SPEAKERS BAN Sce Page 4l Y Lwt La test Deadline in the State ktti4 CLOUDY, POSSIBLE SNOW I F 'VOL. LIX,, No. 58 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, NOV. 28, 1948 tlantic oast Longshoremen's Strik PRICE FIVE CENTS .eEnds 4 !4, National A VG Tied Up Plan Second Late Session On Deadlock Moves Debated, Readied for Vote 'CLEVELAND-(1P)-The Amer- ican Veterans Committee's third national convention bogged down last night in a factional fight which forced the 1,500 delegates into another unscheduled night session. A fight between the administra- tion's Independent Progressive group andthe Progressives crowd- ed aside all other business ex- cept a speech by Murray D. Lin- coln, President of the Coopera- tive League of the U.S.A. RESOLUTIONS were debated and put to vote to lift the suspen- sion of 13 New York City chapters, return the charter withdrawn from the Ernie Pyle chapter of New York City, and restore to membership Richard Crohn and attorney Morris Pottish of New- York. Pottish personally appealed for reinstatement, citing his past record in the organization, Michael Straight, Editor of the New Republic spoke against Pottish, declaring he had incited the suspended chapted to defy the authority of the AVC's 25- member National Planning Committee. Last night delegates, by a close vote, refused to seat representa- tives of the 13 suspended chapters and the Ernie Pyle chapter, or to admit Pottish as a delegate. * *4 * . THE ADMINISTRATION and the resolutions committee, were overruled in their contention that refusal to seat the suspended and expelled delegates had sustained their penalties. The dispute first reached the showdown stage following a meeting last September of the New York Metropolitaan Area Council. The Council, with Pot- tish presiding, seated Crohn as a delegate after Crohn had been suspended by the National offi- cers for lending AVC's name to partisan politics by appearing at a Wallace-for-President rally. Nine of the suspended chapters later renounced their action, but did so under protest. The Ernie Pyle chapter refused to reverse its position, and the other four sus- pended units ignored the National Planning Committee's demand. WES To Be Resumed; Meets Labor Opposition The University's controversial workers' educatidn courses will be resumed immediately after the Christmas holidays, President Alexan- der G. Ruthven announced yesterday. The reorganized program will be a boon to workers' education in Michigan if given the support by labor that it deserves, Dr. Ruthven said. BUT TODAY it looked like labor wasn't going to cooperate. Victor G. Reuther, educational director of the UAW-CIO, called the program "completely unacceptable." Charging that "the Regents are still dominated by General Motors," he said 'they choose to ignore the will of the people as expressed in the recent elections." Reuther and Robert Scott, secretary-treasurer of the Michigan Federation of Labor (AFL) thought that a meeting between Univer- sity officials and labor leaders slated for next Friday would be of little value. * *. * * "UNLESS THE University is willing to restore the Workers Edu- cation Service as it functioned before, I see no point in discussing the situation," Scott said. The labor leaders had previously threatened to boycott the courses if they were resumed. The courses have been under fire for nearly six months following charges by a General Motors official that tey were "Marxist tinged." They were suspended completely in September pending a Regents' investigation. : : , X" THE SUSPENSION of the courses and subsequent firing of Arthur Elder, director of. the program, touched off a wave of protest from labor leaders and churchmen. Details of the reorganized program will not be announced until the meeting of the WES Advisory Council Friday. In announcing that the workers' education courses would be re- sumed, President Ruthven said that "misunderstanding" had devel- oped because of the Regents' probe of the courses.. HE SAID that the Regems never intended to discontinue the courses but only to make an administrative reorganization of the pro- gram. The University was a pioneer in the field of workers' educa- tion. The program was started under a legislature grant and later continued under University funds. The University's program of workers' education was regarded as a model system. Congress was studying the Michigan program with an eye toward establishing a nation-wide system along the same lines. ** * * THE NATIONAL bill dropped out of sight however, and a probe of the Michigan WES was launched by the Regents when Adam K. Stricker, G.M. official, charged that courses were "Marxist tinged." OPENING SESSION: Perry To DisussAmerican Mind in Cook Lecture Series "The American Cast of Mind" seen through the eyes of the phi- losopher, Ralph Barton Perry, pro-K fessor emeritus at Harvard, will be the first topic in the William W. Cook lecture series beginning at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Rackham Lecture Hall. 4. * * 4 National IFC Urges Policy Of Toleraice, Phi Psi Executive Council To Meet NEW YQRK-(P)--Fifty-eight college fraternities were urged last night to consider the "character and personality" of any prospec- tive member 'rather than his race, color, religion or nationality." f * * * THIS PLEA was made by the national Interfraternity Confer- ence in a statement to its 58 affili- ates, but at the same time it af- firmed the right of fraternities to determine the qualifications of their members. Declared the NIA: "The wisdom or desirability of social considerations affecting membership, including religious, racial or national qualifications, are thus the concern of the fra- .ternity itself. "The conference, however, be-. lieves that the fraternity system will flourish better if the charac- ter and personality of the indi- vidual are regarded as paramount, rather than his race, color, re- ligion or nationality." * " * AT YESTERDAY'S session of its 40th annual meeting the NIA delegates voted unofficially in fa- vor of keeping the ban on Negroes maintained by most fraternities. The tally, by a 25 to 12 margin, was merely an expression of opin- ion. Interest in discrimination was heightened at the meeting by the recent suspension by Phi Kappa Psi fraternity of its Am- herst College chapter because the latter asked a Negro to join. Phi Kappa Psi's National Execu- tive Council will meet here today to consider this matter. TODAY'S NIA statement said it was recognized that "a chapter member may cast his vote upon discriminatory considerations" when considering a candidate for membership.. "He may concede or refuse to concede to the opinions, or even the pyejudices of his fraternity brothers," the statement said. "That is his individual right. The weight to be given to conflicting considerations is for his individual decision." The Very Reverend Hewlett Johnson, Dean of Canterbury Cathedral in England and a storm center in the clash over international Communism, will arrive in Ann Arbor Tuesday. During his visit here, he will give an address at Masonic Au- ditorium, will appear at a recep- tion in his honor at Lane Hall, and will meet a "peace delega- tion" of University students. He is sponsored locally by a special welcoming committee of faculty and townspeople. * * * DR. JOHNSON will'speak on "Road to Peace with Russia" at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 30, at Masonic Auditorium. In his address, he is expect- ed to stress the point that the Electioneering Conitinuies *as VotingNears Groups Schedule Last MinuteicMeetinig With campus elections only two days away, local politicos began their last minute attempts to corral votes. A meeting of all independent candidates and students is slated for 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in the League Ballroom. Sponsored by A.sembly, the aim of the meeting is to acquaint independent stu- dents with their independent can- didates, according to Marilyn Ornnt. . EAST AND WEST quadders are planning aseric of rallies and talks in the dormitories Monday evening, beginning at 6:45 p.m. to whip up enthusiasm among dorm students for their candidates. The elections will be held Tuesday and Wednesday. SL of- ficials hope to get a vote of 10,000 students. Sixty-three candidates are 'vie- ing for 32 positions on the Stu- dent Legislature while eight are running for the three student seats on the Board in Control of Stu- dent Publications. SEVENTEEN seniors are running for the four Senior Class offices and 27 juniors are after the nine posts on the J-Hop Committee. Education school officers will also be elected. The elections, originally sched- uled for last week, were postponed by Legislature action because of the rejection by Men's Judiciary of many petitions for faulty sig- natures. STUDENTS PROTEST NEGRO BAN-Dr. Ralph C. Hutchinson, president of Lafayette College, Eastern Pa., addresses a student crowd estimated at 1,500 which gathered to protest against the reported refusal of Sun Bowl officials in El Paso, Texas, to permit Dave Showell, Negro halfback, to play there New Year's Day. Lafayette rejected the Bowl bid because of the ban on Showell. TOWN GROUP PLANS WELCOME: Deat of Canterbury Will Speak Here world faces the greatest ca- trastrophe in its history un- less it meets squarely and solves forthrightly the ques- tion of peace. Tickets for this lecture can be obtained for 50 cents at Wahr's, the Union, League, Lane Hall, and at the Masonic box office from 7 to 9 p.m. Mon- day and 3 to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday. Tickets also will be on sale at the door. THE STUDENT "peace dele- gation" led by Al Fishman, will meet Dr. Johnson at 2 p.m. to hold a discussion with him and ask his signature on "A Roll Call for Peace." This scroll has been signed by a number of clergymen, 'scientists, and educators call- ing on the American govern- ment to arrange for a con- ference with the Soviets to settle all outstanding prob- lems. A reception 'open to all stu- dents and faculty will be held from noon to 1 p.m. Tuesday at Lane Hall. Prof. Theodore Newcomb, chairman of the local welcom- ing committee, said that the committee members did not nec- essarily agree with Dr. John- son's views. 'He explained that the group had invited him because they "believe that many Ann Arbor people will want to hear what an eminent person has to say on matters of public importance." ON SALE TOMORROW: New Science Developments 1*C $E- - Rr ~ 1 AFL Accepts 13 Cent Hike In Pay Scale West Coast CIO Counting Votes NEW YORK - (P)-President Joseph P. Ryan of the AFL In- ternational Longshoremen's Asso- ciation announced the end of his Union's East Coast strike last night. Ryan made his announcement the moment enough returns were in to show the 65,000 striking East Coast Longshoremen had voted to accept a compromise agreement for a 13-cents-an-hour raise. ACCEPTANCE of the terms ended a walkout started 18 days ago when they voted to reject a previous compromise on a 10-cent raise. The stoppage added up to more than a million man-days on strike, besides thousands of railway, trucking and other workers laid off by the paralysis of business. It was a paralysis that gripped New York Harbor-the world's largest seaport-and the . coast from Maine to Virginia.' THE STRIKE immobilized .the world's mightiest liners, and blocked mails and trade. "The men will be back on the piers tomorrow morning for anyone who asks them to work," Ryan said. On the West Coast, 27,000 dock workers in the CIO union headed by Harry Bridges were taking part in the voting but their' balloting will not be completed' until today. THE ONLY ANNOUNCED oppo- sition to the new Atlantic Coast Pact came from a group of Brook- lyn longshoremen who staged a mass meeting of protest yesterdy and called another meeting for late last night. Ryan, told of the secnd meeting scheduled for last night, described the group as "disrpt. ers" and "insurgents" and said that anyone attending the meeting was "not loyal to the Longshoremen's Association." THE SHIPPING shutdown has lasted 87 days on the Pacific Coast, one of the longest mari time tieups in history, and 18 days in the East. More than 500 ships have been tied up and estimated losses have been huge. Thousands of employes of steamship lines, railroads, trucking firms and cargo companies have also been laid off by the strikes. * * * CIO Orders Leftist Union To Join UAW PORTLAND, Ore. -(P)- The CIO smacked down one of its left- wing unions last night. Its executive board ordered the Farm Equipment Workers Union to give up its identity and join the United Auto Workers. * * * THIS WAS the first action growing out of the CIO convention which established the right wing in full control, determined upon a big nationwide organizing "cru- sade" and adjourned yesterday. The board also adopted resolu- tions in which it: Called upon the 81st Congress to abolish the House Un-Ameri- can Activities Committee and to set up new rules for Gongres- sional investigating committees that would "protect the rights of witnesses and persons under investigation." Urged President Truman to re- vise his order concerning 'the loy- alty of Federal employees, in or- der to assure each accused indi- vidual of a fair trial, an open hear- ing, and the right to hire a law- yer. The resolution said the Gov- ernment's loyalty program now "has degenerated into an irrespon- sible witch hunt." THE UNITED AUTO workers, which has moire than 900.000flf .° -_ = SL To H o ldFOUIL SUBSEQUENT lectures, Sb To Hold s w il deal consecu ely .f with "The Development of Celebration o Thought in America," "William James and American Individual- T i e ism," "Religion in America," and Big T i e .t e American Democracy." The general theme characteriz-' ing the entire series will be "Char- Free Mo vie Showing acteristically American." Revives Traditiol Ths fall marks the fifth pres- entation of this lecture series. Pre-war tradition will stage a t was established by William W. comeback tomorrow evening when Cook, '82L, for the study of students are treated to a free American institutions. movie in celebration of Michigan's capture of the Big Nine football Prof. Perry, who won a 1935 Pul- crown. itzer prize for a biography, "The The party will be on the Var- Thought and Character of William sity committee of the Student Leg- islature. LIVELY MUSIC FANS Beginning at 7:30 p.m. Monday LS at Hill auditorium, movies of the Ohio State game, two football shorts, and a Bugs Bunny car- toon will be shown. The shorts and *1 cartoon are being donated by the D sc ib d Michigan Theatre. Narrating the OSU-Michigan By JO MISNER movies will be Al Wistert, Dom Byeria O Muine rmc Tomasi, Walt Teninga, Pete El- Amecan audinces mu liott, Tom Peterson and others on more spontaneous in their reac- the championship team. ions than English ones, according .The doors will be open to etau to Clifford Curzon. dents at 7 p.m. and to townspeople The English pianist, who played aat 7:25 p.m. before a full house at Hill Audi- The free showing after a chai- torium last night, also commented p onship is an old pre-war Mich- on the "extraordinary" audience igan tradition according to SL attention in this country. member Jake Jacobson. - . ~.IN' ENGLAND it is often diffi-. RALPH BARTON PERRY ... * * * James," is considered an authority Thought and Character of William on James. World News Round-Up By The Associated Press NANKING - Madame Chiang4 Kai-Shek left in a special U. S.- Naval plane today for Shanghai en route to Washington, presum- ably to appeal personally for greatly increased aid to the Chi- nese government in its fight with the Communists. WASHINGTON - Cruising of an unidentified ultra-mod- ern submarine in Gulf Coast waters was indicated in reports released by the Navy Depart- ment. BERLIN - Russian Military Tribunal sentenced the former chief of the Berlin Central Coal Agency to three months and 25 days in jail for allegedly failing to cooperate with the Soviet mili- tary administration. Wanna Bet? Pete Lough is a man to back his word. So when a friend tried to itscussed t L Plans for a canal across Mexico, radio interference, engineering re- search and electric welding-all are discussed in the Michigan, Technic, on sale tomorrow and UN Censures Balkan States' Guerrilla Aid PARIS-(/P)--The United Na- tions Assembly has formally con-j demned Albania, Bulgaria and Yugoslavia for aiding Greek guer- rillas. The action came after a bitter debate in which John Foster Dul- les, acting chairman of the United States delegation, called on the Soviet bloc countries to stop spreading Comunism by "force,, coercion and terrorism."" The vote was 47 to 6, with only the Russian-led group voting no. Dulles told the assembly the American people hate Communi- tic methods, but do not hate peo- ple who believe differently from the way Americans do. He virtual- ly disregarded an hour and 40- minute speech delivered earlier by Russia's Andrei Y. Vishinsky. The Soviet Deputy Foreign Min- ister, shouting and gesturing, had attacked investigators of the UN Special Committe on the Balkans as 'Amateur Sherlock Holmeses" and called UNSCOB's report "junk" and "garbage." atest Technic Tuesday in West Engineering Arch. Intended to appeal to varied campus tastes, the latest Technic carries stories on new scientific developments . at . the University and elsewhere. * * * PROF. WILLIAM HOBBS of the geology department has proposed a unique plan for constructing a 126-mile sea level ship canal across the Isthmus of Mexico. De- tails of his plan appear in this month's issue. Radio hams may find the ar- ticle "Development in Man- made Radio Interference" help- ful in suppressing the traditional bugaboo. "Research at the University of Michigan" has become a monthly feature of the Technic. In the new issue Roger Kubel and Rob- ert Paul have written an intro- ductory article sketching the his- tory and function of the engineer- ing research department. * * * THEY HAVE especially stressed its contribution to modern com- fort. David Wise, who won fourth place for his article in a na- tional contest, has writ ten "Electric Welding in Conjunc- tion with the Briquetting Pro- cess," which describes a new use for electric welding. The new Teclmic also contains a Professional Engineering Exam- ination for the benefit of engi- neers who were unable to obtain the one printed in the October issue, which sold out early. lieuce Reactionl *i '" _ 1-l ~n glish ianist CURZON SAID he hadn't had a chance yet to become really ac- quainted with Ann Arbor, but one of the first things he noticed here was "the great variety of archi- tectumre." Americans are making a very definite contribution to music, according to Curzon. "As a pianist I was staggered by the extraordinarily high stand- LA WYERS EXCLtUDED: S,' Accepted for Slide-Rule Tickets Something new in the field of installment buying has been es- tablisheciby the Slide-Rule Ball A student need only present his I.D. card, sign an I.O.U. that he promises to pay the excluded from the Slide Rule Ball, traditionally. The dance commem- morates a longstanding feud be-