CO-OP DAY See Page 4 L wA A Daii.44p SNOW FLURRIES, CONTINUED COLD Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVIII, No. 44 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 12, 147 PRICE FIVE CENTS G.I. Benefits Not Inclusive Of Families Grants Linited To School Fees By JOE FREIN Current provisions of the G.I. Bill of Rights do not provide for the extension of Health Service benefits to the families of student veterans, a University spokesman declared yesterday. Under the present law, proposed use of a part of veterans' educa- tional and training benefits to re- compense the University for the added cost, of providing Health Service facilities for the wives and -children of veterans is not au- thorized, he pointed out. Limited Specifically 'He explained that the maximum of $500 per academic year allowed the student veteran for educa- tional and training benefits by the Federal Government under Public Law 346 is specifically limited to payment for tuition, books, lab- oratory fees and other charges customarily required of all Uni- versity students. Replying to statements by Dr. Warren E, Forsythe, Health Serv- ice director, Ed Shaffer, chairman of MYDA, pointed out that MY- DA's proposal is not limited to veterans' families alone, but ex- tends to the wives and children of non-veteran students and teaching assistants. MYDA believes that the exten- sion of Health Service benefits to the families of students is with- in the basic function of the Uni- versity he declared. t Not Filly Effective "Inasmuch as the basic purpose of the Health Service program is to provide low cost medical care' to protect the health of students, we feel that such a program can- not be fully effective unless the families of students also receive these services," Shaffer said. He conceded that Health Serv- ice facilities were overtaxed, but expressed MYDA's belief that ar- rangements for out-patient dis- pensaries in student dormitories and the use of excess University Hospital beds would help alleviate the situation and provide more facilities for students' families. Taft Believes Marshall Plan Too Expensive WASHINGTON, Nov. 11-(A3)- Secretary of State Marshall today recommended spending $2,657,- 000,000 on foreign aid between now and next July 1, and Senator Taft (R.-Ohio) quickly opposed the sum as being altogether too large. After Marshall had placed his proposal before the Senate For- eign Relations Committee, Taft told a news conference: "I would be absolutely opposed to any such addition to this fiscal year's ap- tpropriation." The Ohioan, who heads the Senate Republican Policy Com- mittee, declined to set any figure on the amount he would approve. But he said he did not believe there should be any increase in the rate at which this activity now is being carried on. Taft has said the outlays for foreign economic help and for relief total about $4,500,000,000 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1948. He told reporters he wants to go ahead with an appropriation for interim aid to Europe, but that he believes too large expen- ditures are proposed both in it and the long range Marshall Plan for European economic recovery. But Chairman Vandenberg (R.- Mich.) also called on Marshall for a "total balance sheet" of pro- posed expenditures for foreign aid by this government during the remainder of the fiscal year, end- ing June 30, 1948. Marshall then dgscribed the overall program, which totals $2,657,000,000, including $60,000,- 000 for China. He also called for restoration of the German econ- omy, which he called "vital." Sigma Alpha Mu .,a TL' A --1 Daily Takes Initative in Newspaper Convention Facts, Figures, Problems To Be Discussed By College Representatives Meeting Here By FRED SCHOTT Plans for a college newspaper convention to be held here Febru- ary 21-22, the first of its kind in the country, have been worked out by members of The Daily's business staff and approved by 10 invited pa- pers at present. Purpose of convention will be to "compare notes" on operating procedure, for the mutual improvement of each paper. Invited papers have been requested to send detailed publication facts, figures and problems for discussion to The Daily. A discussion agenda, subject to change, has already been prepared. Business managers and managing editors have been invited to _-attend. It is hoped that this con- 'U' Conserves As Fuel Needs ExceedSupply Winter Requirements Only Partially Filled By ART HIGBEE University people will be able to keep warm this winter, but fuel conservation measures will have to be taken; a survey made by The Daily reveals. Walter L. Bulbick, University Purchasing Agent, said that the University. nearly all of whose buildings use coal, has enough coal on hand to last into February. Contracts with five mine opera- tors, Bulbick said, "give us every reason to believe that, barring strikes or a serious coal car short- age, enough coal will be delivered to last through the winter." Full Supply Most fraiternity, sorority and league houses using coal have al- ready laid in a full winter's supply. Those using fuel oil hold contracts which they expect will be filled. Local coal dealers said that their supply will be adequate, but pre- dicted a shortage of certain types of hard coal because of European shipments and a shortage of rail- road coal cars. Fuel oil dealers said that they could give their old customers "as much as they got last year," but that "we're turning down new cus- tomers every day."° 'Worse Than Last Year'. The fuel oil outlook is "worse than last year," one dealer re- ported, because of a shortage of tank cars and a 40 per cent fall- ing-off in Michigan fuel oil pro- duction. The local gas company reported that they would be able to supply all gas furnaces which were or- dered installed before April 15, 1946. No installation orders have been taken since that date because of a natural gas shortage which will continue until a pipeline can be laid to tap the Texas supply. House managers said that they intended to take the usual fuel conservation measures, such as, controlling heat by thermostat, and keeping windows closed or radiators turned off. Special Ad Rates Low-rate advertising in TheI Daily for student organization af- fairs has been provided for in at contract which The Daily has made with the Office of Student Affairs.r Publicity chairmen should clear advertising through Dean Walter1 B. Rea before submitting it to The Daily.t vention will inaugurate a series of annual conventions. Papers accepting The Daily's in- vitations include, at present, all Big Ten dailies except Indiana, the UCLA Daily Bruin and the Harvard Crimson. The Indiana Daily Student and the Colorado Daily have not yet replied. Several other representative papers will be invited. The present two-day agenda schedules separate and combined meetings of the represented staffs. Topics to be discussed by busi- ness managers will include: 1. Advertising policies, and pro- motion, payrolls, staff organiza- tion, plant equipment. 2. Public relations, student par- ticipation, faculty supervision, subscription campaigns and sup- plements. The editorial staff is scheduled to discuss the following topics: 1. Systems of campus news cov- erage. 2. Editorial page policy. 3. Staff salaries, incentives out- side of salaries. 4. Training programs, organi- zation and promotions. 5. Relative play of local and na- tional and international news. In addition, four combined staff meetings will be held at the Stu- dent Publications Building pend- ing representation of as- sociated sports' and women's staff members this completes discussion agenda. The convention will be climaxed by a dinner and address Feb. 21 at the Union, featuring a well-known newspaperman speaker. Other details will be announced later in The Daily. French Movie To Be Shown Film Is Comic Satire On Decadent Royalty "The Barge-Keeper's Daugh- ter," new French comedy, will be presented by Art Cinema League at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow through Saturday at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Josette Day, who appeared in "The Baker's Wife" and "The Well-Digger's Daughter," shown on campus last year, again is cast as the wayward woman. Louis Jouvet portrays a school- master charged with finding a new heir to the throne of "Silistria," mythical Balkan kingdom. Elvire Popesco is cast as the prince, who prefers to chase a commoner, rather than, take over the throne. Based on Maurice Donnay's play "Education du Prince," the film is a satire on decadent royalty. Reserved tickets for "The Barge- Keeper's Daughter" will go on sale at 3 p.m. today at the thea- tre box office in the League. Reu-therWins Over Addes, JAW Faction Leader Elected President A ain By The Associated Press ATLANTIC CITY, N.J., Nov. 11 -Walter Reuther was reelected president of the CIO United Autc Workers today and his forces scored an even more crucial vic- tory when they knocked out Sec- retary-Treasurer Geroge F. Addes Addes, leader of the anti-Reu- ther faction in the UAW, lost his job to Reuther-picked Emil Mazey of Detroit. Shortly before 8 p.m. (EST) Mazey had 3,773 votes, more than a majority in the roll-call vote. Addes had 2,088, according tc an unofficial tally. The election of Mazey to the Union's second highest post vir- tually assured Reuther of com- plete control of the leadershi: after years of bitter factiealism Capped Rise Reuther's overwhelming margin over two unknown opponents with no organized backing capped his 25-year rise in the labor move- ment. That was almost taken for granted, but the full weight of his strength was put to the test when he named Mazey, a militant in- dividualist on and off the labor front, to run against Addes. The latter has held the post for 11 years; he is the only secre- tary-treasurer the union ever had and has been opposed only once. His leadership of the so-called "left wing" anti-Reuther forces is seldom questioned. On the Addes outcome seemed to rest the fate tomorrow of the anti-Reuther faction's two vice- presidential candidates - R. J. Thomas and Richard T. Leonard, the incumbents. Brought Demonstration For these posts they will be faced by Reuther-supported Rich- ard Gosser of Toledo and John Livingstone of St. Louis. Reuther's nomination brought a lively, 15-minute demonstration by his followers. Hundreds of them marched around the room and across the platform while a band played "Reuther Is Our Leader." Reuther placards, bal- loons, noise makers and confetti added the first real color to the convention scene. The 40-year-old Reuther's rout of his organized opposition came as he expected after the Addes faction gave up hope of winning the top office. Reuther had the blessing of CIO President Philip Murray, the only CIO official who now stands above him in prestige. Even Reuther's opponents-and he still has many-agree he has come a long way in the labor movement since he quit high school in Wheeling, W. Va., at the age of 15 to become an appren- tice tool and die maker. Voice Change Started Singer On New Path When Set Svanholm, who was holding down a job as choir direc- tor in Stockholm in between sing- ing baritone roles in the Swedish Opera, decided to try a higher "voice, it was the turning point of his career. Conductor Bruno Walter heard him and invited him to Vienna, after which he sang in many other European cities, including the Wagner shrine at Bayreuth. Since then he has climbed to heights not often achieved by a choirmaster. Ann Arbor Debut The Metropolitan's 36 year old tenor will make his Ann Arbor de- but at 8:30 p.m. Friday, when he sings in the fourth concert of the regular Choral Union 'Series at Hill Auditorium. Although Svanholm is best known for his Wagnerian roles and made his American debut .singing Seigfried, he has also been widely acclaimed for his por- trayal of Radamesr inVerdi's "Aida." Trained at Royal Conservatory He received his formal musical training at the Royal Conserva- f- in -, lyhnn , in-v rJnhn Soviets Reported To Have Set Off Test Atom Bomb Seismological Apparatus Register Tremors on Alleged Explosion Day By The Associated Press PARIS, Nov. 11-The rightist newspaper L'Intransigeant today printed a copyrighted dispatch purporting to come from Russia which said the Soviet Union was making atomic bombs and that Soviet scientists had exploded their first test model in Siberia on June 15. The story was datelined "Prague," Czechoslovakia, and car- ried the byline of "John Griggs" which the newspaper explained was a pseudonym because the writer still was in Russia. The dis- patch said the information came from "confidential sources" and carried the parenthetical note, "information transmitted from Moscow via Prague." L'Intransigeant said the author was "neither an American nor British." An Associated Press dispatch from Prague said weak tremors were registered on seismograph- EX-HUNGARIAN PARLIAMENT MEMBER HANGED-Dr. Gy- orgy Donath (left), former member of Hungarian parliament stands in courtyard of Budapest political prison, shortly before being hanged following conviction on charges of "plotting to overthrow" Communist-dominated government. Communists ac- cused him of being leader of so-called "Committee of Seven" which was alleged to have schemed to restore regime to Admiral Nicholas Horthy. Anti-Communists have charged that whole story of plot in Hungary was "frameup" to discredit small hold- ers party and advance leftist control of government. WAR'S AFTERMATH: Armistice Day Talks Show SoberView of World Chaos By The Associated Press Somber realities of a strife-torn world more than two years after the end of World War II were the dominant themes in Armistice Day talks throughout the nation yesterday. Military leaders, the principal speakers at most of the solemn observances, warned that Ameri- can military strength must be maintained to guard the nation's Ex-Romanian Premier Gets Life Sentence BUCHAREST, Romania, Nov. 11 -(A)-A military tribunal of the Communist-led Romanian govern- ment today found 75-year-old Juliu Maniu guilty of high treason and sentenced him to solitary con- finement in prison for the remain- der of his life. Eighteen associates of the for- mer premier, head of the National Peasant Party, received sentences varying from life at hard labor to one year in jail. Of four tried in absentia, two received life sen- tences at hard labor. Counsel for Maniu and his as- sociates lodged formal appeals from the verdicts. Maniu, the Catholic leader of the anti-Communist opposition, was sentenced to an additional 10 years on other charges that in- cluded entering into relations with foreign powers-the United States and Britain-to overthrow the re-. gime of Communist Premier Petru Groza. Both the United States and Britain had protested the arrest. (Authoritative British informants said in London it was likely Brit- ain would also protest the sen- tences.) Maniu steadfastly denied all the charges brought against him in the 14-day trial that opened Oct. 29. Last night in reference to the more than 40 years he has given of his life to Romanian politics he cried out in his last defense: "I demand proof of these pain- ful accusations. I, who sacrificed my life for Romania, cannot plot or instigate. These calumnes were wont to be thrown against me by the gutter press." security. Some declared ways must be found to preserve the peace lest the trust of men who died in two world wars be betrayed. Heavy rain fell at the country's most hallowed Armistice Day service, held at the tomb of the unknown soldier at Arlington Cemetery near Washington. Despite the downpour, President Truman stood bareheaded with others as the National Anthem was played at this service. The traditional one minute of silence then was observed at 11 a.m., the hour at which World War One ended 29 years ago. Gen. Mark Clark, wartime Fifth Army commander speaking at San Francisco, coupled his plea for preparedness with an assertion that Communists "are making the greatest efforts of all time to en- slave the peoples of the world." In a talk at Philadelphia, Secre- tary of the Army Kenneth Royall declared the United States must adopt universal training because the world is in a state "which we cannot sensibly face without ade- quate military force." Secretary of the Navy John Sul- livan said at Arlington Cemetery "the price of peace will continue to be preparedness" and added that "in the months since V-J Day we have pared" our military strength "to but a shadow of its former size." Panel To Air TIax Problems Lt. Gov. Eugene C. Keyes will present the problems of taxation as they confront high state offi- cials, in an AVC-sponsored panel discussion on "Michigan's Tax Di- lemma" at 8 p.m tomorrow in Kellogg Auditorium. Dr. Keyes will share the plat- form with economics lecturer George R. Anderson and Munici- pal League head John A. Huss. Anderson and Huss will broach the problem from the viewpoints of an authority on tax theory and that of an expert on municipal problems arising from state tax- ation policies. Lorne Cook, student of eco- nomics and former chairman of AVC's campus chapter, will be moderator at the panel. The meet- ing is open to the public. ical apparatus at Strasbourg, France, Vladivostok, Moscow, Tashkent and Sverdlovsk in Rus- sia, Pasadena, Calif., Alma Ata, Outer Mongolia, and Stuttgart, Germany on June 15. The royal observatory outside London, re- ported the recording of a "very faint" disturbance the same day, but none of these recordings coin- cided with the hour of 10 a.m. at which L'Intransigeant said the explosion took place. (The' report was received in silence by officials at the atomic energy commission and else- where in Washington. Some sci- entists have reported that tests to detect atomic explosions by seismographs and by recording radio activity in the upper at- mosphere were not very satis- factory. (On a previous occasion L'In- transigeant printed a startling re- port concerning atomic bombs. On July 7 the paper said a new American bomb had blown a crater 2,700 feet deep and 11 miles wide during a test in New Mexico. The U.S. Atomic Commis- sion called that report "nonsense." (Several leading American atomic scientists at Chicago ex- pressed skepticism. Dr. Edward Teller at the University of Chi- cago Institute of Nuclear Studies declared, today's report "does not make much sense." U.S. Opposes Proposed UN Action in Spain LAKE SUCCESS, Nov. 11-(P)- The United States opposed today a demand by the Soviet bloc that the United Nations take all pos- sible economic action-short of actual war-to force the fall of the Franco regime in Spain. Charles Fahy, American alter- nate delegate, told -the 57-nation political committee of the UN As- sembly that the U.S. was against any action 'which "would initiate change by violence." He said in- stead that the Spanish people "in due time and in their own way" will take steps to regain their place in the family of nations. Dr. Oscar Lange, Polish dele- gate who originally laid charges against Generalissimo Franco in the Security Council in April, 1946 renewed the fight against Franco by calling on the committee and the Assembly-to apply a UN charter provision for "complete or partial interruption of eco- nomic relations" with Spain. He said there had been no change for the better in the Spanish case since the assembly last Dec. 12 approved a resolu- tion calling for member coun- tries to take their ambassadors out of Madrid and for the security council to consider "adequate measures" if a democratic gov- ernment were not established in a "reasonable" time. SAC Extends Late Approval For Dances Criteria for Securing Late Permission Set The Student Affairs Committee yesterday cleared the way for con- sideration of late permission for Saturday night dances and, at the same time, overhauled the list of dances which will be granted late permission by the Student Legis- lature and the SAC. The new resolution leaves the final decision on late permission approval for Saturday night dances to the discretion of the SAC. Previously the J-Hop had been the only dance given late permission Saturday. The Committee lengthened the list of dances approved for late permission and established cri- teria under which other dances may also be given late permission upon petition. The new resolution reads as fol- lows: (1) Subject to approval of date, the following dances are author- ized to continue after midnight: Assembly, Panhellenic, J-Hop, Senior 'Ball, Slide Rule, Inter- national Ball, Military Ball, Soph- omore Prom. Interfraternity Council, Crease, Inter-Profession- al, Caduceus, Paul Bunyan, Bus- iness Administration, and Prosh Frolic. (2) In addition, the following kinds of dances are eligible, sub- ject of approval of date at the dis- cretion of the Student Affairs Committee, upon petition for late permission: (a) The annual function of the school or college; (b) The annual functions spon- sored by the independent men's organization, the independent women's organization, the affil- iated men's organization and the affiliated women's organization; (c) All-campus dances spon- sored by representative groups for philanthropic purposes. (3) The scheduing of late per- mission functions be considered in relationship to the establishment of a social calendar for the school year. Battle Flares In Contempt Interrogation WASHINGTON, Nov. 11-(P)- Attorneys for 10 Hollywood movie figures, accused of Congressional contempt, pressed a last-ditch fight today to save them from prosecution pending a debate in Congress on the whole issue. House Speaker Martin (R.- Mass.) took the case under con- sideration without giving a direct yes or no answer to the lawyers' protest. He indicated, however, that once the technicalities have been met, he may have no choice but to turn the case over to the dis- trict attorney. Defense attorneys Martin Pop- per, Washington, and Lester MiIl Levin, New York, voiced their pro- tests to Speaker Martin in an World News At A Glance By The Associated Press NEW YORK, Nov. 11-Commissioner of Welfare Benjamin Field- ing said today that Maj. Gen. Bennett E. Meyers told him last year, that he was offered a commission of $100,000 by Howard Hughes to bring Hughes' motion picture, "The Outlaw," into New York City. * * * * LAKE SUCCESS, Nov. 11-Britain cautioned the United Na- tions today against adopting any plan which would give the British government the major responsibility for,' uplementing the proposed partition of Palestine. This came from Sir Alexander Cadogan in a statement to a UN Palestine sub-committee which has before it a Russian- American plan for putting the partition scheme into effect. * * * * BANGKOK, Siam. Nov. 11-The Siamese military command un- MUSIC SCHOOL CELEBRITY: Fan Letter Converts Star Into Student < n- . I