... _ .r - ... t SCIENTISTS vs. ARMY 3ee Page ? :Y Lw4b 4* :43 a t t4p CLOUDY, SHOWERS VOL. LVI, No~, M; i ANN ARVI t, MICIITT AN, WIN IAMAft('ll 13, 1V)IG PRICE FIVE CENTS . i sr wi snn nm . n wnu® Lewis Tells New UMW Demands Nine P(ints4 Made By t-nion -Lea der WASHINGTON, March 12-P)- John L. Lewis made nine general de- mands of the soft coal operators to- day, including higher wages and shorter hours, without mentioning specific figures. He left the new contract details wide open for bargaining in advance of the April 1 deadline set for a po- tential strike. The major demands were: 1. A health and welfare fund for mine workers. Last year he asked for a 10-cent per ton royalty, capable of netting the United Mine Workers more than $50,000,000 a year, for this purpose. Wage Increase Sought 2. Increase of wages and reduc- tion of daily and weekly working hours, affecting all classifications of inside and outside employes. The bituminous miners now receive $63.50 for a six day, 54-hour week. The basic 1941 wage agreement now in force calls for $1 an hour and a 35-hour week. The bargaining area on this demand apparently would be bound- ed by these two extremes. 3. Adjustment of the controversy affecting supervisory, technical and clerical employes. The National La- bor Relations Board last week listed certain supervisory occupations which could be included in Lewis' supervisory branch of united mine workers. 4. Adjustment of vacation, holiday and severance compensation. Last year the miners received $75 in lieu of vacation time-off. The current contract provides for five holidays and no severance pay. Other Demands Made Others among the nine demands- just half the number he made of the operators last year-included: "Improved safety and compliance with mining, compensation and occu- pational disease laws; adjustment of intra-district and inter-district dif- ferential and local inequalities af- fecting classification and compensa- tion; elimination of inequities and abuses of existing fining and penalty provisions of basic and collateral agreements; amendment of rules and practices to promote mdutual accord, increased efficiencies and e imina- tion of the small tyrannies of man- agement; adjustment of controversy incident to unilateral interpretation of existing agreement by operators." Lewis has cleared the way to call a strike April 1. He has served notice to the government that a dispute exists 30 days in advance of the termination of the bituminous con- tract. The arthracite contract, in- volving 75,000 Pennsylvania hard coal miners, would terminate a month later. GM 'Talks Resumed DETROIT, March 12-(!P)-Nego tiators for General Motors Corpora- tions and the CIO United Auto Workers resumed deliberations short- ly after 9:15 tonight in their efforts to find a solution to the 112-day-old GM strike. As the negotiators entered the meeting room, where they held a three and a half hour session this after noon, special Federal Labor Mediator James F. Dewey declared, "We migh work all night." Plan Petrillo Curb WASHINGTON, March 12-OP)- The House voted, 309 to 39, today t give a Senate-House conference com mittee responsibility for drafting compromise legislation which spon sors said was designed to curb the in fluence of James C. Petrillo in radio broadcasting. Business Administration Fraternity Pans Smoker A smoker for all men students it the School of Business Administra- tion will be held at 8 p.m. tomorrox in Rm. 316 of the Union, under the sponsorship of Delta Sigma Pi, pro- fessional business fraternity. Prof. Dudley M. Phelps of the busi- ness administration school, wh served on the Reparations Commit tee at the Paris Conference, wil speak on the subject "Reparatior in Germany." Men preparing to enter the schoo Veterans Ask Long-Range U Housing Policy 1 iiriti Space for Fall Students at the all-veteran Univer- sity community at Willow Village called for a long-range University de- cision on dormitory housing in a mass meeting sponsored by the campus Veterans' Organization last night. They asked that 50 per cent of the University's men's dormitory space be allocated to veterans next fall, and lamented the fact that entrance in the University for many of them had been gained only by their agree- ing to live in Willow Village. 'Second Campus' Disgruntled single and married stu- dents at the University's