POLL TAX See page 2 Y l& z r ii I PARTLY CLOUDY, SCATTERED SHOWERS Latest Deadline in the State VOL LVII, No. 5S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JUNE 29, 1947 PRICE FIVE CENTS Barclay Wins Two NCAA Golf Battles; Plays Finals Today Michigan Captain Faces Jack Coyle, ,LIUFreshman, in 36-Hole Match By ARC!IE PARSONS Wielding his irons with unfailing accuracy, Dave Barclay, Michi- gan's golf captain and a great competitive golfer, earned the right yesterday to meet Louisiana State's Jack Coyle in the 36-hole final of the National Collegiate Golf Championships, beginning at 9:30 a.m. today on the University course. The second half of the final will begin at 2:00 p.m. Barclay eliminated two of the finest collegiate golfers in the na- tion, Bill Campbell of Princeton and Oregon's Lou Stafford, in the quarter- and semi-final rounds of * * * the individual match play. He " gave the gallery-an extremely small one for what is probably the' second best amateur tournament in the country-a brilliant display of steady nerves and accuratek irons. ".' Rated the underdog in both matches after having barely qual- ified for the tourney, he whipped Campbell, one up, on the last x~. hole in the morning round, and came from behind in the after- noon to whip Stafford, 2 and 1, by .. sinking a 25-foot putt on the 17th hole. Coyle, a freshman from Spring- field, Ill., who was the sixth low amateur in the National Open last year, qualified for the champion- ship match by defeating Tom Lambie of Stanford, one up, in the morning, and coming back to up-s set the highly-favored Charlie Coe -h ' is- of Oklahoma University one up, on the 19th hole in the semi-finals. DAVE BARCLAY Coe, a tall, slender golfer who enters NCAA golf finals is the Trans-Mississippi Amateur' champ, was obviously worn to a frazzle by his morning match with Pla rs' Bl l Charles "Babe" Lind of Denver, , in which he defeated the pre-tour- ney favorite who was runner-up To Open With in this tournament a year ago. The birdies on the last eight holes toU ram a win his match with Lind, one up. On the 19th hole of his afternoon George Bernard Shaw's comedy- battle, he hooked his second shot drama "Candida" produced by the over the fence and out of bounds speech department's Michigan and lost the hole and the match. Repertory Players will open at 8 p.m; Thursdavt at Lydia Mendels- It is hard to say which ofBar- sohn Theatre. clay's performances yesterday was The play will star Beth Laikin the most brilliant. He was one in the title role of the tactful' in- over par in the morning Jnmatch telligent wife of pedantic, narrow- with Campbell firing a 37-36-73Rev. D. Morrell, who will while he was four over par after minded Ry D rd rellrw . 17 hlesaganst tafordin the be played by Richard Stewart. 17 holes against Stafford nRoger Cleary will take the role semi-finals, of Marchbanks, the maladjusted The contest with Campbell, a young poet who causes the tur- quarter-finalist in the 1946 West- moil in the Morrell family. ern Amateur, was extremely close. Other leading members of the They halved 13 holes, and Barclay cast are Clara Behringer as Pros- never was ahead until he won on sy, Forrest Campbell as the Rev. the 18th. Dave had 12 par holes. Dr. Mill and Robert Compton as was one'over on the third, fourth, Mr. Burgess. and 10th, and carded birdies on The play, which is set in the St. the fifth and 18th. Dominic parsonage in London, The six-foot, 200-pound Prince- 1894, deals with Candida's aid to See BARCLAY, Page 3 the poet, Morrell's alarm at the relationship which he thoroughly UAW O fficial misunderstands an d Candida's UA W ~ f icial final choice between the two. New Veteran Attendance Plan in Effect One Report Due For Full Session A revised absence report sys- tem, wherebystudent veterans will be required to file a single' record of absences at the close of the summer session, was an- nounced yesterday by Robert S. Waldrop, director of the Veterans Service Bureau. Forms will be sent this week to all veterans enrolled under the benefits of the G.I. Bill, on which they will be asked to record their week by week absences to be tal lied and returned on a designated date. New Scheme The-new scheme marks a de- parture from that in effect last semester, in which veterans were required to file reports each week with their respective schools and colleges. Resulting confusion and widespread criticism gave rise to the new plan. Whether or not a similar ar- rangement will be in effect in the fall has not yet been determined, according to Waldrop. He added, however, that the degree of suc- cess with which the new plan meets might well influence a de- cision along those lines. (The Veterans Administration has required the University to re- port absences as a means of de- termining the amount of leave to which a student is entitled. Lack of a regular absence report sys- tem as part of the University's normal procedure has called for the devising of a scheme which is at once, effective and convenient.) Report Deadline Student veterans enrolled in the six-week session are required to file their reports by July 28, while the deadline for those in the eight week session is August 11. Stu- dents enrolling in the four week post session must file by Septem- ber 12. Those whose enrollment in- cludes two sessions, should file at the close of the later one. The forms may either be mailed to the Veterans Service Bureau, or deposited at any of a number of stations about the campus. The whereabouts of the stations are designated on the forms. Deadline Set For Amputees Tomorrow Last Day To Apply for Autos Veterans eligible under legis- lation providing cars for legaam- putees must file their applications by tomorrow or forfeit their rights to the $1,600 autos. Forms are available at the Vet- erans Service Bureau, 100 Rack- ham Building. Robert A. Wald- rop, director of the Bureau, re- iterated his request made last week that those who, through neg- ligence, had not yet applied should delay no longer. Tomorrow is the last day, too, for veterans to enlist in the En- listed Reserve Corps with the same grades they held at time of dis- charge. Only those discharged on or after May 12, 1945 are eli- gible. Slosson To Lecture Prof. Preston W. Slosson of the history department will analyze the organization of the United Na- tions in a talk entitled "The Big Five and the Little Fifty-Five" at 4:10 p.m. tomorrow in Rackham Amphitheatre. Estimate 600 Students Driving Without Permits 'U' Officials Warn Drivers To Register; Completion of Registration Card Inadequate An estimated 600 University students are now driving cars in Ann Arbor without official University permission. That is the approximate number of students who have indicated they intend to use cars here during the summer session but have failed to register their cars with the University. University officials stress that all students desiring to drive who are not qualified for exemption from the Automobile Regulation must make personal application for driving privileges at Rm. 2, University Hall, or become subject to disciplinary action. Completion of the Automobile Regulation section of the regis- Lawyer Tells AFL Union Not to Sign No-Strike Clauses Counsel Advises Early Test Case Of Taft-Hartley Expenditure Ban By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, June 28-All AFL unions will be advised not to sign any future wage contract which contains a no-strike clause, AFL counsel Joseph Padway declared tonight. After a conference of 100 AFL attorneys, Padway said the lawyers also will advise their unions to "affirmatively violate" the Taft-Hartley acts' ban on union political expenditures, to bring about a constitu- tional test of the law. He said the unions also will work to defeat the legislators who supported the act. To Name Enemies Hornbeck Will Open Annual Lecture Series Speaker To Discuss 'U.S. and East Indies' Stanley K. Hornbeck, Chief of the Division of Far Eastern Af- fairs of the State Department, will open the fourth annual sum- mer session lecture series on pub- lic affairs with a discussion of "The United States and the Neth- erlands East Indies" at 8:10 p.m. Wednesday in Rackham Lecture Hall. The lecture will be the first of a series of 20 entitled "The Unit- ed States in World Affairs" which will continue through Aug. 8. Netherland Ambassador Hornbeck recently served as American ambassador to the Netherlands and was formerly Ad- viser on Political Relations of the State Department. A lecturer at the University in the summer of 1917, Hornbeck holds the degrees of Ph.D., L.H.D., LL.D., and Litt.D. The second lecture in the ser- ies will be delivered by P.obin A. Humphreys, Reader in American History at the University of Lon- don, at 4:10 p.m. Tuesday, July 8. in Rackham Amphitheatre. His topic will be "Policies and Ten- dencies in Latin America." In addition to the lectures, three series of informal confer- ences will be held; one on the United Nations, a second on Latin American affairs and a third on European affairs. Each confer- ence will meet once a week for four weeks starting July 15 and will be open to summer session students, faculty members and the interested public. 'Genuine Opportunity' President Alexander G. Ruth- ven has termed the lecture ser- ies "a genuine opportunity for the entire University community." According to Dr. Louis A. Hop- kins, director of the Summer Ses- sion, "some of the lectures will be concerned rather directly with American policy, while other lec- tures will deal more particularly with geographical areas or with problems where American inter- ests' are involved." Speakers for the series have been selected from public life, gov- ernment service and universities. Prof. Knitzer To Give Recital Violinist To Feature Elwell, Bach, Bacon Prof. Joseph Knitzer, head of the violin department of the Cleveland Institute of Music and guest lecturer at the University will appear at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday at Hill Auditorium. The program, which will be open to the public, will include selections for violin by Vivaldi- Respighi, Bach, Herbert Elwell, Ernest Bacon and Ernest von Doh- nanyi. Former concertmaster with the Cleveland Orchestra, Prof. Knit- zer has appeared with the New York Philharmonic, the Phila- delphia and Detroit Orchestras. He appeared in the May Festival here with Jose Iturbi several years ago. Prof. Knitzer will be heard in several concerts throughout the summer season. * * * Pattison Opens Recital Series The first in the series of sum- mer faculty recitals by members of the faculty of the music school will be presented by Lee Pattison, tration card does not fulfill this obligation. Permit "tags" obtain- ed during the past year are not valid during the summer session. Exempt Class The authorized exemptions in- clude 1.) those who are 26 years of age or over and 2.) those who have a facultyrating of Teaching Fel- low or its equivalent. An addi- tional provision, in effect during the summer session, exempts those "who, during the preceding aca- demic year, were engaged in pro- fessional pursuits; e.g., teachers, lawyers, physicians, dentists, nurs- es, etc." Students who fall into the "ex- empt" class are not required to apply for driving privileges. Special Provision Special permission allowing stu- dents to drive is generally grant- ed for married students, Ann Ar- bor residents, commuters, and for reasons of business or health. Under a special provision of the See TRAFFIC, Page 4 Couples To Get Another Try At Apartments That Mecca for married vet- erans - the University Terrace Apartments - may seem just a little closer to many patient and homelessestudents tomorrow, but it's probably a "false alarm." The waiting list for residence in the Terrace Apartments will be re- opened to married veterans of World War I tomorrow for three lays. University officials stress, how- ever, that there are no vacancies now and they do not expect any vacancies during the summer ses- sion. The Office of Student Affairs, Rm. 2, University Hall, will accept applications from 9 a.m. to noon and from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. today through Wednesday. The administration has estab- lished a policy of opening the waiting list shortly after the be- ginning of each term. Only married veterans who have completed two terms in the Uni- versity may apply. Each appli- cant must file with his application his Military Record and Report of Separation. All applications will be consid- ered according to a priority sys- tem outlining certain qualifica- tions. The system affords special consideration to Michigan resi- dents, veterans with long over- seas service and veterans who have incurred serious physical disabil- ity. Veterans who have previously filed applications for the Terrace Apartments should not apply; again, since their applications arei being processed according to the established qualifications. Press Survey Checks Post OPA Prices CHICAGO, June 28 - (A') - A year after OPA encountered a' sudden uproar of accusations and defenses, the American people to- day find prices higher and goods more plentiful. That is the conclusion drawn from an Associated Press survey of what happened since the gov- ernment price-fixing agency ex- pired June 30, 1946, after President Truman vetoed as inadequate a congressional bill extending the agency's life.I Subsequently the OPA was re- 1 vived, but it stalked the land only1 as a ghost of its former robust self. It was interred by degrees as ceil- ings were removed from one com- modity after another, and its bur- ial came in December when its re- maining powers were transferred to other agencies. Looking at the results, the na- PROVOST ADAMS ... to address assembly * *i * Provost Will Speak T oda y At Assembly Program Inaugurates Sunday Night Series Students and faculty members will be welcomed to the summer session by Provost Jamse P. Ad- ams who will address a special as- sembly at 8 p.m. today in Rack- ham Lecture Hall. Four vocal selections by Howard Hatton, baritone, will complete the program. He will be accompan- ied by Robert Henderson. Both are students in the music school. Dr. Louis A. Hopkins, director of the Summer Session, will pre- side at the assembly. The musical part of the pro- gram will include "Si trai ceppi" and "How Willing My Paternal Love" by Handel, Brahms' "Die Mainacht" and "Evening Song" by Griffes. The opening convocation to- night will be the first of a series of Sunday night programs for University students and faculty members. The next program in the series will be held two weeks from to- day, July 13, when Dean Ralph A. Sawyer of the graduate school will deliver an illustrated lecture on "The Bikini Tests and Atomic Energy." Dean Sawyer served as technical director of the Bikini atom bomb test. Molotov Joins Bevin, Bidault Report Russia Ready To Strangle Aid Plan PARIS, June 28-(/P)-Armed with what French sources said were up-to-the-minute instruc- tions from Moscow, Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov tardily joined his British and French col- leagues in the Aid-to-Europe con- ference for a session of nearly three hours tonight. What word he had to take to British Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin and French Foreign Min- ister Georges Bidault was not like- ly to leak out for a day or two in view of the official lid on news of the sessions. But pessimism and bickering al- ready had settled down upon the conference, and one source close to the chiefs of the French dele- gate said he had the impression that the Russians were bent upon a course that would slowly stran- gle U. S. Secretary of State Mar- shall's program of U.S. aid to Eur- ope if Europeans will cooperate among themselves. He gained the impression from talks with his delegation that Russian questions at yesterday's opening sessions were directed at bringing up the same old issues that stymied the foreign ministers council in Mos- cow. These questions arose be- fore Molotov had received the lat- est official comments from the Kremlin, however. "The unions will not refrain from publishing that Senator Taft (Rep., Ohio), and Rep. Hartley (Rep., N.J.) are avowed enemies of the principles of organized la- bor," Padway told reporters. "We will request AFL members to defeat them when they are up for election, and to spend money publicizing the records of Taft- Hartley and those persons who from publishing that Senator Taft (Rep., N.J.) are avowed enemies acted in concert with them in our own publications, over the radio and in newspapers." May Disregard NLRB Padway indicated that some highly skilled and well entrenched unions will be advised to disregard the new National Labor Relations Board entirely and that most un- ions will get a recommendation not to comply with the new law's requirement that officers of NLRB-recognized unions file affi- davits that "they are are not Com- munists. The AFL lawyers, meeting in ad- vance of a mass policy conference of international union officers here called by President Green for July 9, are unanimous in their be- lief that the prohibition of politi- cal expenditures by unions is un- constitutional, Padway said. The section has been interpreted to outlaw political comment in un- ion-supported newspapers. "No-Strike" Clauses, As for the "no-strike" clauses, Padway said these are generally given by unions in return for the closed shop. "Since now unions cannot have the closed shop and cannot eject or discipline members for any reason except non-payment of dues, we will advise the Inter- national Unions to give no more no-strike clauses to employers." The conference indicated that the AFL will pursue a course of resistance to the new labor law parallel to that of the CIO, Coal Vacation, Hits Industry PITTSBURGH, June 28-(AP)- Coal related industry felt hunger pangs today for the fuel supply cut off by a 10-day paid vacation of the nation's coal miners. The country's entire coal pro- duction virtually was snuffed out as nearly 500,000 miners, includ- ing 400,000 AFL-United Mine Workers in the soft coal pits, started holidays which closed the mines. Federal estimates indicated the nation had only a 31-day coal sup- ply as the holiday began. Steelmakers took to "starvation diets" to conserve meager supplies of soft coal without which the in- dustry cannot operate. These drastic conservation measures forced layoffs for thousands of production workers. Pickets Attend Taft Wedding In St. Joseph Senator's Son, Bride Were 'U' Students With CIO pickets and state and city police standing by, Virginia Stone, daughter of a St. Joseph industrialist, was married yester- day to Lloyd B. Taft, third son of Senator and Mrs. Robert Taft of Ohio, in the First Congregational Church at St. Joseph. Both were students at the Uni- versity. Taft just completed grad- uate work in journalism during the spring term and plans to work on the Cincinnati Times-Star. Taft Called 'Bad Boy' The pickets carried signs read- ing "Taft Obstructed Housing" and "Senator Taft is a bad boy." Gordon C ole wel, international field representative for the Elec- trical Workers, told the Associated Press that union members would "picket Senator Taft wherever we find him" for sponsoring the Taft.Hartley labor law in the Senate. Mass picketing had been threat- ened earlier in the day but was prevented by police action, the Associated Press reported. The groom's father and mother were among the 300 guests at the wedding. The newlyweds, who met while students at the University, planned to leave immediately for Murray Bay, Quebec for a honey- moon. Sorority Sisters Evelyn Mills, of Oak Park, Ill., Collegiate Sorosis sister of Miss Stone, was maid of honor. The bridesmaids, all members of Col- legiate Sorosis, were Diane Rich- ardson of Detroit, Lenore Nack of Galena, Ill., Marilyn Jenkins of Big Rapids, and Joyce Johnson of Benton Harbor. Among the ushers for the groom were William Chick5ering and Ed- ward Miller of Toledo, and William Hibbard of Detroit All were Chi Psi brothers of Taft here. Eisenhower Rate's Army Below USSR WASHINGTON, June 28-(JP)- Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower told Congress today that the army he leads is a "poor second" to Rus- sia's. As a "professional soldier," the Army Chief of Staff testified that House slashes of $435,000,000' in funds for the year starting Tues- day would "take us well into the danger zone" where the army would lack strength to "pressure for peace" or defend the nation. Eisenhower told a closed-door' Senate appropriations subcommit- tee session that $375,000,000 of this must be restored, and that another $103,000,000 of new funds should be added to cover increas- ing costs of new fighting planes. The House allowed $5,280,000,- 000 cash and $280,000,000 con- tractual authority for the war de- partment for the year beginning July 1. Insurance-Plagued Cabs to Operate Owners of Ann Arbor taxicabs carrying the insurance of an out- Outlines Ford. Pension Plan DETROIT, June 28--(R)-Rich- ard T. Leonard of the CIO United Auto workers estimated today that the Ford Motor Co. pension plan would enable a $200-a-month pro- duction worker to retire at half pay after 30 years. Leonard, vice- president of the UAW-CIO and director of its Ford department, revealed major details of the pen- sion plan, the first of its kind in a major automotive producing plant. The tentative pension agree- ment, announced Friday, supple- ments a seven cent hourly wage boost granted 110,000 Ford pro- duction workers. Leonard estimated that 95 per cent of these employes are eligible to participate in the pension plan from its outset. The remainder would become eligible after an un- specified number of months with the, firm. He said retirement age had not been agreed upon but probably would be set between 55 and 65. "A Ford worker earning $200 a month would contribute about $1,800 in 30 years. and would re- ceive $100 a month at retirement,", Leonard asserted. "If the same worker were to purchase an indiv- idual annuity to pay him $55 a month for life it would cost him about $9,000," . , rm T A . Prof. Valentine Windt of the speech. department, managing di- rector of the Players, will direct the production with Bernice Prisk in charge of costuming and Oren Tucker directing set production. Old Dailies Wanted For Servicemen "Aunt Ruth" Buchanan, who wrote hundreds of letters to Mich- igan men in the armed forces dur- ing the war, yesterday asked for used copies of The Daily so that she can send them to Michigan men in service and veterans hos- pitals throughout the country. Readers of The Daily may send their used copies of The Daily to Mrs. Buchanan at the University Museum. li NEWS BRIEFS 1- By The Associated Press BATAVIA, JAVA, June 28-A last minute pledge from the United States today to discuss economic aid to Indonesia was belived to have caused the Dutch to call off plans for launching military operations against the Indonesian Republic on Monday. * *I * * WASHINGTON, June 28-The National Association for the Ad- vancement of Colored People today denounced what it called the "indiscriminate persecution and condemnation of sincere liber- als" by the House Committee on Un-American Activities, and called for its abolition. BOSTON, June 28-Douglas Chandler, former Baltimore newsman accused of serving as a Nazi radio commentator during the war, was convicted of treason today by a federal jury. * * * * SMOKERS STOCK UP: Campus Dealers Report Brisk Cigarette Sales on Eve of Tax By FRED SCHOTT Campus cigarette dealers, for the most part, were doing a brisk business this week and dismissed reports of students who claimed they are going to quit smoking as "just so much talk." A survey of nine dealers yester- day showed that only two had not experienced a buying spree during the week, as smokers stocked up h.afn-'.. ,a he ria++a + a v xhc~nrn a ton or to about 20 cents a pack- age. But two campus drug stores will up the price a little more than 30, cents. One store which sells at $1.59 a carton plans to sell Tuesday at $1.90, and another store will boost the price from $1.59 to $2.00. A third storekeeper is debating between $1.89 and $2.00, or even $2.10. Best buy remains at a local drug store which now sells cartons at i II