Latest Deadline in the State 6w,47 1 .J SNOW ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, FEB. 20, 1947 PRICE FIVE C I I Prof. Palmer Christian Britain's Coal University Organist Dies Crisis Breaks, Faculty Member Since 1924 Played with House Told Leading American Symphony Orchestras Prof. Palmer Christian, University organist, died suddenly of heart Central England diseaserat 9:30 p.m. yesterday in his home. Industries Open Prof. Christian had been in ill health, but had returned to his O e home from University Hospital several weeks ago. By The Associated Press Born in Kankakee, 1l., in May 1885, Prof. Christian graduated LONDON, Feb. 19 - Britain's from Kankakee High School and attended the Cosmopolitan School Labor Government announced to- of Music in Chicago. He received his honorary doctorate from that day that industries in Central school in 1939. dyta nutisi eta h m .* * Prof. Christian studied the or- England, shut down for 10 days gan under Karl Straube and theory by the coal famine, will be per- under Gustav Shreck at the Royal mitted to reopen next Monday- Conservatory in Leipzig. He stud- first break in the power crisis ied privately with Alexandre Guil- that has slowed the nation's re- mat in Paris and received an hon- covery program to a crawl. "kw $ orary doctorate from the Ameni- Prime Minister Attlee, telling can Conservatory of Music in 1939. Prof. Christian made six trans- the news to the House of Com- continental tours through Europe mons, said, however, that the and played in the larger cities. He present five-hour-a-day switchoff has also played with leading Unit- of electric current to domestic and ed States orchestras such as the other n o n - i n d u s t r i a 1 users S. New York City Philharmonic, the throughout the country would Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, continue indefinitely. the Philadelphia Orchestra and Pressure from Both Sides the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. Despite pressure from both In 1924, Prof. Christian came to Conservative and Labor benches the University to serve as professor of the House, he declined to say of organ and University organist. when industries in the other in January of that year, he gave "blacked out" areas - the North- his first concert at Hill Audito- west, London and Southeast Eng- rium. fsland - might be allowed to re- ri um1. sume production. PROF. PALMER CHRISTIAN o Cr e the Central England, where produc- American representative at the In- to trsu gi ody n terntioal rga-Orcesta Cn-ludes the heavy industrialized cert in New York City ii 1925. Birmingham area, and has more Truinan Asks He wasea member of the Ameri- than ,000,000 factory workers, can Guild of Organists, Mu Phi many making automobiles for the A ct End Alpha, Pi Kappa Lambda and the vital export trade. Music Teacher's National Associ- Two Weeks' Supply ation, serving in the latter organi- Attlee said all but three power Em ergene zation as chairman of the Organ- stations in this area would have Choral Committee from 1930-1940. two weeks' supply of coal by to- Urges 24 Special Prof. Christian is survived by his morrow, but he warned that coal wife Mary Lois Christian. deliveries to industries would be Powers Be Repealed less than normal at first. BrPre) His statement came as the cold WASHINGTON-, Feb.19--o spell which precipitated the power In a major new stride toward nor- .crisis continued without prospect mal national life, President Tru- ToAe * of an early break - London had man today. asked legislation by j11 S . its 18 consecutive sunless day, an Congress to permit "early ending" all-time record - and the num- of the 71/2 year old "state of In 1TNosber of workers asking unemploy- emergency." ment pay rose to 1,272,000. To permit "early ending" of the Temperatures continued below national emergency, on which 102 LAKE SUCCESS, N.Y., Feb. 19. freezing. war laws are based, President Tru -()-Byron Price,war-time di- Army trucks in steadily increas-. man: rector of censorship and former ing numbers helped the country's' 1. Asked Congress to extend 12 executive news editor of the Asso- overstrained transport s y s t e m emergency acts. They include the ciated Press, was named today as move coal. arming of merchant ships and the an Assistant Secretary - General * * armig o mechat sipsandtheof the United Nations. use of war housing for veterans. He succeeds John B.Hutson, Bri h r 2. Urged the repeal of 24 un- who resigned recently as assistant British Labor needed powers including the right to Secretary-General Trygve Lie to lease federal lands for arms in charge of UN administrative MVember~s Hit production, hiring of dollar-a-year and, financial services. The job men, some inducements to oil pays $13,500 plus $8,500 expenses, p and gas field discovery, all tax free. 1 alestLme iPlan 3. Ordered all agencies to halt at Top U.S. Representative once, or by March 15, any activi- The appointment places him as LONDON, Feb. 19. - (P)--Bri- ties under emergency clauses of 36 the top-ranking United States rep- tain's decision to send the trouble- permanent laws. This would leave resentative in the Secretariat. In some Palestine question to the the laws-such as the requisition- the original set-up of the Secre- United Nationswtht- ing of ships-on the books for fu- tariat, the United States chose to , witou recoi- ture use if a new emergency arises. have its allotted assistant Secre- mendations for a solution and with 4. Proposed that Congress re- tary-General post in the field no interim increase in Jewish im- scind funds in most of 20 defense of administrative and budgetary migration, was reported today to appropriation measures, leaving matters. have run into a "stormy" session four in operation-those needed to Former Senator Warren R. Aus- of Labor members of Parliament. complete strategic and access tin, chief American delegate toF roads. the UN, offered his congratula- Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin's 5. Asked that 10 laws be allowed tions first. Secretary of State Mar- plan also met with heavy criti- As ht lw elled shall followed with this comment: cism from leading Zionists and, it to run out, a scheduled, six wsrpreternwdiss months to two years after the Marshall's Comment teed th tedren tds that emergency is formally ended. "Mr. Price will bring to this immediate and substantial Jewish important international positioni the high qualities of judgment and immigration be permitted. eadership he has displayed during A leading Labor member of Par- his wide experience in private life liament said that Bevin, facing and as director of censorship for critics in a Laborite caucus, blam- Sa esC nthe United States during the war." ed pressure of American Jews on Price was born in Topeka, Ind., the United States Government for A lmitd nmbe ofticetsforMarch 25, 1891, and was graduated his failure to reach an agreed A lmited number of tickets for from Wabash College. He joined settlement in Palestine. the special Choral Union concerths 'the Associated Press in 1912 and torium ae stil availae in tha hnh oklav oL r 'v t i iep.m.tomorrow in Hill Audi-whene Wanto join theil 1917 office of the University Musical Army. * He served as first lieuten- ant3an Calld hoe avntetyd ccaptain of infantry over- Templeton will present a varied seas until 1919. Tempetonwil preenta vaied He was news editor of the Asso- program of classical and lighter ciated Press Washington Bureau LONDON, Feb. 19.-( P)-The works. Conducting the second por- from 1922 to 1927 and bureau chief British Government summoned tion of the concert informally, until 1937 when he was called to Viceroy Lord Wavell home from Templeton will present his impro- New York to become executive India today, authoritative govern- visations on four notes in the news editor. ment informants said, and Prime styles of various composers. , Shortly after Pearl Harbor, Minister Attlee prepared a state- Among the classical composers President Roosevelt took Price to ment of "crucial importance" be- whom Templeton will present are Washington and made him the fore the House of Commons to- Bach, Chopin and Debussy. The Chief censor. In that post he morrow on the sub-continent's pianist will also play several of applied the principle of voluntary faltering progress toward freedom. his own works. censorship which was widely ac- One informant said outright A String Quartet, a chorale work claimed and in a customarily British evacuation from India and the score for a new Broadway thankless role he not only escaped "within a stated period," perhaps musical are included in Temple- criticism generally but also won within a year, was not out of the ton's recent compositions. praise. question. House GOP Backs Budget Slas. Unanimously, Leaders Repor Taf Col Toward Labor Parne Terms Union Interference 'Bad Business' Says AFL-CIO Plan Would Confuse Issue Sy The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Feb. 19-Chair-1 man Taft (Rep., Ohio) dashed cold water today on a surprise CIO suggestion that the Senate Labor Committee call in AFL and CIO leaders to a three-cornered parley on ending jurisdictional strikes. CIO President Philip Murray proposed the idea. "You get Will Green (AFL President) down here so he and I can sit down with this commit- tee and work out an agreement right here," Murray suggested at committee hearings. Taft's reaction was that this was no way to do business. He told newsmen : "We can't sit down and write a bill with all thedcontroversyrthat would be going on. After all, the committee has to make its own de- cisions." One of these decisions is what to do about jurisdictional strikes, called when unions disagree over which is to handle a job. Com- mitteemembers, in questioning witnesses on proposed labor law changes, have criticized such strikes as injuring innocent em- ployers and the public. Murray told the questioning Senator Morse (Rep., Ore.) that "I know there is no moral justifi- cation for jurisdictional strikes." He added that the CIO "has not precipitated them." Murray tore into all pending bills to outlaw the closed shop, under which a man must be a un- ion member if he is to work; to forbid industry-wide bargaining; such as is conducted in the coal and steel industries; to change the Wagner Act, which guarantees collective bargaining, and to alter the Norris-LaGuardia Act's re- strictions on the use of injunc- tions against strikes. BEING STOOD UP: Cab Drivers Threaten Coed Dorm Blacklist By RICHARD MALOY Several local taxicab companies have threatened to "black list" women's dormitories for what the cab companies term "no-go" prac- tices. Dormitory residents have been in the habit of taking the first cab available rather than await- ing the cab ordered, a company spokesman charged yesterday. Mrs.. Clapper Will Deliver L ecture "Today This practice has caused un- necessary, or "no-go" runs .on the part of the cab companies, the spokesman said. "If this practice continues we will have to stop sending any of our cabs to the women's dorms," a Veterans Cab Co. official told The Daily. "When too many no- go runs are recorded "at a private address we have to tell residents they are on our black list and that we can no longer serve them," he added. Jazz Concert Ticket Sale Is Tomorrow Tickets for Norman Granz' "Jazz at the Philharmonic" concert, to be presented March 4 in Hill Aud- itorium, will go on sale tomorrow. The tickets will be sold in Uni- versity Hall, the Union, the League and local record stores. Price of the tickets will be $1.20. Members of the Student Legisla- ture Varsity Committee, sponsors of the concert, pointed out that this is the lowest price under which Granz has ever presented his group of nine outstanding ar- tists in the field of jazz. Each performer plays the par- ticular numbers which have given him nationwide fame during the two and one-half hour program. Other features are contests be- tween individual members, group numbers and solos. Members of the group are: Granz, Coleman Hawkins, Buddy Rich, Joe "Flip" Phillips, Willie Smith, Helen Humes, Trummy Young, Kenneth Kersey,. Benny Fonville and Buck Clayton. State Studies FEPC Poll Tax LANSING, Feb. 19-(T)-Rep. Elton R. Eaton, Chairman of the House Taxation Committee, said today some members of his com- mittee are considering the possi- bility of a poll tax to finance the proposed Fair Employment Prac- tices Commission law. The FEPC proposal, initiated by popular petition is to appear on the April ballot since the legisla- ture did not act on it within the constitutional deadline. "An FEPC will cost this state Washington Politics Observed by Author Mrs. Raymond Clapper, lecturer, author, radio broadcaster, and widow of the nationally known columnist and news analyst, will give the sixth lecture in this year's Oratorical Association series at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Audito- rium. "Behind the Scenes in Wash- ington" will be the topic of Mrs. Clapper's talk. During the years of her husband's rise to promi- nence, she came to know person- ally the national and international figures who dominated the world scene. In a quarter of a century at the nation's capital, she has made first hand observations of Washington politics and society. Mrs. Clapper is the author of the best-seller, "Washington Tap- estry," which is based on her hus- bands diaries and her own obser- vations. Since her husband's death, she has edited his columns into the book "Raymond Clapper Watching the World," has done some notable broadcasting from both the Republican and Demo- cratic conventions and has toured the country giving lectures. Tickets for the address will be on sale from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 2 p.m. to 8:30 today in the Hill Auditorium box office. Mrs. Clap- per will be introduced by Mrs. Mary Bromage, assistant dean of women. Exchange Will Close Today The Student Book Exchange is temporarily suspending general sale of textbooks today and will reopen for the remainder of the semester on Wednesday, Feb. 26, Ken Bissell, director, said Yester- day. Closing is necessary to allow time for writing and mailing checks to those students whose books have been sold through the Exchange, Bissell explained. Students, unless on a waiting list for books or in immediate need of a text book, were asked by Bis- sell not to bother the store for this period. Exchange hours, starting Feb. 26, will be from 1 to 5 p.m. A Campus Cab Co. spokes- man said his establishment has been considering discontinuing service to Mosher-Jordan if residents continue duplication practices. He said his com- pany has a "black list" for pri- vate addresses but he expresseda the hope that it would be un- necessary for women's dorms. Mosher coeds defended their ac- tions in taking the first available, cab. Residents told The Daily that taxi service is often very poor, al- leging that it is sometimes nec- essary to wait 45 minutes for a cab ordered by phone. Cab companies pointed out that one of the reasons for much of the poor service was the frequent un- necessary trips made by the driv- ers. "Women complain of the poor service, and then contribute to it by placing orders for cabs they don't use," a company offi- cial stated. Six Students Appear Before Gripes Office With six suggestions and com- plaints by as many students on file at closing time yesterday, the S t u d e n t Legislature's "Gripes Committee" completed a "more encouraging" second day of op- eration. Committee member Walter Klee hailed as the "first worthwhile suggestion" a proposal to estab- lish a social events planning bul- letin board. A student, whose name was withheld in accordance with committee policy, suggested that a blank calendar be posted in a prominent spot on campus. Organizations desiring to spon- sor a social event, he said, could pencil in a tentative date and, when University permission was secured, go over their date in ink. It was asserted that such a bul- letin board would alleviate much of the present confusion in plan- ning and would aid the student body as a whole. Klee revealed two gripes against veteran absence reports, one against the University automo- bile ban, one alleging "collusion" among local bookstores, and one asking for a revision of the legis- lature's election setup. The "Gripes Committee" will continue office hours from 3 to 5 p.m. today in Rm. 306 of the Union, he said. Agree To Cut Army, Navy Appropriation Won't Harm Fightin Strength, Party Says By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Feb. 19-Hou Republicans rallied solidly tod behind a $6,000,000,000 bucd slash carrying what its spon4 called "very substantial" cuts Army-Navy funds. The report on the closed me( ing- action came from party les ers, who said the word on Arm Navy cuts was coupled with assi ance that nothing would be dc to harm the nation's fighti: strength. Not a single Republican stae in his chair, Rep. Bender (Rep Ohio) told reporters, when th were called to astanding vo on the issue of trimming Pres dent Truman's $37,500,000, budget to $31,500,000,000. And not a single speech made in behalf of a small cut, R Taber (Rep., N.Y.) added. Taber said he and Rep. En (Rep., Mich.) told their colleag that while "very substantial" mi tar cuts arein the works, don't intend to hazard the r tional defense. We intend to t the waste out of defense." The Taber-Engel argumel was similar to one delivered o the Senate floor by Senat Byrd (Dem., Va.) who declar "there is not a many in t armed forces who doesn't kno first hand of senseless waste. Senator TBridges(., N.H.), i wise scoffed at those who "imaginary harm" in the pi proposed $6,000,000,000 spends slash. Theirs' and other Sena speeches were set off by introdi tion of a compromise proposal Senator Millikin (Rep., Colo.) hold the budget cut to $4,500,00 000. .Senator Taft (Rep., Ohio), di arinkgthe nation is carrying load of taxes nearly one-thij the size of its total income, to: the Seniate "It is more, importai to cut taxes than even the n,. tional debt." Taft estimated that a cut $4,500,000,0.00 from the presid( tial figure would enable Congr to reduce income taxes 20 per cE next July and leave $2,500,000,( to apply on debt. This was ba, on an estimated excess of $6,00 000,000 in revenue over a spend: figure of $33,000,000,000. ' teachers File Strike TNotice 'TAIN'T FUNNY: Telephone Pranksters Plaue Three Anni Arbor Residents DETROIT, Feb. 19.--(P)--I troit public school teachers, w have announced intention of fil: a 30-day strike notice, were t today that the Board of Educati already has drained its treasi for salaries. "We are allocating to teach all the funds we can get and wh additional money we expect fr the State," said Arthur M. Don neau, Superintendent of Scho "If more funds become ava able, the Board would like to further raises -for the teacher he added. The AFL Federation of Teach authorized its executive board file strike notice with the St Labor Mediation Board after union declared a recent se: strike vote favored a walkout 4, to 1,717. The AFL union claims to rep sent at least 2,500 of the appro mate 7,900 public school teaclh in Detroit. The Union has demanded a monthly pay increase in place a $26.50 offer by the school boa contingent upon distribution state sales tax funds. Casualties in Tra urr I ?u" . y "n By HAROLD JACKSON, JR. Several telephone pranksters have been making life miserable for three Ann Arbor residents, ac- cording to police reports. The pranksters, who are sus- pected to be teen age boys, began three weeks ago to puncture the peace and quiet of three seperate families by a barrage of phony "and others from complete strang- ers who thought I had called them. What's worse, the boys don't just call me, they call every- one else about me. The day this all started, the fire department pulled up in front of my home. Turning in a false alarm is no joke." Her tormentors have also made sure that she is well supplied with Foreign Enrollment Higher,'U' Reveals Fnreign student enrollment at<,slightly more than two per cent of'dents enrolled, with Latin Amer-