w THE MICHIAN DAILYT P-ortal Pay Suits hE AVALANCHE of suits for retroactive portal-to-portal pay for union workers, set off last June by the United States Sup- reme Court decision in the Mount Clemens case, has reached the unexpected total of more than $3,250,000,000, and is apt to reach the $6,000,000,000 mark before it slows down. The unions' suits for the payment of un- collected portal pay since 1938, the year of the passage of the wages and hours act, would affect particularly companies with widely scattered work places distant from the entrances to company property or with large buildings, companies where workers on their own' time must make certain pre- parations such as changing clothes, and . plants in continuous operation where one shift must be on the spot ready to work before the preceding shift can leave. In June of last year the U.S. Supreme Court ruled, in a case involving the Mount Clemens Pottery Company, that travel and .job preparation time at the plant is part of a normal work week, and, more- over, that if such time is not paid and an employee wins a suit over it he is entitled to "triple time" and legal fees. There was some legal. precedent for the Supreme Court ruling. In 1939, Lee Press- man general counsel for the CIO Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers union, petitioned the wage and hour administration of the De- partmerit of Labor for a ruling, and was up- held in his contention that portal pay was a legitimate demand. And southern coal Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: MAL.ROEMER =-- .--- - THE BIG NEWS yesterday was the resig- nation of James F. Byrnes and the appointment of George C. Marshall as Sec- retary of State. We do not mean to appear lethargic; nevertheless we just can't seem to get as excited about the whole thing as the Hearst newspapers which interpreted the event as "61e of the great dramatic turning points in American history." These observers have decided that the change means a definite break with "the whole policy of appeasement of Russia." Although we cannot claim the avail- ability of all three major news services, we can see absolutely no reason to expect any significant change in U.S. policy to- ward Russia. An "about face" on principles or tactics now might well be the final blow to that already battered American prestige upon which other nations of the world are pinning their hopes for a lasting peace. Speculation that Byrnes was removed be- cause of a disagreement on policy with Truman seems to have no foundation in fact. Byrnes had been warned by his doc- tors that he would not live long if he con- tinued the strenuous brand of diplomacy IT SO HA"PENS * The Old Drawingboard All in Favor? rH E NEW YEAR got off to a promising start early this weekj We rolled back into town, ignoring witty allusions to the Yale Record's take-off on the New York Daily News and smiling vacuously at all talk of resolutions. Since our return, life has gone on out- wardly much as before, but we note a certain change for the easier, the more pleasant. Without hesitating a moment, we hereby come out unequivocally in favor of Vacations and Freedom for Free Vacationing gtudents. On an Informal Note ONE OF THE bright lights of our weekday mornings brought down the house in class recently by opening the top button of his White Shirt with a flourish of obvious relief. "I can't afford to throw it away," he ex- plained, "and I've been holding my breath for an hour nd a half." Careful The-e, .rofessor P ILOSOPHER'S Comment on John Dewey (Columbia University's Sage is not only still writing at 87, but he remar- ried last fall): "I don't want to make any predictions, but he's still productive." And Like It WE WERE WALKING and sliding across campus this morning, humming a happy little tune inspired by thoughts of J-Hop and other approaching festivities, when the following overheard conversation jostled us right out of our pleasant male-superiority mood. One coed was explaining to another just how she expected her date to dress for operators lost in the Supreme Court a suit to prevent AFL United Mine Workers from collecting pay for travel and job preparation time. But since the Supreme Court's attempt to define the terms of the wages and hours act, the unions, fascinated with their new toy, have instigated suits which, if granted, would represent a serious threat to the prosperity of the country. In some cases the claims even exceed the working capital of the concern; one company, from which a union is demanding $3,000,000 in back por- tal pay, has a net worth of $4,000,000 and a working capital of $900,000. The United States Treasury would do much of the paying if the unions win their suits, because wages are deducted from gross income of a company in figur- ing taxable income, and the treasury would collect less or no taxes from the employer for the year in which back wages were paid. Although these suits will prove a bonanza to the legal profession, in the words of Raymond Moley, columnist, "This legal de- luge cannot help but depress business pro- spects for 1947. And, what is most serious, it may well precipitate failures which will materially and psychologically depress the entire economy." The basic cause of this predicament lies with the lawmakers who passed the wage- hour law back in 1938 and failed to define what they meant by "working time." Por- tal-to-portal pay for the future is a legiti- mate demand. But the demands for portal pay for the past, when workers did not even know what they were missing, particularly when such demands will exert a "depressing effect" on the national economy, can and should be limited by legislation. It is up to the new congress to tie the legal loose ends left by its predecessor of 1938. -Frances Paine ppoin iment which has become necessary in this post- war world. It might have seemed more heroic if Byrnes had insisted on finishing his job even at the expense of his health, but recent experience has shown that noble ef- forts of this kind are usually detrimental to the country in the end. Marshall is a trained professional soldier, possessing not only a broad military grasp of world conditions, but essentially familiar with all the international negotiations dat- ng back to the first Roosevelt conferences with the heads of foreign states. Marshall returns to the United States after 13 months as a special envoy in China where he at- tempted to unite the Kuomintang and Com- munist factions. It remains to be seen whether the ap- pointment of a military leader to Secretary of State will be regarded as a "slap in the face" by nations which are trying to rid the world of m i 1 i t a r i s m and militaristic diplomacy. -John Campbell Marshall Record PECULATIONS on the success with which George C. Marshall wil meet as the new Secretary of State must be based chiefly on his military career. This plus reports on his diplomatic mission in China compose the only basis for an evaluation of his abilities for his new office. Marshall rose rapidly in the first world war, and after great success as operations chief of the First Army, planning the se- cret movement of men for the Meuse-Ar- gonne offensive, was chosen aide-de-camp to Gen. John J. Pershing. His organizational ability and original thinking, prompted President Roosevelt to promote him over many officers with longer service to the post of Chief of Staff the day Germany invaded Poland. Immediately he began the hard fight for peacetime training, declaring bluntly that the United States was not even prepared to defend itself. During the war, Marshall worked to ob- tain the right to promote officers by ability rather than seniority, and used this policy successfully in preventing any serious fail- ures in command after the first few months. It has been reported that Marshall was Roosevelt's first choice for supreme com- mander of the European theater. However, following Churchill's objections, he quietly stepped out of line for that glamorous job, stating that allied cooperation was of pri- mary importance. Following the war, President Truman sent Marshall on the difficult task of reaching a settlement between China's warring factions. In his recent statement summarizing the results of his 13 month mission, Mar- shall has admitted failure. He placed blame on extremist elements in both the Communist and National Government groups for frustrating the efforts to ob- tain peace. Marshall will come to his new post with the record of a brilliant soldier and of a man who fights for his ideas. Since his only experience in diplomatic service has been the China mission, Marshall's merits as the spokesman for American foreign policy will become clear only when he tackles such problems as creating a peace treaty for Ger- many, and consolidating peacetime allied unity. -Harriet Friedman Al/ O4P7totuhi IN THE MIDST of the "quiet," which seems to have spread as a pall over the liberal forces in America since the last elections, the recent merger of the NCPAC (National Citizens Political Action Committee) and the ICCASP (Independent Citizens Commit- tee of the Arts, Sciences and Professions) was an essential and welcome step in the direction of reaching the small voter. The new organization calls itself the Progressive Citizens of America. Mr. Wallace struck at a truth when he stated in an address to the PCA conven- tion thaat a "genuine" two party system was needed to replace the existing "fake one-party system under the guise of a bi-partisan bloc." The people had little choice in November between the majority of the Democratic candidates and their Republican opposition. The line became more sharply drawn between the pro- labor, pro-small business man element and the representatives of monopoly cap- ital. The newly-formed PCA gave warning to the Democratic party to return to the Roose- velt policies embracing broad social legis- lation; otherwise, a third party will be in the offing. In another month, the Congress of Pro- gressives, which was formed several months ago in Chicago, will meet in Washington to carry out a similar program--the solidifi- cation of progressive, pro-labor forces. The problem of reaching the broad masses of the population on a liberal, renovated New Deal platform will vary according to the local area. Where the old Democratic machine cannot be purged of its reactionary elements, new parties will have to be formed. Where the population is primarily industrial, men will have to be chosen as leaders out of the working people, men who have already gained their associates' confidence. -Poli- ties, as a game in which one element is played off against another as a vote-getting means will have to be replaced by active educational programs. The working people, the farmer, the small business man, the professional groups will have to be ap- proached with facts and figures, rather than with the sentiments of liberalism. Too often, in fact, for the most part, the men who have in the past been selected to lead the people have underestimated the intelli- gence, the ability to act with conscious will of the underpriveleged groups. The energy of these people have never been directed with a maximum of efficiency and honesty. SEVERAL MEN, who have the audacity to call themselves liberals, have formed a group to counteract the work which the newly formed PCA and the Congress of Progressives have begun. They go under the heading of Americans for Democratic Action. More important to them than solidifying the potential progressive forces is to ferret Communists and their sympa- thizers out of Progressive organizations. They wish to imply that the newly formed PCA is not truly progressive be- cause it accepts the cooperation of Com- munists. This, at a time when division of the progressives will play directly into the hands of reacton. The action of the ADA means harder work for the PCA and the Congress of Progres- sives. It means more door-bell ringing, mass' meetings and pamphleteering. The people of this country are waiting for leadership which is truly progressive. The issue for them is wages and prices, bet- ter housing, better working conditions, hos- pitalization, social security, lower taxes on essentials, and all the other things which pertain to the standard of living; not whether Communists should be allowed to participate in their organizations. -E. E. Ellis Center Movement By SAMUEL GRAFTON Since we live in a terminological culture, in which a great part of the process of thinking consists of giving names to things, it is perhaps important to put an identfy- ng label on the Presdent's message to Con- gress. Is it liberal, is it conservative, what is it? It is a little hard to say, because it s a kind of mxed product; it might be called a liberal speech which has been put through a conservative, mangle. The marks of our recent conservative shift are on it; and while parts of the Roosevelt vision are still there, it is like a dream which has been edited by a man who does not believe much in dreams. Perhaps, then, this is the first state paper of a new American centrism. There has never been much of a center move- ment in American politics, which is us- ually a politics of the right, except for brief moments, when it fractures itself against a depression, or something, and is temporarily replaced by an improvised left. But in the Truman message we have something different, a strange combina- tion of conservatism without animus, and liberalism without the glow. We could use a center in American life; but it remains to be seen whether conserva- tism, to help construct one, will be willing to move to the left. (Copyright, 1947, N.Y. Post Syndicate) Copr. 1447 by Unted Feature S'aonicate ,'1. 7,,. Reg. U S. Pet_ Off-All ,righsreserv'edr Letters to the Editor... BILL MAULLDIN I. S4 b Q ~~r. "A professor's salary is $45 a week. His living expenses are S75. How many nights each week must he tend bar at $5 per night to make up the deficit?" iOR'S NOTF:i -o letter to the odi .or will he printed unls 5igned :nd1141 ~nillgodtaste. Setters over 300 weds in length will be shortened or omited; in special in- stances, they ilt he printed, at the discretion cif the editorial director. i2(ilSil IiQPObllem To the Editor: HORTLY before the Christmas recess began, a letter by Mr. Subrahmanyam appeared in The Daily, relative to the Palestine problem. The writer discussed a vital issue, but in order that the readers of The Daily may get a' true and undistorted picture of the facts, some of his erroneous as-ertions must be corrected. I: his opening paragraph Mr. I Subrahmanyam asserts that Pal- estine "was the' irthe Jews') home one~ upon a time, but it has not been theirs for centuries." Ile does not state when or how they lost pos.session, and the facts, moreover, indicate that the his- torical connectiUon of the Jewish people with Palestine, and their right "for reconstituting there their National Home," were first enunciated by Great B r i t a i n t _rou the Balfour Declaration i 11, assented to by the Peace Confern c;rin r reaffirmed at DAILY OFFICIAL L. (Continued from Page 3) cards and the blank cards will be The Art Cinema League pre- posted on the bulletin board ad- sents "They Were Five," director jacent to Prof. Brier's office. Duvivier, starring Jean Gabin. English titles; French dialogue. ~ y,,; ~ C- -v January 14, Rm. D, Alumni Me- morial Hall; auspices of Le Cer- cle FRancais. Academic Notices Mathematics Seminar on Sto- chastic Processes: 3 p.m. today in 317 W. Engineering. Mr. Max Woodbury will discuss Markoff chains. A. 11. Copeland Pre-Medical Student Profes- sional Aptitude Test: The Associa- tion of American Medical Col- leges Professional Aptitude Test, the Graduate Record examia- tion required of all applicants to the 1947 freshman class at the University of Michigan and other medical colleges, will be offered Sat.. Jan. 11, 9 a.m.-12:00 noon and 1:30-4 p.m., Rakiam Lecture Hall. Each applicant must pre- sent a check or money order for five-dollars ($5.00) made payable to the Graduate Record Office be- fore entering the examination room. Cash will niot be accepted in payment of the fee. Applicants are requested to appear at the testing room at 8:45. No students will be admitted after 9 a.m. Conflict, ]Final Examination, College of Engineering: All stu- dents having conflicts will report to the office of Prof. J. C. Brier, Rm. 3223, E. Engineering Bldg, during the week of January 6, but not later than 12 noon on Sat., Jan. 11. Complete instructions for filling out examination conflict DRA MA THE Glass Menagerie by Ten- nessee Williams, starring Paul- ine Lord, played a one night stand last night at the Michigan Thea- tre. The play is, as the narrator states at its beginning, a memory fragment, "dimly lit, sentimental, and vague." Its story concerns the somewhat obvious plottings of a middle-class mother to obtain "gentiemen callers" for her piti- fully shy daughter. Her tool in this is her son, whom she alter- nately bedevils and cajoles into bringing nome his friends. He fin- ally shows up with one. The cast, numbering four, did a nice job with the alternating comedy and pathos they had to handle. Pauline Lord's deliberate- ly halting delivery went well with her part of a mother using memories of the past in a groping attempt to set right the present. Richard Jones, the son, did better on his action lines than on the narration. Jeanne Shepherd gave a convincing performance as the only shy and crippled daughter. And Edward Andrews as the gen- tleman caller lent good contrast to the half-dream world of the other characters. The production was well staged, the single set being neatly de- signed to project the veiled, mem- ory-like quality on which so much of the play is based. -Joan Fiske Graduate Students: Results of the Graduate Record Examina- tions given in December of 1945. April of 1946, and the Summer Session of 1946 are available in the Graduate School Office. Concerts Cancellation of Concert: The, concert scheduled for Tuesday, Jan. 14, in Hill Auditorium by the University of Michigan Choir has been cancelled. It is planned to have the Choir participate in the concert to be given Saturday eve- ning, Jan. 18, in Hill Auditorium, as part of the program for the Mid-Western Con f erence on School Vocal and Instrumental Music to be held in Ann Arbor be- ginning Jan. 17. Exhibitols The Museum of Art presents The New Spirit (the art of Le Corbusier), and Art of the Middle Ages, in the galledies of Alumni 0as, 0 ., a ., : 1. . I office opens 2 p.m. daily. Phone 3300 for resrvat iols. Lydia Men- deissolil Theatrme. . COMing Events V. of 11. Section of the Ameri- cani OchniivaU So iet~y meet at 4:15 p.m., Jan. 10, Rm. 151, I Chemistry Bldg. Dr. W. M. Stan- ley, Department of Animal and Plant Pathology, The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, Princeton, N. J., will speak on "Studies on Purified Influenza Virus." The public is cordially in- IE onmiics Club: 8 p.m., Mon., Jan. 13, East Conference Room, Rackham Bldg. Professors Ren- sis Likerr and George. Katona, of the Survey Research Center, will speak oil "The Sample Interview Survey as a Tool of Economic Re- search." Business Administra- graduate students are invited. the San Remo Conference, incor- porated in the Treaty of Sevres, endorsed by our own governent by unanimous-resolutions of both houses of Congress, and sanc- tioned in the Palestine Mandate by 52 nations of the world. This claim cannot be controverted by the mere assertion that "Palestine belongs to the Arabs." Furthermore, Wr. Subrahman- yam wrongly alleged that the Jew- ish people settled in Palestine "in spite of the bitter opposition" of the Arabs, "a nation too weak to effectively resist." Can anyone possibly believe that a race com- prising 40 million Arabs and em- bracing 3 million square miles of territory could not have prevented the efforts of 15 million people dispersed throughout the world? On the contrary, except for the leaders of the Anti-Zionist Arab Executive, the half million Jaws who have entered and settled in 12,000 square miles of the Holy Land since 1922 (and compare this to the 3 million square miles cited above), were not opposed but were welcomed by the Arabs, who have profited greatly by their work of reconstruction. As was testified before the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the U.S. Ouse of Representatives on February 15, 1944, the Jewish pioneers im- migrating to Palestine "drained its swamps, reforested its naked hills, built cities, established in- dustries, planted great stretches of orange groves . . . In short, they took a neglected and derelict land . .. and transmuted it . into a thriving, modern, progres- sive, semi-industrial country." It is self-evident that improvements wrought in a territory affect all of its inhabitants, and it is pre- cisely because Jewish colonization has improved the economic and cultural level of the Arabs that the population of the Moslems has grown to over one million- almost double that of 1922. he official reports of the British oyal Commission that investigated Pal- estine in the winter of 1936-37 contain many statements that confirm the beneficent effect of Jewish immigration on Arab wel- fare. All of these facts explicitly refute Mr. Subrahmanyam's fur- ther allegation that "Had there been no restrictions . . . the Arabs would have been reduced to an insignificant minority and soon been eliminated." It seems some- what irrational to assert that Jewish colonization, which has in fact led to a growth in Arab pop- ulation, might in theory lead to the disappearance of such a pop- ulation. It is not my intention to mini- mize the complexity of the Pales- tine problem, or to condone the extremes to which some terrorists there have gone. It is my sincere belief, however, that facts and not fallacies should be the basis for our judgments. And it is my hope that the statement of the late King Feisal of Mesopotamia will set the spirit for the solution of this problem. This great Mos- lem leader declared that "the Arabs, especially the educated among us, look with deepest sym- pathy on the Zionist movement .Interested parties have been nabled to make capital out of what they call our differences I wish to give you my firm con- viction that these differencesg.. are easily dispelled by miutual good-will." --Harvey L. Weisberg 1 1 Memorial Hall, current through January 26. Week days, except Geological Journal Club: 12 Monday, 10-12 and 2-5; WN dnes- neon, Fri., Jan. 10, Rm. 3055, Nat- day evenings 7-9; Sundays, 2-5. ural Science Bldg. Prof. A. J. The public is cordially invited. Eardley and students will sum- marize the field work at Camp Michigan Takes Shape - a dis- Davis, Wyoming, during the past play of maps. Michigan Histori- smnummer. cal Collections, 160 Rackham. Hours: 8-12, 1:30-4:30 Monday English Language Institute through Friday; 8-12 Saturday. weekly program: 8 p.m., Fri., As- sembly Hall, Rackham Bldg. Re- Events oday port on"Universities of the Ameri- cas," by students from various University Radio Programs: countries. Miss Margaret Moye, 3:30 p.m., Station WPAG, 1050 English Language Institute of Kc., World Masterpieces. Mexico City, will speak. The pub- lic is invited. Wood Technology Lecture Post- -mtd poned: The lecture by Mr. Leo Uo Jiranek on Furniture Design University Women Veteran's scheduled for today has been post- Association: 7:30 p.m., Mon., Jan. poned to 11 a.m., Thurs., Jan. 16 13, Michigan League. Pictures will East Lecture Room, Rackham be taken for 'Ensian. All women Bldg. veterans invited. University Men's Glee Club: Im- portant rehearsal Thursday, Jan. 9. Concert for Midwestern Music Conference, 7:15 to 7:30 p.m., Fri-, Jan. 17. Plans for trips. Association of U. of M. Scien- tists discussion group on atomic energy meet at 7:15 p.m., Thurs., Jan. 9, West Council Room, Rack- ham Bldg. Alpha Phi Omega, nationalj service fraternity: 7:30 p.m., Un- ion. Nominations accepted for next semester's officers and dis- cussion of the J-Hop plans. Camp Counsellors' Club: 7:301 p.m.. W.A.B. The meeting will be a handicraft workshop. The Modern Poetry Club: 7:15 p.m., League. See bulletin board for room. Prof. Rowe will speak on poetic drama. Potluck dinner: 6 p.m.,.Fri., Jan. 10, Pine Room, Methodist Church. Dr. Frank Huntley will speak. For reservation call 6881. Any young couples are welcome. Graduate Outing Club Hike or Ontmr Sports: 2:30 p.m., Sun., Jai. 12. Sign up at the check dek i the 11.akham Building be- fore noon Saturday. 'T'he scred Club Thurs. Eldg., square dancing class spon- by the Graduate Outing originaliy scheduled for Jan. 9. Women's Athletic has been canceled. Cyargoylc: Students who desire to lWx c)c .r affiliated with Gar- :oy h lirary staf f next semester ac welcome at the Gargoyle of- fice, firr floor Student Publica- tions Bldg., Wed., Jan. 15, be- tween 1 and 5 p.m. Bring your own pencil. L A.g. Banquet: 7 p.m., Fri., Jan. 10, Sth Catering Service. Tick- ets on sale in Ae. Office. Mem- bers oly. > Gernan Cuffee' our will not meet again this semester. Fifty-Seventh Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Robert Goldman .....Managing Editor Milton Preudenbeim.Editorial Director Clayton Dickey...........City Editor Mary Brush.......... Associate Editor Ann Kutz...........Associate Editor Paul Harsha..........Associate Editor Clark Baker.............Sports Editor Des Howarth ..Associate Sports Editor Jack Martin ...Associate Sports Editor Joan Will;k........... Women's Editor Lynne Ford _Associlate Women's Editor Business Staf Robert E. Potter ....Buslnese lfnagel Evelyn Mills ....* Associate Business Managet Janet Cork Associate Business manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press Un derwr iters: Luncheon, 12 noon, Room, League. Thursday- Russian Teae La P'tite Causette: 3:30 p.m., Grill Room, Michigan League. BARNABY '> 1c l r7~hiviat;,,r 7'l 1 ! vl r nr v1T~ ]'1 77 t E f rtirn rtamr'1 f '+r { lw ___ ..a . ., ,. r.1. , t, m,. . c..., l