JUNIOR GIRLS') PLAY see pat Y ICF41 43-ALii4p FAIR AND WNA iRM E[Ud 1 Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVII, No. 123 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1948 PRICE FIVE CENTS ., ~... S.> .......... House Sends Tax Cut Bill To President Expect Truman Veto on Measure WASHINGTON, March 24-(IP) -The House sent President Tru- man a $4,800,000,000 tax reduction bill today, pounding home its ap- proval by a 289 to 67 roll call vote. The margin was 52 votes greater than the two-thirds majority which would be required to over- ride a veto, provided there is no change of sentiment. And President Truman is ex- pected to veto the tax cut prompt- ly. His supporters take the stand that instead of reducing taxes, Congress should maintain the cur- rent high flow of revenue to re- build the nation's military strength in the global drive to stop Communism. But the House vote, coupled with the topheavy 78 to 11 ap- proval given by the Senate Monday, was viewed by Demo- crats as well as Republicans as assuring that the tax cut wmill became law. "There is not a chance in the world that Congress will support a Presidential veto," one highly placed Democratic lawmaker said. The bill would: 1. Grant relief to all the 52,- 000,000 taxpayers, ranging from 100 per cent in the lowest income bracket to 5 per cent in the high- er brackets. It removes 7,400,000 low-income persons from the tax rolls completely. 2. Effective May 1, reduce all tax withholding from pay envel- opes and salary checks. The tax reduction is retroactive to Janu- ary 1. So next year the taxpayers would get refunds on overpay- ments from January 1 to May 1. F House action came in the fae of an impassioned statement by Democratic leader Rayburn, of Texas, that "danger lurks in this world." He asked: "In this hour of disorder, had we not better be In a position to bring about those instruments of war that may be needed to defend our shores?" But in the voting 84 Democrats deserted the Administration to join 205 Republicans in support of the measure. Opposing were 64 Democrats, one Republican (Mor- ton of Kentucky) and the two American-Labor Party members from New York. Not one Repub- lican voted against it. Speaker Martin (Rep., Mass.), after the vote was announced, told reporters: "A veto will be overridden. This tax cut is certain." The House put aside briefly its debate on the $6,205,000,000 for- eign aid bill to rush the $4,800,- 000,000 tax slashing measure to the President's desk. Republican Leader Halleck of Indiana challenges Rayburn's ar- gument that national defense makes a tax cut unwise now. Rehabilitation Plan Approved 'I' Faculty Endorses Greek Movement A movement at the University of Athens for Greece's spiritual rehabilitation has been endorsed by members of the University fac- ulty as well as President Alex- anger G. Ruthven. The Student Orthodox Chris- tian Society has secured state- ments from President Ruthven, Prof. Ernest F. Barker, chairman of the physics department, Prof. Russell C. Hussey of the geology department, Prof. William C. Steere, chairman of the botany department and Prof. Arthur E. R. Boak of the history depart- ment. The statements, which backed the Greek scholar's stand for re- newed Christian values, will be sent to the Christian Union of Alumni in Athens. More than 180 University of Athens scientists and teachers as well as other Greek leaders recently published AN EDITORIAL: Daily Launches Magazine The need for a permanent student literary magazine at this University-with its crowded writing courses and its famous Hopwood contests-has been self-evident for some time. Today The Daily announces plans for an entirely new literary supplement which will be published for the first time May 2. Contributions will be accepted at the Student Publications Building immediately. Deadline for manu- scripts has been set for April 16. The new magazine will publish work in all fields of writing -fiction, poetry, drama and essay. It will also carry art work, criticism of current books and records, and articles on special subjects written by students in all departments of the Uni- versity. In addition to student work, contributions from faculty members on topics of current interest will be published. The supplement will be under the temporary direction of Daily senior editors. Eventually a special undergraduate staff devoted solely to the preparation of the literary mag- azine will be established within the framework of the Student Publications organization. When The Daily issues its call for tryouts next Fall, students interested in working on the literary staff may apply. A special feature of the first issue will be a report of the International Critical Symposium, to be held April 13 to 15 at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. Andre Gide, Benedetto Croce, Alan Tate, Herbert Read and Ernst Curtius will be among the participants in the symposium. We hope that the new literary magazine will provide The Daily's readers with a cross-section of the best creative work done by students at this University. -The Daily Senior Editors. LIBRARY SPACE LIMITED: Niehuss Points Out Necessity For Four. Building Projects By KENNETH LOWE An urgent need for four additional building projects was cited by Marvin L. Niehuss, University vice-president, in a recent interview. The four projects are an Angell Hall addition, a General Library addition, a University fire station and a motor service shop. A request for $7,057,000 to cover construction costs of these buildings has been submitted to the State Legislature. The Angell Hall addition would provide approximately 150,000 IStrile Brings New Slash in Rail Service WASHINGTON, March 24-(IP) -A new slash in railroad service was ordered today as a result of the 10-day-old soft coal strike, and President Truman named a three-man board to investigate the causes of the walkout. The Interstate Commerce Com- mission ordered a 25 per cent re- duction in coal burning freight service, effective midnight next Tuesday and continuing through April 30 unless the order is modi- field. About 67 per cent of freight movement is by coal burners. An Office of Defense Transpor- tation order for a similar cut in coal-burning passengerstrain serv- ice became effective last Sunday. Hoover Says FJRP Is Block On Aggression WASHINGTON, March 24-(VP) -Herbert Hoover endorsed the $5,300,000,000 European Recovery Program today as "a major dam against Russian aggression.' The former President said the program "should produce eco- nomic, political and self-defense unity in Western Europe." "I believe it is worth taking the chance," Hoover said in his first public statement since President Truman's stop-communism speech last week. Mr. Truman called for quick adoption of the program as one of the most urgently needed parts of his new policy. In the Senate, the question of turning the atom bomb back to military control was raised during a foreign affairs discussion. square feet of additional space. Most of this would be devoted to classrooms and a few depart- mental offices. Niehuss said that the Angell Hall annex was also necessary in order to reduce fire hazard on campus. He called attention to such oft-condemned buildings as the Economics, Pharmacology and Romance Language Buildings. All of these could be razed if an ad- dition to Angell Hall were au- thorized. Additional Volumes. The library addition is neces- sary in order to house additional volumes and for additional study hall space. In this connection, he men- tioned that the student body pro- per has tripled, the graduate stu- dent body has increased more than tenfold and the Library has added approximately 1,000,000 books since the building was com- pleted in 1917. In spite of this, Niehuss said, no permanent rpo- visions have been made to meet the expanded needs. The need for a University fire station is claimed by both the city and the University. The ex- pansion of the city eastward has left the campus area without ade- quate fire protection, Niehuss said. The motor service shop is need- ed to service University motor units which are now being re- paired outdoors. WJR Will Be Investigated WASHINGTON, March 24-(A') - The Federal Communications Commission today announced it will investigate news broadcasts by radio stations KMPC, Los Angeles, WJR Detroit, and WGAR Cleve- land. The stations are jointly con- trolled by G. A. Richards, of Los Angeles, who is president of the operating companies. At Detroit, a WJR spokesman said the station probably would not make any comment before the FCC hearing. ' Assemibly Acts on Code OfFreedom Set Up Academic Freedom Plan By BEN ZWERLING An assembly of University stu- dents and faculty members, agree- ing that "there can be no thought except free thought in the world" took steps yesterday to establish an international code of aca- demic rights. More than 300 students and teachers who gathered to deal with reported infringements on academic liberties in Czecho- slovakia, sent the proposal for a global code to the United Na- tions. They sent comnunica- tions to Czech Premier Gott- wald and to the International Union of Students in Prague de- ploring the clamps on academic freedom that have allegedly fol- lowed the Communist coup. Declaring that these messages to Czechoslovakia can be "no more than a gesture," Robert Miller, a Czech student and one of the five speakers at yesterday's rally, said that word would nevertheless fil- ter through to the subjugated stu- dents and hope would be revived. He declared that our task is to rid the world of fear. As our first step he said, we ought to let the Czech students and faculty mem- bers know that we are behind them in their fight for free thought. The rally, initiated by SLID and co-sponsored by a number of campus organizations, dealt with the topic, "Czech Academic Free- dom is Our Problem." "The Czechs had a Demo- cratic heritage that paralleled ours," Alfred Shapiro, chairman of the meeting declared. "And they believed as we do, that academic freedom is a principle and not a tactic." Academic freedom is a relative concept. Prof. Preston Slosson of the history department said in the keynote address. "No nation is or ever has been completely free," he said. "But virtually all of what we know as civilization-wha tM world has cherished-has come from the relatively free govern- ments." In a relatively free government, like the United States, he said, "a professor might occasionally be fired-and go on to a perhaps better position. But in a totali- tarian government, thousands of teachers might well be put in concentration camps." Dr. James H. Meisel of the po- litical science department spoke of the "Battle of Prague." The Communists and "both labor unions and Socialists- uneasy partners of the ruling coalition-have a joint majority of 52%," he declared. "The rest is silence. The silence is the evi- dence." Rev. Edwin H. Redman of Ann Arbor's Unitarian Church, assert- ed that we will do most to give strength and encouragement to the students of Prague's Charles University and the people of Cze- choslovakia . . . if we demonstrate the depth of our belief in the dem- ocratic idea which is summarized in the Czech slogan, "Pravda Ves- tasia, Truth Prevails." Rev. Redman urged as the strongestwand mostkimpressive protest we can make, "a clear integrity, so self-evident that no amount of material power could ever add to our moral, intellectual and spiritual strength." Prof. John L. Brumm, chairman of the Michigan Committee for Academic Freedom declared that the "more youth grasps the sorry scheme of things, the more it real- izes that freedoms are restrained either from within human beings or imposed from without, but that innner restraints are the more im- portant." PAPANEK SPEAKS TO UN COUNCIL-Jan Papanek (seated right) addresses the United Nations Securitly Council at Lake Success, declaring that Russia engineered the Communist grab in Czecho- slovakia. "God help me, I shall prove this to y ou," he asserted. Seated at left is Andrei A. Gromyko (dark glasses), Soviet delegate. Papanek was voted a seat at the table by a 9 to 2 vote despite bitter objections from Russia and the Soviet Ukraine. MISSING AN HOUR? Ann Arbor Debates Following Detroit in Change to New Time Where did that eight o'clock class go? That and many other confus- ing questions are liable to arise in the befogged students' minds if Ann Arbor decides to follow De- troit and adopt daylight saving time. The motor city will set its clocks ahead one hour April 24 if Mayor Eugene Van Antwerp does not veto a Common Council measure approving the action. The mayor has indicated he will go along with the move. In Ann Arbor, most citizens including Mayor William E. Brown, Jr., felt that the city would have to go on "fast time" because of the industrial ties with Detroit. Council President Cecil 0. Creal, however, said he would Stason Sees Better Chance To Study Law Prospective lawyers will have a better chance this year of entering law school, Dean E. Blythe Stason told members of Michigan Crib, newly formed pre-law society, last night. A slackening of war-time pres- sure, coupled with a slight increase in the number of students the school is able to admit, means that not only Michigan residents but out-of-state students with good averages will be admitted, Dean Stason pointed out. Michigan Crib was organized to give prospective law students a chance to get acquainted with some of the problems they will meet later. Future meetings will present other speakers dealing with spe- cific fields of legal study. Dean Stason suggested that fu- ture action for the organization might include not only speakers but lists of suggested readings for students interested in legal prob- lems. An apitude test, used to deter- mine whether students with bor- der-line scholastic averages will be admitted to law school, will be administered to the group soon. Test records may help them to de- termine interest and ability in the legal profession. During his undergraduate years, the pre-law student can study any sound program which trains the mind thoroughly, he said, since the lawyer will need "almost every- thing" during his professional ca- reer. Eisler Given Jail Sentence oppose such a measure if it comes up for consideration. Most conflict would center in shipping schedules especially in plants geared to Detroit automo- bile production. U.S. Silence Stalls Action On Palestine LAKE SUCCESS, March 24-(P) -Unexpected and unexplained United States silence stalled Se- curity Council action today on the urgent Palestine issue. It was put over until next Tuesday. The Council had expected to take up a United States resolution calling for a special assembly of the 57 United Nations to recon- sider the Palestine partition ques- tion. The U.S. now proposes UN trusteeship for the Holy Land. But no resolution appeared. Warren R. Austin, chief U.S. dele- gate sat silent through the entire two-hour council meeting. Informed sources speculated, however, on two possible reasons for the switch in plans: 1. The U.S. delegate may be waiting until after Mr. Truman's news conference in Washington tomorrow. It was said the Pres- ident might then explain the U.S. decision of last Friday to ask for the special session and for trusteeship for Palestine., 2. The new switch came the day after Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin told the House of Com- mons that Britain cannot change her policy in Palestine because some other country makes the lat- est of a number of propositions. On Friday when Austin disclosed the new American position a high British official in London had said Britain now might stay longer in Palestine. Eisenhower Not Available As Nominee WASHINGTON, March 24-(P) -Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, re- tired Army Chief of Staff, will not be available for a Presidential nomination on any ticket, his friends said today. This was in reply to demands from a number of Democrats that the five-star general be given the Democratic Presidential nomina- tion instead of President Truman. The General is now writing his memoirs before taking up the presidency of Columbia University in June. Friends said the General is aware of recent moves to revive his name for the Presidency in both Democratic and Republican quarters. But they said his position was made known irrevocably last Jan. 23 when he wrote a New Hamp- shire Republican supporter that he "could not accept" a nomina- tion and "my decision to remove myself completely from the po- litical scene is definite and posi- tive." !ngrahm Rally Set for oday The legal and sociological as- pects of the Ingrahm case will be discussed by George W. Crocket, CIO-UAW lawyer, and Ernest Neal, graduate student in soci- ology, at a "Help the Ingrahms" rally 7:30 p.m. in the League. The rally is part of a national campaign to collect funds for a retrial for Mrs. Rosa Lee In- grahm and her two sons, con- victed of murdering a Georgia farmer. Sponsors o fthe rally are IRA, AVC, YPCM, SRA, Wallace Pro- gressives and the Unitarian Guild. Money collected during the local drive will be sent to the national headquarters of NAACP. 1K 'Charge Plane Engines Sent To Russians Witnesses Testify Before Congress WASHINGTON, March 24-() -Testimony that American war- plane engines have been shipped to Russia within the last six months and that shipping boxes marked for Russia are lying "all over the New York water-front" was presented to Congress today. In rapid-fire order, witnesses made these salient points before a House subcommittee: 1. Forty-six new B-24 engines "suitable for bombers or troop- carrying planes" were shipped from New York to Russia and Poland starting last May and continuing to the end of 1947. 2. Since V-J Day, the war As- sets Administration has sold 21,- 278 combat-type planes for scrap, at scrap prices, "some of which were obviously new." 3. President Truman is ex- pected to issue a proclamation "within a few days" banning the export of all airplane engines and other supplies used "pre- dominantly for military pur- poses.", 4. The State Department has "not yet worked out its policyon. the distinction between shipment of American goods to friendly and High officials of the War Assets Administration and the State De- partment testified on all these points except the reported ship- ment of airplane engines to Rus- sia. Clarence Carruthers, President of the Wall Street aeronautical supplies firm of Carruthers, Inc., told the committee: "Everybody in New York knows there are boxes and cases marked for Russia lying all over the New York waterfront. They are being loaded every day. They're being loaded this after- noon, for that matter, and they've been loaded for the last three days I know of. "I've seen diamond (oil-drilling) tools for Russia and other mate- rials ear-marked for Praha (Prague), Czechoslovakia," the went on. "They've brought in 60 Soviet- flag ships flying the hammer and sickle into New York harbor and loadted them with material for Russia since the first of the year. They carry everything from tractors and bulldozers to electric generators." Asked by Rep. Rizley (Rep., Okla.), subcommittee chirman, to name some of the alleged ship- pers, Carruthers ticked off a list which included Pratt and Whitney (the witness did not say whether he meant the firm that makes ma- chine tools or the one that builds' plane engines), General Eelectric and Western Electric. Arab Attacks ill3 7 Jews Hit Haganah Convoy BearingRelief Goods JERUSALEM, March 24-()- Arab attacks on convoys and a Jewish hilltop fortress north of Jerusalem killed 37 Jews today. Fourteen Jews were killed and 10 wounded when Arabs ambushed a two-car armored convoy of Ha- ganah fighters speeding to the re- lief of beleaguered Neve Yaacov~ six miles north of Jerusalem. The settlement was reported under attack by 700 Arabs, and 11 Jews were slain in the initial attack. Twelve Jews were killed and 30 wounded in an attack upon a 12-bus convoy at Bab El Wad, a town on the main highway from Jerusalem to Tel Aviv. Bab El Wad is in the Judean hills west of Jerusalem where more than 100 persons were re- ported killed in heavy fighting during the past few days. The unofficial death toll in Pal- estine since the United Nations' decision on partition mounted to 2,069. Three major battle areas were developing in Palestine and Brit- ish security forces, weakened by 'M' CLUB THERE TOO: Argentine Alumnus Returns To Campus After 23 Years GERMAN OCCUPATION: Dr. Pollock Approves Truman Decision _____________ 4 _______________________________-------_____ By DICK ARNESEN Rafael Luna, '25E, General Di- rector of the Argentina Board of Transport, visited his alma mater yesterday for the first time since his graduation 23 years ago. He has been visiting American manufacturers to order railroad cars and equipment for the newly nationalized Argentine railways. Luna, whose swarthy features, dark fiery eyes, and soft Spanish accent immediately mark him as a South American, has kept alive his interest in the University de- spite living 6,000 miles from cam- pus. gentine railways the first of this month will soon bring great im- provements to the transportation system in that country Luna de- clared. "The government has a five-year program to replace and modernize most of the railways," he stated. "We are buying cars and equip- ment here in the U. S. and Canada as a start." When Luna left the University in the spring of 1925 with a de- gree in highway and railway engi- neering he went to Tucaman Ar- gentina, where he worked with the President Truman's decision to retain Army control of the Ger- man occupation was regarded as the "wisest possible move" today risk, especially since it would mean that Gen. Lucius D. Clay, present military governor in Germany, Dr. Pollock, former adviser to Gen. Clay in Stuttgart, also said he hoped the crisis period for the