FRESH AIR !A P 4 eePag ' -44 A6F A6V an 4br -AA--Ab., FAIR, W ARMER Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVII, No. 143 ANN AR1- OV, MCHIGAN, c; APRIL 27, 1947 PD TVV WT'[TT'i r-IW V riQ Truce Sough In Month Oh Phone Strike Labor Secretary Expresses Hope By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, April 26-Sec retary of Labor Schwellenbac held shirt-sleeve conference on t telephone strike today which pre duced a union expression of hop for a settlement but no new pla for one from any qiuarter. "I am hopeful that between no and Monday we'll get an agree ment," said Joseph A. Beirn } president of the National Federa tion on Telephone Workers, afte one of these sessions. But he adde that there is "nothing in sight a the moment" to bear out the hop With the "coast-to-coast stril headed for its fourth week Mor day, the Labo'i' Secretary met sep arately at his office with Beirn and C. F. Craig, vice president i charge of personnel of the Ameri can Telephone and Telegraph Cc These talks came as Schwellen bach's conciliators got three sets c negotiations between A.T.&'I affiliates and the striking union going again in a new burst of fed eral mediation activity to get thi 340,000 strikers back to wgrk. Beirne said Schwellenbach hat no new settlement plan to offe and he merely reviewed the entir situation. Action by the NFTW in reducin: wage demands from a $12 weekly raise to $6 failed to bring and money offers from the companies They are holding to their offer t' arbitrate all principal issues re- gionally. State Strikers Will Take Cut DETROIT, April 26--(P-Re- sumption of Michigan negotiation: was scheduled today as the na- tion-wide telephone strike neareC the three-week mark despite a 5( per cent cut in unlion wage de- mands on the industry( A spokesman for the Michigar Federation of Telephone Workers (Ind.) said Union officials woulc meet Sunday with members of the p U. S. Conciliation Service and thai Michigan Bell Telephone Co. rep- resentatives were to join the group in a meeting Monday. Vet Petitions Now Available FCommittee To Vote On Subsistence Rates Reminding veterans that a com- mittee vote on proposed subsis- tence increases may be expected this week, Bill Haydon, chairman of Michigan Student Veterans + Planning Conference, said yester- day that the Conference had peti- tions ready for veterans "who would like to apply a little last- minute pressure." The latest development in the raise the subsistence campaign which began here with a question- naire drive in March Mayden said, is a report made to the House committee by Rep. Mead of Ken- tucky who recently returned from a fact-finding tour of colleges. Mead, who posed as a GI trying to make ends meet, found evidence to indicate that the present sub- sistence rate is insufficient, ac- cording to Haydon. The committee, upon Mead's recommendations, is reported to be considering the following sub- sistence rates; $90 for a single vet; $125 for a married vet; $15 for first dependent; $10 for each ad- ditional dependent. Petitions may be picket up at the VO office, Lane Hall, Haydon said. CAF To Hold State Meetin The possibility of establishing a statewide committee for academic freedom will be considered by rep- resentatives of student govern- __ .. --- IVE* UET 5 - I ._ CASE WORK PROCEDURE-Arne A. Erickson, executive secre- tary of the Ypsilanti Family Agency, counsels a mother who has found the difficulties of discipling her children too much for her. " *. * * USE SPECIAL SKILLS: amily Aenc Workers"Say Graduate Studies Necessary I By FRANCES PAINE If you are seriously interested in social work, it might be well to spend a few more years in school. x Two University graduates, mem- Sbers of the Washtenaw County chapter of the American Associa- tion of Social Workers, say that pest-graduate work is "almost es- sential" for qualified wo ers in the rapidly expanding social field. "More is involved in rehabili- tation of families than mere giv- ing of financial assistance, and special skills and techniques are needed in doing an effective job," Cutin Anon dby Lcal Stores Four Ann Arbor nerchants have arnounced price cuts in line with President Truman's plea for lower prices to head o'T another depres- sion. Following the so-called New- buryport, Mass.) plan which has been adopted in scattered sections of the country, the merchants have cut prices from 10 to 20 per cent. The plan adopted by the Massa- chusetts community calls for cuts of 10 per cent in all retail prices. Not a 'Sale' The local price cutting move is not a temporary "sale," but a gen- uine effort to reduce prices, and start a general downward trend, the merchants said. A Main Street hardware store, slashed all prices by 20 per cent: Friday. Joseph Bandrofeheck, store owner, reported that sales were up by 25 per cent the first dlay after the price reduction. Cuts Up to 20 Per Cent Another 20 per cent cut on all store items was announced by a clothing store Friday. The first hour after the cut went into effect, the establishment did a greater volume of business than had been transacted all the previous week, according to Manager Charles; Robideau.- Two other local business estab- lishments who have followed thez local price cutting trend are a ra- dio store with a 10 per cent cut1 and an art shop with a 15 per cent reduction in prices.t Lewis Christman, executive sec-i retary of the Ann Arbor Chamber of Commerce has announced thatc the retail merchants group will meet Monday night to discuss the Newburyport plan. Arne A. Erickson, executive sec- retary of the Family Agency of Ypsilanti and chairman of the lo- cal chapter of the American As-' sociation of Social Workers, said in a Daily interview. Family as Unit The Family Agency is "the basis of social services in any commun- ity, as it deals with the family as a unit," Erickson said in de- scribing his work. Not a relief agency, it is primarily interested in "promot'ng healthy family life by the case work process, which means working with individuals one by one on the basis of their individual needs and varying per- sonalities." The case worker must "help peo- ple to help themselves," he de- clared, rather than "doing things for them and to them to fit them into the pattern you like." People still" show some reluctance to re- oest these services, he added, but this is much less evident than even a decade ago. Aims at Injustices "The Family Agency is con- cerned not only wtih individual families, but also with social and economic conditions affecting family life, such as inadequate so- cial legislation, poor housing and class and racial distinctions," Erickson said. "Consequently, the Agency assumes responsibility in trying to remedy these injustices through social action." Erickson received his AB degree from the University in 1935, and accepted a position with the Wash- tenaw County Emergency Relief Administration. He carried a large case load of families on public as- sistance, and soon realized that more professional training was See POST-GRADUATE, Page 7 GroupAs Plan For NSO Week Representatives from each cam- pus organization will attend a meeting of the Unity Committee at 3 p.m. today to discuss final plans for National Student Or- ganization Week which begins to- morrow. The aims and activities of the NSO will be explained by Jim Smith, president of its Continua- tions Committee, at a campus-wide informational meeting Thursday. On May 14, six students will be chosen in a campus election to rep- resent the University at the NSO Constitutional Convention next September.j Crane Easily Waddles Out Of Deep Jail Ascent Silences Si(Ic w4a kS(~dielr By IHAROLDJACKSON, JR. Student sidewalk supervisors can relax-"Bridgit" is safe. At 10:10 a.m. Friday, the giani 52 ton cyane easily waddled u out of the basement of the new administration building and sneered at skeptics who predicteC that she would suffer the same plight as her cousin Alfred, the steam shovel who is allegedly bur- ied under Angell Hall. For the past two weeks student observers, eyeing the steel prison which rose steadily higher en- circling their favorite crane, became more and more alarmed about Bridgit's chances of scal- ing the 20 foot embankment. Old timers, including several profes- sors, have been shaking their heads and sighing "Just like Al- fred." Construction officials have con- sistently pooh-poohed these fears even claiming that Bridgit could practically "climb up the side of a house." Whether Bridgit is really that good is debatable, but it is certain that she ambled up that 60 degree grade with an air of co- plete indifference, and is now rest- ing on high ground looking safe, sound and smug. This is more than can be said for Alfred. Alfred is not fiction, he actually existed. To prove this we have not only the word of several men who knew him personally, but numer- ous mention of Alfred in the files of The Daily for the fall of 1922, when the Angell Hall basement was being dug: Why this shovel was named Alfred is not clear, but appar- ently there was a controversy at the time about the true sex of Alfred. One student backed his opinion with a geometrical proof: "1. Women talk all the time, or in other words women are always making noise and blowing off steam. 2. Alfred is always making noise and blow- ing off steam. 3. Therefore Al- fred is a woman." Nevertheless, Alfred remained Alfred. He became a campus celeb- rity instead of an inanimate steam shovel, and letters about him flooded The Daily. One irate stu- dent complained that he himself See CRANE, Page 7 Marshall et By Truman On Arrival Home WASHINGTON, April 26-uP)- President Truman welcomed sec- retary of State Marshall home from Moscow today with praise for his work but deferred hearing is report until Congressional leaders of both parties share the briefing. "I am most happy to receive you back with us," Mr. Truman told his top cabinet officer at the air- port. "I am very well pleased with what you have been doing. I know when you make the report to the country, the people will also' be pleased." That report will be broadcast from 8:30 to 9 p.m. Monday night, 24 hours after a private re- port to the President and Con- gressmen at the White House to- morrow night. After a round of handshaking with Marshall and members of the delegation who returned with him, Mr. Truman resumed a Potomac River cruise aboard his yacht, the Williamsburg. Marshall conferred at the State Department for 20 minutes with Undersecretary Dean Acheson and then flew off to Pinehurst, N.C., for a reunion with Mrs. Marshall. e Ware Increases Conceded Key Industries Grant 15 Cent Hourly Boost Three Corporations Follow GM Pattern By The Associated Press April 26 - General Electric, the Chrysler Corporation and the Jones and Laughlin Steel Corpor- ation Saturday granted their em- oloyes wage boosts approximating 15 cents an hour, bringing to more than 790,000 the number of work- ers in three major industries who have reached agreement at that figure. The General Electric agreement for a 15-cent boost covered 125,- 000 employes in 14 states. The Chrysler contract, similar to one sigined by General Motors Tues- day, provided a 11 -cent increase plus six paid holidays and other changes and affects 70,000 pro- duction employes in five states. Covers 25,000 Workers The agreement with Jones and Laughlin, the nation's fourth lar- gest steel producer, covered 25,000 employes in the Pittsburgh area and provided for a 1212-cent boost ,lus other benefits which made the total "more than 15 cents." The Chrysler agreement left only the Ford Motor Company among the automotive "Big Three" unsigned in the new 1947 wage pattern, set originally about 10 days ago when the CIO electrical workers signed with General Mo- tors at the 11'2-cent figure with paid holidays. Follows Wage Pattern The wage pattern set by pre- vious increases in the electrical, automotive and steel industries, and followed in Saturday's set- tlements, compared with a pre- dominant pattern of 18 and 182 cent boosts granted last spring at the peak of the post-war strike wave. Football Seats Re-arranged :On Suggestion Legislature's Plan Becomes Certainity JOHN CAMPBELL . . Managing Editor Athletic Board Gives Assent on NANCY HELMICK . .Business General Manager Publications Board Appoints New Fall Daily, Ensian Editors World News Roundup By The Associated Press NEW YORK, April 26-Britain and the other big powers may be forced to show their hands on the Palestine issue in the special session of the United Nations As- sembly opening Monday. Reports from small nations in- dicated that the Arab League might get some support in its ef- forts to pin down the British on the explosive issue. RANGOON, Burma, April 26 -British Port authorities said today no trace had been dis- covered in the fifth day of the search for the missing 1,000-ton coastal vessell Sir Harvey Ad- amson, feared lost with 250 passengers aboard. * *. * STOCKHOLM, April 26-The Swedish Atomic Commission de- clared today that this country soon would be able to produce large quantities of uranium from slate. In a report to the government, the commission proposed the es- tablishment of an atomic energy corporation owned by the state and private interests. * * * CAIRO, April 26-Leaders of India's Moslem and Hindu fac- tions cabled the Arab League today expressing their support of Palestine independence and of halting Jewish immigration to the Holy Land. Jawaharlal Nehru, leader of the predominantly Hindu con- gress party, said "we sympathize with th eJews persecuted by Nazis in Europe, but Palestine is an Arab country and should remain so." ** * DETROIT, April 26-A General constiuttion holiday in the De- troit area next Thursday was threatened by AFL Building Fifty Yard Line Student Seats; John Campbell, '48E, of Swarth- more, Pa., was named managing editor and Nancy Helmick, '48, of Park Ridge, Ill., business general manger, of The Daily for 1947- 48 by the Board in Control of Student Publications yesterday. The Board also named Clyde Recht, '48, of Detroit, city editor; Stuart Finlayson, '48, of Maywood, 111., editorial director; Edwin IeN Village Coff To Be Elected At Willow Run Moves for concerted action to cope with common problems of Willow Run residents will be cli- maxed at 8 p.m. today in the North Community building, when a 22-man council will be elected and the much heralded "unincor- porated village" government will be in effect. For purposes of representation the Village has been divided into eleven districts, each of which will be served by two representa- tives. The district comprising the apartment area and including the married students' residences will be divided on a population basis. The 'West Lodge dormitory area, in which are housed single students of the University, will comprise a single district. The new Village government will presumably take over many * of the functions of the various cit- izens' groups in the Village. These groups have in the past fought for revision of the Village elec- trical policy, which has since been effected, an improved drainage system and the establishment of a day nursery in the Village. The questions of improved street lighting, more adequate police proteettion, and new road and street paving are other bones of contention which are expected to be broached in early sessions of the council. Schneider, '48, of Detroit, busi- ness manager; and Jeanne Swen- deman, '48, of Elkhart, Ind., ad- vertising manager. Dick Kraus, '48, of Chicago, was appointed sports editor and Bob Lent, '48, of Saginaw, associate sports editor. William Buck Dawson, '47, of Evanston, Ill., was named man- aging editor and Barbara Gray, '48, of Peekskill, N.Y., business manger of the 1947-48 Michigan- ,ensian. Jean Kodish, '48, of Brooklyn N.Y., and Rozann Radliff, '48, of Bloomington, Ill., were appointed Michiganensian associate editors, and Lloyd Jewell, '49, of Detroit, associate business manager.' The Board deferred decisionron appointment of Daily editorial staff senior associate editors to its meeting next Saturday. At See PICTURES, Page 3 that time, the Board will also appoint senior editors of the women's staff; junior night edi- tors of the editorial, sports and women's staffs, junior managers of the business staff; and senior editors of the 1947-48 Gargoyle. Daily editors and mangers re- tiring at the end of the present semester are Paul Harsha '47, of Plymouth, managing editor; Clay- ton Dickey, '47, of Milwaukee, city editor; Milt Freudenheim, '48, of Larchmont, N.Y., editorial direct- or; Ann Kutz, '47, of Chicago, and Mary Brush, '47, of Herkimer, N.Y., senior associate editors; Robert Potter, '47, of Chicago, business general manager; Janet Cork, '48, of Ann Arbor, business manger; Jack Martin, '47, of Huntington, W. Va., sports edi- tor; Archie Parsons, '47, of New York City, associate sports edi- tor; Joan Wilk, '47, of Detroit, women's editor; and Lois Kelso, of Mt. Lakes, N. J., associate wom- en's editor. Retiring editor of the Michi- ganensian is Florence Kingsbury, '47, of Detroit. Mary Lou Rookus, '47, of Detroit, is retiring busi- ness manager. By MARY RUTH LEVY Student football seats on the 50-yard line became a certainty yesterday as the Board in Con- trol of Intercollegiate Athletics announced favorable action on the Student Legislature's revised' student seating plan. Following recommendations made this week at a mediation meeting of alumni, faculty and student representatives, the Board decided that student seating will begin in the middle of section 23, on the west side, and extend north in a solid block through section 26. #tudent seats in se- tion 27 and other end zone sec- tions will be assigned only above row 30. The Board's decision met all Legislature requests except the recommendation for a split stu- dent section. A long-standing alumni com- plaint was satisfied by the as- signing of one section inside the goal lines for alumni who want individual game tickets. Such seats were formerly available only in the end zone. Faculty, alumni and compli- mentary tickets will be distributed for the other half of the west side, running south from the 50- yard line. The opposing team's supporters will receive seats from the 50yard line on the opposite side of the field. The seating revision gives students 1,826 seats nearer the center of the field than the plan in operation this fall, An- drew Baker, ticket manager, pointed out yesterday. Haskell Coplin, Legislature pres- ident and chairman of the com- mittee which drew up the seating plan, said that "in view of the large numbers of faculty, alumni and students to be satisfied, I think we have done very well, The Board cooperated v'ith all our re- quests." The Legislature's plan also in- cluded new provisions for distri- bution. "These are administrative details," Baker said, "and we will try to carry them out in conjunc- tion with student wishes." The distribution recommen- dations are that tickets be dis- tributed to students on the basis of the number of semesters com- pleted at the University, with See FOOTBALL, page 3 VU Fresh Air Camp Cited by Julie Franks By LIDA DAILES "The biggest thrill I got from my summer last year at the University FreshmAir Camp came from seeing the pure pleasure reflected on the kids' faces when they received awards in sports in which they had never played before," Julie Franks, 1942 All-American who was hos- pitalized from 1943-1945 after contracting tuberculosis, said yes- terday. Most of Julie's work was ar- ranging recreational activities, but a major part of his time was spent arranging "legal" boxing matches between the kids who though they had justifiable grudges against each other and then acting as ref- eree. About 75 per cent of the cam- pers were interested in competing in the boxing matches. Two box- ing tournaments, one for every four week period, were run, the winners of which were announced publiclv. "The kids got a. hbi kik 'MUSIC MASTER X':- Pianist, Eloise ental Patient Now Prefers Bach's Works MICHII(RAS MADNESS: uother-in-Law Foils Swain DETROIT, April 26 - (P) - A year's progress by "Music Master X," the mental patient who at- tracted nation-wide attention by his brilliant piano recital before the National Federation of Music Clubs one year ago, was reported today to the Federation conven- tion. "He is making real and definite progress," Dr. Ira M. Altshuler said of former concert pianist and teacher who once was considered a "hopeless" mental case. "A year ago he could play the piano but he could not coordi- nate his mind and hands enough to turn the pages of his music. vention that at one time the mu- sician was unable to dress him- self, feed himself or engage in a conversation. Music therapy was applied at the Eloise Mental Hospital, climaxed by last year's unprecendented re- cital by the mental patient before the federation. "le has very few relapses now," said Dr. Altshuler. "He is markedly happier, and he con- verses more and more as the weeks pass. "It is impossible to take a pa- tient who has been in the hospi- tal for nine years and cure him instantly." concluded Dr Alt- By CLYD RECHT The title of "Unhappiest Man 'at Michigras" was won easily by an unfortunate soul who stepped out of the Theta Chi "Tunnel o- Love" with two women and dis- gustedly explained that one of the women was his future mother-in- cardboard hoops trying to ring the foot of a bevy of nylon nifties. One of the more successful patrons garnered so many Michibucks for his night's efforts that he was awarded a string of pearls at the prize booth which he immediately turned over to his "target." Horror". after seeing several live, garden variety snakes. She came out through the wall of the next booth, a coke bar, where she paused to refresh. Even those with hatred in their hearts had a pleasant evening at the "Sweet Revenge" booth, spon- Il