DEAN LLOYD ANSWERED See Page 4 LlkI, Hit W~U &iitj; CLOUDY, WARMER Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVII, No. 56 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 27, 1946 PRICE FIVE CENTS Haifa Jews B3ack Refugees Uelled Ten Soldiers Injured, One Missing After Using Tear Gas, Fire Hoses HAIFA, Palestine, Nov. 26-(A') -Bonfires blazed atop Mount Carmel tonight as Haifa Jews demonstrated their support of 3,370 immigrants who fought a frenzied but unsuccessful battle aboard their blockade runner this afternoon with club-wielding Brit- ish tommies. Ten soldiers were injured and one was missing and believed Pollock Says Senate Probe Affects Policy Cites Possible Upset Of Peace Negotiations By PHYLLIS KAYE The Senate War Investigating Committee, in its current probe on certain phases of the German oc- cupation, should consider the ef- fect of such action on American 'foreign relations in this area, in the opiniol of Prof. James K. Pol- lock, of the political science de- partment. "Personally, I do not object to such an investigation," he said. "Everything that has been done in Germany is an open book." However, Prof. Pollock pointed out that nothing should be done to "upset the framework of our relations" with other powers. If Secretary Byrnes feels, as he obviously does, that the investi- gation will embarrass him in his negotiations with the Council of Foreign Ministers, Prof. Pollock said, "we certainly should not take the risk." It is also important that nothing should be done to embarrass Gen. Clay in his relations with other powers, particularly Russia, or to undermine the prestige of our rep- resentatives in Germany, he de- clared. Gen. Clay has always been anx- ious to haue committees come to Germany, Prof. Pollock indicated. Many senatorial committees have visited there and investigators of the Senate War Investigating Committee have already been over the area. Since the general is in the coun- try at preaent and can be ques- tioned personally by the commit- tee, he stated, there is no real need for them to conduct a per- sonal investigation. Students Close War reaches Schanke Cites Union Among scandinavians Student groups throughout the world are reestablishing the bonds between countries that were brok- en during the war, Andreas Schahke, Norwegian member of the World Student Christian Fed- eration, stated in a speech to Pro- testant groups last night. Although Scandinavian coun- tries played opposing roles during the war, Schanxe said that stu- dents from these countries met following the war and after "frank" discussion of their differ- ences, partcd on a note of forgive- ness. Schanke said that as a result of the variet ; of experiences that Norwegian students had in prisons, in the underground and fighting with foreign forces, a broader viewpoint toward other countries and toward the different classes in Norway resulted. Following the war, Norwegian students collected enough money to provide 3C tubercular Dutch students with a vacation in Nor- way. Schanke contrasted this with the situation before the war, when the Norwegians felt that they were isolated from the troubles of other countries. dead in the hour-long melee which broke out a half hour after the immigrant ship, the 2,000-ton Hameri HIaivra (Lochita), entered Haifa Harbor under the escort of two British destroyers. Army sources confirmed the death of one 16-year old Romanian Jew, from injuries suffered when he jumped from the ship. Five injured Jews were rushed to a hospital, and seventeen others to a sick bay. Scores were puffy-eyed from tear gas. The troops used tear gas and fire hoses to subdue the immi- grants. Nearly 100 Jews leaped into the water during the height of the fighting, in a last desperate attempt to reach the Holy Land, or scrambled to the deck of a tug which was warping the ship up to a jetty. All were recaptured. After order was restored, troops began transferring their refugees to three British transports. One by one, the immigrants were taken from the Hameri Haivra and searched. They were then placed aboard the transports Ocean Vig- our, Empire Heywood and Empire Rival, presumably for ultimate de- portation to Cyprus Island. The immediate departure of the British ships was stayed by a habeas corpus action, brought in Palestine Supreme Court by Jew- ish Palestine residents. The ac- tion requires the government to show cause why the refugees should be deported. Haifa City, meanwhile, was bat- tened down by a protest strike of its 60,000 Jewish residents, many of whom met on Mount Carmel in support of the refugees. Groups To Ask U-D FootbalI Policy Report Leaders o five campus organi- zations will leave for Detroit at- 1 p.m. today to get a statement of policy from the president of the University of Detroit which has been accused of "Jim Crow" ac- tion in seneduling a football game with the University of Miami to be played Saturday. The investigating organizations include SRA, MYDA, IRA, the Lawyers Guild and two chapters of the local AVC. "We rea ize it's too late to can- cel the contract but we shall ask for a statement of policy," de- clared Lyman H. Leyters, presi- dent of SRA. The Unversity of Detroit team which leaves this morning for Miami was asked to bring no Negro players to the University of Mi- ami., Two universities, Syracuse and Pennsylvana State, have previous- ly refused to play Miami after they also had neen requested to bring no Negroes. Penn State was originally scheduled to meet Miami but cancelled its contract. The five campus organizations joined with others on the Univer- sity of Detroit campus this week in a concerted drive to force De- troit to beak its contract but their efforts were unsuccessful. Frown on Cuts Is Still in Effet The "more than casual inter- est" which members of the lit- erary college faculty are ex- pected to take regarding post- Thanksgiving absences will ap- parently be a matter of indi- vidualescretion. Announcements were made in a few classes this week that names of students who did not appear at class on Friday must be reported to Dean Erich A. Walter for disciplinary action. No such special regulation has been set~ up, according to Dean Walter. The general procedure will be followed in reporting absences which arcconsidered to be af- fecting te student's academic progress. SAttendance at any time, has been considered the responsi- bility of the students since the liberalization of attendance regulations last June. Dean Walter emphasized in a state- ment this week that students would be expected to attend classes according to the Uni- versity calendar and that they would "prove themselves able to assume their new responsi- bility." 185 Students To Face Trial over Tickets Legislature To Send Delegates to Chicago A prolonged football ticket in- vestigation will be climaxed Mon- day night when 185 students ap- pear before the Men's Judiciary Council in Kellogg Auditorium to answer charges that they ob- taied and retained their football tickets fraudulently. Plans for the trial were an- nounced last night at the meet- ing of the Student Legislature by Seymour Chase, chairman of the Judiciary Council. Pleas Possible Chase said that each student ar- raigned before the court will be given an opportunity to plead in- nocent or guilty. Clemency will be recommended for those who plead guilty to intentional fraud, he said. He emphasized that the extent of the Judiciary Council's power is to recommend penalties to the University Disciplinary Committee. The maximum penalty will be recommended for those studnts who plead innocent but are later proved guilty, Chase said. He did not specify the nature orextent of the maximum penalty to be im- posed. Delegates Chosen The Legislature approved the recommendation of the Student Government Committee that dele- gates he sent to the Chicago Stu- dents Conerence to be held Dec. 28-30. The group elected Rae Keller, Archie Parsons, Terrell Whitsitt and James Riess as off i- cial delegates to the conference and Henry Kassis as alternate. The Legislature took an official stand on the controversy over the scheduled M i a mn i University- University of Detroit football game last :t'ight by authorizing a representative of the group to act with other campus groups in pro- testing the acceptance of the game by University of Detroit officials. Archie Parsons was unanimous- ly elected to represent the Legis- lature and was authorized to con- tact student organizations on tfie U. of D. c anpus today and to co- operate with IRA, SRA, MYDA, both AVC groups and the National Lawyers Guild in contacting ad- ministration officials. alkout Felt As Schools Close Doors Industry Suffers, Coal Supply Low By The Associated Press PITTSBURGH, Nov. 26-Ef- fects of the six-day-old walkout of 400,000 bituminous coal miners extended into the educational as well as the industrial life of the nation today with students from many schools and colleges join- ing about 70,000 workers in en- forced vacations. From points as far west, as the Pacific Coast came reports of lack of fuel to keep the nation's halls of learning open. Four thousand students at Brig- ham Young University, Utah, who have been shivering for three days, started their Thanksgiving vacation two days early. In the heart of the soft coal re- gion, Pittsburgh school authorit- ies have asked the Solid Fuels Ad- ministration in Washington for authority to buy 500 tons-enough to tide the city's 119 schools over a two-week period. Meantime, unemployment in industries depending on coal ra- pidly reached the 70,000 mark as additional blast furnaces and open hearths ceased operations. The Tri-State Industrial Association figured that fabricating plants in Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Ohio would be reduced to 50 per cent of capacity within another week but that it would take at least a month for 100 per cent in- effectiveness. The steel industry and the rail- roads have been hit the hardest although Toledo reported that 27,000 industrial workers would be idle by tomorrow due mainly to supply and material curtail- ments. * * * State Decree Shuts Schools Without Coal By The Associated Press State Fuel Administrator Don S. Lenard ruled late today (Tues- day) that "schools are not essen- tial users and unless they can find coal locally or in neighbor- ing communities, they will have to close" because of the current coal shortage. Leonard said he had established direct teetype communication with Washington officials in an effort to expediate handling of emergency requests for coal. The director added that his office has drafted employes from other state agencies to handle "a deluge" of requests for emergency help. Meanwhile, Detroit's key indus- tries took stock of their coal re- serves. Ford said it had put some coal conservation measures into effect that would result in a drop of from 6,000 to 4,000 tons daily in its coal consumption and en- able the firm to keep operating at the present rate until Jan. 1. Private Strike Negotiations Rumored As Speed Is Asked in Contempt Trial; Students o on Holiday with Strikers Alleged Lewis Conferences Denied y Moses, Eaton Court Injunction Aimed at Ending Walk-Out Awaits Verdict on Charges Against Lewis By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Nov. 26-Behind-the-scenes talk looking toward a possible end to the coal strike was widely iumored in the capital tonight as the government pressed for speed in John L. Lewis' con- tempt of court trial, opening tomorrow. The air was full of reports of private efforts to get negotiations rolling between Lewis and the mine operators. No official confirma- tion was forthcoming and some of the principals in the coal picture denied knowledge of such efforts. However, at Cleveland, Ohio, Cyrus S. Eaton, banker and indus- trialist, declined to comment on reports that he had exploratory con- '$'"erences he~re with Lewis. Lewis LEWIS ARRIVES AT COURT-John L. Lewis, United Min'e Workers president, walks from his car to the United States Dis- trict Court building in Washington, as he arrives to answer a citation for contempt of court in failing to comply with an in- junction ordering him to keep union members at work in the mines. INDUSTRIAL HOLD-UP: Britain Blamed for Shortage Of Fuel Needed by France The serious lack of energy power for industry that exists in France today may be partly at- tributed to the fact that coal which should be coming into the country from the Ruhr Basin as war repas'ations has been side- tracked by Great Britain. Prof. Georges Gurvitch of the University of Strasbourg gave this reason in a talk at Rackham Am- phitheatre yesterday. He main- tained that France's slow postwar recovery is due to the dearth of coal and oil which are needed to put her industrial machine in high gear. Outmoded Equipment "The very low supply of out- moded technical equipment in France means that she must have energy power not only to produce more goods economically, but to create the machinery for the pro- duction of these goods," he pointed out. Prof.' Gurvitch stated that al- though France is producing 15,000 more tons of coal per month now than she was before the war, this is only one-third of her current requirement. "It is a problem of international economic planning to redistribute the supply of in- dustrial energy in the world," he declared. Denies French Laziness "France cannot make an eco- nomic reconstruction on her own resources," Prof. Gurvitch empha- sized, "since without energy sup- plies there will be an economic re- gression." Vets' Council To Consider Food Problem A report on campus eating fa- cilities is the main business on the agenda for the luncheon meeting today of the Veterans University Council, view campus group for acting on the problems of student veterans. Adequacy of representation on the Council will also be discussed. At present the 14 member Council consists of five University offi- cials and representatives of nine student groups. Committee chairman Henry Kassis, representative from the Student Legislature, will make the report on the available eating fa- cilities. Other members of the committee are Mrs. Haskell Cop- lin, president of the Ball and Chain Club, and Kenneth Fleis- hauer, former president of the University Veterans Organization. Russia Argues For Revelation Of New Arms MolotoV Asks Britain To Air War Secrets' LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Nov. 26 -(11)-Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav M. Molotov bluntly asked the United States and Great Britain today if they were ready to report immediately on atomic and jet-propelled weapons in their peacetime war machines. Philip J. Noel-Baker, Britain's chief delegate to the United Na- tions Assembly, heatedly replied that he was no more ready to re- port on such matters than was Molotov. U. S. Senator Tom Connally (Dem., T x.), chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Com- mittee, let +he question pass with- out direct answer from his gov- ernment. The request, voiced by Molotov in answer to Noel-Baker's conten- tion yesterday that Russia's reso- lution cailing for a troop census was not "adequate," tossed into the United Nations political com- mittee a new and complicating fac- tor. The committee adjourned after three hours of warm debate until tomorrow (10:30 a.m. E.S.T.) without auy apparent solution to the deadlock over what kind of a troop count shall be made. Russia rejected the demand that any troop count include home forces. However, as apparent evi- dence of willingness to discuss this later, Mobtov offered a proposal for the General Assembly to call on member states to submit infor- mation on armed forces and arma- ments "in their own territory, this information to be submitted when the Secuiity Council will con- sider the pioposas for general re- duction of armaments." Roundup of World News By The Associated Press NEW YORK, Nov. 26 - Secre- tary of State Byrnes and British Foreign Secretary Bevin searched in a secret bi-lateral session today for a method for minimizing criti- cism among the little nations of the big power use of the veto in United Nations decisions. There was no indication of what progress, if any,, was made. WASHINGTON, Nov. 26 - The State Department formally accused Romania today of vio- lating a pledge of free and un- fettered balloting by permit- ting election "manipulations" and "terrorism." * * * NANKING, Nov. 26-Govern- ment military sources tonight quoted an official Central News Agency dispatch as saying that nationalist armies would launch a punitive expedition against Yen- and his aides also reserved com- ment on the reports, which indi- cated that Eaton was interested in using his good offices, if feasible, in helping bring Lewis and the operators together. Moses Denies Talk Harry <<. Moses, president of the H. C. Prick Coke Company, Pittsburg, a U. S. Steel subsid- iary, denied that he had talked with Lewis. There had been re- ports that lie had conferred with the miners' chief on a possible separate settlement for coal mines owned by the steel companies. Lewis goes before Federal Dis- trict Judge T. Alan Goldsborough Wednesday on charges that he committed contempt by refusal to withdraw his notice that the min- ers' contract with the government ended last Thursday. With the contempt issue out of the way-it might take days-the court will consider whether to issue a per- manent injunction aimed at end- ing the walkout. To Forego Recess Justice Department attorneys said they will ask Goldsborough to forego the customary Thanksgiv- ing weekend recess and resume the trial on Friday. President Truman, who engi- neered the showdown with the miners' chieftain, remained silent. Reached in Pittsburgh, Moses said emphatically that he had not even talked with Lewis on the telephone and knew of no con- versations by other operators, Mayor Brown Lauds Local Conservation Mayor William E. Brown Jr. to- day commended townspeople' for 'heir cooperation in complying with federal and state dimout de- ?rees to conserve coal. "The majority of local business places dimmed display and win- dow lights Monday night, in ac- cordance with the 21-state brown- 9ut directive" the mayor said. He onas asked 'ocal police to make a ;heck of business areas, reminding violators of the iederal order. "I am sure where will be no wilfull violations of the edict" he added. A federal announcement stat- ing that schools will no longer re- ceive top priority in coal deliveries, caused increased interest in the University and public school coal stocks. University officials have estimated that present supplies will last until the first of the year, while Ann Arbor public schools have from 45 to 60 days' supply. E. C. Pardon, plant supervisor, announced last week that all steam outlets in University buildings will be turned off at night. This program, which went into effect yesterday, is expected to effect a considerable coal saving. In addi- tion, building thermostats have been set 2 degrees lower in an ef- fort to conserve existing coal stocks. More Ioliday Rail Facilities Expected Although New York Central LA TE HOURS CONTROVERSY: Dean Lloyd Emphasizes Women's Opposition In response to a Daily request for comment on the current con- troversy over the extension of women's hours, Alice C. Lloyd, dean of women, yesterday empha- sized coed opposition to changing present regulations. Declaring that there is "evi- dence of misunderstanding" over the controversy, Miss Lloyd said that "a gi eat many women did not want present hours changed." In a statement, Miss Lloyd said that while the vote of "Our housing is very badly over- crowded," she pointed out, "and. certain regulations are neces- sary." The controversy arose last month when the Association of House Presidents, an organization of dormitory officers, representing 1,500 women, drew up a proposal which would have given upper- Text of The Daily's answer to Miss Lloyd's references to it ap- nears an the editorial nage. "The question was announced in the Daily before either League House or sorority presi- dents had considered the is- sue," Miss Lloyd said. Pointing out that the Office of the Dean of Women had not been in- volved in the controversy, she said that the final action had been taken by the women themselves. Miss Lloyd also expressed the opinion that the Student Legis- taken any interest in some of the fundainental student problems." Miss Lloyd's comments on The Daily were denied last night by Milton Freudenheim, Daily senior editor, who pointed out that "the criticism men- tioned by Miss Lloyd did not appear in Daily editorials but were written by individual stu- dents in letters to the editor." The text of Miss Lloyd's state- ment follovis: "There is evidence of misunder- by comment in The Daily or by appearing at any of the house presidents' meetings. When final action was taken, a change in hours was voted down by the house presidents of women's houses. "The vote of the League House presidents was undoubt- edly influenced in part at least by the feeling of some of the house directors in those houses that they did not wish to sign contracts for the second semes-