erans Emergency Conference to be held Jan. 20 in Detroit. Next meeting of the Student Vet- erans will be held in Ann Arbor early in March he added. Mrs. Rob eson Will Speak Here Lecturer To Discuss Negro, World Affairs "The Negro, and the Pattern of World Affairs" will be the topic of Mrs. Paul Robeson at 8:30 p.m. Wed- nesday in Hill Auditorium. Lecturer on race relations and other aspects of democracy, she is the wife of Paul Robeson, interna- tionally-known Negro singer. Mrs. Robeson received her B.S. de- greee in chemistry from Columbia University. Following some years as surgical technician and chemist at the Presbyterian Hospital in New York City, she took her Ph.D. degree in anthropology. Author of "Paul Robeson, Negro," and "African Journey", she depicts the oppressive yoke under which the millions of black men live. During the war, Mrs. Robeson was an active worker in the Red Cross Motor Corps. The London School of Economics, London University, the University of Chicago and Hartford Seminary Founduation are among the schools at which the noted lecturer has studied. The thirteenth annual March of ' Dimes campaign, organized to give aid to those afflicted with infantile paralysis, will open on campus to- morrow and extend through Jan. 23. The national campaign, under the sponsorship of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, is carried on in memory of the late President Roosevelt, who did so much in organizing the group. Ab- ner E. Lamed of Detroit has been named Michigan State Chairman. Miss Virginia Schurnaker is head of the Washtenaw County committee. Lamed, in accepting the March of Dimes chairmanship, said, "In our state alone during the first nine months of this year, 140 cases of in- fantile paralysis were reported. For- tunately, through the generous con- tributions of the American people to the March of Dimes, it is possible for the fight against this disease to be continually strenthened and intensi- fied."' It was announced by Jean Gaff- ney, head of the women's commit- tee on campus, that boxes would be placed by Janet Yound in all dorm- Students Asked To Urge Action On FEPC Bills A campus drive urging students to write to their congressmen regarding current Federal Employment Prac- tices legislation will take place to- morrow and Tuesday under the spon- sorship of the Liberal Action Com- mittee. Booths will be set up at various points around the campus and writ- ing materials will be furnished to anyone requesting them. There will also be mimeographed letters neces- sitating only a signature for per- sons not having time to write their own and telegram blanks will be available. Petitions to the Presi- dent concerning current legislation will also be at the booths. "At the present time, two bills are before Congress which would make the FEPC permanent, would grant it , more appropriation and would givef it more judicial backing," Pat Kelley,E chairman of the drive, stated in the chairman of the drive stated. "In the Senate the bill is about to be intro- duced and Michigan Senators Van-' denburg and Ferguson are said to favor it. However, southern Senators are opposed to it and Senator Taft of' Ohio, the only northern mid-west' Senator, is also against it", she said. "However, in the House," she continued, "the bill has been pigeon holed by the Rules Committee who refused to put the proposed legis- lation on the calendar. A petition by 218 representatives is necessary to bring the bill on the floor of the House. So far 50 Republicans and 110 Democrats have signed. Mich- igan representatives who have not signed are Republicans Mitchner, Hoffman, Jonkman, Blackney, Wol- cott, Crawford, Woodruff, Bradley, and Dondero. Students are urged by the Liberal Action Committee to request their congressman to sign." An organizational meeting of the Association of University of Mich- igan Scientists will be held at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Rackham Amphitheatre. All faculty and graduate student scientists are urged to attend. ABNER LARNEL Heads State Mf Of Dimes Comm itories, league and soro Boxes for the fraternity men's dormitories will uted by George Spaul man of the men's corm by his assistant, Andrei Tags will be placed or the dime boxes, giving for their return at the Snbscriptic For Ensian "Subscriptions for Michiganensians which for distribution in June in the library and the Arch and Wednesday in and the League", Jean announced yesterday. The supply of Ensians ited. "Last year 30U peo appointed and .,unable copy of the yearbook,' said, "and for this rea evereyone to buy their early if they want to be copy.-" This year's annual is t ion of the Ensian. The that there will be addit shots and a completely devoted to features o campus. Another new ac book will be cartoons. In accordance with policy, payment must be when purchasing the The price is $4.75. UNO Secp Council Se LONDON, Jan. 12, (P) Security Council of the tions Organization, inve power to invoke arm preservation of the peac today by the general ass overrode Soviet propos pone election of six no members. In a series of secret assembly elected Austral Poland to two-year tern powerful 11-member named the Netherlandt Mexico to one-year ter T omorrow G:drive. Boxes for the women's resi- S.. dences will be distributed at the house presidents' meeting of dorms and league houses and at Panhel meeting to be held Tuesday in the League. Boxes which will be placed in all University offices tomorrow will be distributed by Barbara Raymer. Alice Miller is in charge of securing coeds to make collections in the lo- cal campus theatres and selling a special dime edition of The Daily Jan. 21. The University committee, headed by Miss Ethel A. McCormick, social director of the League, is asking that all faculty members mail their dona- tions to the League in care of the So- cial Director's office. This request is being made because of the difficulty in contacting the faculty members in- dividually. These c ontributions should be mailed soon so that they will be received before the closing date of the University drive. arch ttee Judith Waller ity houses.BC W ill 7houses and be distrib- ding, chair- 68 ak n mittees, and w Poledor. a the back of Authority To Discuss information Preparation for Radio end of the Miss Judith Waller, director of public service for the National Broad- )Ins casting Co., will speak on "Careers in Radio" at the speech assembly 3 p.m. Tuesday in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Basing her talk on her own wide experience in the field of radio, Miss Waller will discuss preparation for radio careers in numerous types of the 1945-46 positions. will be ready Besides her general background in will be sold advertising and all branches of radio, Engineering Miss Waller is noted for her leader- Angell Hall ship in educational uses of radio. She is a member of the executive commit- Pines, editor, tee of the Chicago Radio Council, which prepares and broadcasts radio will be lim- programs to the Chicago public pie were dis- schools. to obtain a Miss Waller also supervises the Miss Pines Chicago Round Table and is in son we urge charge of the programs of the Ameri- subscription can Medical Association. In addition assured of a to these positions, she holds posts on the radio committee of Hull House, he 50th edit- Chicago, and the Federal Radio Edu- cf rcation Committee. Standard time. 4-Hour Eession Announcement of the delay came at the end of a four-hour closed-door session in the executive mansion, called by the President last night when wage negotiations broke down in New York. It also followed sepa- rate meetings by the President in his offices with Philip Murray, president of the steelworkers, and Benjamin F. Fairless, president of U.S. Steel. Collective bargaining will continue next week under the supervision of the President. Murray Shows Strain Murray, showing the strain of the past few days of negotiations, an- nounced to waiting reporters that he had agreed personally to postpone the walkout of 800,000 steel workers and would come back to the White House for more conferences Wednes- day. He said he did it "at the request of the President." The President disclosed that the corporation has made an offer, pre- sumably better thant he 15-cent hourly increase proposed prior to the breakdown of negotiations on behalf of the union. Dropped to $1.56 The union's original demand was for a $2 a day increase. Murray dropped this to $1.56 yesterday, com- pared to the company's counterpro- posal of $1.30 increase. Both Murray and Fairless, as well' as Ross, declined to say what was offered today. As today's meeting began, a highly placed official told a reporter that the price of steel overshadowed all other questions involved. He said the lineup was this as the administration put on pressure to head off a walkout that could gravely affect the nation's whole economy. Mediators Not Able To Break Phone Deadlock By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Jan. 12-Federal conciliatorsdtonight were unable to break the deadlock in negotiations that might settle the nation's long distance telephone tieup. Discussions will resume at 10 a.m. EST. tomorrow. Government seiz- ure of the industry is considered pos- sible if the conference fails. Nine hours of consultations be- tween officials of the Western Elec- tric Company and of the Association of Communications EquipmentWork- ers today produced no settlement of the wage dispute. Telephone communication through manually operated switchboards has been curtailed as a result of picket lines thrown around telephone ex- changes by the equipment workers union. prize Paintings To Bfe Exhibited Work of Two Detroit Artists Will Be Shown The College of Architecture and Design will sponsor a joint exhibition by two Detroit artists, Sarkis Sar- kisian and John Pappas, beginning, Wednesday in the galleries of Rack- ham Building. Both Mr. Sarkisian and Mr. Pappas have enjoyed national fame and have several of their works, including prize-winners, in numerous public and private collections. The New York World's Fair and the San Fran- cisco Exposition exhibited some of their canvases. At present they are reperesented in various large mu- :N New Terms Proposed; Meeting To Be at Capitol Collective Bargaining Will Continue Wednesday Under Personal Supervision of Truman By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Jan. 12, - Personal intervention by President Truman brought a one-week postponement today of the nationwide steel strike scheduled for 12:01 a.m. Monday. It also produced new offers, of a nature not announced, from, both United States Steel Corporation, bellwether of the industry, and the CIO-United Steelworkers who had planned to shut down the mills in support of their demand for higher pay. Mr. Truman expressed confidence that an agreement will be reached, and the White House announced that the parties will be brought together again next Wednesday at 2 p.m., Eastern' Student Waiters State Causes of Recent Waflkout Strike Called Protest Against Discrimination In an attempt to clarify their po- sition regarding the recent waiters' strike, student employes of the Law- yers Club Dining Hall released the following statement yesterday which was the first authorized announce- ment issued by them: "In the operation of a dining hall serving from 250-300 persons twenty meals a week, there are bound to be left-over items and less choice portions of the currently prepared food. The practice has been to set aside these portions for the student employes and full- time kitchen help. "If the student employes were pay- ing a lower rate for their meals than the prevailing rate charged the reg- ular diners. there would be no com- plaintrHowever,'the student employe do pay the prevailing rate. Therefore, we felt that there was no justification for the discrimination described above. "The walkout was a protest against this discriminatory prac- * tice, prompted by the obvious sub- stitution on the Thursday evening menu. The quality of the food in the dining hall was not the issue. "The student employes have been assured that there will be no such discrimination in the future. At a meeting of the waiters Friday eve- ning, a committee of three was elect- ed to represent the group in future negotiations." The statement by the student em- ployes had reference to the spontan- eous walkout Thursday night by all but six of the 45 waiters regularly employed in the Lawyers Club Dining room. Issue was taken by the waiters when they were served roast beef for dinner while the remaining guests were given steaks. Dissatisfaction with the wage scale was also ex- pressed by some spokesmen for the waiters. No formal statement of grievances, however, was made by the waiters at the time of th walk- out. All student water :retrned t their ebs Fridar ater the had reotedly rtece ve"a a efrom the Board of Govern' r -hat they will receiv the same fod as the other guests in ice fure. Ernest Getz, headwaiter, conferred Thurs- day night with Prof. Grover C. Grismore, acting secretary-treas- urer of the Law School, and Miss M. A. Bailie, assistant director of the club, concerning the walkout. The waiters' strike is believed to be the only instance in the history of the University in which University- employed student help has pressed a wage grievance. .,, ,,. s ai reporLs tional candid new section n the entire ddition to the the Ensian made in full subscription. rity tUp ) - The vital United Na- sted with the ed force for e, was formed embly, which als to post- n-permanent ballots, the ia, Brazil and is on the all- council, and s, Egypt and ins. Weekend Roundup Of Sports, Michigan's hockey team coasted to an easy 10-3 win over Colorado Col- lege last night at Colorado Springs. Due to a two hour time difference between Ann Arbor and Colorado Springs and the overcrowding intele- graph lines due to the telephone strike, The Daily regrets that it is unable to publish any further infor- mation on the outcome of the contest in today's Daily. * * ,, Michigan's basketball team did a right about face last night and dropped a 60-41 contest to North- western. Winning their second victory in as many nights, Michigan's swimming team outscored a strong Great Lakes squad, 46-38, last night at the Lakes. COMPREHENSIVE CORRECTION COURSES: Speech Clinic Training Program Aids Vets CAMPUS EVENTS "The Speech Clinic offers persons with speech defects a comprehensive training program so that they can learn to use speech well in life situa- tions," Prof. Harlan H. Bloomer, di- rector of the clinic who returned last week from service in the Navy, said in an interview yesterday. The clinic is now conducting its nurse who suffered a serious head in- jury in India. Other groups served by the train- ing program include University stu- dents who attend classes four days a week for aid in their particular difficulties. Among this group are several veterans who stutter. Al- though they were formerly stutter- ers, their difficulties are consid- Besides this seven-fold program, the clinic holds University classes, conducts research in speech rehab- ilitation and maintains an exten- sive diagnostic service. Graduate students work in all phases of the clinic's program along with staff members. Patients are referred to the clinic from the University Hospital, state seat everyone here." Although he termed the present prog ram "comprehensive," Dr. Bloomer said that it is, nevertheless, limited because there is not adequate, convenient housing for patients. He termed making such facilities avail- able as very advisable. None of the patients live at the clinic. Jan. 15-Judith Waller will speak at 3 p.m. in the Lydia Mendels- sohn Theatre on "Careers in Ra- dio." Jan. 16-Orientation .advisors' meeting will be held at 4 p.m. in the League ballroom for all women students interested in be- coming advisors for the spring and fall terms of 1946. Jan. 16-Mrs. Paul Robeson will mpakQQ t nn11"'Thga Jgraind1,t he