'FRIENDLY FIRMNESS" See Page 4 Y G OMM A& r of A6F 0 ow ..dk- AM,- IVW 1 1 AW 411 - - A att4p C FAIR COOLER Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVII, No. 26 ANN ARBOR 1' MIC1IGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23 1946 PRICE FIVE CENTS Lucking Claims Denied By Court Judge Toms Waives Show Cause Order AgainstLocal Government Circuit Judge Robert M. Toms yesterday dismissed a taxpayer's suit containing an order to show cause why the city of Ann Arbor should not be restrained from enter- ing into an agreement with the Uni- versity regarding expansion of the local water and sewage plants. Byrnes Defends Limitations Set On Loan Policy Resentment Expressed To 'Economic Slavery' By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 22-In a sarcastic dig at Russia and Czecho- slovakia, Secretary of *State Byrnes laid down the policy today that the United States will not grant loans to nations which fear the money will make them slaves of dollar imper- ialism. The United States recently sus- pended $90,000,000 loans and credits to Czechoslovakia after that nation's delegation at the Faris Peace Con- ference applauded Russian charges that American dollars were being used to reduce Europeans to "econo- mic slavery." Byrnes denied at a news confer- ence that a general policy of re- fusing loans to Russia and her neighbors has been adopted. But he said at a news conference that a general policy of refusing loans to Russia and her neighbors has not been adopted. t But he said the determining fac- tors in future loans would be need and friendship. After all, he said, it was only hu- mtan to resent charges of economic slavery-and the State Department is run by human beings. This coun- try, he said, would want to be very certain that a borrower doesn't feel we are trying to enslave him. The money available for foreign loans is not limitless, he emphasized, adding that this country has no funds to lend except those provided by American taxpayers. Drily, Byrnes observed that if Czechoslovakia -was in a position to make loans, then it wasn't as bad off as had been believed. Part of the credit to Czechoslo- vakia was to finance purchase of American surplus property. Byrnes said he concluded it was necessary because Czechoslovakia had entered into an agreement to extend a $10,- 000,000 credit to Rumania to buy surplus property on the oasis of sev- en per cent handling charge and six per cent interest. Bradley Warns ending Vets Attacks Reckless Benefits Expenditures WASHINGTON, Oct. 22 - (P) - Veterans Administrator Omar Brad- ley warned today there is tough sledding ahead for ex-servicemen who are exhausting unemployment. benefits recklessly. "I am greatly concerned over the rate at which many veterans are ex- pending their readjustment allow- ances," General Bradley said in an " terview. "A veteran who lies idle for a year, living on unemployment checks in a period when jobs are more plentiful than they may be later, might find it hard to get work and to get to work when his readjustment allowance ends," Bradley warned. "That veteran is losing seniority and experience leading to a better job. Unemployed veterans are allowed $20 a week for a maximum of 52 weeks, or $100 a month for 10 2/5 months if they are self-employed but without income. In Michigan 1,315 claims have been exhausted and $1,292,611 was paid during the last period to 12,377 veterans. Brought by William A. Lucking, local attorney, the suit had sought to have agreements between the city and the University disapproved by the court. In dismissing the suit, Judge Toms said that the court had no authority to act upon contracts which are merely contemplated. This court action is expected to bring speedy approval by Ann Ar- bor Conmon Council on the pro- posed agreement with the Univer sity. The proposed agreement offers $97,600 to the city for the expan- sion of water and sewage disposal plants. Under terms of the agree- menit, the 'University will continue to pay the same sewage and water rates as charged taxpayers. Also included in the proposal, is an amount, estimated at $20,000 yearly, to be paid by the University over a ten year period for the sal- aries of seven policemen who will serve the campus area. Another provision of the agree- ment provided that the University shall be exempted from the obliga- tion of furnishing free beds at the U. Hospital, upon payment of $7,500 to the city. It is expected that Council Presi- dent Cecil Creal will call a special meeting of the Common Council early this week for the purpose of acting on the offer. College 'Dumps' Poor Substitute Says Supt Elliot Finds Michigan Vets Prefer Major Schools Dr. Eugene B. Elliott, state super- intendent of Public Instruction, told The Daily yesterday that emergency education camps are no desirable substitute for existing colleges with strong and varied programs. He declared that the State of Michigan would bend its efforts to educate veterans to improving pre- sent colleges "where we will have a lasting and permanent invest- merit." Dr. Elliott said that his depart- ment had considered the action of New York State in creating three emergency junior colleges to accom- modate the overflow of veteran students under the GI Bill. But he has found that Michigan veterans want to go to our major colleges. In spite of delays caused by labor and material shortages, he believes that the present policy "better serves the veteran than to attempt to create colleges around a barracks situation which offers no hope of better conditions and which would lack utterly the collegiate atmos- phere of our college campuses." The State is using one converted military camp at present. About 300 veterans are enrolled in the school at Fort Brady, Sault Ste. Marie. The Michigan College of Mining and Technology is sponsoring the in-. stitution. Lewis S Foreig See y. Cites Nedfo New Spirit 4 Reiterates Satic]l LONDON, Oct. 2 -IUP) - Forin Secretary Ernest Bev i), caling earn estly for a new give-and-take spirit of inter'nationialismn among the great powers, declared today he was "not unhopeful" of an under standing on the problems of peace. But he warned that Britain wold insist that the Potsdamn agreement on Germany either be observed ii it entirety or~ completel y rewritte n, that "outside interference wihii Greec' must stop," aid that a cease-fire' or- der' in the "war of nerves" is neces- sary for international n eg otiation on the Dardanelles. In an hour and 50 rninute review of world affairs that seemed to skim rather than probe many of the is- sues he had been expected to discuss, Bevin told a ljam -packed House of Commons: "If we are to achieve lasting peace and economic recovery, all at the forthcoming meetings at New York must show a readiness to recognize the legitimate interests of others and to subordinate national interest to the common good." Bevin's speech opened a two-day debate on the Labor Government's foreign policy. Prime Minister Attlee and his predecessor, Winston Church- ill, opposition leader, are scheduled to speak tomorrow. In an around -the -world review, Bevin touched brief ly on the following countries: Germany-Bri tain agrees "almost" completely with the Ituttgart speechI See BEV'+IN, lPage2 Britisher Asks Scientists rj() Prevent War PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 22-.( )._ Sir Henry Dale, noted British scin- tist, proposed tonight that the world's universities and professors might prevent secret plans for ev~ci by a worldwide agreeneit decli- ing to carry on :rese:.archl under mili- tary secrecy. In an address prepred for de- livery before a distinguisid group of scientists froni 25 nations a a meeting of the National Academy of Sciences, lie said, "nrow that the war has ended, that scientists "look for the freedom (of research withut secrecy) that victory was to insure.'' But, he added, scientists may b told by their national leaders that "abandonment of national secrecy in science would nake the retention of any kind of military secrecy im- possible, and t ha this would com- promrise righits of na~ional :,aver egnty" r ie _- f ,n World-wide Nov. 1 Coal P1LOTS PICKET TWA SHOPS-Six pilots of Trans- World Airlines march, minus the usual placecards. The picket line was set up in Kansas City, Mo., before the airline's big maintenance shops. The strike, which began at 3:59 a.m. (CST), followed a 30-hour ultimatum by the Airline Pilots Association (AFL) demanding prompt action on wage increases, company officials s aid. 4 ,* * * " 7 VW T " "Y Ir W-1 W"S rW'Y, 4"% ft T W'7 $ I 'HIGHER TO:NE' Fa ulty Members Enthused Over Caliber of Student Vets < 1 By BOB GOLDMAN 'Teaching at the University of Michigan is undergoing a virtual re- naissance--and it's largely due to the 11,000 veterans enrolled here. "There can be no doubt of it," re- cently-appointed Literary College as- sistant dean, Dr. Charles H. Peake declared. "Veterans attending the University are providing a real chal- lenge to professors." "The higher tone of the class- room has been acknowledged by numerous faculty members," he said. "Veterans want to know the 'why' of things, in comparing classroom work with their real 1 life experiences." He maintained that "veterans are making a significant contribution to American education today in. that they apply themselves more con- scientiously and are more discern- ing than most students." Prof. John W. Lederle, of the poli- tical science department asserted, "This is the high water mark for the University in the matter of stu- dents." "We'll probably never have a stu- dent body like this again," he stated. Another faculty member pointed Be~trlin 11Elections Held, Favorable Prof. Wheeler Calls Democrats Best Hope The Social Democratic Party of- fers the best hope for democracy in Germany in the opinion of Prof. Ben- jamin W. Wheeler, of the history de- partment. Al though Prof. Wheeler believes that the party's victory in the recent Berlin elections will serve to encour- age Social Democrats throughout Germany, he warned that it must completely overcome the stigma of being a wage earners' party in order to win the German-wide elections which presumably will be held when the country is finally united. Commenting on the severe setback suffered by the Communist-domi- nated, Russian-supported Socialist Unity Party, Prof. Wheeler said that the results of the Berlin election would seem to suggest the German people were unprepared to accept a radical social revolution. The failure of the Socialist Unity Party to effect a strong combination out that professors are now forced to "dig down into their bag of tricks" to find answers for re- quested information. "It's phenomenal," he said, "all my associates are having a .better time teaching now than ever be- fore." As tangible evidence of intensi- fied student effort being put forth, another member of the faculty pointed to what he termed "a run on library material unparalleled in the institution's history." Maynor Gives Fourth Concert Here Monday Presenting her fourth Ann Ar- bor concert, Dorothy Maynor, so- prano, will be heard in a special pro- gram Monday in Hill Auditorium. The concert will be the first of several special programs planned by the University Musical Society be- cause of the large student enroll- ment. Tickets for the performance are on sale in the Society's offices, Burton Memorial Tower. Since her discovery by Serge Kous- sevitszky, conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Miss Maynor has been known as one of the coun- try's leading sopranos. This reputa- tion has been earned through her re- cordings of spirituals as well as through the numerous coast-to-, coast concert tours she has made. airline Strikes To Face Action By Government WASHINGTON, Oct. 22-(P)-The government, preparing tonight to in- tervene in the farflung strike of Transworld Airlines Pilots, turned its attention meanwhile to another hot wage dispute, involving American Airlines, Inc., the nation's'largest domestic operator. With Transworld's 28,000-mile op- erations still shut down, the White House revealed that the Mediation Board was considering taking action to end the walkout. The board already was seeking to settle the American Airlines case in which, a company spokesman said, pilots are asking a 30 per cent in- crease in pay which now averages $9,477 a year. Representatives of the Air Line Pilots Association (AFL) and the company met separately with Frank Douglass of the National Mediation Board. The union requested media- tion after negotiations, which began in July, collapsed a month later. Senator Pepper To Speak Here Senator Claude Pepper (Dem., Fla.) will be the principal speaker .at a rally at 9 p.m. tomorrow in the Ma- sonic Temple. Sen. Pepper will speak here under' the joint auspices of the campus chapter of the American Veterans Committee, t h e newly-organized chapter of the Independent Citizens' Committee of the Arts, Sciences and Professions, IRA and MYDA. Strike; Policy Asks Prompt Consideration Of Demands Efforts To Reopen Contract Refused By The Associated Press John L. Lewis told the government in effect Tuesday night that his 400,000 AFL soft coal miners would quit work Nov. 1 unless Interior Sec- retary Krug takes up promptly his new demands on wages, hours and other issues. Lewis' notice highlighted labor de- velopments including a break in the stalemate barring settlement of the nationwide shipping strike, and the possibility of government interven- tion in the farflung strike of Trans- world Airline pilots. The government questioned the le- gality of Lewis' efforts to reopen the contract it signed after seizing the mines last May, and the United Mine Workers' chief replied with an ulti- matum that the present agreement will be void unless negotiations are started by Nov. 1. Voting of the contract presumably would be the signal for a new mine tieup. The union traditionally has refused to work without a contract. Lewis asked Monday that a wage conference be called by Nov. 1. Sec- retary Krug, government mine boss now traveling in the Southwest, mes- saged Lewis Tuesday he couldn't be in Washington Nov. 1. He said he would meet Lewis on that date at Tule Lake, Calif., where he will be on government business, or in Washing- ton on Nov. 6. Lewis replied that the present agreement "expressly provides that both parties to the agreement are bound to meet within a 10-day period upon formal request of either party. "Such formal request was filed yes- terday by the United Mine Workers of America. Failure on your part to honor this meeting will constitute another breach of the contract and will void the Krug-Lewis agreement." Truman Will Open Meeting Of UN Today NEW YORK, Oct. 22-(P)-Key diplomats of 51 nations chartered policies tonight in last-minute cau- cuses before the first session in the new world of the Nnited Nations General Assembly, which will begin tomorrow in an elaborate setting with an address by President Truman. The throng of notables crowding this temporary diplomatic capital of the world virtually to the limit of its capacity waited with keen anticipa- tion the 20 to 25-minute speech on which the President has devoted con- iderable time. Wide speculation among the delegates indicated that the speech would be an important indication of American policy during the Assembly. Planes, trains and ships still were bringing delegates and their attaches to New York for the historic session. But the most important groups-the members of the five Great Powers- were practically complete and al- readynwere busy on plans for the Assembly. A simple but impressive ceremony has been arranged for the first day, before the delegates get down to the vital issues facing them in the six- week session. U.S. Troopers Continue Raids STUTTGART, Oct. 22-(P)-U. S. contabulary troopers and German police supported by tanks swept through Stuttgart's ruined under- world in a second series of raids to- night against terrorists who bombed POSTWAR FASHIONS: Removal of Fabric Restrnetwns To Cause Little Change in Style NO HOMELAND: By M. J. TUTTLE and BETTY STEWARD Fathers of college coeds can stop holding their breaths because the re- vocation of L-85, the fabric-conser- vation law, will not mean an imme- diate flood of clothes bills and whole new wardrobes, according to local store managers. L-85 originally banned three-piece ensembles sold as a unit, restrained the lenth and fullness of skirts, and limited the amount of material that could be used for sleeves, cuffs, pock- ets, and trimmings. This order served a useful purpose during the war as a fabric-conservation measure, but since supplies of materials are now close to demand, it was outlived its usefulness. No Substantial Changes tures for materials. Manufacturers have already invested a great deal in their fall and win ter lines and cannot afford to throw these out in order to initiate drastic style changes. changes. Clothing Held Back Violations of order L-85 have been fairly general in fall merchandise, and the revocation of the order will only mean that clothing which has been held back until the restrictions were lifted may now be sold freely. Clothing manufacturers feel that style changes will be gradual and the fashions will emerge through evolu- For PICTURES, See Page 5 tion. The fact that there can be Jewish Leader Condemns British Policies in Palestine Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, president of the World Jewish Congress and founder of the American Zionist Movement, in an address yesterday at the B'nai B'rith Foundation, as- serted that the Arab League is a British-devised and manufactured organization to prevent the Jews from establishing a national home- land in Palestine. Dr. Wise described Prime Minister Atlee as being not only apathetic, but antipathetic, about the Jewish prob- lem, and called the British labor government "one of the biggest dis- appointments of Jewish history." He stated that the Jews are caught be- organizations are determined to send 5,000 to 10,000 more persons to Pal- estine by "stealth or any other means possible." In answer to those who might be- lieve this procedure illegal, Dr. Wise said, "The only legal immigrant in Palestine is Field Marshall Cunning- ham." "The lawlessness of Britain has made every act of mandatory power illegal," Dr. Wise continued and af- firmed that Jews will continue to go into Palestine, despite British oppo- sition. Discussing the problem of Jewish .i I