Y SOCIAL See Page 4 Swp b Dtt PARTLY CLOUDY, COOLER Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVIII, No. 166 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 1948 PRICE FIVE CENTS E Ask Federal O (ihi~ f -uu- Ll VVnu mlp U Rail Industry Union Support of Plan Unanimous WASHINGTON, May 25-('P)- Twenty railroad unions demand. ed tonight that the Federal gov- - ernment take steps toward seiz- ing complete ownership of the rail industry. The government has already taken the properties temporar- ily, for legal purposes, in order to block a strike of engineers, firemen, and switchmen. The railway Labor Executives Association adopted unanimously a resolution which said: 1. That the government should assume full financial control now, and bargain directly with the three would be striking unions on wages and working conditions. 2. That, in addition, because of past management "failures" to serve the public properly, the government should "begin prep- arations for the transfer of rail- road ownership from private in- ' terests to the United States of America." H. W. Fraser, Chairman of the Association and President of the Order of Railway Conductors, told reporters at a news confer- ence that the resolution does not suggest nationalization "beyond this case"- But A. E. Lyon,, Executive Sec- retary of the. Association, said at the same news conference: "If they (the railroad man- agement) can't operate them any. better than they've been doing, better make it perma- nent." W. T. F~ricy, president of the Association of American Rail- roads, issued a statement late to- night in which he. pictured the Union proposal as only a tactical move in the present dispute. His statement follows: "This action by the Railway Labor Executives' Association is an attempt to divert attention from the fact that the leaders of three railrqad unions refused to accept the recommendations of an im- partial board named by President Truman to hear all the facts and recommend a settlement fair and just to railroad employes and em- ployers and to the public which pays the bills. Alumni Class Reunion To Be Held in June Approximately 3,000 alumni will reclaim the campus Thurs- day, June 10, to start a three-day ireunion of meetings, dinners, a community sing, golf tournament and dance, The reunion will bring together alumni who were graduated in the years ending in "3" and "8". It is expected that alumni from as far as Manila will attend and will represent classes as far back as 1888. Alumni registration on Thurs- day will begin the activities. The directors of the Alumni Associa- tion, will elect the organization's president for the 1948-49 term, Thursday an all-class dinner will be held at the Union. Dean Russell A. Stevenson, School of Business Administration will speak. President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to alumni, the grad- uating classes and their families, from 4 to 6 p.m. Friday, "Reunion Day". Don Chown, script writer for WJR, will be master of cere- monies when the alumni have their annual sing on campus with the University band performing that evening. The festivities will end with an all-class dance at a nearby country club. The Emeritus Club, exclusive organization for elumni who have graduated at least fifty years ago, will induct new members Saturday morning at Kellogg Auditorium. At a luncheon Saturday noon, awards will be presented to dis- tinguished alumni. Clare B. Hughes, president of the Alumni Assodiation, will introduce the newly-elected president. Mundt-Nixon Bill Is Forum Topic , L 1. 5 OPINION BUREAU: Gauge Women's Hours, T icket Set-up Attitudes By MARY STEIN Students are about equally divided in their satisfaction with present hours for women, with a somewhat larger percentage appear- ing to be dissatisfied, according to a representative survey by the Bureau of Student Opinion. General satisfaction with present methods of distributing foot- ball seats and registration materials was evinced in another phase of the Bureau's carefully controlled and unbiased poll. Basketball Tickets Students were also divided on preferences for methods of distributing basketball tickets, somewhat more of them preferring .Jews To Report eW O Bombing of erusalem 'Reconsider' UN Truce; n SAC Revises Rules Covering Recognition Changes Submitted to President RuthVen After two hours of wrangling, the Student Affairs Committee yesterday passed and sent for ap- proval to President Alexander G. Ruthven a revamped set of rules for recognition of student organi- zations. The revised recognition rules set up standards to be followed in recognizing student groups. For the first time standards for with- drawing of student groups are also included in the rules. Details Announced Later Details will be announced after President Ruthven considers the SAC recommendations. The re- vamped recognition standards are the results of months of work on the part of the SAC. Much of the Student Affairs Committee's wrangling in yester- day's discussion of the recognition rules centered about the method of presenting the recommendation to President Ruthven. Some member of the group favored attaching a rider to the recommendation stating that nothing in the recognition rules be cogstrued as usurping any powers vested in University Ad- ministration. However remaining members overrode this objection, holding that such a statement would un- dermine the power of the Student Affairs Committee. 'U' Implicit Veto Right They pointed out that Admin- istrative Officials already have the implicit right of veto over any University group with delegated powers. At its regular meeting yesterday the SAC also: 1. Approved petitions of Delta Sigma Pi to lease a house at 1212 Hill St. and Triangle Fraternity to lease houses at 802 Monroe and 814 E. University. 2. Approved reactiviation peti- tion of Alpha Chi Rho fraternity. 3. Approved minor revisions in th e Inter-Racial Association's constitution. VU Student Injured Usha Trivedi, 20, of 338 E. Jef- ferson, a University student from India, suffered a broken leg and lacerations Monday when the car in which she was riding hit a tele- phone pole, on Stadium Blvd. The driver, Jayant M. Parekh, 19, of 726 Packard, a Hindu Uni- versity student, received minor cuts. Both were taken to Uni- versity Hospital. that tickets be handed out on a reserved basis. The Bureau's in- terviewers, all Survey Research students, also found that more students would prefer to purchase football programs at $.25 apiece instead of the present $.50. On the subject of closing hours for women's residences, students were questioned on whether they were satisfied or dissatisfied with the present system of 10:30 p.m. closing on week nights, 12:30 a.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and 11 p.m. Sundays (plus special late permissions). Satisfied ...............32% Dissatisfied ............36 Had no opinion ........27 Not ascertained ........ 5 Student Prerogatives As evidenced by the percent- ages, there appeared to berlittle campus-wide pressure for lifting of present rulings, which are un- der the jurisdiction of the League Undergraduate Council, women's governing body. No significant difference of opinion by sex was shown. The opinion of students by classes showed that a majority of those having opinions in each class were dissatisfied, ywth the excep- tion of junior men and graduate women. Students were then asked, "If there were a choice of somewhat later hours every night, or one additional late night each week, which would you prefer?" Additional late night . . .44% See OPINION, Page 8 Student Help Needed by SL Juniors and seniors concentrat- ing in geography, German, phi- losophy and sociology are needed for next fall's Student Legislature course content program, Bill Gripman, Student Legislator said yesterday. Student advisers with wide ex- perience in all fields of concen- tration with a 'B' average are desired. Gripman said that honor students are wanted, but that is not a requirement. The advisers will participate in a program designed to give in- coming freshmen, sophomores and transfer students the benefit of upper classman experience. Initiated last semester by the Student Legislature, the program brought excellent results. It was originally confined to the Literary College, but will be expanded in the fall, Gripman added. The experts will have the same privileges as regular orientation advisors, including early registra- tion and meals during that week, Gripman said. GM Reaehes Wage Pact With UAW Novel Agrelneet Heads off Strike By The Associated Press General Motors Corp. and the UAW-CIO reached a unique tWo- year agreement yesterday provid- ing for an adjustment of wages to the cost of living, and an immedi- ate flat 11 cent an hour wage in- crease. The move was hailed by govern- ment labor officials as a possible strike-averting pay formula for most industry in 1948. The agreement averted a strile threatened for Friday, and provid- ed assurances that the 225,000 UAW workers in General Motors will have no strike at least until the contract expires in 1950. The same terms have been offered to the 40,000 GM members of the United Electrical Workers, who are studying the formula. General Motors called its sliding wage scale "the new approach to the living cost problem." Officials said it would add about $75,000,000 a year to the payroll, and boost the average wage to about $1.61 an hour. GM did not reveal whether the wage boost would lead to an- other increase in its car prices. Cyrus S. Ching, director of the Federal Mediation and Concilia- tion Service, said "the new pact will doubtless establish a basis for settlement of a number of other wage disputes now pending." The UAW-CIO said that, if the rest of the industry follows the pattern, it would put an exta $220,000,000 a year in the pockets of the nation's auto workers. In signing the contract, the un- ion shelved a number of demands on GM such as pensions, union shop and the like. They did get a dues checkoff instead of a union shop. This means that the com- pany will collect dues for the un- ion from any employe who wants it done that way. The GM agreement has three important factors: 1. It is the first major conces- sion in labor's drive for a third round of postwar wage increases. 2. It provides a two-year, in- stead of the usual one-year, set- tlement - thus promising labor peace for two years to GM. 3. It accepted, for the first time in such a large industry, the prin- ciple of gearing wages to changes in the cost of living. Nationl Roud- Up By The Associated Press DALLAS, May 25-Anti-Tru- man Texas Democrats tonight surged into firm control of the state convention at Brownwood with the election of Wright Mor- row of Houston as National Com- mitteeman. * * * WASHINGTON, May 25-A mass meeting of House Repub licans rallied in force behind the Israel Cites Delay. 'Favoring' Arabs Security Council Appeal for Peace Arrangement Will Expire at Noon By The Associated Press The Palestine war appeared even farther from settlement tonight as the Israel government "reconsidered" the UN cease fire order in the face of intensified fighting in the Holy Land. The Israel Foreign Minister, Moshe Shertok, said his government took this action because the Security Council postponed its truce appeal 48 hours "to suit the convenience of the Arab governments." The UN appeal expires at noon tomorrow (Wednesday). Three other developments complete tonight's Palestine news: 1. In Tel Aviv, a Haganah communique announced that Jeru- salem underwent its first air bombing in history tonight. Arabs claimed two major victories for their forces inside the city. 2. The United States announced that it will ignore Egyptian and Syrian naval blockades of Palestine. 3. Seven nations have no announced recognition of Israel, Russians announce exchange of diplomatic missions. * * * * * * BACK TO WORK-Packinghouse workers gather in the street outside the Armour and Company employment office in Kansas City, Kan., preparatory to going back on the job. The recent settlement of their strike was followed yesterday by an agreement between the UAW-CIO and General Motors providing an 11 cent an hour wage increase, and averting a walkout set for Friday. "D' DAY FOR WRITERS: Hopwood Contest Winners Will Be Named Tomorrow For the eighteenth consecutive year, outstanding student literary talent will be rewarded, when the winners of the Avery and Jule Hopwood contest in creative writing are announced after the Hopwood lecture tomorrow. Judges Decision Distinguished judges rank and evaluate the 74 manuscripts which have been submitted in the 1947- 48 contest, but final determina- tion of winners is made by the Hopwood Committee, which is directed by Prof. R. W. Cowden. Truman Asks For Action on Education Bill WASHINGTON, May 25-(AP) -President Truman prodded Congress today for action on Federal Aid to schools and a boost in the Minimum Wage. He wants to see bills covering both those matters passed this session, he told a group of lead- ing Democrats who talked with him for an hour at the White House. But the Republicans, who hold a majority in both houses, are driving to clear away a mass of other legislation they have label- ed "must" so they can adjourn for the GOP Convention. Officially, House Republican Leader Halleck (Ind.) said no de- cision has been reached on either the Minimum Wage or the Edu- cation Aid Bill, Neither is current- ly classified by the Republican policy framers as legislation which must be acted upon before a djournment. The Senate has passed a $300,- 000,000- a-year School Aid Bill providing grants for the various states. The House hasn't acted on it, and Senator Lucas (D-Ill.), one of those who attended the White House conference, said it is "bottled up"win a House Com- mittee. (It was assigned to the House Education and Labor Committee.) The proposal to raise the min- imum wage rate from 40 cents an hour to 75 has not got beyond the Committee state in either House. Other members of the com- mittee include Professors A. L.I Bader, L. I. Bredvold, Bennett Weaver, C. F. Wells of the English department; Prof. D. H. Parker of the philosophy department, and Dean Hayward Keniston as chairman. Announcement of athe judges, for this year's contest will also be announced tomorrow. Since the inauguration of the contests in 1931, approximately $8,000 has been awarded every year. Aside from many smaller prizes, forty-three awards of over $1,000 each have been made, two of them being $2,500. No other university in the world offers such large prizes to its students in thej field of writing. Hlopwood Lecture Before the announcement of the winning manuscripts, the Hop- wood lecture is traditionally pre- sented. Past speakers have in- cluded Max Eastman, Zona Gale, Christopher Morley, Carl Van Doren, and last year, Robert Penn Warren. This spring Mr. J. Donald Adams, critic for the New York Times Book Review, will deliver the Hopwood lecture at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow, in Rackham Lecture Hall. The program is open to the public, Perkins Given JobbySiglder LANSING, May 25 - (1P) - Budget Director John A. Perkins. a former University professor, to- day was named to head the new- ly-created State Department of Administration by Governor Sig- ler. The new Department will merge budgeting, accounting, building and building maintenance and motor vehicle control. At the same time he announced the appointment, Sigler asked the State Administrative Board to ap- point Perkins Secretary of the Board, a position he will hold by law when the act creating the new department takes effect Aug. 20. Sigler also instructed Perkins to take over immediate direction of the state purchasing department pending the effective date of the new law. Arabs Clairn Victories The Haganah communique, is- sued in Tel Aviv, said unidentified planes, flying at a high altitude, dropped high explosive bombs on the Holy City. It gave no other details. The Haganah report came as the Arabs claimed two major vic- tories elsewhere in Palestine and the approaching end of the battle in Jerusalem's Old City. The Egyptian Defense Minis- try said Egyptian army forces had cut off contact between Jewish settlements in northern and southern Palestine by taking the town of Iraq Suweid an, 27 miles south of Tel Aviv. A communique described Iraq Suweidan as "an important town controlling com- munications" of Jewish settle- ments in southern Palestine. Trans-Jordan's Arab Legion claimed in a communique issued in Amman that its forces had ended a 24-hour battle for Latrun, 15 miles northwest of Jerusalem, by exterminating a Jewish attack- ing force. Six hundred Jews were killed, the communique said. To Ignore Blockade The United States announced today it will ignore Egyptian and Syrian naval blockades of Pales- tine. The State Department said to- day this government can't recog- nize action of the two Arab states as valid, and has so informed them. They haven't replied. To reporters, press officer Michael McDermott of the de- partment cited traditional American policy against inter- ference with maritime com- merce. Egypt told the U.S. ambassador on May 17 of the blockade, and Syria gave notice on May 19 of similar action, the Department announcement said. Russia To Send Envoys Seven nations to date have pro- claimed recognition of the state of Israel. They are the United States, Russia, Poland, Yugoslavia, Guat- emala, Nicaragua and South Af- rica. Russia is the first of these to announce she would ex- change diplomatic missions with the 10-day-old Jewish state. The radio quoted Molotov as saying in a telegram to Shertok: "The Soviet Government agrees to the establishment of a mission of the state of Israel in Moscow, headed by an envoy or a charge d'affaires, including also the dis- charge of consular functions, and in its turn is ready to establish a Soviet mission in Tel Aviv." Hint Palestine Topic of UN, Marshall Talks LAKE SUCCESS, May 25-(AP) -Secretary of State Marshall talked at length today with top United Nations leaders, presum- ably about Palestine. Their meeting in New York was private. Informed persons indi- cated one topic covered was the attempt of the UN Security Coun- cii to impose a cease fire order in the Holy Land. There also were indications that Secretary Marshall might have been asked how far and how forcefully the United States is pre- pared to go in restoring peace to Palestine. Secretary Marshall was the guest of Warren R. Austin, Chief United States Delegate to the UN, at Austin's suite in a Manhattan hotel. Others there were Trygve Lie, UN Secretary-General; Alexander Parodi of France, Chairman of the Security Council this month; Byron Price, an Assistant Secre- tary-General of the UN and war- time Director of Censorship; and Dean Rusk, Head of the Office of United Nations Affairs in the State Department. UN observers attached particu- lar significance to the personnel attending the lunch and to the time it was held. It was noted that Marshall conferred with Lie and Parodi on the eve of a meeting of the Se- curity Council at which, observers said, it is likely the Arabs will re- ject a council demand for a ces- sation of hostilities in Palestine. Relax Summer Auto Limits Retain Baa on Social, Personal Driving Use Relaxation of driving regula- tions to permit certain types of recreational driving this summer has been announced by John Gwin, assistant in the Office of Student Affairs. Under the summer rules, stu- dents may drive cars in connec- tion with outdoor sports activities such as golf, tennis and swimming. Personal and social use of cars will not be permitted however, Gwin said. The driving ban will be lifted at 5 p.m. on the last day of finals, which is differei}t for the various colleges. Rules will go into effect again at 8 a.m., June 21. Gwin emphasized that except for recreational privileges, all ex- istina' drivin reemiaition will h AWAITS APPEAL: Marzani Repays America' By Carrying Case to People By HARRIETT FRIEDMAN "I am carrying my case to the people, because I have gained a great deal from America, and I feel I owe something in return." Carl Marzani, on bail pending appeal to the Supreme Court on a federal court conviction for de- ceiving the government on Com- munist Party membership, ex- plained: "Of course I will personally suf- fer if my sentence holds, but it is also true that you all are in dan- ger, American democracy is in danger, if I go to jail." Marzani appeared at a private dinner and meeting here after the University refused the Michigan Committee for Academic Free- dom the right to sponsor him in a campus rally. A Faclpra1.l (Iii (ivm+ irf An_ the state department, before he re- GOP Tariff Bill today. Repub- signed to take another job. lican Leader Halleck of Indiana "It is really his word against predicted the measure will be mine; I did not lie; I was not a passed by the house tomorrow. Communist Party member," Mar- W zani said. "I had far left opinions, WASHINGTON. May 25-A list but everyone has always known of 506 men and women called this," he explained. "ruthless" was described by a "If the government wants to try House group today as the leader- a man because of his opinionsshEprofedCommunist offensive in they should admit it; instead they Europe and the Orient. It called them the "Professional tried to maintain a pretense that revolutionarips to whom Lenin c sberties nothing to do with passed the torch of world revolu- tion. Marzani, an American born in* * Italy, who was educated at Wil- DETROIT, May 25-Attorney liams College and Oxford Univer- General Eugene S. Black today sity, was an OSS man during the accused Detroit radio station war, and then transferred to the WWJ of denying him time on State Department, the air for an intended "expo- "When I resigned to take an- sure of the Michigan gang." ant it'd, nhPvornnP iel mt, * " i BACHELORS, TAKE HEED: Men Warned To Beware of June Moon C> By CRAIG WILSON Independent males that want to remain that way had_ better stay dents signed on the nuptially- dotted line, an upswing of 30 over the mneviom var. according to ogne, and bath powder are "must" items for the occasion and future- hihhv sometimes comes along to I