Latest Deadline in the State D~AiiF RAIN, See Page Z VOL. LVII, No. 156 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY ,MAY 13, 1947 PRICE FIVE CENTS I Ballots To Be Cast at Four aPollingPlaces Students To Elect NSO Delegates Four campus voting booths will be open from 9 am. to 4:15 p.m. today for the election of delegates to the National Student Organiza- tion's Constitutional Convention and six Union vice-presidents. The booths will be located in the Engine Arch, and outside of Alumni Hall, the Chemistry Build- ing and Angell Hall. In the event of bad weather the Angell Hall booth will be moved inside. Three Delegates Three delegates will be elected who will join three members of the Student Legislature as the official University delegation to r l I Phone Operators Dispute MichiganBellBill To Re-strict Union Activ** May Halt U' Building FTEM Agree es Return to Work To Switchboard by Strikers Brings Pickets at West Engineering By DICK MALOY A labor dispute involving University phone operators may mush- room into a walkout of the 1,000 AFL construction men now at work on the multi-million dollar building program. Yesterday phone strike picketing spread to the campus as NFTW Local 301 protested what they termed "scab" labor employment on the University switchboard. Picket lines were thrown up at the West Engineering Building, which houses the switchboard. Workers May Not Report It was learned late yesterday that some individual workers on -- University construction programs STATEMENTS, Page 4 the convention. Three alternate- delegates and three additional legislature members will attend the convention as non-voting, non- speaking observers and will re- place absent delegates. The delegates will be selected from ten candidates under the Hlare Plan for Proportional Repre- sentation while the Union vice- presidents will be chosen on a straight ballot by men students only. Identification cards will be required for voting. Under the Hare system, the voter must number his choices in order of his preference although he may vote for as many candi- dates as he pleases. The quota of ballots necessary to elect a candi- date is approximately the number of ballots cast divided by the num- ber of posts to be filled. Campaign Rules No campaigning will be per- mitted within fifty feet of a bal- lot box and no posters or sandwich boards will be permitted on the campus block bounded by North, South and East University and South State Streets. The distribution of campaign literature and slanderous and li- belous statements are punishable by disqualification. , The ballots will be counted in the Grand Rapids room of League after the election. Interested per- sons may watch the system of vote tabulation. * * * Student Polling Returns to U MYDA Question First To Be Put to Test "Is the banning of MYDA a threat to academic freedom?" will .be the first question put to a sc- entifically-selected cross-section of the campus by the recently reac- tivated Bureau of Student Opin- ion, Robert Carneiro, chairman, said yesterday. The sampling will begin Monday and continue thrdughout the week, Carneiro said. He added that the results will not be made public but will be used to "perfect our tech- nique." Next fall, however, the Bureau plans to publish its findings on various questions- which will be limited to subjects of "strictly campus interest." The purpose of the polls, according to Carneiro, is to keep the campus informed on student opinion and to aid the Student Legislature in policy de- cisions. The Bureau will not operate during the summer session, Car- neiro said. It formerly was active here from 1938-41. Professional advice will be giv- en the Bureau . by Dr. Charles Metzner and Gene Jacobson, of the University Survey Research Center. At present the Bureau is seek- ing student interviewers, coders and tabulaters. No experience is required, Carneiro said, because all personnel will be trained by the Bureau staff. All applications should be filed today at Lane Hall, he said, add- ing "we would like about 50 inter- viewers." Seek Krnpa Trio For Jazz Concert Henry Wallace began Career As Journalist Henry A. Wallace, former vice- president and present editor of The New Republic, who will speak at noonhtomorrow in Hill Audi- torium, has now completed a ca- reer cycle-from editor to editor. As early as 1910, he was asso- ciate editor of Wallaces' Farmer in Iowa, and later become edi- tor of the merged Farmer and Iowa Homestead, holding that job until 1933. Wallace abandoned journalism temporarily in 1933 to join Frank- lin D. Roosevelt's cabinet as sec- retary of Agriculture. In Septem- ber 1940 he resigned to campaign for the vice-presidency, to which he was elected the same year. Defense Board Head During the war, President Roosevent appointed him head of the Economic Defense board and chairman of the Supply Priori- ties and Allocations board. Following a dispute in 1943 be- tween Wallace and Jesse Jones, chairman of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, from which Wallace's board obtained funds, President Roosevelt transferred all agencies of RFC engaged in fi- nancing foreign purchases to a new Office of Economic Warfare, which Wallace headed. In July 1944, Wallace was de- feated for renomination for the vice-presidency. In January 1945 he was nominated to succeed Jesse Jones as Secretary of Commerce and to head RFC. RFC Nomination His nomination for the RFC post was rejected, however, and he became Secretary of Commerce, March 1, 1945. During his tenure in the cabinet, Wallace advocated full postwar employment, asked for extension of the Reciprocal Trade agreements and wrote "Six- ty Million .Jobs." In the field of foreign affairs, Wallace consistently stressed the need for U. S.-Russian coopera- tion. In September, 1946, he re- signed from the cabinet shortly after a speech on foreign policy in New York. In December, 1946, he became editor of the New Republic, and has recently returned from an ex- tensive trip through Europe. Sp lurg .e Given A Local Ta vern Telegrams to individuals and houses on campus inviting "you and your identification" her- alded the advent of a local tavern's 14th birthday cele- bration Monday night. "Our party got rollingdshort- ly after dinner, and red roses were presented to the ladies," manager Clint Castor said. Everybody sang "Happy Birthday," then spent the rest of the evening drinking free beer paid for by campus hous- es and nostalgic alumni. may not report for work today, out of respect for the phone union's picket line. No official action on the question will be taken by the building trades union until the regular meeting Friday night, ac- cording to Louis Hackbarth, busi- ness agent. Lloyd Clickner Local 959 la- borer's union official said there is a possibility some members of his union may not report for work today in the belief that they would be crossing picket lines by so do- ing. The possible mass walkout grew out of a dispute centering around eight phone operators on the Uni- versity switchboard who "bolted" the striking phone union and re- turned to work, according to F. S. Greene, NFTW Local 301 official. Union Members Resign During the first month of the phone strike, the University switchboard had been manned by supervistory employes of the Michigan Bell Co. Last week, how- ever, several members resigned from the union and returned to their jobs, Greene charged. The University is playing the role of an "innocent bystander" in the dispute, according to Alfred Ueker, University personnel offi- cial. In a prepared statement issued yesterday afternoon, Vice-Presi- dent Robert P. Briggs declined to comment on the dispute. He point- ed out, however, that workers in- volved in the switchboard dispute are employees of the Michigan Bell Co. supplied to the Univer- sity under contract. Under terms of this contract, the Bell Co. sup- plies equipment and personnel to the University, but the Univer- sity has no control over working conditions, salary or working hours of phone company personnel, he said. He emphasized' that the University had not been contacted by either party in the dispute. Manager Comments Commenting on the dispute., N. J. Praaken, manager of the local phone company, said workers in- volved in the dispute had a meet- ing last week and decided to re- turn to work, "'If any of our strik- ing employes want to return to work, we have a job for them," he declared. The possibility of a general walkout of all construction men because of the phone workers' dis- pute remained cloudy last night. According to the Associated Press, plant workers of the Michigan Bell Co. have reached an agreement with the company and an agree- ment is expected momentarily with the operators. If this agreement is concluded, members of NFTW Local 301 in Ann Arbor will have to ratify it. A vote on any agreement could not be taken before late tonight, meaning construction work may possibly be hindered for at least one day. Korea Settlement Seen WASHINGTON, May 13-(/P)- The United States and Soviet Rus- sia agreed finally today after a year's deadlock to try again to set up a unified provisional govern- ment for divided Korea. ToSettlement Filial Acceptance Waits Union. Vote By The Associated Press DETROIT, May 13-The Fed- eral Conciliation Service todaydan- nounced the Michigan Bell Tele- phone and the Federation of Tele- phone Employes of Michigan had reached agreement on a proposal for settlement of the 37-day-old strike of 5,600 plant workers. "Acceptance by the membership will effect a complete contract be- tween the company and the un- ion," Leo Kotin, mediator, said. Membership Vote Following a membership vote to the settlement proposal, which he estimated would take "about three days," terms of the agreement would be disclosed, Kotin said Walter R. Schaar, union presi- dent, emphasized that the proposal did not constitute settlement and said, "the strike goes on," until the rank and file of the FTEM has re- sponded. "We have agreed only to submit the company's final position to the membership," he said. Other Conciliation Deadlocked The latest single unit of Michi- gan telephone workers, represent- ed by the Michigan Telephone Employes Federation, however, re- mained deadlocked with the com- pany. The situation was announced early this morning after a lengthy night negotiating session between company and union, which repre- sents traffic and accounting em- ployes. World News Roundup By The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO, May 13--Set- tlement of the 37-day strike by the National Federation of Tele- phone Workers against the five- state Pacific 'Telephone and Tele- graph Company, subject to rati- fication by union members, was announced by a federal concilia- tion official tonight. WASHINGTON, May 13-The Western Electric Co. today made its first wage offer to its 20,- 000 installation employes in the Association of Communication Equipment Workers, but thej Union rejected it. LANSING, May 13-Legislation to prohibit strikes by public em- ployes passed the House today while the Senate was approving a bill to require compulsory arbitra- tion in hospital and public utility' labor disputes. * * * ROME, May 13 - Alcide De Gasperi resigned as Premier of Italy today for the third time in 19 months as the result of a feud between his Centrist Chris- tian Democratic Party and Communists and Socialists which ripped apart his three- party coalition cabinet. BERLIN, May 13-United States military government quarters at Frankfurt expressed fear today that an outbreak of hunger strikes and demonstrations may develop in the American zone. WASHINGTON, May 13 - A Senate-House Committee agreed j today on final terms for the $400,080,000 Greek-Turkish aid legislation. UN Excludes Powers From Investigation 1l Nations To Study Holy Land Problems By The Associated Press LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., May 13 -With the Arab states abstaining in protest, the United Nations as- sembly's political committee late today excluded the big five from membership on the Palestine in- quiry commission. It then named 11 smaller coun- tries as the UN group to investi- gate the Holy Land problems this summer. The inquiry group named by the committee is composed of Czecho- slovakia, Canada, the Netherlands, Peru, Uruguay, Iran, Sweden, Yugoslavia, Guatemala, Australia and India. The Arab-country delegations- Egypt. Syria, Iraq, Lebanon and Saudi Arabia-abstained on all the critical ballots at the afternoon session in evident pursuit of the declaration by their leaders that they might even walk out of the UN Paletine assembly and might refuse to cooperate in the UN in- quiry. The action represented a victory for the United States, which had maintained from the start of the Assembly April 28 that the Big Five should not take part in the UN investigation. The committee decisions now go to the 55-nation assembly for final approval. The assembly meeting was ten- tafively set for tomorrow morning at Flushing Meadows, in New York. AVC Presents LaorTalks Maos Meeting To Be At Masonic Temple The campus chapter of the American Veterans Committee and the Ann Arbor chapter of Pro- gressive Citizens of America, will conduct a parade at 7:30 p.m. to- day in conjunction with labor dis- cussions to be sponsored by the two groups later in the evening. Also participating in the pa- rade, which has received the sanc- tion of city authorities, will be members of Kaiser-Frazer Local 142, UAW-CIO Local 959, the Na- tional Negro Congress and mem- bers of several other local build-1 ing and trade organizations. Following the parade, a mass meeting will be held at 8:30 p.m. in the Masonic Temple for the purpose of bringing some of the issues confronting the United States to the public's attention. Speakers at the rally will in- clude the Rev. John Miles of The People's Institute of Applied Re- ligion, Detroit; Rev. Robert Rum- er of the Calvary Community Church; James Tamoor, vice presi- dent of Local 600, UAW-CIO of the Ford Rouge, plant; and Fred An- derson, former business agent of the Ann Arbor AFL carpenters. _ _._ Karl Marx Club Splits Over Policy Questions Nine Founders Accuse Controlling Bloc Of 'Subverting' Original Purpose of Group The Karl Marx Study Club's factional dispute broke out in the open again yesterday as nine of the founders protested the controlling bloc has "subverted" the original purpose of the group. In a meeting of the Student Affairs Committee, the founders' spokesman, Betty Goodman, '47, charged in a prepared statement that a majority of the club's 134 members were not interested in Marxist theory and intended only to "take over" the club. Charge Rule Violation A requirement that members of the club pay a one-dollar fee was violated and the new constitution, adopted at the club's second meet- ing held April 3, was "railroaded through," Miss Goodman told the committee. Big Five Out of Palestine Probe Passed by Coalition of Senators; < Final Parley, Plans Stated ByCommittee Final plans for topics and speakers for Spring Parley panels, Friday and Saturday, were an- nouncedayesterday by the parley committee. "Can the Atom Be Controlled?" and "Responsibility of Science in the Atomic Age" will be given spe- cial treatment at 8 p.m. Friday. Members of the faculty leading discussion will be Prof. Ernest F. Barker of the physics department, Prof. Thomas S. Lovering of the geology department, Prof. David T. Williams of the aeronautical engineering department, Prof. Wil- fred -Kaplan of the mathematics department and Vrof. P'ed J. Hodges, chairman of the Depart- ment of Roentgenology. Prof. Lawrence Preuss of the political science department and Albert D. Moscatti, graduate stu- dent, will lead discussion of the topic "The United States, the Se- curity Council and the Interna- tional Control of Atomic Energy and Armaments" at the panel on foreign relations, also to be held at 8 p.m. Friday. Dave Dutcher, will moderate. Nursery Home Still Undecided No action was taken by the Willow Run school board Monday night in regard to the allocation' of two rooms at Simonds School as a day nursery, it was disclosed yesterday. The request for the designation of the two rooms was furthered by the Village day nursery commit- tee, which presented the board with a petition of 50 names sup- porting the action. Two hours of discussion netted only a board statement that the petitions were "received and filed without com- ment." A measure requesting a state grant of $3,000 for such a nur- sery is pending until a suitable home for it is designated. Col. Philip Pack, state veterans coor- dinator, has agreed to introduce the request for a grant before the State Legislature. > Elmer Faust, '48BAd, president of the club, claimed the present membership has carried out the intent of the founders by present- ing lectures on Marxism by facul- ty members. He said the new constitution was given clear ap- proval by a majority of the mem- bers and added that the voting procedure was explainned before the vote was taken. Miss Goodman charged that by provisions of the club's original constitution, voting privileges are limited to students who pay a one- dollar membership fee.. To date, only 34 persons have paid such membership fee and we maintain that these are the only valid members," she said, adding that the club's present officers are "not the duly elected officers" and that the new constitution is "void." SAC Interprets Section The SAC decided that the sec- tion of the original constitution describing membership fees did not imply the "membership" would be limited to student whose fees were paid up. Article seven of the original constitution states in part: . "Membership fee in the Karl Marx Society will be $1 per sem- ester." Article three states: "Membership in the Karl Marx Society is open to all students re- gardless of political affiliation or belief." Submits for Approval Earlier in the meeting, Faust had submitted the new constitu- tion for approval by the SAC. The committee's members, who sat passively through a heated ex- change between Faust and Miss Goodman, ordered Faust to resub- mit the proposed new constitution to the registered membership and stipulated that a two-thirds ma- jority vote would be necessary for passage. The Committee also: 1. Requested the Student Legis- lature to recommend to the SAC a system for campus drives and tag days. 2. Granted WAA's request to hold Lantern Night May 19 in Hill Auditorium and approved a "golf championship dance" to be held June 24 in the Union. 3. Granted University recogni- tion to the Mormon Fireside Group, the Grace Bible Guild, the American Society for Public Administration and the Willow Village chapter of AVC. Three Sentenced In Policy Racket Three men were sentenced yes- terday in Washtenaw County Cir- cuit Court to $300 fines or 90 days in jail after pleading guilty to a charge growing out of an alleged Willow Village policy racket. The charge of "accepting money contingent upon result of con- test" was amended from the origi- nal charge of conspiracy to evade gambling laws, brought against the three men in an indictment by Washtenaw county's one-man grand jury, Circuit Judge James R. Breakey. The three men-Walter West, 38, of Willow Village, James Clark, 31, and L. C. Cato, 37, both of De- troit-had been apprehended Feb. 25 while selling- nnliuv tieiP rc Vote Enou gl To Override Truman Veto Senate-House Parley To Adjust Differences By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, May 13 - A mass coalition of Republicans and Democrats rammed through the Senate today a history-making bill to check strikes and other union activities. The vote was 68 to 24, enough to over-ride a presidential veto, if the lineup re- mains unchanged. The measure was sped to a Senate-House conference to ad- just differences between it and an even more sweeping bill which the House passed earlier-also by more than the two-thirds required to cancel a veto. Passqge followed storms of bitter protest by union leaders that Congress is out to crush or- ganized labor. Those on the win- ning side argued that Union leaders have become danger- ously arrogant and that legisla- tion is needed to redress injus- tices and economy-crippling strife. Senator Taft of Ohio, Chairman of the Senate's Republican policy committee and the labor commit- tee, estimated it will take 10 days to two weeks to iron out differ- ences in the House and Senate bills. After conferring with House Republican leader Halleck (Ind.) chairman Hartley (Rep, N. J,) said President Truman will not be consulted on the possibility of drafting a compromise the Chief Executive might be willing to sign. "My disposition," he said, "is to go along pretty much with the Senate bill. But we have plenty of room for trading, and I think we should retain the House ban on mass picketing and a 'Bill of Rights' for labor." Both the Senate and Mouse measures (1) permit the govern- ment to seek injunctions against national emergency strikes such as a coal tie-up, (2) ban the closed shop, (3) restrict the un- ion shop, (4) make unions lia- ble for unfair labor practices, (5) outlaw jurisdictional strikes and secondary boycotts, and (6) create a new federal media- tion.service independent fof the labor department, The House bill, but not the Sen- ate measure, would outlaw in- dustry-wide collective bargaining in most cases, scrap the National Labor Relations Board and set up a Labor-Management panel in its place and prohibit mass picketing and violence in any picketing. Senate Passes Callahan Bill LANSING, May 13-(IP)-The senate passed the Callahan Bill today, which would require the i'egistration of any organization dominated or influneced by or serving the purposes of a foreign power. It would permit the Attorney General to make such a designa- tion and to take control of any labor union, society or corpora- tion he believes dominated by a foreign power until the member- ship elects officers loyal to the United States, Previously, the CIO United Auto Workers challenged the legisla- ture and Gov. Sigler ."to move for public hearings" on the bill which it labeled a "legislative monstrosity" Journalistic Field To Be Discussed The journalism department will present the eleventh concentra- tion conference at 4:15 p.m. today in Rm. 2231 Angell Hall. The concentration advisement meeting, part of the series planned to assist sophomores and freshmen in the literary college in choosin AINI , AUI~ UI Ail,'~