WHAT'S' ON WAX. See Iage 4 Y 41t 2Iaii4 CLOUDY, AND COLDER Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVII, No. 80 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JANUARY 12, 1947 PRICE FIVE CENTS Michigan Defeats, QueensPuckmen 'M' Cagers Lose MacMillan, Jacobson r1lOP 6-3 Win; Minnesota Fashions 48-37 Triumph By CHUCK LEWIS Playing some of the finest and ,most spirited hockey seen 'this season, the Michigan hockey team came from a one goal deficit at the end of the first period to de- feat the squad from Queens Uni-a versity, 6-3, last night at the Coli- seum. The game, which swept the two games series for Michigan started out like a battle between two mighty defensive aggregations, as most of the first stanza was played between the blue lines. Queens didn't have one shot on Jack Mac- Donald, Maize and Blue goalie, in the initial 10 minutes of play. MacMillan Leads Scoring But the contest terminated on a decidedly different note. Michi- gan showed some of their best dis- plays of offensive power seen this winter in the final frame when they rammed home four tallies and scored twice within the last two minutes of play. Queens also scored twice in that period with one of them in the fast and furious closing two minutes of competi- tion. Gordon MacMillan again led the team in scoring garnering two markers and getting an assist on See HOCKEY, Page 3 Government, UMW Briefs Filed in Court Lewis Asks Fines, Charges Be Dropped WASHINGTON, Jan. 11-(IP)- John L. Lewis' United Mine Work- ers and the Government filed their briefs in the Supreme Court today outlining the arguments wiich they will orally present Tuesday. In the briefs, Lewis' counsel asked the Supreme Court to can- cel the contempt findingseas well as the fines, while Attorney Gen- eral Clark argued they should be sustained. The case grew out of the Justice Department's attempt, by obtain- ing a restraining order from Fed- eral Judge T. Alan Goldsborough, to bar the miners from walking out of the federally-seized pits last November. Lewis ignored the order and the miners walked out. After a trial, Judge Goldsborough fined Lewis $10,000 and the Union $3,500,000 for contempt. On December 7, three days after the fines were imposed, Lewis ordered the men back to work. The Union's brief said the gov- ernment Judge Goldsborough had "disregarded completely the plain, unequivocal language of the fed- eral anti-injunction statutes, their indisputable purpose and scope, and controlling decisions of this honorable court." This was "so much so," the Lewis brief said, "as reluctantly to com- pel the suggestion that public hys- teria and political expediency, rather than dispassionate and ju- dicial application of established legal principles, have thus far dominated and determined these proceedings." Clark said even if Judge Golds- borough was wrong in issuing his restraining order, Lewis and the union had no business disobeying it and should have been fined any- way. Extra Concert To Be Given By Templeton Continuing its series of extra concerts, the University Musical Society will present Alec Temple- ton, pianist, in a special perform- ance Friday, Feb. 21, in Hill Au- ditorium. Tickets for the concert will go on sale Monday at the Society's offices in Burton Memorial Special To The Daily A rangy, fast-moving Minneso- ta team, got away to a 12-1 lead over the Michigan cagers, and those early 11 points were the margin of victory, as the Gophers ± rolled to a 48-37 triumph. Bud Grant's free throw on a personal by Mack Suprunowicz opened the scoring foreMinnesota. A field goal and free throw by towering Jim McIntyre and a field goal by Ed Kernan from the side boosted the Gopher total to six before Suprunowicz made good a gift shot. Gophers Open Fast Kernan flashed i for a short one on a fast break and connect- ed again on a pivot shot to run the gap to 10-1 for Minnesota. Jack Young spun in a pot shot which made it 12-1 and the Wol- verines took time out. Harrison was the first to find the range from the floor for the visitors, connecting from outside the free throw line after seven and a half minutes of action. McCas- lin's long one brought the Michi- gan total to 5, the deficit was cut to 6-12 by Roberts' free throw, but Young put the Gophers back in the scoring column with a short spinner. Young hit again from the sidelines and Minnesota was well in front once more at 16-6. Lou Brewster worked himself free under the Michigan basket on a guard-around play and hit for the Gophers' 18th point. Grant's two successive conver- sions from the free throw line put Minnesota 12 points to the good, 28-16, to start the second period. Roberts picked up a point for Michigan, but Brewster and Mc- Intyre added three to the Gopher total and it was 31-17 with the period still fresh. Michigan Cuts Margin Michigan then came up with its best concerted effort of the game. Harrison, Elliott, Morrill, Suprunowicz and McCaslin found the range to cut the Wolverine de- ficit to nine points at 35-26. See BASKETBALL, Page 3 Students Must Register Cars Immediately All students enrolled in refresh- er courses who have automobiles on campus must register them im- mediately with Charles Thatcher, assistant to the Dean of Students, in Rm. 2, University Hall, in com- pliance with the Board of Regents ruling. Thatcher issued a reminder yes- terday to students now holding permits that they must report their 1947 state license numbers to prevent their permits from be- coming invalid. Approximately 2,800 permits were issued for the first semester, including 1,600 tags and 1,200 ex- emptions. Last year 900 tags and about 700 exemptions were issued. Permits are granted to students who fall in at least one of the fol- lowing categories: students who are 26 years old, married students, permanent residents of Ann Arbor, students living at a distance of one mile or more from campus, disabled students and students with driving needs arising from business responsibilities. Even though a student has a car on campus but does not intend to use it, he must register it for storage, Thatcher emphasized. The driving ban is lifted during the period between semesters, so that students will be able to use automobiles for J-Hop. TicketSale For I-Hop In'U' hall Limited Number Sold Tomorrow Open sale of J-H-op tickets will be held from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. to- morrow in University Hall, and tickets for the J-Hop breakfasts will be sold from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday. A limited number of J-Hop tickets is still available, and these will be seld on a first-come, first- served basis, regardless of class standing. It was decided by the committee to open the ticket sale to all students instead of selling extra tickets to juniors for their out-of-town friends. Exact Change Tickets cost $6 and students must bring exact change, a $5 bill and a $1 bill. Identification cards or cashiers receipts are necessary in order to purchase tickets. No refunds on J-Hop tickets will be made. Breakfasts will be served from 1 to 3:30 a.m. both nights of the J-Hop at the Union and League. Tickets will cost $1:50, and pur- chasers must present their J-Hop tickets in order to buy breakfast tickets. The breakfast menu will include cereal, fruit juice, bacon, eggs, toast and milk or coffee. Different Color Breakfast tickets will be a dif- ferent color for each night of the J-Hop and for each place. Tickets will not be transferable, they must be used for the night and place for which they were bought. A total of 500 tickets will be sold for each night. For the first time since before the war, the J-Hop will feature two name bands, Jimmie Lunce- ford and Ziggy Elman. Lunceford, who played for the 1942 Michigan J-Hop is hailed by critics as "The New Colored King of Syncopa- tion." The band has just returned from a road tour in Europe, and is completing an engagement in New York. Ziggy Elman, formerly featured trumpet soloist with Tommy Dor- sey's orchestra, played at the 1946 J-Hop. Last year voted trumpeter with the All-Star Band, Elman formed his own orchestra from half of the members of Dorsey's old band. Free Refreshments An innovation at this year's Hop. free refreshments will be served. Women will receive favors at the dance, and, because of the, expense involved, the committee asks that corsages not be worn. It is J-Hop tradition thatonly the women members of the central committee and the dates of men central committee members wear corsages. Men students on the central committee will wear red sashes, another revived J-Hop cus- tom. The J-Hop will be presented from 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. Friday and Saturday, Feb. 7 and 8, in the In- tramural Building. Women stu- dents will have 4 a.m. permission for the dance. Both the Union and League have agreed to present in- formal dances both nights in order to provide entertainment for' stu- dents who are not going to the Hop on a particular night. Gar govle.®.. Gargoyle will hit campus to- morrow. It will be priced at 25 cents the copy. Easy recognition of the mag- azine is afforded by the woid "Gargoyle" on the cover. "Just get those facts in the paper and that's all we'll need from you," Ed McKinlay, Garg managing editor, told a Daily reporter, adding, "The mag will sell itself since it's the only thing of it's kind appearing on campus Monday." Gov. Arnall of Georgia Resigns Vandenberg Urges U.S. Support Chinese V K. Move Clouds Next Week's State Action Talmadge Claim Spiked by Surprise By The Associated Press ATLANTA, Ga., Jan. 11-Gov. Ellis Arnall of Georgia resigned to- day, 'effective immediately after qualification of the Lieutenant- Governor," in a dramatic move preceding next week's legislative showndown on succession to the late Eugene Talmadge. In a nine-line letter to Secre- tary of State Ben Fortson, Jr., the Governor said: "In conformity with my an- nounced purpose, supported by the opinion of the Attorney General, and in order to insure an election by the people at the earliest time consistent with the constitution, I hereby resign as Governor of Georgia effective immediately after qualification of the Lieu- tenant-Governor, so that the exec- utive powers of government may devolve upon the Lieutenant- Governor and the expressed will of the people of Georgia may be effectuated." Assembly Convenes The letter was dated Ja . 11, 1947, and came just 48 hours be- fore the Georgia General Assembly convenes to accept or reject claims of Herman Talmadge,only son of the late Governor-Elect, that the legislature elect him to his father's term. It appeared in- tended to spike Talmadge's cam- paign argument that Arnall would repudiate verbal pledges and seek to hold office another four years. Commenting on Arnall's quali- fied resignation, Herman Tal- madge said: "That is just another effort by Gov. Arnall to dictate his successor as governor, in order that he may control him. I am confident that when the legisla- ture elects me governor that Gov. Arnall will comply with the law." Without Authority Lieut. Gov. Elect M. E. Thomp- son, who says the legislature is without authority to elect an al- ternate to 'Gene Talmadge, and who claims enough assembly sup- port to defeat Herman, declined comment on Arnall's move. Noted Pianist To Play Here Vladimir Horowitz, pianist, will appear in the seventh concert of the Choral Union Series at 8:30 p.m. Friday in Hill Auditorium. Following the success of his American debut with the New York Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra in 1928, Horowitz has made his home in the United States, but his early musical train- ing was received in Russia. He made his first appearance in Kar- kov at the age of 17 and was giv- ing 70 concerts a year by the time he was 21. His real fame came, however, when he made his first European tours in 1926. Although he was al- most unknown in Europe at that time because of the post-revolu- tion seclusion of Russia, he be- came a celebrity almost overnight. Six Found Alive Near Wreck Of Bomber Lost in Antarctic Byrnes Holds Hopes For a Just' Peace ABOARD U.S.S. MOUNT OLYMPUS, Jan. 11 - (AP) - Six men were found alive and three dead today near the burned wreckage of a Martin Mariner plane which disappeared on an Antarctic reconnaissance flight two weeks ago. A search plane from the sea-' plane tender Pine Island found the wreckage at 12:29 p.m. (East- ern Standard Time) today. Sur- vival gear was dropped for the six men found alive. A broadcast heard in New York by NBC said that a second Navy search plane, a Mariner, had tak- en off from the Pire Island and would attempt to land near the camp where the six survivors were located. Passage For Tax Cut Bill Called Likely McCormack Terms Reduction 'Unsound' WASHINGTON, Jan. 11-(P)- Rep. MCormack of Massachu- setts, House Democratic Whip, conceded today probable House passage of a 20 per cent reduction in income taxes, "because the Re- publicans have got the votes." But he denounced the cut - fathered by Chairman Knutson (Rep.-Minn.) of the House Ways and Means Committee and en- dorsed by Senator Taft (Rep.- Ohio)-as an "unsound" approach to fiscal problems. McCormack, himself a former member of the tax-writing Ways and Means Committee, suggested instead a study of methods design- ed to ease the tax burden on "the little fellow"-possibly by boost- ing exemptions on earned income. President Truman's estimate of the necessary spending in the fis- cal year starting July 1 is $37,500, 000,000. Harold E. Stassen, form- er Governor of Minnesota and an announced candidate for presi- dent, joined fellow Republicans today in attacking this figure as too high. "Sharply padded," said Stassen of Mr. Truman's budget. "Waste- ful and extravagant." Stassen told a news conference he is laying before individual members of Congress a proposal to cut $5,000,000,000 out of the Pres- ident's budget. He suggested continuing enough of the wartime excise (luxury) taxes to raise another billion dol- lars to make the total income $38,500,000,000. There then would be $6,000,000,00 to work with on his calculations, he said. U' Sophomore Struck by Auto George Wetterau, 22, a sopho- more in the engineering school,! was struck by a car on the corner of Packard and Stadium Blvd. at 12:05 a.m. today. According to police reports, the accident occurred when Wetterau stepped out of a car in which he was riding, and ran into the side of an oncoming auto. Wetterau, a, native of Akron, Ohio, was taken to University Hospital. Hospital authorities said that he recovered consciousness shortly after admitance, but that the ex- tent of his injuries was undeter- mined. Wetterau is being held for .lhrnr infinri f- fho hncr ifal (The plane will attempt to land in open water near the site of the camp. It is equipped with jet bot- tles to assist its takeoff with the survivors aboard. Two phamacists mates also will make the trip to give first aid and medical assis- tance to the survivors. (The names of the three men who died and the six who survived the crash have not been an- nounced, nor has the exact loca- tion of the camp been specified. The survivors were found 10 miles inland from open water and not far from the last position where the plane radioed to its base before its 'disappearance. (The messages received by the search plane which located the fliers indicated that all six are "on their feet.") The location in which the plane was found appears on maps as about 60 miles off Thurston Pen- insula on James Ellsworth ,Land. however, maps in this area often are inaccurate and that is no in- dication whether they are floating on ice or were found aground. The rescut plane took off from the Pine Island Saturday morn- ing at 12:07 a.m., Eastern Stand- ard Time. Then in a dramatic message it gave the news. Toledo Labor Plan.Studied Recommended for Adoption in Detroit DETROIT, Jan. 10--EP)-Pres- ident George Edwards of the City Council, said today that he will recommend a study of the Toledo, 0., plan for arbitration of labor- management disputes with a view toward its adoption in Detroit. The essence of the plan, ac- cording to Edwards, is voluntary agreement between labor and management to submit disputed issues to an agency composed of representatives of management, labor and the public. Edwards said he will submit a motion to the Council Monday calling for establishment of an 18-man committee to investigate the Toledo plan and bring back recommendations for or against its adoption. The survey group would include employers, union leaders and pri- vate citizens recognized for im- partiality in labor disputes. The Council president said the Toledo plan would probably not be applicable to the auto in- dustry's big three of General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co., and Chrysler Corp. "Ford, Chrysler and General Motors, and the unions with which they deal, do their negotiating and their fighting on a national basis," commented Edwards, a former organizer for the CIO Uni- ted Auto Workers. "They would be affected very little, at least at the start, by a marshalling of purely local public opinion in De- troit." PAUL HARSHA .. . new managing editor * ~ *I * Paul Harsha Named to Top Dally Position Paul Harsha was appointed managing editor and Clayton Dickey was reappointed city edi- tor for the spring Daily at a meet- ing of the Board in Control of Student Publications last night. The other appointee to the sen- ior editorial staff was Clyde Recht who will replace Harsha as associ- ate editor. Milton Freudenheim, editorial director, Ann Kutz and Mary Brush, associate editors, will con- tinue in those capacities for an- other semester. Harsha replaces Robert Gold- man, present managing editor, who will graduate next month. Harsha, a native of Plymouth, Mich., is a veteran as is Dickey, who comes from Milwaukee, Wis. Recht, also a veteran, is from De- troit. Junior appointments to The Daily for next semester were de- ferred by the board until a later date. President Alexander G. Ruth- ven, speaking to the Board com- mended Dean of Students Joseph A. Bursley, who will retire Feb. 1, for his long service on the Board. Police Set Up Stop Streets An emergency measure design- ed to combat the growing campus traffic problem was announced yesterday by Captain Barney Gainsley of the Ann Arbor Police force. With material shortages delay- ing delivery of traffic control lights from three to 18 months, it was decided to make street in- tersections near the Union and in the S. University business area, full stop streets immediately. The S. University-State Street inter- section has been designated a three-way stop, while the S. Uni- versity-E. University intersection has been made a four-way stop. Retiring Sec'y of State Urges Perserverance By The Associated Press CLEVELAID, Jan. 11-,Sena- tor Vandenberg (Rep., Mich.) urged tonight that the United States shift its China policy to en- courage the non-communist coali- tion backing the new constitution there. Secretary of State Byrnes at the same time said that he is more confident than ever that "We can achieve a just peace by cooperative effort" by per- ssting with "Firmness." Their joint billing at the final session of The Council on World Affairs had dramatic contrasts. In the Republican-dominated Sen- ate, Vandenberg has gained new power in foreign affairs-The time of his greatest influence probably is just ahead. Byrnes, having fin- ished the first phase of treaty- making, is retiring-he will be suc- ceeded by Gen. George C. Mar- shall. Vandenberg, in his first speech as chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, served notice that adherence to a bi-partisan foreign policy does not preclude the fullest contro- versy over foreign affairs. He differed with Byrnes on at least one point by insisting that a Pan-American conference on de- fense problems be called without delay. Byrnes' last scheduled address as secretary of state appealed for the United States to remain strong in military arms and forces until its strength can be reduced equally with that of other powers. This, he said, is necessary for world peace. "As a great power and as a per- manent member of the Security Council," Byrnes said, "we have a responsibility, veto or no veto, to see that other states do not use force except in defense of law. We must discharge that responsibil- ity." Marshall, who is to succeed Byrnes late next week, is return- ing home from 13 months in China where he helped General- issimo Chiang Kai-Shek put over the new constitution. He had hoped it would appeal to "liberals," as he called them, among the Communists as well a~s among non-Communist poli- tical- groups, but so far the Communists have cold-shoul- dered it. Students in Poland Need Books, Scripts An official of the Department of Education in Warsaw, Poland, last night issued an appeal to Uni- versity students and faculty mem- bers to contribute books and "scripts" (course outlines) to Po- lish students and teachers. Kazimierz Marianski, the Po- lish educator, made the appeal through University mathematics Prof. Louis C. Karpinski Marianski, director of instruc- tion in the field of adult educa- tion, said that Polish students and teachers are in need of literature on architecture, electro-technics, mechanical and civil engineering and industrial management. He added that extension service and correspondence course mate- rial would be greatly appreciated. Nationalist Coalition GLENCOE TRIES MOEHLMAN'S PLAN: Educators Eye New Salary Systeii World News at a Glance By The Associated Press ROME, Jan. 11-Anti-Communist factions of the Socialist Party broke completely today with the rest of the Socialist Party, and the leader of the bolters declared that unless the party remained indepen- dent of foreign pressures "we will not be able to escape the specter of civil war and of international war.' * a * NANKING, Jan. 11-A major shakeup in the Chinese govern- ment, with liberal nonpartisans or minority party members get- ting at least half the ministers, is due to be completed within the next month, a well-informed source said today. If carried through, this program, recommended by General Marshall in his forewell critical statement on the Chinese problem, By JOSEPH H. KARSHNER Associated Press Staff Writer Educators, who consider them- selves congenitally underpaid, look His assistants report that head- way toward a similar plan is be- ing made by the Port Huron schools. it as the lowest common denomi- nator. All salaries, including those of janitors and other custodial em- ployes, are geared to it, with the