ANTI-LABOR LAWS See Page 4 Y 4 A6F AOP mAj 743 att]y CLOUDY AND COOLER Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVII, No. 66 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1946 PRICE FIVE CENTS 'U' Vets Average $27 Month Debt In AVC Survey Local Tabulation on Cost of Living Shows Need for Income Increase By STUART FINLAYSON This is the first in a series of three articles iresenting the tabulations of the AVC cost-of-living survey of University strudent veterans. The next, giving a breakdown of how student veterans are making up their deficits, will appear Friday. Eighty per cent of the University's veterans are going in the red- to the tune of $27 a month on the average-according to final tabula- tions in the AVC gost-of-living survey released last night by Lorne Cook, chairman of the AVC campus chapter. The local survey was part of a nation-wide campaign to discover the cost-of-living of student veterans conducted by the AVC, whose national executive committee has gone on record in favor of increased VEAOfficials To Hold Gripe Session Today Complaints on Checks May Be Registered University student veterans who are still sweating out their delayed subsistence checks will have a chance to "sotnd off" about their plight to Veterans' Administra- tion representatives today in the Rackham Building. A special VA team of training officers and contact representa- tives will register the complaints of "checkless" veterans in Rm. 101, Rackham Building from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. today, George Beauchamp, Acting Assistant Chief of the VA's Vocational Re- habilitation and Education Divi- sion announced yesterday. "We realize that delay of pay- ment has caused hardship and ill- feeling on the part of the veteran," Beauchamp said. "The sole pur- pose of this survey is to get the checks out to every veteran on the campus and at the same time straighten his records with the VA so that future payments will reach him on schedule." Beauchamp reiterated that the success of the survey will depend entirely upon the veterans regis- tering their complaints today. Meanwhile Robert S. Waldrop, director of the' Veterans Service Bureau, announced that the Ann Arbor Main Post Office is holding wrongly addressed checks for the following veterans: Beaufait, Daniel L.; Bennett, Donald R.; Boressoff, Bernard; Cahoon, William Gills; Fahs, Har- old J.; Harris, Pauline M.; Kobrin, Theodore; Larson, Donald; Mc- Donald, John Graham; Schoeding- er, William O.; Starr, Thomas; White, James W.; Yancich, Charles T. All the above listed checks will be returned to Cleveland Dec. 19. Anti-Lynching Drive To Start The Campus Anti-Lynching Committee, representing Willow Village and Campus AVC, IRA, MYDA and the Lawyers Guild, will launch an intensive campaign in support of federal anti-lynching legislation today. During this week, University students and citizens of Ann Ar- bor will be urged by the Commit- tee to participate in a nation-wide campaign to end lynching in America. Climax of the local campaign for the enactment of a national anti-lynching law, the ouster of Bilbo and Federal prosecution of lynchers will be a campus rally to be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Union ballroom. Rev. Charles Hill, president of the Detroit chapter of the Na- tional Association for the Ad- vancement of Colored Peoples, and other prominent speakers will give addresses during the rally. News Wanted for Activity Handbook subsistence allowances. However, the University chapter has taken no stand pending complete tabu- lation of the results of the local survey. Of the 1,200 veterans polled, 69.3 per cent were single men, 18.3 per cent were married men without children, 10.1 per cent were married men with children, 1.8 per cent were single women and .4 per cent were married women. The average monthly expen- ture of the 1,200 veterans polled by AVC amounted to $116.49. Largest monthly expenditures were made by married veterans with no children, whose average totaled $162.14, while married men with children spent on the average $153.59. Cook said that larger ex- penditures of married men with- out children could be explained partially by the fact that the ma- jority of their wives are working and therefore they have more money to spend. Mlen spent more than women according to the poll which showed that the average month- ly expenditure for single men was $99.42 as contrasted with $91.82 for single coed veterans. Further breakdown of the fig- ures shows that 80 per cent of the 1,149 veterans polled who are en- rolled under public Law 346 (GI Bill) are going in the red each month, with only,20 per cent stay- ing in the black. The average net monthly balance of these veterans is $27.81 in the red. Slightly more than 89 per cent of the 115, married men with children reported an aver- age monthly deficit of $39.43, while 64.5 per cent of the mar- ried men without children, who reported the largest expendi- tures, had an average monthly deficit of $11.11. Single men who formed over 69 per cent of the group polled in- dicated that 83.4 per/cent of them were going in the red on an aver- age of $30.59 each month. Single women reported an average monthly deficit of $25.45. Cook said that there is no way of knowing how accurate the figures are, although they are indicative of the general condi- tion of student veteran finances. The figures may not be com- parable in that some veterans have calculated only the cash out of their pockets, while oth- ers may have figured in such things as replacements for clothes, he said. The University Veterans Organi- zation announced last week that it will circulate petitions next Tuesday and Wednesday asking that the monthly substistence al- lowances be increased from $65 to $90 for single veterans and from $90 to $125 for married veterans. Students May Order j-Hop Tickets Soon University Hall Booth Will Open Thursday Juniors, seniors, and graduate students may apply for J-Hop tickets Thursday, Friday, and Sat- urday at a booth in 'University Hall,Nancy Neuman, ticket chair- man, announced yesterday. The booth will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday and Fri- day, and from 9 a.m. to noon Sat- urday. Students must present identification cards and bring a self-addressed, stamped envelope when they apply. Women students are eligible to apply for J-Hiop tickets. Students who have applied will receive acceptances or refusals. Tickets for the dance will be sold after the Christmas vacation to those whose applications have been accepted. A total of 3,000 tickets will be sold for the J-Hop, at $5 plus $1 tax each per couple. This year's J-Hop will include two formal dances to be held from 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. Friday and Sat- urday, Feb. 7 and 8 in the Intra- mural Building. Men students are only eligible to buy tickets for one night of the J-Hop, but women students may attend both dances. Plans for the 1947 J-Hop, as ap- proved by the Student Legislature and the Committee on Student Affairs, include breakfasts to be served at the Union and possibly the League, and semi-foimal dances at the Union and League for those not attending the J-Hop on a particular night. World News Roundup By The Associated Press ATLANTA, Dec. 9-A careless cigarette smoker dazed by liquor was blamed tonight by city fire marshal Harry Phillips as the most likely cause of the Winecoff Hotel fire that took 120 lives. Definite origin of the most dead- ly hotel fire in the country's his- tory probably never will be estab- lished, Phillips told the City Coun- cil's fire board. He said investiga- tors were unable to locate anyone who saw the flames before several floors were enveloped. * * * WASHINGTON, Dec. 9-An acknowledgement that they have a responsibility to use every ef- fort "to maintain industrial peace," came tonight from men representing labor and manage- ment in public utility industries. * * * MILWAUKEE, Dec. 9-A 20- minute pitched battle between 200 police officers and more than 500 pickets erupted at the strike- bound Allis Chalmers Mfg. Co. to- day leaving an estimated 50 per- sons, including 22 police, injured. Police and pickets slugged it out toe to toe in the outburst which began as theldemonstrators at- tempted to block workers cars from leaving the plant. *~ * '* CHICAGO, Dec. 9-The CIO United Packinghouse Workers today announced signing of a new contract with the Cudahy Packing Co., calling for an av- erage wage increase of 15 cents an hour for 11,000 workers in ten plants. * * * LONDON, Dec. 9 - Gales whipped European waters from the English Channel to the Aegean Sea today leaving the Aegean German liner Europa deposited on a mudbank in the French harbor of Le Havre and 800 shipwrecked Jewish refugees succored but still isolated on a tiny island olf the .coast of Turkey. UN Politic Immediate al Break with Franco; Government Plea Granted By Tribunal -41 tease Sn preme Court, Hear Briefs Jan. Will 14 i 3 7 By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Dec. 9. - The Supreme Court granted the gov- ernment's plea for a speedy ruling in the coal case today and agreed to decide another question of vitala interest to John L. Lewis too-the unionization of foremen. The court approved the govern- ment's motion to bypass the Cir- cuit Court of Appeals and "au- thoritatively settle" the legality of Federal Judge T. Alan Goldsbor- ough's restraining order against Lewis "in view of the public inter- est involved," even though the strike ws over arnd most of the miners returned to work during the day. It set the case for argument Jan. 14. Its decision could come any Monday after then and it probably will be delivered well ahead of the April 1 deadline Lewis mentioned for a possible new, walkout in ordering the 400,000 miners back to work Saturday to end a 17-day strike. The matter of unionizing fore- men has been a stumbling block to negotiation of a contract be- tween Lewis and the private mine owners which would permit the government to relinquish control of the pits. The operators have been determined to await a Su- preme Courttruling before yielding on this point. Under his contract with the government, however, Lewis has been organizing mine foremen in a branch of District 50, of the United Mine Workers. The gov- ernment contract provides that the procedures and rulings of the National Labor Relations Board shall be followed in the matter. The Supreme Court agreed to review a case involving the or- ganization of foremen in a sep- arate union of their own at the Packard Motor Company of Detroit. Coal Flow to U.S. Furnaces Is Resumed PITTSBURGH, Dec. 9.-('P)- Black rivers of coal flowed again toward the nation's fuel-starved furnaces today as more than two- thirds of the 400,000 AFL bitumi- nous miners returned to work upon end of their 17-day strike. District officials of the United Mine Workers predicted the rest of the miners would be back as soon as they receive and act upon formal return - to - work notices from the union headquarters at Washington. The union expected full production, which is normally ' 2,200,000 ton daily, would be achieved by Wednesday. Business immediately began shaking off the throttling effects of the shutdown which had idled 300,000 in coal-dependent indus- tries and threatened to put a total of several million out of work in a few more weeks. Railroads summoned back thou- sands of workers laid off due to government-ordered reductions in freight and passenger service. Big steel companies ordered back workers wholesale and started re- storing open lhearths and blast furnaces. The gradual return to normalcy began all the way down the line, even to housewives worried over heating their homes in cold wea- ther and high school sports fans in South Bend and Indianapolis, Ind., whose basketball schedules ln 1 n - Library I Over Coi By BOB WHI Book thefts are conti unprecedented high at eral Library. In spite of earlier bring the drastic effect situation to the attent student body, library o veal that there has beer In an effort to geta aid in a drive to curb Dr. Warner G. Rice, dire General Library, recent conference of faculty a representatives. The g cluded that students do book-stealing as a crim it is due, instead, toa "attitude." Chief Circ brarian Fred L. Dimo out that such an attitud disregard of a state la State Shor Of Fuel Su Is Still Evi Many Commu Are Rationin By The Associated Michigan expected t cially the coal strike em morrow (Tuesday), but ald S.. Leonard, state f istrator, warned that emergency is notyet o Formally lifting the regulation this morning Kelly kept in force for other 24 hours his pr which placed the st emergency controls-al controls now are all g But, Leonard said h Kelly would suspend t mation also tomorrow. Will Check with Mayo Kelly kept it in force day at the request of LIe said he wanted time to municipal mayors on1 situations. As an indication of t some communities ev coal production has bee Mayor George Welsh Rapids completed a p all coal resources of the ers and to ration them ers on the basis of nee Seven-Day Supply Welsh said dealers w only a seven-day supp Grand Rapids to mee consumer needs, and dealers were complet coal. S* * * Students' La Floods Post ( With the removal o post mailing restrict postal authorities yes ported over double no: age receipts yesterday. Students dispatchi laundry cases, and shoppers with outsize b counted for most of business, authorities s der the coal saving which were in effect these items were barre mails. Committee Urges To Get QuickuRling Repots ConePass Belgian Proposal ntinued Book Loss Over U. S. Objections TE severe penalties for the theft of i- Security Council Asked To Consider Case nuing at an brary books. Unless New Spanish Government Is Set Up the Gen- Administration's Attitude ''The University administra- By The Associated Press efforts to tion's attitude is reflected in se- LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Dec. 9-The United Nations Political s of such a vere punishment of students found Committee overrode United States objections tonight and called for ion of the guilty of such an offense," he said. a partial, immediate diplomatic break by member states with Franco fficials re- Dimock added that punishment is Spain. ano- cet-upnot regarded by the Library as The 54-member committee approved by a 27 to 7 vote, with 16 allcamusthe most effective remedy, how- the losses, ever, and that it is believed that abstentions, a Belgian proposal providing that: ctor of the eeadta ti eivdta ly called a an "educational program" can cor- 1. All members of the United Nations immediately recall from nd studnt rect the mistaken attitude held Madrid their ambassadors and ministers plenipotentiary. nd tudntby students- roup con- 2. That the United Nations Security Council will take up the not regard "scan aimuek dfntel Spanish case and consider adequate measures to be taken if e, but that anti-social," Dimock continued, within a reasonable time there C , mis tae "It is the responsibility of the Uni- a mistak versity to train people to approach has not been established a Span- Li-n L life with a spirit of responsibility. shgovernment drawing its au-en es ck pomted One of the functions of the Uni- thority from the consent of the to is heldin versity Library is to provide mate- citizens." Right of UN , providingrials for the students to use in One Belgian proposal first was their studies. When such mate- passed as an amendment toa gen- rials are removed by one student, eral resolution. China abstained To In erere tapge the rest of the students are neces- and the United States voted "no." sarily deprived of their rightful Then the whole committee's , Says Spanish Liberty y privilege of using these books." resolution on Spain, embodying The Library has announced that the Belgan resolution and re- a e i anger all illegally taken books may be viewing previous United Nations en$ returned anonymously to the sec- . actions towards Franco, was MADRID, Dec. 9-(IP)-Gener- ond floor circulation desk. adopted for submission to the alissimo Franco told thousands of lnities A preventive step has been tak- General Assembly. The vote demonstrating Spaniards today en in the basement study hall. was 22 to 5 with 20 abstentions, that the United Nations had no Coal There students must have their including the United States. right to interfere in the internal belongings checked at the desk for Under Belgium's amendment affairs of his country and that if Press , books that have not been legally members having relations with Spanish liberty and sovereignty o end offi- charged. It is 'pointed out, how- Franco Spain still could maintain become endangered "we would be ergency to- ever, that such a program is not charge d'affaires in Madrid even converted into a real apple of dis- Capt. Don- immediately feasible in all after their ambassadors or minis- cord." uel admin- branches. ters had been withdrawn. He spoke from the balcony of the real Books May Be Returned A sub-committee recommenda- the national palace climaxing a erownout The Library plans to send let- tion asking an individual rupture three-hour demonstration in the ,rownortters to all organized student resi- of relations with Franco by the heart of Madrid against "foreign a Governor dences enlisting aid in the pro- members of the UN was rejected rference." toclamation gram and urging the return of by a tie vote of 20 to 20. "What is happening in the Unit- aeudrmissing boos. ed Nations cannot surprise W, The text of a statement issued Spaniards," he said, adding that a though the by Dimock follows: Bi Four W illaveof Communist terror is des- e "In a previous article in The olating Europe and violations, Daily the theft of books from the * crimes and persecutions, of the he procla- General Library was discussed Hold M eetInI same order as those which many Since this article, books have con- of you witnessed or suffered, gov- rs tinued to disappear. In M oscow ern the life of 12 nations which for another "At a meeting held last week were formerly independent." onecd who University officials, Library offi- --Th "As long as the concert of na- chkeck with clas, and students representing NEW YORK, Dec. 9-(nithe Asion a thewr cont ofne- their local cas n tdnsrpeetn four-power Foreign Ministers tions of the world continiues to student groups discussed this mat- Council decided tonight that its rest on respect for the sovereignty he plight of ter. There seemed to be a concen- next meeting-on a German peace of each people, without an inter- en though sus of opinion that students who settlement-should begin in Mos- national Fascism to dictate to n resu See LIBRARY, page 2 cow March 10, after Soviet Foreign them, no one has the right to mix of Grand Minister Molotov assured Secre- into the private affairs of each an to pool ( yg d e rIJJlitary of State Byrnes that the con- nation," Franco said. city's deal- l LL I ference could be fully reported to 'The pacific spirit of Spain is to custom- D iscuss the world. sufficiently proven. Its interests d. irscuss Jobs In accepting Molotov's invita- are unopposed to the honorable tion to meet in the Russian capi- interests of other countries. Our arned them Dr. Ewan Clague, described by tal, Byrnes made clear, according peace serves. them as much as it ly exists in Prof. William Haber of the eco- to persons in tonight's Council serves us. If our liberty and so- t domestic nomics department as one of the session, that he still had no in- ereignty were endangered, we that some outstanding social economists in tention of going to Europe for an- would be converted into a real ap- ely out of Ill . k ";-nn .Th. other round of peacemaking un- ple of discord." andry )ffice f all parcel ions, local terday re- rmal pack- ig bulging Christmas bundles ac- the extra tated. Un- regulations last week, d from the the country, win speax on e Job Outlook-Occupational Trends and Tendencies" at 7:30 p.m. to- day in the Rackham Lecture Hall. The lecture, sponsored by the University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Informa- tion, is open to the public. According to Prof. Haber, Dr. Clague, as Commissioner of La- bor Statistics, holds the most im- portant government job in the field of labor information. His or- ganization is responsible for cal- culating the monthly cost of living and wage-hour figures on which much of government and com- mercial planning is based. The bu- reau also provides the statstics on which all strike settlements are made. less he is convinced that real progress can be made on a Ger- man settlement. Byrnes and Britain Foreign Sec- retary Ernest Bevin urged Molo- tov to agree here in New York to the appointment of deputy for- eign ministers who could hold hearings for smaller European and other nations and get their ideas on the fate of Germany prior to the Moscow meeting. Indicating the possibility of a break in his resistance to this pro- cedure, Molotov said he would consider fully the desirability of appointing deputies to work on both German and Austrian settle- ments before the New York meet- ing ends late this week. ECONOMIC AID: Dr. Lieu Perceives Possibility Of Socialistic Trend in China -" v . U' Educators Skeptical about Detroit Report University educators were skep- tical about a story in today's De- troit Free Press which maintains that Detroit high school gradu- ates' grades at the University do not compare favorably with those of "other campus scholars." The Free Press story, one of a series on Motor City educational shortcomings, stated that "an em- inent member of the University of Michigan staff" conducted a study which shows that A and B graduates from Detroit make grades slightly above C at the University. Findings of the staff member, who was not named by the Free Press, hold that Detroit graduates make grades here ranging from 2.6 (Eastern High graduates) to 2.2 (Northeastern High graduates.) Dean James B. Edmonson said, however, "It has been our experi- ence in the School of Education that graduates from Detroit prove WHO ARE YOU KIDDING, KID? No ID Cards Needed To Purchase Garg China's government will prob- ably practice some type of social- ism in order to achieve its eco- nomic objectives which include extensive industrialization and progress in the agricultural, trans- portation and finance fields, Dr. D. K. Lieu, Michigan alumnus expansion at this time, .but be- lieves that financing can be se- cured through foreign investment in China, government loans and Japanese reparations," Dr. Lieu explained. Transportation Improvement Land reforms and improve- By PERRY LOGAN Students who have been pre- vented from buying their parents the usual Holiday Cheer because they are under 21 have been over- joyed to learn that their parents ies of the magazine to go around last month will not be disappoint- ed tomorrow, as the demand for the thing has decreased sharply. "Life n Ann Arbor has its mo- ments." Clayton Dickey. Wauwa- in the National Boy Scouts Monthly. "Although costs of publication have risen nearly six per cent, we have raised the selling price to the public only 43 per cent. This will hal +n a n"_ ,__ m i_ ai i