PEACE AND BROTHERHOOD Flee Pace 4 Cl ooe Lw 11 11 Aqi 4bp IJL lqpmrl 4:3"t t4p CLOUDY LIGHT RAIN Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LIX, No. 97 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22 1949 PRICE FIVE CENTS Truman Asks Vast Social Security Norway To Join North Atlantic Pact U.S. Pledges Armed Backing By The Associated Press Norway's Foreign Minister Hal- vard M. Lange said that Norway has decided to pin her security to the proposed North Atlantic Alli- ance backed by the armed strength of the United States. This announcement came after a Washington official stated that the United States would give as- surances in the Pact that she would not stand idly by if any of the signers is attacked. * * * THE EXACT language of the promise remains to be worked out, but the assurance was apparently enough for Norway, whose deci- sion is counter to Russian de- mands for Norway to stay out of the proposed security alliance. Lange indicated that a Scan- dinavian defense union, depend- ing largely on Swedish arms to protect northern neutrality, is out of the question. Informed sources in Oslo said that Rus- sia's offer to conclude a non-ag- gression with Norway would also be turned down. The Washington informant who spoke of the assurances to be giv- en in the proposed pact said that the treaty will contain a clause which will leave no doubt about the United States, determination to resist aggression. NORWAY's decision to go along with the West had been generally anticipated. Foreign minister Lange told a news conference in Oslo that bitter experience has convinced his country that neu- trality and isolation will not pro- tect her. He cited the German in- vasion of 1940. With the final treaty talks ap- proaching, the StAte Depart- ment went ahead with plans for the arms program expected to supply more than $3,000,000,000' worth of armaments to Europe. Lange told 14 touring American newsmen that his government has not yet made up its mind exactly when and how it will join the At- lantic pact talks. Final formula- tion of that decision will await a parliamentary debate later this week. THE NORWEGIAN govern- ment's decision to take part in the Washington talks was reached de- spite the Soviet warnings. Secretary of State Acheson is scheduled to meet within the next day or two with representatives of Canada and the European coun- tries taking part in the talks, Fear Retards Economic Gain Thorp Calls for More UNESCO Cooperation LAKE SUCCESS - (AP) - Assis- tant Secretary of State Willard L. Thorp said today world economic progress is being retarded by po- litical uncertainty and fear. Thorp spoke before the U.N. Economic and Social Council in the opening day of a general de- bate on world economic changes in 1948. He will deliver a major speech here late this week on President Truman's program to aid backward areas. THORP JOINED other dele- gates in a plea for cooperation o1 all countries in U.N. efforts to study and remedy world economic problems. While Thorp did not mention Russia directly, it was understood he was referring to the failure of the Soviet Union to sup- ply economic data to the U.N. eco- nomic experts. Chilean Delegate Hernan Santa Cruz earlier charged that Russia was hindering the efforts of the U.N. by withholding information Bromage Defeats Bursley in Voting Political Scientist Nominated For Alderman on GOP Slate By DON McNEIL In a light city primary, Prof. Arthur H. Bromage, professor of po- litical science won the Republican nomination for alderman over Jo- seph Bursley, Dean-Emeritus of students and Hazel M. Standish. Prof. Bromage closely edged out Dean Bursley by a 223-210 vote. Mrs. Standish polled 61 votes. The nominee is a former chairman of the Citizens Council execu- tive board and has served on two governor's vommissions. , , , , Hoover Panel' Issues Call X ELSEWHERE, J. B. Mellott v the first ward over R. A. Dual by a< 93-48 vote. Both of these men are University graduates. In the third ward, Joe Becker took the Democratic nomina- tion from Ray Scott by a 66 to 33 vote and Lawrence Ouimet won over Robert Ward for the Republican nomination 245 to S26. John R. Dobson defeated Frank- lin C. Foresythe 484 to 315 for the Republican nomination in the seventh ward. In the contest for County super- visor, Mary M. Hahn won the Re- publican nomination from Carl F. Mayne 213 to 173 in the second ward and Ray E. Scott took the Democratic nomination from Joe E. Beeler 33 to 26. THERE WAS NO contest for the party nomination in other wards or for the mayoralty com- paign. In the April 4th election, Wil- liam E. Brown, Jr. (Rep.) in- cumbent, will race Leslie A. Wikel (Dem:. campus drug- gist and Prof. John F. Shephard of the psychology department. (Prog.) for the mayor's office. Other University men won their party nominations without con- test, including 1st ward, Peter A. Ostafin (Dem.) lecturer in so- ciology; 3rd Ward, Mrs. John H. Muyskens (Dem.) wife of Prof. Muyskens of the speech depart- ment; 4th Ward, Robert Holston (Prog.), teaching fellow in psy- chology; and 7th ward, Lester Beberfall (Prog.) teaching fellow, psychology department. Druno meter To Face Test the Republican nomination in PROF. ARTHUR W. BROMAGE - candidate for Alderman A " Atomi.c Query: How to Protec/t Us, Not Others? WASHINGTON -('P)--Govern- ment officials said today they haven't been able to figure out a way to tell Americans-and not everyone else-how to protect, themselves against A-bombs. Their dilemma, Atomic Energy Commission officials said, is how to spread the information in this country without letting the whole world in on it. j COMMISSION MANAGER Car- roll L. Wilson conceded the agency has no plan for protecting a major defense area, in the event of an A-bomb explosion. And Commissioner Lewis Strauss commented: "The'best For Shakeup State Department Revision Asked By The Associated Press The Hoover Commission called yesterday for a thoroughgoing overhaul of the State Departmen and broad revisions in this coun- try's machinery for dealing wit: foreign relations. The Commission said President Truman should have a freer hand in directing such relations, and a better setup for getting sound ad- vice. IT ALSO SAID the constitu- tional requirement of a two-thirds vote in the Senate to confirm treaties is a "serious trouble breeder" although it did not spe- cifically suggest a change. In calling for a major shake- up of the State Department, the Commission declared that the Department has failed to a level of "low esteem" with Congress. the public, the press and many of its own officials. University Prof. James Pollock, chairman of the political science department, is a member of the twelve man commission, but was unavailable for comment. THE COMMISSION, headed by former President Herbert Hoover, said the Department's low rating resulted from an "intolerable" overload of foreign-aid and other special tasks heaped upon the ,shoulders of the Secretary of State and the Undersecretary. Unlike earlier proposals, 'how- ever, the Commission yesterday forecast no immediate savings from recasting the foreign affairs operations.now scattered among 46 government departments and agencies. It said present functions are "crucial and necessary" and cannot be curtailed. It renewed a suggestion that the White House should set up a series of special cabinet-level committees to advise the president on specific important issues. Titiev Calls for International Govern men t An effective international po- litical organization of some sort must be established if present cul- ture patterns are to survive, Prof., Mischa Titiev told a meeting of the campus AVC last night. Speaking of the rise of nation- alism in the Far East, the anthro- pologist stressed that foreign eco- nomic exploitation is to a large degree responsible for the violent eruptions in China, India and Indonesia. Prof. Titiev was in China and the Far East during the war with OSS. IN A WORLD dominated by power politics, these countries had no other means to gain their ends other than force of arms," he as- serted. "Israel is another case in which armed might was demon- strated to be the only effective means of realizing nationalistic desires." Prof. Titiev compared the present day ranking of national prestige to the 'whom did you beat' psychology of prize fight- ers. "It is unfortunate that these underdeveloped nations are just coming of age in a power world." Historically the day of the small tribal unit is gone, he said. "War- fare has also evolved from small scale skirmishing to gigantic and enormously devastating conflicts."! "Both of these developments are long range trends and the only way to prevent the destruction of our present way of life is through the establishment of an organiza- tion that will transcend national interests," he added. "The policy of tie United States government and of every state in the United States towards black Americans is a policy of' Jim Crowism and segregation, enforc- ed by terror." This belief was expressed by William Patterson, national exec- utive secretary of the Civil Rights Congress, and former defense at- torney for Sacco and Vanzetti, when he spoke last night at a meeting sponsored by a local com- mittee of the NAACP. THE MEETING was called to bring to light the case of six Ne- groes who, Patterson, their de- fense lawyer claims, are being sent unjustly to the electric chair. Mrs. Bessie Mitchell, sister of one of the "Trenton Six", was also present at the meeting and l resented her story and reasons for believihig that her brother and the other five accused are innocent. These men, booked for the mur- der of a second-hand dealer, were picked out at random by the Tren- ton police, who, claimed Mrs. Mit- chell, totally ignored any attempts, of the men to prove their inno- cence. PATTERSON SAID that this case was only one of many in this country of this nature. He pointed Slower Road Speeds Asked Washtenaw County officials to- day issued a plea for students to reduce auto speeds while travel- ing between Ann Arbor and Wil- low Village. Road Commission Superinten- dent Kenneth Hallenbeck said he had received numerous complaints of excess speed by automobiles coming from the village in the morning. Authorities of several schools located on Geddes Rd. north of the river have threatened to have red'uced speed limits enforced on the highway unless motorists slow down. Hallenbeck urged students and instructors hurrying from Willow Village to make eight o'clock classes to co-operate with the au- to the Roosevelt Perkins case in nearby Saline as an example. Per- kins was shot down after he had been caught and handcuffed by a pursuing posse. He had no trial proving him guilty of the charges against him. "This country is not threatened by any other country in the world," declared Patterson, "rath- er it is threatened by those men who lynched 5,000 American Ne- groes and were aquitted in Ameri- can courts." "It is this policy which will de- stroy our country. Don't close your eyes to it," the lawyer warned. Third Pastor Admits Reds' Spy Charoes SOFIA, Bulgaria-(P)-The So- fia press reported yesterday that another of the 15 Bulgarian Pro- testant church leaders accused of treason has confessed he was a spy for the United States and Britain. The statement was attributed to Georgi Chernev, head of the Pentecost church in Bulgaria. In successive days the papers had reported confessions also from Yanko Ivanov, supervisor of Methodist churches, and Vassil Ziapkov, Congregational church leader. * * * THE TRIAL of the churchmen is scheduled to begin Friday. (Britain denounced the arrest of the churchmen, and denied British diplomatic representa- tives in Sofia are spies. Minister of State Hector McNeil told Parliament the case may con- stitute a violation of Bulgaria's peace treaty pledges to respect human rights.) Chernev's alleged confession was described as testimony given in a judicial investigation of charges of treason, espionage and black market money deals. The other 14 churchmen face similar charges. As reported by the papers, Chernev named Cyril Black, an American, as No. 1 man in a spy ring working, through the United STRIKER SHOUTS AGAINST SETTLEMENT-A worker of the Philadelphia Transportation Company shouts against settling the ttransit strike at Philadelphia, during a mass meeting of strikers after negotiators had reached agreement in the ten-day strike. Other strikers applaud or shout during the stormy session. BLAMES JIM CROW: LIwyer A ttacks Deatu Sentence for 6 Negroes Late Gargs Gargoyle enthusiasts whose subscription copies did not arrive in the mails yesterday are urgedito take heart. Gargs were delayed through some new postal regulation which demands that all mailed articles must be accompanied by postage. All subscriptions, this time complete with stamps, were re-mailed last night. "But it was the best Gar- goyle," Marchair Parker, Garg managing editor, insisted. The government did not seem to care. Non-subscribers who were afraid to buy them from cam- pus salesmen may purchase them at the Student Publica- tions Building today. torse Raps B ackers f LaborBill WASHINGTON - (A") -Senator Morse (Pep., Ore.) said today the attitude of many defenders of the Taft-Hartley labor act is "a Judas betrayal of the capitalistic sys- tem." In a sudden onslaught against many of the business spokesmen who have appeared before the Senate labor committee, Morse declared their attitude is "shock- ing, selfish, class-conscious and un-Christian." BUT HE praised Senator Taft for his "fair-minded objectivity" in considering testimony on the 'shortcomings" of the Taft-Hart- ley Act. Morse said he and Taft are "much nearer together" on "the need for a law less drastic against labor" than they were in 1947 when Taft-Hartley was passed. He issued a statement while the Senate committee was hearing more testimony in defense of Taft-Hartley provisions, and on the Truman Administration's pro- posal to junk the present law and substitute a measure much closer to the original Wagner act. TAFT, MEANWHILE, insisted again the basic provisions of the present act will be retained. He replied to a statement by CIO President Philip Murray that the Ohio Senator has made 18 specific "concessions and re- treats" which add up to "a re- luctant confession" that the act is unworkable. The national Grange, a farm organization, told the committee it is an "error" to claim that the November election was a mandate for outright repeal of the Taft- Hartley Act. GM Guilty of Unfair Practice DETROIT-(R1)-The CIO Unit- ed Auto Workers were given an- other "club" today to use in forth- coming bargaining with the auto industry. The weapon was a Washington ruling by the National Labor Re- lations Board. It held General Motors Corp. guilty of an unfair labor practice for attempting to launch a group insurance program without consulting the UAW. But the million-member auto workers union may never need to use the decision to back its 1949 demands for pensions and medical care plans. It had pressed the case only for reserve strength, if need- ed. ikes Bill Provides Higher Tax, Pension Pay Passage Would WidenCoverage WASHINQTON-(P)-Presiden't Truman's program for a vast broadening of social security ben- efit's, bringing additional millions of persons under the system and increasing the payments and taxes, was unfolded on Capitol Hill today. The legislation would bring an additional 20,000,000 Americans, into the old age and survivors in- surance system, making a total of 50,000,000 under this setup. * * *. TILE MAXIMUM insurance benefit would be boosted from $85 to $150 a month and in addi- tion the bill would provide direct federal aid for all needy persons. It would also hike the old age insurance tax rate from the present one per cent to 1.5 per cent on the first $3,000 of an employe's paycheck and the em- ployer's payroll next July 1. Under the present law, the in- crease is not due to begin until Jan. 1, 1950. The rate would jump to two per cent against the first $4,800 of an employe's pay and employer's pay- roll next Jan. 1. * * * THE ADMINISTRATION'S pro- posals were embodied in two bills covering more than 100 pages. The measures were introduced by chairman Doughton (Dem., N.C.) of the House Ways and Means Committee. Major features would provide: 1. Direct federal financial as- sistance not only for the needy aged, the blind and for de- pendent children, as at present, but for all needy persons. (This is distinct from the old age in- surance system, uider which workers and their employers are taxed so the workers can draw benefits when they grow old.) 2. Benefit payments for short periods of illness-and for extend- ed periods of disability when a person is unable to work. Doughton took no stand on the legislation, which would greatly expand old-age and survivors in- surance, and increase maximum monthly insurance benefits from $85 to $150. First Lecture On Marriage Set for Today Dr. Ralph Lin ton, professor of anthropology at Yale University, will open the "Marriage and Fam- ily Relations Lecture Series" at 8 p.m. today in Rackham lecture hall. In the first of the series' five talks, Dr. Linton will discuss "The Institution of Marriage." m * * LECTURE TICKETS have been completely sold out, according to Ivan Parker, chairman of the lee- ture committee and Assistant to the Dean of Students. He said another lecture series next fall is virtually assured be- cause student demand for tick- ets far exceeded the limited number sold. Other lectures include "Psycho- logical Factors in Marriage, March 15; "Courtship and Pre- Marital Relations," March 23; "The Anatomy and Physiology of Reproduction," March 28; and "The Medical Basis of Sane Sex Practice," March 29. STUDENTS attending the lec- tures may submit written ques- tions at the close of each talk. Comment and criticism sheets will be available after each lecture. Jfob Talks Will Be Resumed The county drunkometer get an unusual test, at 9 today. will a.m. Lt. Vincent Fox of the sheriff's protection is to be somewhere department will be trying to dis- else when a bomb goes off." prove a Detroit doctor's claim that The issue was raised by mem- the alcohol tester will react to bers of the Congressional Atomic onions, limburger cheese and Energy Committee. other substances much as it does Rep. Holifield (Dem., Calif.) to liquor. said that since taxpayers "are The doctor has charged that the paying about a half billion dollars Drunkometer is inaccurate be- a year for atomic developments, cause of its reaction to these sub- they should know how to protect stances and wants the courts to themselves against a bomb." declare it inadmissible as evidence. Wilson said the Commission is Law enforcement officials from trying to induce contractors to de-j throughout the country including velop "a rugged reliable instru- Municipal Judge Francis O'Brien ment" to detect radiation. and Ypsilanti Judge Mark Rust In advance of the meeting, Rep.I will attend the public tests in the Price (Dem., Ill.) renewed a de- identification bureau of the mand that a report on the Bikini County Jail. bomb test be made public. TRIANGLES EXPOSED: 'Time Capsule' Sheds New Ligoht on Earlier U' History By PETE HOTTON someone stole it from under their A "time capsule," discovered in noses and it's been missing ever the dim, dark recesses of the en- since. gineering arch, has shed new light Not long ago Clark investigated on early 20th century University the place of exhumation and history."found the little box imbedded in The "capsule" is a small metal the hole where the plaque had razor blade box. Uncovered by been. amateur archaeologist Bob Clark, * '50E, it contains long-lost records THE BOX was found to contain of Triangles, junior engineering a smallsc ao nn with9 91 r S t 5, _) 1. thorities in reducing their speed. States legation. , t i i r THEY CANNOT TELL A LIE: Documents Debunk Washington Legend By GEORGE WALKER Students trudging along to classes today might as well resign themselves to the fact: All this business about our first president States. He had white hair, he cut down a cherry tree and told his father, he threw a silver dollar across the Potomac and then he grew up and became the first says Robert Lewis, his nephew, who said he saw him do it. And finally, about this claim to the first presidency. John Hanson, of Maryland, became the first