'ON SECOND THOUGHT) See Page 2 Li 41itta *1 'LIGHTU SNOW OT OCLD DIME DAILY ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, JANUARY 21, 1946 GIVE ALL YOU CAN Steelworkers trike Involves 750000 DeGaulle Quits After Dispute With Cabinet Leftists Demand Cut In Budget for Army By The Associated Press PARIS, Jan. 20-Gen. Charles De- Gaulle resigned tonight as interim President of France in a dispute with left wing cabinet members over the size of his nation's armed forces. One source said that "While D Gaulle's decision is described as ir- revocable, it might not be that in eight days," and predicted the crisis would end "in the formation of a new De Gaulle' government." Communists and Socialists had de- manded an additional 20 per cent cut in the budget for France's army. De Gaulle, France's first elected Chief of State in five years, stepped down after 48 hours of conferences with party leaders. "International Situation" President De Gaulle strode ab- ruptly from a turbulent cabinet ses- sion early in the day. A well-in- formed source said proposals to re- duce the army budget were opposed by De Gaulle "because of the inter- national situation." The cabinet session followed re- peated newspaper attacks on national defense expenditures and on the ad- ministration of Minister of the Armies Armand Michelet, a member of the MRP. The situation became tense yesterday, and some well-in- formed persons were considering the possibility that a Communist-Social- ist government might be formed, headed by a radical Socialist. Ed- ouard Herriot, pre-war premier, is leader of the radical Socialists. Take-It-Or-Leave-It De Gaulle was reported to have stated his position to the cabinet bluntly, on a take-it-or-leave-it basis, and then to have left the meeting before it was concluded. The issues at stake were not made clear immediately, either by De Gaulle or by his coalition cabinet, which was born in the crisis in No- vember. It is believed that the dis- pute is a development of the New Year's day crisis over the Army budget in which the Socialists took the lead in cutting expenditures. Francs "Camouflaged" During the past few days several' Paris newspapers have charged that billions of francs had been "Camo- fiaged" in the budget for the Army. The newspaper Liberation said yes- terday that "If one examines the budget closely one finds this: to the 125,000,000,000 francs (official budget figure) have been added some 30 bil- lions under the heading 'equipment and reconstruction.'" De Gaulle is reported to have the firm support of Armies Minister Michelet, Cagers To Face Indiana Quintet Revenge Planned for Earlier Hoosier Upset Michigan's basketball team will be out for its second consecutive victory' and revenge for the 67-58 overtime defeat it took at the hands of the Hoosiers early in the season, when it meets Indiana today on their home court in Bloomington. The Wolverines also have an eye on bettering their .500 mark turned in in Conference play. Michigan has victories over Chicago, Illinois, and Northwestern offset by defeats by Ohio State, Northwestern and In- diana. The Hoosier five has had an up and down season since they defeated the Maize and Blue in the Big Ten opener for both teams in December. They have taken the measure of Iowa, the pre-season favorite to cop the Con- ference basketball title, and last Sat- urday night gave the highly touted Ohio State quintet their first defeat of the current season by the score (f 44-39. Indiana also has a victory over Chicago. On the other side of the ledger Indiana has lost to Minnesota and Purdue. Indiana's upset over the Buckeyes was accomplished without the serv- Catmpus POliO Drive Nears End[, * * *~ * * '- *~ Election Draws Large Turnout n iGermany Nonpartisans Lea Leftwing Socialists By The Associated Press FRANKFURT, Germany, Jan. 20 -Germans voted today in their first free election in 13 years with an en- thusiasm stimulated more by the nov- etly of the return of the secert ballot than by the politics involved. First returns indicated clearly that the turnout exceeded predictions with BULLETIN TOKYO, Jan. 21 -(P)- General MacArthur today took over 394 Jap- anese aircraft plants, army and navy arsenals and war laboratories in a sweeping directive designed to preserve them intact for probable shipment as reparations to the na- tions Nippon once set out to con- quer. as many as 90 per cent of the regis- tered voters casting ballots in some villages. With no major issues, the election was more of a popularity contest than a political function. Returns from 95 gemeinde (towns and villages) in Ashfeld, the first landkreid to com- plete the count, showed unsponsored candidates leading with 8,925 votes, with left-wing Socialists getting 7,- 430 and Communists 389. Col. James R. Newman, director of the military government for great- er Hesse, expressed satisfaction at the heavy vote, declaring "I tpink- this should prove to the world that democracy has not been completely smothered by years of Nazi oppres- sion." Nazis were known in several in- stances to have attempted to sabo- tage the elections by persuading qualified voters to stay away from the polls. The heavy vote showed, how- ever, that those attempts failed in general. Left-wing Party Calls for Honest Gree'k Balloting ATHENS, Jan. 20 - (/P) - Prime Minister Themistokles Sophoulis has agreed with right and center party leaders to hold Greek general elec- tions March 31, but the extreme left wing adopted a resolution today charging the governmnt had not cleared the way for honest balloting. About 150,000 left-wing followers, massed in an Athens stadium, pro- tested that the government had not restored order necessary for the elec- tions and objected to "intervention of foreign reactionaries who strengthen and support corrupt Greek political factions." No country was named specifically, but left wing spokesmen recently have decried British influ- ence in Greece. Terrorists Kill Ten in Palestine JERUSALEM, Jan. 20--(P)-Ter- rorist violence caused at least 10 cas- ualties in the Palestine coastal area,' it was reported tonight. The outbreak, an attack on the Givat Olga Coast Guard Station between Tel Aviv and Haifa, followed bombings yesterday in Jerusalem. Part of a coast guard tower was reported destroyed by an explosion. The report could not be confirmed officially. Givat Olga, out 60 miles northwest of Jerusalem, was among the coast guard stations north of Tel Aviv at- tacked last Nov. 24, following appre- hension of the Greek steamer Deme- trois with 200 illegal immigrants aboard. Strong military and police parties nnf rr ,,1 r r+fl'.tTin .Tflrc1ii L' m f- -Daily Photo by Marg Elmer INFANTILE STRUCK-Miss Marion Stafford in 1944. her hands in weaving, after having spent most of the p you contribute will stay in Waslitenaw county to hel all polio victims. Now a patient at University hospital she is able to use ast 16 months in an iron lun. Half of the money which p defray the extensive and costly care which is given to AN EF)ITORlA I: o6 on ireit Ired oF(iCes March, march, march the dimes are marching. So what, you ask. Maybe you're getting sick of all these drives, drives, drives. Oughta put a stop to them. But wait- Know what happens to your (lime? Your dime becomes ten little centinals. Ten little centinals that will do a little more to ease the suffering of polio victims. And don't think they don't suffer. The physical and mental torture accompanying infantile paralysis makes it one of the most dreaded of all diseases. And an iron lung is no mink coat.i So give and give generously to the infantile paralysis fund. Your purchase of today'si Dime Daily has helped a lot. Give a dime daily during the rest of the drive and you will be help- ing even more. just as the United Nations are the sentinalsj guarding world peace. so your dimes are the centinals on guard against disease. -By Ray Dixon Auto Workers Will Resume Wage Parleys ,TaIT ?,0, J1. A) i) The CH-) uited Auto Wo mkcr its indus''y' wide wage iudeands pared to 191/, cents an hour, will resune negotia- tions with two of the autonotive big three this week in an atmosphere clouded by the steel strike. Word that glass-hungry produc- tion lines might be fed in the near future after a three-months strike in that industry failed to offset the gloom that followed certain knowl- edge of a steel walkout. Only the Ford Motor Co. produces its own steel and a protracted strike would affect even that firm. The UAW-CIO has scheduled a (1:30 p.m.) Monday meeting with Ford, and a renewal of long-dormant negotiations with the Chrysler Corp. for (2 p.m.) Wednesday. The third of the auto triumvirate, strikebound General Motors Corp., is not listed on the bargaining agenda.I General Motors, idle for nearly two months, has been given until mid- night Monday to accept a UAW-CIO offer to settle for a 192 cent an hour raise recommended by a presidential fact-finding board. Otherwise, the im inn cnid +l-,a ,,no andpmnan rirn(V! Dr. Colby Talks On World Folk' Music at Center TlW(rv ating li-r talk on "Folk Musir, of the World" with her own record- ings, Dr. Martha G. Colby last eve- ning spoke at the weekly Sunday eve- ning program of the International Center. Dr. Colby, associate professor of psychology, has traveled throughout Lbe world in pursuance of her hobby of collecting authentic folk music of every civilized, and sometimes not so civilized, people. She has often used such rustic means of transportation ds camel-back, elephant-back, and donkey-back to reach some of the out of the way places that "I would have found it impossible to reach other-. wise." "Although folk music is probably the most permanent type of music in the world," Prof. Colby declared, "it is, nevertheless, rapidly disap- pearing through adulteration and pol- lution with the other more tempor- ary types of music of the more im- mediate past and present." Folk music is characterized, most commonly, by two features, Dr. Colby points out. First, it is music of the ! onnIp a ~fnPIaIvi~r iinrrfrnm t1ha1 Care Provided ByDime Drive One of the patients at the Uni- versity Hospital whose care is pro- vided for through the annual March of Dimes Campaign is Miss Marion Stafford, 20 year old polio victim. When stricken with polio in 1944, Miss Stafford was confined to her re- spirator all the time, but she uses it only three or four hours in each 24 hour period. She has also recovered use of her hands, to a partial extent. At the time she contracted the dis- ease, Miss Stafford was living in Ann Arbor. It was shortly after her graduation from the Ann Arbor Scc- retarial School, and she was sharing an apartment with f a girl friend and working for the Army Air Forces at Willow Run. "A busy day is a less lonely day," Miss Stafford said when relating h bow she spends her ti n "First lthere is breakfast at 7 a.mn. and the routine morning schedule before going to the physiotherapy room for treatment," she said. At the treatment room, Miss stafford ex- ercises and is given r- ,cle mas- sage and reeducatien. "The thrill of being able to iove my hamds Ifor (lie first thin~e wells wonderful, she stated, "In the aterinoon, I work in the occupational therapy room where I've worked with clay, weavinglooms,ileather, and other materials." TJhis work and exer- cisc helps to strengthen weak mus- cles, as well as furnish recreation for patients, "So with studying and readng', visiting friends in the corridor in my wheel chair, and writing letters," she said, "the day is over before I know it." Miss Stitffor said that her elan is to keep three things ahead to be done. "I try to have either a book or a piece of sewing or something else that will keep me occupied," she said, "so that I'll always have something to do." Poliomyelit is Foundation Medical Director Dies CHICAGO, Jan. 20-(I)-Dr. Don W. Gundakunst, former Michigan Health Commissioner, died of a heart attack early Sunday in his hotel here. He was 51 years old. Coeds To Sell Dime Dailiesv For Campaign "Let Your Quarte Be Their Supporter" The local March of Dimes cam- paign, being carried on throughoutt the United States under the direc- tion of the National Foundation of Infantile Paralysis, is moving into its; eighth day with the edition of the special dime Daily., While the minimum price of the paper is a dime, George Spaulding, chairman of the men's committee On campus, said, "It is hoped that those purchasing The Daily will give all that they possibly can so that this will be the most success- ful drive ever sponsored by the University." Jean Gaffney, head of the women's committee, stated that she hoped that all would remember the motto, "Let your quarter be their supporter," when the purchaser dropped his change in the bucket. More than 400 boxes, which have been distributed throughout the cam- pus - and the stores of local mer- chants, will be collected Tuesday and Wednesday, the closing day of thei University drive. It has been re- quested that all student and faculty members make their contributions by then so that they may be included in the campus donation. The national drive will extend through Jan. 31. Mayor William Brown of Ann Arbor in an interview said, "I am heartily in favor of the March of SDiies campaign. I think that everyone should contribute as lib- wally -a.s .they can-.not oly with.- dimes but with dollars. The drive should be supported by the people downtown as well as by the campus group. I can not think of a wor- thier cause." A wishing well has been con- structed by Robert Schoenfield, Rich- ard Courtright and Arthur DerDerian and placed at the Arcade on Sate Street to receive dimes to add to the campus contribution. The National Foundation pledges that no victim of infantile paralysis in the country shall go untreated for lack of funds, regardless of age, race, creed or color. Foundation chapters spread throughout the nation stand ready to give aid, advice and serv- ice in nearly all of the 3,070 coun- ties of the nation. These chapters cooperate with public health offi- cials and hospitals, provide funds for needy poliomyelitis patients, for orthopedic equipment, and for doc- tors, nurses and physical therap- ists trained in modern techniues of treatment. In order to raise as much as possi- ble for those who have been afflicted by polio, plans have been formulated for sports events in every state and country in addition to the local drives. IlinCt Schools FLINT, Mich., Jan. 20-i(P)-CIO maintenance workers today unani- mously approved a one-week truce that will permit reopening Monday of this city's 43 strikebound public schools. An estimated 27,000 pupils are ex- pected to return to classrooms that have been empty since picketing forced all but one school to close last week. In addition, approximately 1,200 teachers and other school employes are free to return to their jobs. The 190 strikers, members of the CIO's state, county and municipal workers okeyed the return-to-work- for the limited period during which a. permanent settlement of the dis- pute will be sought. Conciliator Robert Lomasney of the State Labor Mediation Board has suggested that the Flint Board of Education grant a 10 cent hourly ,wage increase demanded by the un- ion. 23,000 Steel Workers Idle Iit Michigant DETROIT, Jan. 20-(I/P)-An esti- mated 23,000 employes in 70 Michi- gan steel plants in district 29, United Mine Workers (CIO) are expected to be idle Monday as a result of the nationwide walkout. All of Lower Michigan in district 29 which also includes a small seg- ment of Northern Ohio. Emnloyes at Great Lakes Steel Corp. in Detroit have been outsince they ";jumped the gun" Friday night. Five other Detroit plants are expected out at midnight tonight. The remainder of the plants in the district will he closed by the first day- time shift Monday, according to dis- trict director Thomas Shane. rrile ~jaidts range in size from 7,118 crnployes at Great Lakes to a small Detroit plant with four union em- ployes. 'here are 9 plants in the Detroit- Toledo-Monroe area; five in Bay City-Saginaw; and nine in Kalama- zoo-Jackson-Niles. Wiler Will Discuss Iussian Cooperation Choosing as his topic "Russia and the West: Conflict or Co-operation" William Henry Chamberlin will de- liver an address at 8:00 p.m. today in Kellogg Auditorium. Mr. Chamberlin was for 12 years Christian Science Monitor corres- pondent in Russia and the Far East. During his years in Russia, he inter- viewed such famous Russian leaders as President Kalinin, Leon Trotsky, Premier Rykov, and former Commis- sioner Chicherin. He is also the au- thor of "America, Partner in World Rule." At the outbreak of World War II, Mr. Chamberlin was sent to France, where he served as correspondent un- UTS. Steel Plants Close In 30 States I n tts try Refuses President's Figure "y '''e Associated Press P TTSBURGH, Jan. 21-The great- est single strike in the nation's his- tory, a walkout of the CIO steel work- ers for higher pay, began early today a moment after midnight. From coast to coast workers at mills, fabricating works, ore mines and some aluminum plants quit their jobs. The union said the idle would total 750,000. The industry had slowed down for days in anticipation, with some plants closing down before- hand. Climaxes Negotiations The strike, threatening the nation's postwar productive effort, climaxed months of fruitless negotiations in Mea trike °... WASHINGTON, Jan. ?4 --P)-- The possibility of givernment seiz- ures in the strike-hit meat pack- ing industry within 24 to 48 hours was raised in high administration quarters tonight. which President Truman had recently tried without avail to act as peace- maker. Philip Murray, president of the steelworkers and the CIO, drove from Washington to take over personal di- rection of the giant demonstration for his wage demands. He had no comment but planned a radio address (ABC) to the nation Monday night at 10:30 l,.m., (EST). Meeting Planned The union's 21-man negotiating committee for the United States Steel Corporationi, which announced all its operations had closed down hours ahead of the midnight deadline, ar- ranged to meet with Murray Monday morning. Both sides dug in for what they apparently expected will be a long deadlock. n. I I i I