FICKLE OPINION RULES PROGRESS See Page 2 moo A643U11 4Iaii4g CLOUiDY AND (2001 17'k UT Pc., 1) YUL. LV1, 14 0. 15 73 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MAY 12, 1946 PRICE FIVE VV.T*FPq i E'V~ h U1- - - ---- - -- - ----- i_1t1t JVi V 1 V t, L 11, IN 1'a FR EE V ACAT ION:- Tag Day Will Support 'U' Fresh Air Camp for Coal Truce Ends Freight Embargo; Essential Needs Given Fuel Priority Boys from State Cities By ANITA FRANZ EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second in a series of three articles on the Univer- sity's Fresh Air Camp. On Tuesday a tag day will be held for the purpose of col- lecting funds to help support the camp. Each summer, approximately 230 young boys, many of whom find dif- ficulty in making social adjustment, are placed in a vacationland of play and constructive crafts. Oblivious to the fact that student counselors are observing them and trained sociologists and psycholo-< - _ Soft Coal Strike Intensifies AI i Arbor Men's ClothingShortage By JOHN CAMPBELL gists are applying remedial tech- niques, the children spend four weeks in the playful atmosphere, most of them emerging better able to assimi- late into home life. Referred by Social Agencies Youngsters between the ages of eight and fourteen are referred to the camp by social agencies of De- troit and other southeastern Michi- gan cities. The basis of camp accep- tance is the problem of adjustment. For example: here is the case of For pictures of the 'U' Fresh Air Camp see Daily Picture Feature, P. 8. a 10-year old who will be referred to as Tommy Jones: Rangy and tousel-headed, Tommy was the school's champion bully. His chief extra-curricular activity was "picking on" other children. Braggart to Sissy When Tommy entered camp he found himself unable to match with the boys of his cabin and he changed from braggart to sissy, perpetually whining and hanging on to the "apron strings" of his counselor. The psychologist decided Tommy should be given boxing lessons. At first the kids would gather to poke fun at his forcefully misguided stabs. But soon Tommy developed his punch well enough to spar with his teacher, and the kids were impressed. They came to him for boxing les- sons themselves, and Tommy found he couldl.getrespect and attention in other ways besides tormenting other children. Need a Good Time Tommy's case, though typical of the average, was simple. Among the entire group, however, can be found some children who merely need a good time, and others with malad- justments raging from minor re- pressions to shut-in personalities. The children, live eight to a cabin and are counseled by two graduate students of sociology or education. As students of the fields of human adjustment, the counselors apply theoretical classroom work to the situation confronted. Thus, in addi- tion to giving trained guidance to the socially maladjusted, the stu- dents are able to gain first-hand ex-1 perience in their fields.2 Subtle Guidance Guidance is applied in a subtle7 .manner through camp activity. Ai Fresh Air Camp program contains1 precisely the same diversions as does[ any private camp's agenda.[ Swimming, hiking, boating, fish- ing and other sports are offered1 the boys with instruction to improve their techniques. Handicraft classes[ give youngsters a chance to develop1 heretofore undiscovered talents. Varies from Ordinary Camp[ The chief varying point from an< ordinary camp is that the child's activities are channelled into these fields which will so occupy his at-C tention that he will be relieved of7 any home-nurtured complexes or( inhibitions. - As a general rule, camp experience is so impressive to the boys, that the happy attitude is carried back home resulting in an attitude befitting the{ more difficult adjustment he will' have to make. (Tomorrow's article will deal with University students' participation in1 the camp.)t Violinist Will lay Virginia Solomon, violinist, assistedc by Marilyn Mason, pianist, will pre- sent a recital at 8:30 p.m. today int Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. The recital will include composi-) tions by Bach, Tartini and Sibelius.1 Miss Solomon is at present studying1 under Prof. Gilbert Ross.P Byrnes OK's Reds' Request For Payment PARIS, May 11-01P)-U.S. Secre- tary of State James F. Byrnes ac- cepted today Russia's demands for $100,000,000 in reparations from Italy, but clashed with the Soviet delegation at the Foreign Ministers Conference over the source of pay- ment, an American informant said. Byrnes at a two-hour informal meeting said the money must be ob- JAMES F BYRNLES ..Accepts Soviet Demands tained only from Italian assets abroad, excess industrial equipment in former munitions factories, mer- chant shipping and naval vessels. Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Mol- otov immediately disputed the last point, declaring naval vessels were legitimate war booty apportioned among the victorious powers as such and did not constitute reparations. Byrnes was said to have replied that war booty could be claimed only by those who captured it and that the Russians had taken no Italian naval vessels. British Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin supported Byrnes' viewpoint on the naval vessels, and seconded Byrnes' in opposing a Soviet move to obtain reparations from current pro- duction in Italy, British sources said. Yesterday Russia agreed to the French plan to make Italy sole trustee under the United Nations of her colonies, and to the American pro- posal for establishing an interallied war criminals commission in Italy to operate for a certain limited time after the treaty is affected. Molotov presided over the morning session, which was devoted to dis- cussion of the reparations issue as the ministers sought to narrow the area of disagreement in the Italian peace treaty. * * U.S.-British Dictates scored by Izvetsia MOSCOW, May 1 1-03)-An article in the government newspaper Izves- tia charged today that the United States and Britain apparently had agreed prior to the foreign ministers conference on tactics designed to force acceptance of British-American dictates on formulating the peace. N. Sokolovsky, a Soviet commenta- tor, wrote that among the "narrow" goals sought by such joint effort were American - British domination over Italy and establishment of "the com- plete hegemony of England in the Mediterranean.' The already critical shortage of men's clothing in Ann Arbor has been aggravated by the coal strike, ac- cording to a spot survey of 11 local clothing stores. Local merchants report that in- coming shipments have dwindled to a trickle because of the railroad embargo prohibiting the shipping of clothing, and the 11-pound limit Business Must. Alter Program For Labor Age Slichter Says Unions Have 'Underdog' View One of the greatest shifts of power in the history of this country, from an economy run by businessmen to one run by labor leaders, necessi- tates a changed program by business in a laboristic age, Prof. Sumner H. Slichter, Lamont University profes - sor of the Harvard University Grad- uate School of Business Administra- tion, said yesterday. Upward Pressure By Unions Speaking before the general ses- sion of the Alumni Conference of the School of Business Administration, Prof. Slichter gave as the conse- quences of the shift in power an un- precented upward pressure by labor accompanied by increased political power, and lessened restraint by gov- ernment on the activities of trade unions. The unions, he-said, will con- tinue for at least a generation to have "the point of view of underdogs" and be unready to take the responsibility for guiding the economy. The program of business in this laboristic age, Prof. Slichter explain- ed, must include a knowledge of what people think about its activi- ties, better day to day administration of labor, and better bargaining, with the employer possibly acting as the consumer's bargaining agent in re- sisting union demands rather than passing these demands on to the public in the form of higher priced products. Recover Intellectual Initiative Furthermore, the laboristic world wil mean greater expenditures on technological research and will neces- sitate an attempt on the part of business to recover intellectual ini- tiative, which they have lost to labor at the cost of many friends of busi- ness. One of the thing which we must do for a greater civilization to come out of this period of change, he con- cluded, is to make civil rights, in- cluding the same review by a neutral when a union fires a man as when an employer does, effective in all walks of life. Congress Asks For Workers Students May Choose Own Field of Interest Newly-christened Student Con- gress moved to implement campus support yesterday by calling for in- terested students to work on the General Committee established in the first Congressional session Thurs- day night. Congresswoman Judy Chayes, tem- Committee, invited students to pick porary chairman of the General Com- mittee, invited students to pick their own department of interest under the plan to obtain campus-wide pa- ticipation in the government. Provisions for work on interna- tional affairs, finance, housing, and recreation will be among those set up by the Congress, Miss Chayes anticipates. ---- _ i parcel post packages Moreover, a four-hour day for tailors, necessi- tated by the brown-out, has cut production 50 per cent. Retail dealers agreed that the cur- rent shortage is the most acute ever experienced by the business. Characterizing the shirt allotments as "plain lousy," one dealer said that he had received 20 dozen shirts out of 72 dozen ordered since January and that he had not had a shirt in his store for 11 weeks. Backing up the general opinion that the allotments are undependable, another retailer pointed out that some supply houses owe him shirts from back in Decem- ber. All dealers agreed that there was no chance to accumulate stocks and that they are actually "selling out of the boxes" One merchant reported getting in nine or ten suits at one time and then no more for two or three weeks. Declaring that light-weight cloth- ing will be easier to get, several deal- ers believed that the shortage of men's clothing would be somewhat relieved during the summer. A large majority of the dealers interviewed, however, believe that there will be no improvement in the situation this summer. "The man- ufacturers are already working on next fall's stocks," one declared. Another reported receiving small shipments of light-weight suits but added, "We don't expect them to last long." Two dealers were emphatic in at- tributing the present shortage almost entirely to a government ruling re- quiring clothing rmanufacturers, un- der penalty of heavy fines, to ship different-priced clothing in the same proportion as they did in 1942. The result of this policy, they as- serted, is that stocks are actually piling up in factories while the public suffers from a shortage. Fetter Reviews World Trade Reconstruction The reestablishment of trade on a multilateral basis, free from con- trols tying exports to a country to imports from that same country, is a major aspect of the reconstruction of world trade and war damaged economies, Dr. Frank W. Fetter, said yesterday before the business ad- ministration alumni conference. Dr. Fetter, chief of the Division of Investment and Economic De- velopment, Department of State, explained that up to 1931 multi- lateralism was predominant, but since then bilateral practices have grown up, largely because of the desire of pressure groups to expand exports and strengthen monteary reserves. Both long and short run trade actions are necessary to put the world back on a multilateral basis, which will open the field of trade outside of the direct control of gov- ernment and contribute to peace and economic welfare, he said. A lowering of tAriff barriers, es- pecially in the creditor countries, is necessary to prevent any multila- eral trading system from becoming an empty shell," Dr. Fetter pointed out. Britain seemed headed for full-fledged bilateralism, as the best of the bad alternatives, be- cause of a grim economic prospect following the war, he said. The pending financial agreement with Britain for a $3,750,000,000 loan will assist her to reestablish multi- lateral trade in that she will remove all exchange restrictions on current transactions between . the United States and other countries, both in- side and outside the sterling area. These commitments will affect the wvhole pattern of trading relations, Dr. Fetter said. Truiman Says Education Is Vital to Peace Tolerance Called A-Bomb Defense Tay[lhe Associated Press NEW YORK, May 11-President Truman declared today that until the world learns the science of human relationships "the atomic bomb will remain a frightful weapon which threatens to destroy all of us." Speaking before a crows which overflowed 10,000 seats on the campus of Fordham University, celebrating the 100th anniversary of its charter, the President declared: "It is up to education to bring about that deeper international un- derstanding which is so vital to world peace." Mr. Truman, whose address was broadcast over all networks, said there was at least one defense against the atomic bomb. "That defense lies in our mastering this science of human relationships all over the world," he said. "It is the defense of tolerance and of under- standing, of intelligence and thoughtfulness." The President and his party land- Back Holiday Pay Is $3,000,000 Obstacle By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, May 11-The government today ordered the railroad freight embargo lifted Monday but slapped controls on the entire soft coal output expected during the strike "truce." The action covers "captive" mines as well as others and may with- hold coal from industry immediately. But it provides the government with an expected 20,000,000 to 25,000,000 tons of coal for emergency users without resorting to seizure of the pits. ed at La Guardia (EST) in his C-54 and drove to the immediately. Field at 1:48 p.m. "The Sacred Cow," Fordham Campus VICTORY: Track Squad Defeats Irsh By27 Points, By BILL MATNEY (Special to The Daily) SOUTH BEND, Ind., May 12, 1946-Capitalizing upon its over- whelming superiority in the field and distance events, and surprising strength in the sprints, Michigan's track squad swamped Notre Dame here today, 741/2-471/2 for its sec- Herb Barten . . . who defeated Bill Leonard in the featured half-mile event, after losing to the Irish ace in the mile run. ond straight victory of the outdoor season. TheWolverine attack, spearheaded by Horace "Hap" Coleman's twin victories in the 100 and 220 yd. dashes, a slam in the discus, and a near sweep in the shot-put, more than compensated for its weakness in the hurdle events, in which Notre Dame scored 17 points. Bill Leonard, Irish distance ace, started the meet with a close triumph over Michigan's Bob Thomason, passing the 18-year old sophomore on the last turn and withstanding his finishing kick. The winning time of 4:25.1 was creditable, consider- ing the chilly weather and the soggy condition of the track. Herb Barten, far back in the field for most of the race, sprinted to third place to even See MICHIGAN, Page 6 John L. Lewis and the mine own- ers met, meanwhile, in what Edward F. McGrady, federal conciliator, called "a very friendly, very coopera- tive atmosphere" to seek the settle- ment President Truman requested by Wednesday. Stumbling Block After morning and afternoon ses- sions which brought no specific word of progress the conferees adjourned until 11 a.m. (EST) tomorrow. The Ann Arbor's brownout will con- tinue in spite of the strike truce, Robert R. Brown, local manager of Detroit Edison Co. said yesterday. Asking citizens and students to continue to observe the mayor's voluntary brownout proclamation, Brown said that power conserva- tion would continue "until the strike is over, and after, until such time as sufficient stockpiles are built un so that we can feel safe!" stumbling block appeared to be Lewis' demand for $3,000,000 in back holi- day pay. Possibly in this connection, most of the afternoon session was devoted to a caucus of the operators. It was they who proposed the Sun- day session. John D. Battle, Executive Secre- tary of the National Coal Associa- tion, who was not among the conferees issued a statement saying that "the coal mine owners made of-. fers to the union leaders weeks ago that should have prevented a work stoppage, and they renewed their of- fers many times." He declared that Lewis' truce offer "further demon- strates his control over the nation's coal supply." CIO Locals Appeal On the political front, Senator Mitchell (Dem., Wash.) reported ap- peals from CIO locals that the anti- poll tax bill be placed in the way of labor legislation which the Senate will consider Monday. Such strategy could be expected to provoke long debate, if not a filibuster. Coercion Must Go -- Slichter New Strikes To Ensue If Policy Is Relaxed "The government can't permit it- self to be coerced by strikes," Prof. Sumner Slichter, Harvard Univer- sity economist, said yesterday in a comment on the coal strike. Essential issue raised by the strike, he said, is "whether the govern- ment, having announced a wage- price policy, will now allow it to be changed" by giving "preferential treatment to groups which strike against that policy." "If the government rewards strik- ers by making concessions, it will foster more and bigger strikes in the future," Prof. Slichter warned. The government's policy "should be applied without favor to all groups," he asserted, pointing out that whatever wage increase is granted by the operators to the min- ers, only that part allowable under the wage-price policy should be ac- cepted as a basis for application for a price increase. Questions raised by the strike, he said: are whether special groups shall be granted privileges, and whether a democracy can allow strikes to be used as a weapon to change. public policy. Institute Will Open Tuesday, At Rackham The 14th annual Adult Education Institute, under the joint sponsor- ship of the University Extension Sdr- vice and the Michigan Federation of Women's Clubs, will open at 10 a.m. Tuesday in the Rackham Lec- ture Hall with four speeches on topics of current interest. After the opening talk by Dr. Charles A. Fisher, director of Ex- tension Service, Prof. Misha Titiev of the anthropology department will speak on "Anthropology Looks at the World" at 10 a.m. At 11 a.m., Mr. R. A. Guerin, special agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, will discuss "Youth Today." To Discuss Medicine, Russia Tuesday afternoon's speeches in- clude "New Medical Discoveries of Interest to Laymen," by Dean A. C. Furstenberg of the School of Medi- cine, at 2 p.m., and a discussion of Russia by Prof. Andrev Lobanov- Rostovsky of the history department, at 3 p.m. Students and faculty members may be admitted without charge to any. of the meetings of the institute by obtaining a badge at the registra- tion table. Wednesday's Schedule Wednesday's institute program will feature talks on "Japan and China" by Prof. Frank L. Huntley of the English department at 9 a.m., "Hopes and Fears in World Public Opinion" by Prof. Theodore Newcomb of the Department of Sociology at 10 a.m. and "Parental Responsibility, by Mrs. Belle F. Murray, lecturer in family relations for the Extension Service, at 11 a.m. In the afternoon, Prof. Ernest F. Barker, chairman of the Department of Physics, will speak on "The New Physics" at 2 p.m. and Prof. Sanford A .Mosk of the eco- nomics department will present a dis- cussion of Latin America. Professors Speak At 9 a.m. Thursday, Prof. Benja- min Wheeler of the history depart- ment will discuss Germany's pre- sent situation. Prof. Norman Maier of the Department of Psychology will speak on "The Techniques of Understanding" at 10 a.m., Mrs. Ar- thur C. Evans of Lansing on "Re- ligion in the Home" at 11 a.m., Prof. Lawrence O. Brockway of the chem- istry department on "The New Chemistry" at 2 p.m. and Prof. Law- rence Preuss of the political science department on "The Foreign Policy of the United States" at 3 p.m. The Adult Education Institute is attended by members of church groups, women's clubs, PTA's and other organizations interested in adult education, from all over the state. The best attendance since the record year of 1941 is expected for this years' institute. Hoffa, Teamsters' Agent, Is Charged with Extortion DETROIT, May 11-( P)-The AFL Teamsters Union drive to organize clerks in Detroit's 7,000 butcher shops and grocery stores brought Union Business Agent James Hoffa into court on an extortion charge today. ' . 4.4xecutives To Drive Trucks in U' Course Farmers Reauested To Cut Pig Production