ANTOFAGASTA See Page 2 Y d&FAw :43 tii]g CLOUDY, COOL VOL. LVI, No. 149 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MAY 25, 1946 ruman Calls for Return of I Str PRICE FIVE CENTS 'ikers * * * * * * * * * * * * * Congress o Back Administration! May Ask Army 4 Chiang's Trip May Decide China Peace Prohlem Seen On Changchun By The Associated Press NANKING, May 24-Generalis- simo and Madame Chiang Kai-Shek flew to Mukden today in General Marshall's personal plane amid hints that peace for warring China might depend on the outcome of their trip. Government and Communist spokesmen could not agree on whe- ther the government's recapture of Changchun yesterday had improved or weakened prospects for a peace settlement, but these was a new flurry of negotiations looking towards compromise between the rival fac- tions. Peace Talks Foreseen "Now we can begin to talk with the Communists," said one high offi- cial of the Kuomintang Government Party who declined to permit use of his name. The Communists had just notified General Marshall, special mediator, that they were willing to accept in principle a peace plan proposed by the third-party Democratic League on April 29. New Problem Arises This proposal, however, was based on both sides staying out of Chang- chun, and a Communist spokesman said the government's seizure of the Manchurian capital was "regret- table" and had "complicated" the situation. "The key is not now in our hands," said this spokesman, Tung Pi-Wu. "We shall see what Chiang Kai- Shek will do." Tunkg added that everything hing- ed on Chiang's return from Mukden. This lent support to speculation that the sudden flight of the Chiangs to Manchuria might presage peace. Counselors For Fresh Air Camp Needed A few positions on the counseling staff of the University's Fresh Air Camp are still open, William C. Morse, camp director, announced yesterday. A combined program of work and study yields six hours credit to grad- liade and advanced undergraduate students of sociology and education. For the eight week session, students serve as counselors half the period and attend classes during the re- mainder. Specific courses offered are in the areas of group behavior and the mental hygiene of childhood and adolescence. A week's orientation course pre- ceding the camp session is required for all counselors. Students accepted for the program are given assistantships in the Uni- versity Summer Session, and receive a stipend equal to their tuition and room and board for the nine weeks. Both men and women are eligible. Further information may be ob- tained from the Fresh Air Camp of- fices in Lane Hall, the sociology de- partment offices and the office of the School of Education. Berry Supports Workers' Party The only means of overturning the relationship between employer:' and worker, in which the capitalist de- pends upon the poverty of the mas- ses, lies in organizing labor as a poli- tical organ, Abner Berry, educational director of the Communist Party in Michigan, declared at an Inter-Co- operative Council meeting yesterday at Stevens House. aThe working class is destined to carry society to the next stage of advancement," he said, for they have learned through the teaching of Marx that the truth of society is Officials See Dwindling Food Supplies in State By The Associated Press DETROIT, May 24 - State and municipal officials kept a close watch on Michigan's dwindling food supplies tonight as the railroad strike contin- ued almost 100 per cent effective in the state. Faced with a virtually complete shutoff of rail shipments, public offic- ials moved speedily to conserve supplies of food, gasoline, oil and other vital necessities. Governor Harry W. Kelly announced late this afternoon that he has Committee To Collect Famine Funds Monday Returns To Be Made In Lobby of League The first collection of funds from student residences for the Famine Relief Drive will be made by the Fa- mine Committee from 8 a.m. to noon Monday at a special table in the lob- by of the League. Every house on campus has been requested by the committee to or- ganize collections from all student residents in order to increase the student body's contribution to fa- mipe relief abroad. In a letter to house presidents in which she ex- plained directions for the collec- tions, Mary Elizabeth Friedkin, chairman of the drive, suggested that each resident be asked to make a weekly pledge to the campaign. The committee's speakers' bureau, which now has 18 members, will eontinue to visit residences to ex- plain the committee's conservation program and the need for immediate fund contributions. Several members of the All-Nations Club have vol- unteered their services to the bur- eau and will join the group next week. A suggestion that a portion of the fuds received by the committee from the house collections be ear- marked for relief in India will be considered by the group's steering committee at its next meeting. Since UNRRA food distribution does not include India, funds for that country would have to be submitted to ano- ther relief organization. Parking Metersi To Be in Monday Police Chief Issues Violation Warning Students and faculty members parking near campus where new parking meters are installed should be warned that the system will be put into effect Monday morning, and violators will be ticketed, Chief of Police Sherman Mortenson said yes- terday. Installation of the meters, which began May 6, will be completed to- morrow, and the new system will be effective from 8 a.m. until 6 p.m. every day except Sundays and holi- days. Parking charges will be at the rate of a nickel for one hour or a penny for each twelve minutes. Meters in the immediate campus area are being installed on N. Uni- versity, S. State and E. William. The city has purchased approxi- mately 500 parking meters at a total cost of about $30,000. Most of these are to be used in the central shopping area. basked 20 wholesalers to limit each of the 15,000 retail food stores in the state to amounts of food not greater than their norman requirements be- fore the strike. Spokesmen explained that the re- quest was intended to protect the re- tailer "who is conscientiously follow- ing the emergency program in his re- lationship with his customers and further assure the public that if they continue to purchase on a normal basis, there will be a normal supply available to meet their requirements." The Governor, repeating his pre- vious plea to the state's consumers to aid in the emergency by purchasing only the food needed for daily use, said reports convinced him "the pub- lic is cooperating splendidly." War Department officials also dis- closed that 500 troops had been shift- ed from Camp Atterbury, Ind., to Fort Custer, Mich., in what was termed a "precautionary" move to place troops "in strategic locations" in case of need. Two trains - the New York Cen- tral's Empire State and the Mercury -left Detroit during the day. The former, bound for Buffalo, was manned by Canadian crews. Spring Formal Will Be Held Today at Uion1 Remaining tickets for the annual Union Spring Formal to be pre- sented from 9 p.m. to midnight to- day, will be on sale today at the main desk in the Union. Students at the affair, which is to be formal, will dance to the music of Bill Layton and his orchestra. Ela- borate decorations following the spring theme have been planned by the committee Red suede dance programs will bear the Union seal and corsagesI will be presented to all women at- tending the affair. A program will be given during intermission and re- freshments will be served. Heading the various committees for the dance are, George Spauld- ing, Eugene Sikorovsky, and Andy Poledor, decorations; Milan Mis- kousky, tickets; Henry Horldt, pro- grams; Al Boyd, patrons; and Jerry Comer, publicity. Sport Schedule University sports fans will see action today at Ferry Field, where the Wolverine baseball team will face Purdue in a doubleheader, and the Maize and Blue track squad will compete against Ohio State. Both contests will begin at 1:30 p.m. Yesterday's rain caused the can- cellation of the baseball tilt against the Boilermakers while the Wolverines were leading 2-0 in the third inning. The downpour forced the team to schedule its fourth doubleheader in as many weeks. The track meet with the Buck- eyes will mark the only home ap- pearance of the outdoor season for the Michigan thinclads. House Leaders Ready To Push Desired Laws President May Seek Draft Age Limit Raise By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, May 24-Congres- sional leaders announced their read- iness to push through any legislation President Truman might recommend tomorrow while the Senate drove a- head with its own labor measure in a night session. House leaders declared their cham- ber would meet after the joint ses- sion at 4 p.m. tomorrow to act im- mediately on any Presidential rec- ommendations meeting fairly general approval. Barkley Expects Recommendations Senate Majority. Leader Barkley told the Senate tonight that he had "no doubt" that President Truman would make "definite and specific" recommendations to a joint session tomorow for legislation to cope with the railroad strike situation. Chairman May (Dem., Ky.) of the House Military Committee mentioned the possibility that Mr.Truman might request emergency revision of the Se- lective Service Act to draft men over 30. "I believe the House would pass that immediately," May told a report- er, "and would consent to its consid- eration without committee hearings." Senate Night Session In the Senate, Barkley held mem- bers in a night session and told re- porters he will keep on attenpting to get a vote on pending proposals up to the hour of the President's appear- ance, This suited Senator Ball (Rep., Minn.) and others who have been de- manding a showdown on legislation to impose a 60-day cooling off period against strikes and lockouts where a federal mediation board intervenes. Similarly, Senator Murray (Dem., Mont.) a leader of those fighting this and other amendments, said he saw no reason why the Senate should not go ahead. He added that any recom- mendations the President may make will "carry great influence" and could be expected to be cleared promptly by Congress. Misconduct' Charges Head Against Rae The trial of Washtenaw County Prosecutor John W. Rae on dis- orderly charges before Municipal Court Judge Jay H. Payne was ad- journed late yesterday after eight prosecution witnesses had been called. Witnesses testified that Rae was in an intoxicated condition after his automobile had run into a ditch on Highway US-23 Jan. 12. Deputy Roy Richter's testimony further charged that Rae pulled a gun on him while driving Rae to the sheriff's office. Sheriff John L. Osburn stated that Rae was so intoxicated on arrival that he offered to sign a warrant for his own arrest. However, testimony by Detective Lieut. Erwin L. Klager showed the prosecutor to have been sober enough to drive his own auto- mobile home. After Osburn admitted under cross-examination that the warrant for Rae's arrest was not filed until more than two'months had elapsed after the incident, Louis E. Burke, defense attorney, said he intended to prove the charge was a political "frame up." Rae is running for re-election as prosecutor in the June primary. Tolandle Trains President Blasts Brotherhood Heads For Endangering Welfare of Nation By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, May 24-President Truman tonight called upon rail- road workers to return to work and operate the nation's trains. He said that if they were not back on the job by 4 p.m. tomorrow he would call upon the Armed Forces to help run the railroads and furnish protection for those willing to work. In a nation-wide radio broadcast, he accused the heads of two striking railroad brotherhoods of creating "terrible havoc." The President declared it was "inconceivable" that the rank and file of the striking trainmen and locomotive engineers "realized the terrifying situation created by the action of these two men." Opposes Unfair Restrictions~ PRESIDENT TRUMAN * * Mail Deivery Promised by Post Off ice By EUNICE MINTZ An Ann Arbor post office official reported yesterday that all first class mail is going through, "whether by truck or train, when one runs." Mail for the East is taken to De- troit by truck and then relayed from city to city, the official said. The same thing is done for mail headed west, which is taken to Jackson by truck and then relayed. No packages are being accepted, the post office official said, and the first class mail cannot weigh over 16 ounces if it is to go on the truck relay. A spokesman at the train depot re- ported that one train, the Mercury going to Chicago, had gone through Ann Arbor yesterday carrying few passengers and a lot of mail. But, the spokesman added, "we never know if the train will complete its run. It may stop at some city en route and not start again." No freight trains came through yesterday, the spokes- man said. A Railway Express official said that they are shipping nothing but priority goods. "And they go only when and if a train conies through," he added. By priority goods the of- ficial said he meant urgently need- ed medicines or foods. The Ann Arbor bus station reported that the buses have been completely over-taxed. The few extra buses that are available are being run, a bus station spokesman reported. "But we can't nearly take care of oll the peo- ple who want to take buses now that the trains have stopped," he declared, The bus station official said that the long lines of people waiting to get on buses have kept the station flooded all day and night Buses are continuing to take pack- ages, the spokesman said, adding that "as with passengers, we are unable to make up for the lack of railroad service" Hillelzapoppin To Be Staged Hillelzapoppin, "a musical, laugh revue," will be presented by the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation at 8:30 p.m. tonight in Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- tre. The show will include seven ori- ginal comedy skits, written, directed and acted by students. Numbers which will be presented were se- lected as the best of the skits sub- mitted for the show earlier this month. Tickets for Hillelzapoppin will be available from 1 p.m. till show- time today at the theater box-office. Stressing that he had "always been a consistent advocate of the rights of labor," the President said: I have opposed and will continue to oppose unfair restrictions." "But in any conflict between one particular group and the country as a whole, the welfare of the country must come first." "It is time for plain speaking," the President said in his 12 minute broadcast. "This strike vitally con- cerns the well being and the very life of our people." Names Brotherhood Heads The President referred to A. F. Whitney, head of the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen, and Alvanley Johnston, head of the Brotherhood of Locomotive -Engineers. These two, he said, rejected his proposal to compromise their dif- ferences with the railroad operators when the 18 brotherhoods accepted it. The President, in appealing to the workers themselves, went over the head of their two leaders. Expressing doubt that the rank and file knew all the facts, he said .he was telling them now in person. He declared that Whitney and Johnston refused his request that they meet with the operators and the other 18 brotherhoods "in a joint conference in the office of the Presi- dent of the United States," and re- quired the holding of three separate conferences. Explaining that 18 of the brotherhoods had accepted his own compromise recommendations, the President declared, "they placed the interest of their country first." Deplores Effects on Famine Relief The President deplored the strike's potential effects on.shipments of grain abroad, where it might mean a difference "between life and death to hundreds of thousands of per- sons." "If the operation of our railroads is not resumed at once, thousands of persons both here and abroad will starve," he said. "The railroads must resume opera- tion," he said. "In view of the extra- ordinary emergency which exists, as President of the United States I call upon the men who are now out on strike to return to their jobs and to operate our railroads. To each man now out on strike I say that the duty to your country goes beyond anly desire for personal gain." The emergency is "soacute" and the issue "so vital" he said, that he will appear before a joint session of Congress at 4 p.m. tomorrow to de- liver a personal message on the sub- ject. * * 4' Rail Leaders Tell Of N ew Offer - WASHINGTON, May 24-(P)-The striking railroad brotherhoods' lead- ers said tonight, before President Tru- man's speech, that the government had made an improved offer for set- tlement of the railroad strike. The union men said, however, they had been advised that the carriers "had nothing further to offer" on their previous stand. A. F. Whitney, president of the trainmen, and Alvanley Johnston, grand chief of the locomotive engin- eers, said the new proposal had been submitted to them today at the White House by Secretary of State James F. Byrnes and Secretary of Labor Lewis B. Schwellenbach. They said the offer was for the 18%/ cents an hour wage increase, pre- viously proposed as a settlement plan by President Truman, plus the work- ing rules changes which had been recommended by a Presidential fact- Krug Confers With Operators On Coal Strike Government's Stand On Issue Is Discussed WASHINGTON, May 24--AP)-Sec- retary of the Interior Krug advised soft coal operators today of the gov- ernment's position on the issues of the mine strike. This led to strong speculation that he was close to the point of offering John L. Lewis an actual proposition. 'With all parties- government, management and workei's - sticking tight to a policy of silence, the se- quence of the meeting was the main supporting evidence on the develop- ment of negotiations. The interior secretary's first major move after he took over the federally- seized properties consisted of White House conferences and talks with ex- perts, obviously to formulate a policy. Then yesterday he discussed the issues with the United Mine Workers chief in a long conference in his off ice. This morning was devoted to a meeting with the operators' negotia- ting committee. Earlier in the week, operators said they expected that they would get a look at Krug's proposition, before he made a firm offer to Lewis. While operators did not expect to be given a veto on what Krug had in mind, some of them said they did believe they would get a chance to join it, or try to talk Krug out of it, before he laid it in final form before the workers' chief. One report was that yesterday's conference with Lewis had centered on a suggestion to compromise the UMW health and welfare fund de- mand on the basis of a three and a half per cent payroll levy, paid by the operators, with joint union and management administration of the resulting fund. Sudden Stroke Hits Bankhead 73-Year Old Senator Rushed to Hospital WASHINGTON, May 24-V'P)- Senator Bankhead (Dem., Ala.) ap- parently unconscious, was carried from the Capitol tonight in a stretch- er after collapsing in a committee room a few yards from the Senate legislation was in progress. He was rushed by ambulance to the Naval Hospital at nearby Beth- esda, Md. Bankhead's office said the Senator was suffering from a "light stroke on the left side." Dr. George W. Cal- ver, capitol physician, declined to offer a specific diagnosis pending a detailed checkup at- the hospital. White-clad medical men from the naval hospital, on the double quick, hurried the stretcher bearing Bank- head through the Capitol's marble corridors while a few score specta- tors looked on, most of them, un- aware of the patient's identity. Spring Perspectives Is Due Tomorrow Rnrnrric~ci 1p f a r ,',+ Pam ATOMIC AGE UTOPIA: Ogburn Predicts Improved Standards By NATALIE BAGROW A future standard of life in which "wealth would become common" and working hours would be "immeasur- ably shortened" was predicted by Prof. William F. Ogburn, of the Uni- versityv of fhir'avo sociologv depart~- industrial plant set up in this con- nection within two to five years." Because of the fact that such a plant would not only require a great deal of space but also an expensive and complicated protective shield, The gradual breaking up of urban populations in this country was pre- dicated by Prof. Ogburn as a possible result of the discovery of atomic en- ergy. "Although I do not think that our cities are likely to be broken up facilitate the movement "back to the country." The promotion of a world organi- zation is another important possible effect of atomic energy. "Unless we speak in terms of power we are not