n 1" CANDIDATES' Ci r A6F -411tr tg-,an b-itest I)e(tdlt*iie iii, the Stale AdIV :43 a t SNOW FLURRIES, COLDER See Page 2 VOL. LVII, No. 114 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 1947 PRICE FIVE CENTS Delay Sought Bypemoerats In Tax Cuts Foreign Loans Slow Redluction By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 14- Noting "dark clouds hanging ove 1 the world," Pep. Doughton (Dem. N.C.) called today for delay ir tax cuts "until we, know what our foreign commitments and expen ditures will bef" 'But Rep. Jenkins (Rep., Ohio) declared that "just because of th scare the President gave us a few days ago, we are not at war witi Russia." Doughton, who managed tax legislation as Ways and Means Committee chairman while the Democrats controlled Congress stepped into the leadership of the opposition as the committee closed two days of hearings. Final Witnesses The final witnesses were twc under-secretaries of the treasury in the Roosevelt administration who joined Republicans calling for a 20 per cent across the board income tax cut. They were Roswell Magill, now a Columbia University law pro- fessor, and John W. Hanes, fi- nance chairman of the Hearst en- terprises and the U. S. lines. Both testified before the House Ways and Means Committee. Their position clashed head-on with that of the Truman Admin- istration. Secretary of the Treas- ury Snyder yesterday asked the committee to forget about tax cuts this year and apply any treasury surpluses to debt reduction. EN publican Control The committee, under complete control of the Republicans, is bound to approve a tax cut bill, probably next week. Magill and Hanes testified after a stormy session in which Demo- crats sought to open the commit- tee hearings to witnesses from the general public. On a strict party-line vote, the committee rejected 12 to 5 a mo- tion by Rep. Lynch (Dem., N.Y.) that anyone who desired to ex- press an opinion on taxes be al- lowed to testify. Lynch contended the two-day tax hearings were be- ing limited to witnesses "invited" by Chairman Knutson (Rep.,Min.) VU Will Ask FPHA To Aid Willow Vets Improvements in the comfort of Willow Village students and their families will be recommended to the Federal Public Housing Au- thority by the University, Vice- President Robert P. Briggs said yesterday. "We hope to receive the coop- eration of the Housing officials in making the improvements that will be'suggested," he said. He pointed out that "the Uni- versity for some time has been conducting a study with a view to determining what might be done to add to the comfort and con- venience of students and their families who live at Willow Run." A series of recommendations, now being prepared, will be presented soon to the FPHA. The University has been con- sidering methods whereby the elec- tricity load at Willow Village could be increased. Electrical ex- perts have been employed to sur- vey the Village electric power sit- uation. The University statement is an outgrowth of recent controvery over an FPHA campaign to en- force more rigidly the rules gov- erning use of electricity by Vil- lage residents. Residents have protested the restrictions on the grounds of "discomfort" and "in- convenience." Vets' Checks Are Held Here, Checks are being held at the Ann Arbor Main Post Office for the following veterans: Brink, John Earl; Holstein, Norman A.; Levy, Howard S.; Soviet Calls Truman Proposal Threat to Greek, Turk Liberty; Wide Loan Discretion Planned FIVE STUDY 'FATEFUL HOUR' PROPOSAL -- Five top officials go into a huddle (March 13) in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee room at the Capitol to study President Truman's "fateful hour" proposal for aid to Greece and Turkey. From lef t are: Acting Secretary of State Dean Acheson, Secretary of War Patterson, Sen. Arthur Vandenb erg (Rep., Mich.), committee chairman; Secretary of Navy James Forrestal; and Sen. Tom. Connally (Dem., Tex.), committee member. Building Halt Seen Averted Reach Compromise On 'U' Construction LANSING, March 14 -(4)- A compromise by which construction of new buildings at the Univer- sity of Michigan and Michigan State College may not be halted reportedly has been reached by Legislative finance committees. The agreement was reported reached at a conference of the Senate Finance Committees and the House Ways and Means Com- mittee with officials of Michigan State College. Under thecompromise the Leg- islature would approve a Finance Committee building.; bill (the Bishop Bill) which provides no funds to continue certain pro- jects at the colleges, but those projects "halted" would be fin- anced out of funds in the next fiscal year, starting July 1. It was reported that Rep. John P. Espie, veteran chairman of the House Ways and Means Commit- tee, condemned the Finance Com- mittee plan for stopping certain projects and insisted the Legis- lature live up to a previous com- mitment to complete the buildings. President John A. Hannah of MSC previously had charged that a curtailment of the building pro- gram would mean turning hun- dreds of veterans out of the insti- tution. Qsud Addition Ready in Fall University officials announced yesterday that it was "pretty cer- tain" that the East Quad addi- tion, now under construction, will be completed in time for the fall term. Designed to house 500 students under ordinary circumstances, "doubling up" will probably make room for 700. No date has been set for the completion of the new women's dormitory. Work on it has been slowed by a shortage of labor and materials. COOK LECTURE: Economic Groups Must Halt Irresponsible Powers--Clark Freedom will survive only if the nation's conflicting economic groups cease irresponsible use of their powers Prof. John Maurice Clark of the Columbia Univer- sity's economic departipent de- clared yesterday in the final 1947 Cook lecture. The Government can help achieve harmony by modifying existing legal powers in the direc- Review Ticket Saes Continue Music Depreciation Show Set for Friday There are a limited number of tickets left for the Spike Jones "Musical Depreciation Review," to be held at 7 and 9:45 p.m. Fri- day in Hill Auditorium. The tickets will be sold from 9 to 4 p.m. every day this week in the Union, League and in Univer- sity Hall. All seats are reserved, and the exchange tickets may be turned in at Hill Auditorium this week for reserved seat tickets. The time of the second show has been changed from 9:30 to 9:45 p.m. to allow enough time to clear the auditorium before the second show. Those attending the 9:45 show should not arrive before S:20, according to Betty Pritch- ard, publicity chairman,because the auditorium will have to be emptied in order to avoid con- fusion. The "160 minutes of musical madness" is being presented by Panhellenic Association to raise funds for the University of Michi- gan Fresh Air Camp. The pro- gram will include most of Spike Jones' favorite recordings. Helen Greco is song stylist with the band, and the vaudeville acts in the review will feature comedy juggling by Bill King, tap danc- ing by the "Slickerettes," and acro- batics by Bettyjo Huston. tion of more equal bargaining power, he said. Such modification, he stated, would not mean de- struction of union power-merely curbing it short of supremacy. Prof. Clark asserted that both big unions and big business havel become forms of unofficial gov- ernment with coercive power and need to view their actions in the effect on the whole nation. He also stressed the necessity for. protecting individual union mem- bers' rights within the union. "Two of the greatest correctives to economic conflict----the neigh- borhood community and religion -are waning in their power to bring the conflicting groups to- gether," he said. Man has become a member of an economic group first and an American afterward. We must still learn the working truth that a community is not merely a source of benefit, but one to which one owes obligations. The lecture concluded Prof. Clark's series of five entitled "An Alternative to Serfdom." Election Polls Open Tuesday Ballots To Be Cast Under Tare PR Plan Polls will be open from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday and from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Wednesday for the election of 23 members of the Stu- dent Legislature and one student member of the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics. The voting for the legislators will be conductedraccording to the Hare plan of proportional repre- sentation. Under this system each voter must number his choices in order of preference, although he may vote for as many candidates as he pleases. The quota of bal- lots necessary to elect a candidate is approximately the total num- ber of ballots cast divided by the number of positions to be filled. If a candidate receives more than the necessary quota of bal- lots, after they are distributed into piles for each candidate ac- cording to the first choice of each voter, the excess ballots are re- distributed to the candidates in- dicated next in order of prefer- ence. Candidates receiving the fewest ballots are eliminated and all of their ballots are redistrib- uted. This process is continued until the full number of Legislators have been elected. Vets File 183 Check Gripes Congress Set For Speedy Consideration Committee Arranges Hearings Next Week By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, M a r c h 14 - -A plan giving President Truman wide discretion in using the $400,- 000,000 he seeks for bolstering Greece and Turkey against com- munism was studied today as both branches of Congress arranged for speedy action. The House Foreign Affairs Com- mittee'set public hearings for next week. The Senate Republican Confer- ence approved a work schedule designed to produce a decision on the question by March 31, al- though leaders privately expressed doubts that action could be com- pleted that soon. Bill for Monday Rep. Eaton (Rep., N.J.) chair- man of the committee, said he ex- pects to have a bill ready for in- troduction Monday. Calling for its consideration on a non-parti- san basis, he declared he is not worried about politics "but I am worried about the United States in a world that is full of hell." While waiting for the House to act first, Senator Vandenberg (Rep., Mich.) began compiling a list of questions on all phases of the historic diplomatic move. He said cabinet members will be asked to answer them fully when they appear before the Foreign Rela- tions Committee which he heads. Misunderstanding Cited Ohe-question, raised by Sena- tors Taft (Rep., Ohio) and Jen- ner (Rep., Ind.) is whether top government officials knew of the impending Mediterranean situa- tion as long ago as last October. The State Department later is- sued a denial of this. Prezs Offi- cer Lincoln White told reporters: "There is obviously a misunder- standing about what the British told us. "The British have for many months indicated that they de- sired and proposed to withdraw troops from Greece as soon as they possibly could. Mr. Bevin and other British officials have said so publicly in Comm. 'is, at the Unit- ed Nations and elsewhere. 'However, the British note of Feb. 24 was the first notification received by this Government that the British Government was forced to withdraw financial and economic aid as of March 31 to the Greek Government. White noted that the British statements about withdrawing troops dated back to 1945, but he said none referred to an in- tention to wind up economic as- sistance by March 31. Senate Opens Debate Today On Portal Pay Ban on Suits Called Wagner Act Threat WASHINGTON, March 14-(iP) -The Senate opened debate today on a bill to outlaw present and fu- ture portal pay suits with two Democrats protesting it would "cut the heart" out of the Wage- Hour Act and Senator Taft (Rep., Ohio) declaring "it would do noth- ing of the kind." The Democrats, Senators Mc- Carran (Nev.) and McGrath (R.I.), offered a substitute which would wipe out the nearly $6,000,- 000,000 of pending suits but leave future portal pay claims to labor- management negotiations. McGrath said this would "serve notice on employers of the country that they should have an under- standing with their employers as to what constitutes a day's work." Senator Lucas (1Il.), Democra- tic whip, predicted strong support for the McCarran-McGrath sub- stitute among members of his party and said some Republicans also plan to vote for it. But Taft, chairman of the GOP Policy Committee, said Republi- can leaders will oppose any ma- jor changes in the bill approved by the judiciary committee. It would outlaw all portal suits except claims based on contract provisions or industry custom. It is substantially the same as the measure already passed by the House. The Senate expects to reach the voting stage on Monday. Mt. Clemens Case Appealed DETROIT, March 14-(/P)- The Mt. Clemens Pottery Co., case, pattern for nearly $6,000,000,000 in portal -to-pobrtal pay claims was appealed to a higher court again today. Counsel for the pottery work- ers asking a hearing in the United States Circuit Court of Appeals at Cincinnati, O., first step in any appeal to the Supreme Court. Frank A. Picard, U.S. district judge here, dismissed the Mt. Clemens suit last month, ruling that the employes were not en- titled to portal pay. It will be the second trip for the complicated case through the le- gal mill. ministers' agenda, but Marshal, refused unless China could par- ticipate. (A Nanking dispatch said the- Chinese foreign office sent iden- tical notes to the four powers in Moscow, objecting to any discus- sions of China's internal affairs either officially or outside the Foreign Ministers' Conference.) Urges Immediate Action Molotov urged the ministers to' take immediate action on estab- lishing central trade unions and central political agencies before taking up economic questions in Germany. He was blocked immediately by British Foreign Secretary Bevin. who declared coldly that he had not come to Moscow to place his government in a costly position. He said the British wre ready to lay figures on the table show- ing the amount- of reparations taken from Germany and that Britain expected the other powers to do the same. Evade Direct Answer Molotov evaded a direct answer to Bevin's request for reparation figures. The British consider the information essential to discus- sions of questions of a unified Germany. The Western delegations fear the Russians have taken so much from the Eastern zone that an economic merger would bring ad- ditional financial burdens on the Western powers. Student Has Meter 'Blues' Even though a parking meter may look like the perfect spot to drop extra pennies, a University student found out yesterday that an Ann Arbor city ordinance re- stricts their use to a driver of a car or his agent. "Students should realize that they can't put coins in a parking meter the way they would in a juke box," Chief of Police C. M. Enke- mann said shortly after a student received a suspended sentence from Municipal Judge Jay H. Payne after pleading guilty to il- legally inserting coins in a meter. The Chief added that he has had several cases in which a passer- by has become so sympathetic with the driver of a car that has been ticketed for overparking that he has filled up the empty meter himself. This action does not save the driver from paying his fine; it only embarrasses him, the Chief pointed out, since a driver has a perfect right to be annoyed when he returns to find his car ticketed and standing next to a full park- ing meter. Marshall Outlines Plan For German Democracy U.S. Acknowledges Receipt of Soviet Note Pressing for Three-Power Talks on China MOSCOW, March 14 --(P)- Secretary of State Marshall, in an oblique attack on totalitarian government, laid before the foreign ministers today a pointed outline of American concepts of democracy and how they should apply to a democratic Germany. On the question of China, the United States acknowledges form- ally receipt of a note from Soviet Foreign Minister Molotov pressing for informal British-American-Russian talks but gave no answer. Prospects dimmed for such talks with a representative from China present. An authorized source said the Chinese were almost certain to reject an invitation to attend. Molotov had asked origin- _ally that China be placed on thr IzveStia Hits Move as Short Circuit to UN Charges U.S. Hides Imperialistic Plans By The Associated Press MOSCOW, March 14-Izvestia the most authoritative govern- ment newspaper in the Soviet Un ion, charged today that President Truman's proposals for aid to Greece and Turkey were a "fresh intrusion" threatening the inde- pendence of those two nations and short circuiting the United Na- tions. The two-column editorial, which was the first extended So- viet reaction to the President's message to Congress asking fo $400,000,000 to fight any totali- tarian subjugation of Greece and Turkey, created excited interest Samong visiting delegations to the Foreign Ministers Council in Mos- cow, Didn't Await Report In his desire "to act over the head of the U.N.", Izvestiader dlared, Mr. Truman "did not even consider it necessary" to await the report of the special United Na- tions inquiry commission sent to Greece to investigate her troubles on her northern borders. He also did not take into ac- count the sovereignty and inde- pendence of Greece and Turkey, the paper said. Greek Sovereignty "In fact, what will remain of Greek sovereignty after American military and civilian personnel have sat on the heads of the Greek leaders and when that per- sonnel begins administering in Greece with the aid of 250,000,- 000 American dollars brought into that country?" "American 'assistance' to Tur- key is obviously aimed at putting this country also under United States control,, after which one would not be able to speak of the independence of the Turkish home and foreign policy, since this pol- icy would be directly controlled by American imperialism," Izves- tia went on. Smokescreen Charged Charging that talk of "Ameri- can responsibility" in saving Tur- key and Greece from "expansion on the part of the so-called 'total- itarian states'" was but a smoke- screen to hide plans for expan- sion, Izvestia said such talk was not new. "Hitler also referred to the Bol- sheviks when he wanted to open the road. to conquests for him- self," Izvestia said. Poland Hit By Food Shortage Four Million Slashed From Ration Lists WARSAW, March 14-(R)- The Polish Government today ordered the slashing of at least 4,000,000 persons off its rationing lists in a desperate attempt to conserve supplies in a food crisis that UNRRA officials said would soon see the average Pole getting less to eat than the Germans. Persons on the list have been obtaining essential foodstuffs at a government fixed price far be- low the free market. The officials said that the pri- mary hope for the Poles, whose food needs will become increasing- ly critical until harvest time, rests in the United States. The crisis threatened to reduce the daily average consumption level to 1,100 calories. (The ration in the U.S. zone in Germany is 1,550 calories daily. It is higher for workers in heavy industry.) Passport Rule Set For 'U' Students Any University student wishing to secure a passport in order to CAN'T IT WRITE? New Semi-Literate Machine Designed To Read Patterns' WASHINGTON, March 14--OP) As the drum rotates past photo- -Now the scientistshave come up electric cells, the black paper pat- with a device which "reads out terns, mounted on a white back- loud." ground, :interrupt the light pat- They say it may be possible terns of the cells. to have the instrument read to a This breaks the light beam into blind or handicapped person or to a series of signals, regulated by the people "just too plain lazy to read." shape of the pattern. These sig- This robot-reader was develop- nals operate a "voice box," called ed in the Bell Telephone Labora- "Voder." tories.hAppropriately for anrin- The patterns represent the var- fant, the choice for its first reci- iu onso peh uha tation tonight was: "Mary had a ios sounds of speech, such as little lamb, its fleece was white as syllables and words. ,, "1Buzzing 'Sound World News Roundup By -The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 14- -The House Labor committee to- day unanimously ordered an in- vestigation to determine whether some witnesses- lied to it during hearings on general labor legis- lation. -* * * WASHINGTON, March 14-The CIO Executive Board named a three-man committee today to in- vestgiate charges of pro-Commu- nist leadership in the mine, mill and smelter workers union. ASUNCION, Paraguay, Marc 14-CTheGovernment of Para- guay, faced with an Army revolt in the northern part of the na- tion, declared tonight that troops from the bloody Chaco region had remained loyal, al- though rebel forces in Concep- cion said in a radio broadcast the Chaco forces had joined the, uprising. The government said its trops a drawn n. n , nnn-itp AN EYE ON JUNIOR: Student Invents Time-Saver, Sells Electronic Baby Sitters By EUNICE MINTZ D. Roger MacNaughton, '47E, has built the answer to the prob- lem of keeping Junior watched- the electronic baby sitter. The apparatus consists of a mi- crophone which is placed beside Vand do nothing," he said. "With the electronic baby sitter, if the baby is going to be quiet all eve- ninganyway, no one's time is wasted." MacNaughton said there is nothing "radically new" about his _nn',- ;+Y 111, + e_ ;"+ i