UNDECLARED WAR See Page 4 LiY L SirFzArn 414 tetidiieiteSle A6F 741 -atty C LOUDY, SNOW FLURRIES VOL. LVII, No. 116 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY. MARCH 18, 1947 PRICE FIVE CENTS Supreme Court, In Effect, Blocks UMW Strike Plan Rulino Comnmands Lewis To Cancel Notice Ending Government Contract By Thec Associated P'ress WASHINGTON, March 17-The Supreme Court in effect told John L. Lewis today that no March 31 strike will be tolerated. Speeding up its procedure, it ordered its mandate in his case to go out officially on March 20, instead of March 31 as it would have otherwise. Cancel Notice The ruling commands Lewis to cancel his notice terminating his soft coal miners' contract with the Government, and notify the mines he has done so, under pain of a $2,700,000 fine against the United Mine Workers. Lewis has five days after the issuance of the mandate I Legislaturee ort Balloting Will I fp Begin TodayRussia 60 Candidates 1 Seek Positions I US ., Plans To ppose l Reparation Demands; in which to comply. In ordering the striking miner, back to work Dec. 7, Lewis told them to carry on until March 31 but did not call off lhis contract termination notice--equivalent to a strike call, for the miners tra- ditionally do not work without a contract. Convictions Upheld The Supreme Court's ruling was issued March 6 and under the nor- mal course it would not have op- erated in time to avert a March 31 walkout. The decision upheld con- tempt convictions against Lewis and the union for the previous strike but reduced Judge T. Alan Goldsborough's $3,500,000 fine against the union to $700,000, con- ditional upon compliance with the ruling. The Government then moved to have the mandate issued "forth- with" to safeguard "the public in- terest." However the 11-day speed-up meets its purpose just as well. Counsel for Lewis had op- posed any speed-up on the ground it would jeopardize his interests. The Supreme Court acted today through a brief order. No opinions in the case were issued and if the nine justices were divided, the fact was not recorded. Three other xnajor court rulings today also came on orders, with- out formal opinions. The court refused to review protests by Morton Friedman, ousted from a job with the War Manpower Commission by order of the Civil Service Commission on the group he was a communist sympathizer. The Civil Service Commission said it based its dismissal order on Friedman's association with the American Peace Mobilization. It declared there was "reasonable ground" for belief that that or- ganization was formed under Communist auspices. It cited a. change in the group's attitude to- ward World War II beginning shortly after the German invasion of Russia. Speedy Peace Action Uro'ed By MacArthur TOKYO, Ma4rcli 17 -(A')- Gen- eral MacArthur declared today that a peace treaty with Japan should be made quickly, abolish- ing the occupation and leaving future guidance of this country to the United Nations. "If the United Nations ever is to succeed, this is the most favor- able opportunity it ever had," the occupation commander told Amn- cican correspondents at a lunch- eon. "If the United Nations cannot provide mild controls it cannot meet anything . . .The Japanese would accept it , . . It would be considered protective rather than repressive. It could continue as long as it was beneficent. "I would not envision any mili- tary formations of any sort after a peace treaty. Bayonet control would be a mockery." Pressed for an opinion on when a treaty should be made, MacAr- thur replied., "For the record I'll say as soon as possible." He indicated his belief that it should be conicluded in a matter of months at most. and at an- other point said, "It would be ad- visable for the world to initiate at this time peace talks with Japan." Group Plans FEPC Lohby TI'OOITOW U Deficit Bill WaitsApproval Of Governor S House Votes Funds For State Agencies A $11,300,000 deficiency bill including $1,250,000 for the University of Michigan, was passed unanimously by the State House of Representatives last night and today awaits the Governor's sig- nature. The bill, designed to meet the operating expenses of state agen- cies until the end of the fiscal year, was approved by the Senate on February 20 and sent to the House for a vote. Yesterday's House action came after an hour's bitter' debate, the Associated Press reported. The bill includes amounts of $2,526,290 for Michigan State Col- lege, $2,300,000 for direct relief, $2,800,000 for aid to dependent children and $1,250,000 for vet- eran's homestead exemptions. In the Senate debate on the bill last montp, several senators had voted against the bill, contending that the colleges had been guilty of bad management in incurring these extra expenses. 15 Dead As Floods Ravage South England Amphibious Tanks Rescue Marooned LONDON, March 17-()- Britain counted 15 dead tonight in the wake of a roaring hurri- cane and the worst flood in more than half a century, which spread destruction over vast areap of southern England. New gale warnings went up on all coasts, and the battered island kingdom, beset by the aftermath of one of the most severe winters in its history, braced itself for another blow. Families Marooned Troops with amphibious tanks and jeeps came to the rescue of thousands of families marooned in the upper stories of their homes. Factories were flooded and thousands of head of live- stock perished. Historic Runnymede was seven feet ynder water. At Windsor. professional divers descended to close valves in the flooded gas- works. Transportation Snarled Lingering snows combined with hurricane-felled trees and inun- dated roads to leave transporta- tion, communications and indus- trial produc4on thoroughly snarled. Two Yorkshire rivers-the Hull and the Don-burst their banks and farmers estimated 15,000 acres of land flooded in that area. Campus polls will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m tomorrow for the election of 23 members of the Student Legislature and a student member of the 'Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics. The polls, which will be set up in the lobby of Angell Hall and at the Quonset hut near Water- man Gymnasium, will be roped-ofT and ballots must be marked with- in the enclosed area. Identifica- tion cards will be punched and ballots stamped with a special Legislature stamp at the exits of the enclosures. Legislaturc Positions Sixty candidates are competing for the Legislature positions. Dom- inic Tomasi and Pete Elliott are the candidates for Board mem- bcrsh ip. Students from all schools may vote in the election but will be required to present identification cards. Because the voting for the Leg- islators will be conducted accord- ing to the Hare system of propor- tional representation, voters must number their choices in order of preference, although they may! vote for as many candidates as they please. Number Choices Harvey Weisburg, election com- mittee chairman, warned students yesterday that it is to their ad- vantage to keep numbering choices as long as they have any basis Rules governing the Legisla- ture election appehr on page 2. 1 ,. . ) i i i t nified Mand Soght on Greece GOP Suppsort tIs Asked For Truman Plan Soviets Seek 20 Year Plan Of Collections for preferring one candidate over another. adding that voters should choose at least 12 candidates ir, order for their choice to be effec- tive. Under the Hare plan the quota of ballots necessary to elect a candidate is approximately the total number of ballots cast di- vided by the number of posts tc be filled. Ballots Redistributed. If a candidate receives more than the necessary quota of bal- lots, after they are distributed in- to 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 first place votes are elim- inated and all of their ballots are redistributed. This process is continued until the full number of candidates have been elected. Two Bills On Riet iControl Divide Senate WASHINGTON, March 17-- t/P -- -The Senate, badly split on the question of permitting a general rent increase, got two new rent controls bills today, neither call- ing for a general' rise. 1. Senators Taft (Rep., Ohio) and McCarty (Rep., Wis.) intro- duced one to continue rent con- trols until March 1, 1948. They propose to set up a rent adjust- ment and decontrol board which could authorize decontrol or rent increases on an area basis. 2. Senator Cain (Rep., Wash.) offered one to continue controls until Feb. 19, 1948. He contem- plates continuation of OPA to handle rent control but abolition of OPA's other functions. Both bills would abolish ceil- ings on new constructions and ho- tels. 'Democrats Seek Joint Foreign Policy Action By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 17-The Democratic National Committee made the unprecedented proposal to the Republican National Com-i mittee tonight that they issue a joint statement affirming both parties' support of President Tru- man's plan for action in Greece and Turkey. The suggested statement would serve notice "to all peoples of the world" that the two major par- ties are agreed "on the purpose and method of withstanding the spread of totalitarian aggression and enslavement wherever it may occur." Joint Statement The joint statement was sug- gested to Carroll Reece, GOP na- tional chairman, by Gael Sullivan, new Democratic executive direc- tor, in the name of the Democratic National Committee. Reece said he will answer Sul- livan's letter tomorrow, without .ndicating what his answer will be. Cheek Communist Tide Sullivan said in a statement that the United States "can and must check the tide of Commu- nism" but that 'a divided Amer- ica" cannot succeed in the tas and neither can "one political party." He added that the world knows this and is waiting "desperately" for word of "America's whole heart and whole vision." Mobilize Opinion "If the great party majorities in America are standing as one, behind the Truman doctrine," Sullivan continued, "the world will know that America means busi- ness. And the effect will be to mobilize a tremendous world pub- lic opinion in its favor-the only force that can stop the persua- sion-by-bayonet of Communism. "There is no better time than now for the political parties of America to tell the world--in so many words--that they are pre- pared to back the Truman doc- trine to t heilt . Sullivan submitted a suggested dr'aft of the proposed joint state- ment to Reece and invited him to propose and changes "the phras- ing" if he sees fit. RbyWave Hits County Daily-wake IIELP OUT VILLAGERS - Mrs. Terry Finch of the firm of Casey, Casey, Finch and Finch--com- pletes asale with William Frye, '50, at the Willo w Village P.X. The store keeps a supply of much- needed indisvensables handy for village residents. 9 SHOPPING SER VICE: Two Vet Fanilies Operate -apidly Growing Village PX By BEN ZWERLING 1 or a couule of vel erans to beat rising living costs, and at the same time, to aid fellow students to conquer the ever exorbitant cost of time is no mean accomplishment. Perhaps that's why the firm of Casey, Casey, Finch and Finch is so proud of its little establishment, the West Lodge P.X. Perhaps, too, that's why Willow Run students show such admiration for these fellow village folk and their enterprising concern. For. the P.X. specializes in those easy-to-forget, hard-to-do-without items and brings them to the village dweller at just about members he has forgotten them. The P.X. business hours are the time he returns home and re- t World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 17-- A plan to give 20 percent incoexre tax cuts to most taxpayers and 25 to 30 percent reductions to the smallest taxpayers was considered today by the House Republican .e;c rindg con-mcnitte imed to meet the after-class buses *'from Arn Arbor, which, in turn, seem to leave Ann Arbor just in time to render necessary shopping impossible. Such a frustration, without a P.X. to check it, was the plight of Bob Casey and his wife and Terry Finch and his wife last fall and such was the difficulty encounter- ed, too, by the 3,500-odd students at Willow Village. This first--hand awareness of the plight was coupled with a good deal of mental and physical exer- ;ion on the part of the Caseys and Finches and out of it arose the P.X. with its stocks of tooth paste and ping pong balls, cigar- ettes and candy bars, pocket dic- tionaries and cans of pineapple juice, and occasionally even alarm clocks. Last November the Finches and Caseys drew up a partnership, got fheld of some wood, hammers and nails and set to work building themselves a small, rather com-I pact store which today houses something like 10,000 individual pieces of merchandise. Their mode of determining just what Sec WILLOW VETS, Page 2 City Concludes UtilityContract With University One Year Agre emient Pays City $135,100 Ann Arbor ;Common Council last night formally approved a one year contract with the Uni- versity providing that the city shall be paid a sum of $135,100 by the University for utility and po- lice services. The unprecedented agreement, first of its type ever concluded between a city in the United States and a state-owned educa- tional institution, came after a protracted series of negotiations between the city and the Univer- sity. The one year contract is expected to be supplemented by further agreements between the city and the University regarding city services, according to:Mayor William E. Brown Jr. Specifically, last night's con- tract provides for a payment of $97,000 in return for utility ser- vices to the University, and $30,- 000, or one-seventh of the city police budget, for police protec- tion to University property. An amount of $7,500 also included in this agreement will release the University from the obligation of providing free hospital beds for city employees. Future yearly contracts will provide for an annual payment of approximately $100,000 to the city for police, fire and utility ser- vices, according to Mayor Brown. It is expected that the University will also defray the cost of a new fire station which is to be built in Ann Arbor. Germany Would Pay Ten Billion Dollars By The Associated Press MOSCOW, Tuesday, March 18 -Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov demanded last night that. Germany psy the Soviet Union $10,000,000,000 in repara- tions over a 20-year period, but au- thoritative sources said the United States would oppose spreading any German war payments over so long a period, In a savage attack on the Western Powers, Moltov said he wished the Four Power For- eign Ministers to devise a 20- year reparations plan for the benefit of the Soviet Union and, in addition, demanded the im- mediate nullification of the merger of the British and Amer- ican occupation zones in Ger- many and a Soviet hand in the German state control of all cartels and trusts. Molotov's long tirade against the Western Powers-the United States, Great Britain and France -brought a cold, blunt rebuke from U. S. Secretary of State George C. Marshall, who main- tained an icy mien throughout the four hour and 15 minute session, the longest to date. Authoritative sources said the American position in regard to Molotov's reparations plan would be that two decades would be too long a time to impose such a financial burden on Ger- many and that such a continu- ing' debt would hinder Ger- many's recovery for years to come. Attempts will be made, the sources said, to have the Russians agree to cut down the payment period considerably. It was understood that Great Britain probably would adopt a similar attitude to the 20-year plan. Meanwhile, French Foreign Minister Georges Bidault con- ferred with Prime Minister Stalin for an hour and a half last night, French sources said. No informa- tion was available immediately as to the nature of their discussion. Bidault was the first of the visiting ministers to see Stalin and it was expected that Mar- shall and British Foreign Sec- retary Bevin would follow suit shortly. Moloto's demands, which ex- ceeded by far the expectations of even the most pessimistic western observers, included a proposal that reparations be paid from current German production, House Delays T4ruman Plan To Consider Curbs On Greek-Turk Aid WASHINGTON, March 17-(M) -An effort to satisfy Congression- al demands for some restrictions on Greek-Turkish assistance was reported today to be delaying a bill to carry out President Tu- man's ,$400,000,000 program. Rep, Eaton (Rep., N.J.) told re- porters the House Foreign Affairs Committee which he heads will meet tomorrow with the hope of having the bill before it. It would then be introduced immediately and hearings would be set, They will bring top officials before Con- gress to explain all phases of this country's move to stop commnu- nism short of the strategic Dar- danelles. There was speculation in Con gress that the $400,000,000 author- ization bill might include a provi- Safe-crackers got away with P I()GOTA, Colombia, March least$1,000 in a county-wide 17 Taca Airlines said tonight wave of thefts over the weekend, that one of its passenger liners according to police reports, had crashed into a mountain The burglars obtained $700 25 miles northwest of Medellin from safes at the Texas Bulk Co., today and that five passengers 1777 S. State St.; $300 from food and three crew members, in lockers in the Whitmore Lake including two United States cit- area; and an undetermined izens, probably had perished. amount from a local lumber com- pany located at 1340 N. Main St. ."w USALEM, March 17-Tens Apparently the work of an or- of thousands of cheering, smiling ganized gang, all the thefts were Jews streamed out of the martial committed in the same manner. law areas of Palestine today mom- In each case, intruders gained en- ents fter the British lowered trance by forcing a door, then barbed wire barriers which had knocked the combination from isolated two sections of the Holy safes in the establishments. Land for the last 15 days. HONOLULU, March 17-A 'seven-imlan Navy crew maneu- 'DELICIOUS', SAYS STIEIE:E l fit ch LnI-tlcIc ~~Iid L lll ridtt l ii~ 'l E It 3W i7 l-m'" u-u 11 A %rred a lifeboat through heavy seas today and rescued 2 men CHEAP HUMOR?: Technic One Cent Sale Slips luLIu u011""Iv By FRANK HARMON Do you hate spinach, cabbage and beans? Would you like more variety in your daily diet? Then try skunk cabbage, wild onion or a-ot f' h nr h .i e i-u' S ho tsri f L3 ( 3jFIII (W1I J UI1}3LI(~ wrecked tanker Fort Iearborn. '_-~~.-- - - - - - ---- -- --'--he haggard survivors had in a recent interview. With spring Tubers or stem bases are more tri-d for five days to sail the close at hand, they will soon be valuable as solid, nourishing foods stern section 14) jiort under its available, he pointed out. because they contain carbohy- own POwer: Dahdelion greens, probably best drates, fats and proteins, he said.t 1 known, are not the most delect- Especially good are these parts LAKE" UCCE S,.N.Y., March able, according to the University of the common cat-tail or of the 17- -Action was delayed on the f a -m "i-+ _, y--nr --nm r..nt-,..nr ..11 .tnt it - n~ e- -- ..-f , n.... Uniftprit, it,? i se l ;hi -n o r l There were puzzled frowns in the Gargoyle office last night as staff members workedfeverishly to balance the books against re- ports that one hundred copies of the magazine were sold for a pnenny apiece by Technic staff offering the two magazines for sale together yesterday morning on the basis of a "one-cent sale." One spokesman for the Tech- nic claimed that the Gargoyles had been presented to the Technic .I