SAMPLE BALLOT See Page 2 L Lwb 4aAi4 FAIR, COOL VOL. LVI, No. 109 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1946 PRICE FIVE CENTS U.S. Confirms Change In Argentine Policy--: Will Sign Defense Pact By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, April 8-The United States confirmed a change in its Latin American policy tonight by declaring it would sign a hemispheric de- fense pact with Argentina if the regime there lived up to its commitments. Previously, emphasis had been placed on denunciations of the Argentine government and refusal to sit down with it to draw the defense pact. Secretary of State Byrnes issued Governor Kelly Seeks Building Permit of CPA University Officials Approve of Program Fresh impetus toward progress in the state building program came yesterday when Governor Kelly an- nounced he would meet today in Detroit with John McGillis, district manager of the Civilian Production Administration, to seek go-ahead per- mission in the face of the federa freeze order on building. University vice-presidents Robert P Briggs and Marvin L. Niehuss, who met with Kelly in Lansing yesterday indicated that they were "pleased with the program outlined by the governor," and that they "believe it will result in expediting the Univer- sit?'s educational construction pro- gram." Building Can't Wait Kelly, according to Associated Press reports, asserted that the state build- ing program "can't wait around," and declared that "we want an an- swer from the federal government on how much we can build." Contracts for $8,175,000, he re- ported, have been let in classroom and other buildings at the University and at Michigan State College, ex- clusive of dormitories. Needs of Veterans "It's a race against time to have these facilities ready by a year from next September," Kelly declared. "The veterans so marvelously pro- vided for under the GI Bill of Rights have to have more than dormitories and a place to eat when they go to college," he said. Kelly said he would give McGillis a complete summary of the state's projects and the amount of critical material needed. "There is plenty of material if it is properly allocated," he claimed. War Department Reported Ready To Compromise WASHINGTON, April 8-('P)-In- fluential House Military Committee members today reported War De- partment willingness to compromise on a 12-month draft act extension with a four or six months ban on inductions. The Army's position was disclosed to reporters shortly after Rep. Vin- son (D, Ga.,) introduced legislation to start a $3,000,000 enlistment cam- paign and suspendinductions for six months to give it time to be tested. Earlier in the day Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower had appealed once again to the Senate Military Committee to continue the draft, declaring that to end it would be to "gamble" with the security of the nation and the peace of the world. Both Senate and House military committees may vote tmorrow on various proposals to extend the law, expiring May 15 of this year. Some members want a straightaway exten- sion, others want inductions banned until next February 15. Vinson's proposal, which would raise the pay of all enlisted personnel, would allow the President to rein- state inductions after November 15 if voluntary enlistments fell short. Vinson's measure would increase the pay of all enlisted men. Argentina Bolts' League Meeting GENEVA, April 8-(/P)--Argentina's delegates walked out today on the opening meeting of the League of Nations Assembly's final session, called for the purpose of declaring officially dead the 26-year-old ex- periment in world idealism. Argentina 'sgestura came after she a memorandum at his news conference -revealing this government's readiness to relax its stand provided the newly elected regime of Col. Juan Peron "will give prompt implementation by positive acts to commitments under the inter-American system." But, said the American document bluntly, "There must be deeds and not merely promises." Previously the State Department, in refusing to participate with Argen- tina in a treaty-making conference, had charged that the military gov- ernment headed by Gen. Edelmiro Farrell had paid only lip service to its pledges to: 1. Depose Nazi agents. 2. Liquidate Nazi holdings and as- sets. 3. Eliminate Nazi propaganda ac- tivities. 1 Under the new arrangement, to which a majority of the 19 other American rejublics have agreed, Col. Peron's government will be given a reAsonable time to fulfill the prom- ises Argentina made at the Chapul- tepee conference in Mexico City early in 1945. Representatives Vote To Revive Grad Council Representatives of graduate stu- dents enrolled in all departments of the University voted last night to re- establish the Graduate Student Coun- cil and adopted a constitution. Departmental Representation Under the new constitution, passed by a unanimous vote, each depart- ment of the Graduate School shall be represented on the Council by at least one graduate student. Non- departmental organizations of grad- uate students to be designated by the Council shall have one representative. on the Council. Representatives must be in residence and enrolled as grad- uae students. To provide contimuty of oice, one half of the representatives shall be chosen the second week of each semester and where necessary va- t cancies shall be filled at the beginning of the new semester and in the same manner as the original selection. Manner of Selection The manner of selection of repre- sentatives shall be set forth in the by laws which will be prepared by a committee and submitted to the Council for approval at its next meet- ing. The Council, which dissolved dur- ing the war, has operated during the past year around a nucleus of vol- unteers. The aims of the Council, as stated in the constitution which went into effect last night, is to "Coordinate and promote the social, educational and intellectual activi- ties of the graduate student body, to foster and encourage cooperation be- tween the graduate student body and the graduate school faculty." Board Limits Wage Basis Only Portion Will Figure in Price Hike WASHINGTON, April 8--AP)-The National Wage Stabilization Board refused today to approve all of an 18-cent an hour wage increase as a basis for a price rise. The decision was the first of its kind. It affects 14 Detroit milk dealers supplying 75 percent of the city's milk. They have been paying the 18-cent increase since March 2, fol- lowing a 10-day strike of 1,175 mem- bers of the CIO United Dairy Work- The Board ruled that only 10 cents of the increase might be used by the companies as a basis for seeking price relief from the OPA. If the companies are unable to absorb the cost of the remaining eight cents of the increase, the de- cision said, they may apply to the Board for permission to reduce the current wage by that amount. A------- --- U.S. Balks Iran Case Withdrawal Byrues Opposes Russian Request NEW YORK, April 8-()---Secre- tary of State James F. Byrnes indi- cated today that the United States is opposed to dropping the Iranian case from the United Nations Secur- ity Council agenda as demanded by Russia, but he suggested the Ameri- can delegation would be willing to examine the Soviet proposal. Byrnes did not sa'e flatly that this government would fight any at- tempt to remove the Iranian matter from the agenda, but his remarks in a review of previous council ac- tion on the subject added up to that conclusion. He did say he could see no reason for reopening the case at this time in the light of the coun- cil agreement to take no further 'action on it until May 6. Iran May Drop Cas (Tehran dispatches today quoted unofficial sources close to Prime Min- ister Qavam as saying they believed he would agree to complete with- drawal of the case before the Coun- cil. The dispatchesbadded, however, that the Iranian government appar- ently had reached no decision. Prop- aganda Director Prince Mozzafar Fi- rouz said the decision was up to the Security Council.) As Byrnes stated the American po- sition at a news conference in Wash- ington after talking with President Truman, there were these other de- velopments in United Nations circles: 1. Iranian Ambassador Hussein Ala disclosed that he had asked his home government for further instructions and awaited its reply, which may pro- foundly influence the Security Coun- cil Byrnes To Leave Meetings 2. Byrnes, who led the fight against Russia on the Iranian issue, said he would not return to the Council meetings since he is preparing for the conference of the Big Four For- eign Ministers in Paris. 3. Delegates were generally agreed that the Gromyko letter would not come up for discusson at tomor- row's session on procedural rules, and the Secretariat confirmed that it was not on the provisional agenda. Ambassador Gromyko remained noncommittal on the question of re- suming attendance at the Councii meetings since his walkout on March 27 in protest against placing the Iranian case on the agenda. Psychological Insight Needed ByTeachers 11 only teachers could combine their scholastic abilities with abun- dant psychological insight, they would be in a superb position to guide their pupils into a much better adjustment, Dr. Howard Y. McClusky declared yesterday in his talk before the Psy- chology Club. In every field of elementary and high schools, Dr. McClusky said, teachers, being able to maintain close contact with their students, have the opportunity of becoming mental hygientists "par excellence". The football coach, public speak- ing instructor, and history and Eng- lish teacher, added Dr. McClusky, can all contribute their sincere efforts to add to the emotional and social stability of their pupils in later life. Thus, Dr. McClusky concluded, be- sides helping in correcting speech difficulties and poor reading habits, psychology can and must play a definite, central role in the education of the child and the adolescent if the future adults of the nation are to feel secure and happy. Taxi Trouble Flares Up at City Couneil Propose Change In Cab Ordinance By ROBERT GOLDMAN (Daily City Editor) Ann Arbor's volcanic taxi-cab sit- uation erupted last night - this time during a City Council meeting at which a proposed amendment to the local cab ordinance was given its first reading. Local cab drivers werevirtually unanimous in stating that if this ordinance becomes effective, "cab operators in this city will go into some other business." Briefly, here's what the amend- ment proposes: a system of what the cab operators termed "rigid controls" on cab lighting, glass, and upholstery; installment of meters; and raising individual li- cense fees from the current price, $15 to $100. Prof. A. D. Moore, chairman of the Council committee studying reg- ulation of cabs could not be reached for comment, but this is what the operators think of the proposal: "It wouldn't be humanly possible to comply with this ordinance," Ken Martin, owner of one local outfit de- clared. "If you had to live up to that amendment to the letter, I'd rather be in some other business," Jim Pugsley, another company operator said. "It's really a fancy ordinance", he added. "Boys driving veterans' cabs have all come back from long periods of service and now when they're mak- ing some headway, the city seems to want to control their incomes," Carl Breining, operator of the Vet- erans Cab Co., an Army veteran of three and a half years' service in the South Pacific said. "This thing may cause a stoppage of cab transportation in the city," he added. This move follows an investigation of cab company incomes, Breining pointed out. "Spectators at the council meet- ing and alarmed cab drivers were stupified when the city attorney read this impossible proposed amend- ment", Jack Brunnell, cab driver and University graduate student de- clared. "Cab drivers and cab owners are by tradition a misunderstood occu- pational group," he asserted. "They have been denounced but little under- stood. This proposed amendment will quite literally cut away subsistence from a group of men in public serv- ice, merely because of an irrational law drafted by men who have been infected by a popular prejudice" "It looks a little as though the city is attempting to drive all companies out of business in order to reinstate one company," he de- clared. City Attorney William Laird said that the amendment could be written into the ordinance within three weeks and become effective May 1. The amendment provides for a May 1 deadline on procurement of meters. Gerald L. K. Smith Senitenced to jail CHICAGO, April 8-(/')-Gerald L. K. Smith, head of the America First party, today was sentenced to 60 days in jail for contempt of court for distribution of statements to reporters during the trial of an associate. In passing sentence, Municpal Judge John V. McCormick said "if the conduct of you and your associ- ates in and toward an American court of law affords a test of your attitude toward other American in- stitutions, it behooves Americans to look squarely at the philosophy which confronts them." Speakers Debate Two Proposals Five hundred students at the pre- election rally for student government last night heard a heated discussion by planners of the rival Congress- Cabinet and Council-Forum consti- tutions. Informal debate on the two con- stitutions was combined with mu- sic by the University Band and a satirical skit on present student- University relations to climax a spirited publicity campaign aimed at turning campus attention to student government. The tempo of the rally was set by its chairman, Prof. Theodore New- comb, who adjured the opposing speakers to hurl "words at 40 paces." Student speakers were quick to take him up as they first took to task campus people who doubted the need for student government and then attacked the rival constitutional plan. Upholding the Congress - Cabinet constitution, Robert Taylor pointed to the need for student government by saying the University is almost alone among important American universities in having "no recognized channel through which the opinion of the student body can be effectively expressed and through which stu- dent-initiated reforms can be carried out." Joyce Siegan, speaking for the rival Council-Forum plan, also de- clared a "very definite and con- crete need for student government. She felt that "as citizens here we should have something to say." Miss Siegan and her speaking mate, Fred Matthaei, asserted that their plan was workable and efficient and democratic. By directly electing the president, they held the Council For- um guarantees that popular opinion is represented. Taylor and Elsa Goodman, on the other hand, claimed their plan would "represent the entire student body and at the same time function ef- ficiently." They said their constitu- tion would enable government "to grow with the changing needs of the students." Willow Village Officers Are Elected, Plans Made for Rally At the initial meeting of the Wil- low Village AVC chapter last night in West Lodge, officers were elected and a rally was planned. Speakers at the rally, to be held tentatively April 23, will be Lewis Frank, of the national AVC planning committee, Guy Nunn, Michigan area AVC field secretary, and Miss Suz- anne Ladriere, secretary of the Ann Arbor town chapter. The new officers are: Allen D. Weaver, chairman; Edgar Davis, vice- chairman; Richard Webb, secretary; and Robert Katzen, treasurer and chairman of publicity. The initial meeting of a new Ann Arbor town chapter will be held Thursday, after which the present chapter will become affiliated strict- ly with University students. Students Will Decide on Campus Constitutions; 500 Persons Att end Rally 3,000 Votes Needed for Ratification; Polls To Stand Throughout Campus See ELECTION RULES page 2 The campus will vote today and tomorrow for the Congress-Cabinet or Council-Forum constitutions as the new framework for University student government. A ruling of the Student Affairs Committee makes it necessary for at least 3,000 students to vote in the election before ratification of one of the constitutions is legal. Climax to Campaign The election which climaxes a week of intensive publicity and debate by planners of the alternate constitutions will require identification cards of all voters. 1.' Polls will be located in Angell Hall basement and lobby, the diagonal in front of the library, the engineering arch, Barbour Gymnasium, in front of the Economics Building, and in front of AlumnisMemorial Hall. Voting Hours Voting hours will be from 8:45 a.m. through 3:15 p.m. Tuesday and Wed- nesday at all polls except at the En- gineering Arch, where the polls will remain open through 5:15 p.m. for the convenience of those students who use bus facilities to Willow Vil- lage. Dental, Law and Medical schools have scheduled separate voting hours. Polls will be open in the front lobby of the Dental Building from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. today and tomorrow. In Hutchins Hall they will be open on the first floor from 9 a.m. to noon and 2 through 3 p.m. today and to- morrow. Medical Students Medical school seniors may vote in the Hospital near the Amphithe- atre from 1:30 through 2:30 p.m. both days. Sophomores may vote in the West Medical Building from 8 through 10 a.m. tomorrow, and fresh- men may vote in the East Medical Building from 8:30 through 9 a.m. tomorrow. For students whose identification cards are not ready, a special voting permit is available in the Dean of Students office, Rm. 2, University Hall. V-12 men may make use of this card. Indepeydents Not Round By Assembly Stand Helen Alpert, president of Assem- bly, pointed out last night that the committment of the Assembly execu- tive board to support one of the alternate student government Con- stitutions does not oblige members to vote for that constitution, The executive board's action was merely a recommendation, according to Miss Alpert, and was based on an objective study of both constitutions. [Strike . Roundup By The associated Press v Jap Premier Walks Out on Leftist Group By The Associated Press TOKYO, Tuesday, April 9--Aged Premier Kijuro Shidehara brushed off detaining hands of a leftist dele- gation and walked out late yesterday on demands for his resignation. The incident pointed up a re- awakened public interest in tomor- row's general election. The. previously apathetic campaign for the Diet had led Japanese ob- servers to predict a light vote. But they changed their minds as the re- sult of a riotous communist-led de- monstration Sunday, the tense draw- ing-room drama in Shidehara's home, and heavy returns from an isolated precinct which votes early. The "Democratic People's Front" sent a 14-man committee to make the demands on Shidehara. Led by Kyuichi Tokuda, Secretary of the Communist Party, they argued their way past the Premier's secretar- ies. For 45 minutes they accused him of failing to solve the country's many problems and demanded that his entire cabinet quit immediately. MYDA Will Aid In Fight Agamst Race Inequality Charging grossly unfair treatment of Negroes in Columbia, Tenn. and Freeport, N.Y., MYDA will cooperate with Wayne University in their fight for racial equality, it was decided at the American Youth for Democ- racy convention held in Detroit over the weekend. Two Negroes Shot Two negroes were shot and killed in jail by Columbia police officials, according to an investigation made by Clark H. Foreman, president of the Southern Conference for Human Welfare. They were being question- ed, he said, about their attempt to prevent a lynching of two other Ne- groes. They were being held incom- municado, and denied the right to arrangedbail and counsel at prelim- inary proceedings. At least 15, he re- ported had been charged with assault and intent to commit murder. At Freeport no attempt was made to try the case of a police officer who allegedly shot two Negro soldiers. Raids on Negro communities resulted in both cities. Urges Participation Stressing the need for Negroes to take a more active part in AYD or- ganiations throughout the nation, Harriet Ratner, MYDA delegate to the convention, urged them to at- tend the next meeting when plans to help develop a new pattern of racial relations will be discussed. City's Housing Drive Begins The city's drive to lick the local housing shortage moved into high gear yesterday when the newly-con- stituted Veterans and Citizens Hous- ing Committee held its first meering. After a brief address on policy from Mayor W. E. Brown, Jr., the commit- tee set up seven sub-committees to be appointed by Chairman George Sandenburgh, city engineer. Sub- committees on Supply and Materials, Price, Building Code, Available Land, Available Labor, Publicity, and Sta- tistics will h ysepefMa y Rmrar,_ Strike Averted. 0 0 KIeUSSO-AMERICAN FRICTION: Kallenbach Opposes Atomic Tests' WASHINGTON, April 8-A threat- ened strike of Cincinnati electrical workers was averted tonight by an agreement between company ,and union officials and federal concilia- tors. The agreement, reached after four days of conference at the Labor De- partment, provides a 17 cents an hour wage increase. The AFL Brotherhood of Electrical Workers had demanded 20 cents. The Cincinnati Gas and Electric Company had offered 15 cents. BoardAppiointed.. WASHINGTON, April 8-01)-Sec- retary of Labor Schwellenbach ap- pointed a fact-finding board tonight in hope of averting a strike at seven refineries producing two-thirds of the nation's cane sugar. Spokesmen for 6,500 CIO and AFL unionists seeking a 15-bent hourly wage increase demanded that the American, National and Revere refin- ing companies agree in advance to accept the board's recommendations. H. B. Carpenter, Vice-President and General Counsel of American, said, however, that the companies would not be bound by the recom- mendations, although they accept the fact-finding. .. ..4 By NATALiE 1!AGR0W Friction between Russia and the United States was offered as a pos- sible reason for postponement of the atomic bomb trial at Bikini by Pro- fessor Joseph E. Kallenbach of the political science department yester- day. "My tentative thought is that we would be better off if we did not make the test at all, because it is obviously an experiment direct- ed towards prospective use of the are in carnest about our desire to outlaw the use of the bomb and in- tend instead to concentrate on our efforts to make peace practicable, we are only inviting trouble by adver- tising our experiments and power as we have so far been doing." "If the atomic bomb test was entirely forgotten, the indication would be," he asserted, "that we are putting our complete trust into UN, rather than carrying through with our present policy of playing tough with Rusia and making our- The friction of which he spoke is, he said, largely attributable to our secrecy about the atomic bomb and the continuation of experi- ments in connection with it, all of which can only have the effect of alarming the Russians about our future intentions." In this regard, Prof. Kallenbach said that the postponement might have been a concession to the Russians follow- ing their announcement of with- drawal from Iran and their ex- nressned intention to wive full sn- I I