BRANNAN PLAN ts 4au Latest Deadline in the State *a~4* CLOUnY See Page4 VOL. LX, No. 154 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SUNDAY, MAY 14, 1950 EIGHT PAGES Policy Made By Big Three At London Unite to Curb Reds in Far East LONDON - (AP) - The Big Three foreign ministers ended a three-day cold war council last night confident the West can bu'ild freedom into a dynamic force that will secure defenses against communism and win prosperity at the same time. "The ministers agreed upon the main Ines of their policy in all parts of the world," said a com- *i.ique - the fifth and longest sini.e Secretary of State Dean ,:Acheson, British Foreign Secre- tary Ernest Bevin and French Foreign Minister Robert Schuman began their deliberations. THEY EXPRESSED deterniina- tion to fight "Communist imperi- alism" in southeast Asia with firm encouragement and support for new independent states there. The three ministers decided to set up a committee of experts to consult with other interested governments, particularly Ger- many and Italy, on increasing migration from overcrowded Europe. . They declared themselves basic- ally in agreement on the impor- tance of the "political develop- ment of the peoples of Africa" 0 and the improvement of their economic and social conditions. ** * THE DESIRE for an early treaty of peace and independence for Austria was reaffirmed. And finally, three diplomatic chiefs agreed to meet again in New York City before the next meeting of the United Nations in September. No spectacular cnanges in poli- cy were disclosed. None had been expected. In general, more and better application of old policies appeared to be the general deci- sion. A communique will be issued late today concerning decisions the Big Three took about the future of Germany. Meanwhile, United Nations Sec- retary General Trygve Lie con- ferred in Moscow with Soviet Dep- uty Foreign Minister Andrei Gro- myko on his "save the UN" mis- sion. Diplomats in Moscow are cautiously optimistic that the mis- sion may succeed. Blasts Chavez For Attack On Budenz NEW YORK-(/)-The presi- dent of Fordham University, the Rev. Laurence J. McGinley, yes- terday denounced as "slander- ous and cowardly" an attack mede against Louis F. Budenz by Sen. Dennis Chavez (D-N1.). Chavez, himself a Catholic, accused Budenz last friday of using the Catholic church as a "shield and cloak" in the Sen- ate's probe of charges of Com- munism in the Government. Budenz, now assistant profes- sor of economics at Fordham, once was managing editor of the Communist Daily Worker. He re- nounced Communism in 1945 and returned to Catholicism. Father McGinely said the at- tack made by Chavez on the Sen- ate floor brought "personal vili- fication of Professor Budenz to a point even lower than that reach- ed in the columns of the Daily Worker." Williams Will Speak Here' Gov. G. Mennen Williams will speak here at 4:15 p.m. Tuesday on "The University : Its Role in Michigan's :Future."] The speech will be delivered to the University chapter of the As- sociation of American University Professors. The meeting, to be held in Rackham Lecture Hall, will be open to the public, according to Prof. Norman E. Nelson, of the English department, president of the AAUP. Contented State Czech Dipartm nt Dipvlom--ats t Orders iLeave oC -Daily-Alan Reid UNDERPRIVILEGED KIDS FEAST-The smiling youngsters shown above, part of a group from the Children's Village of De- troit and the Ann Arbor Orphans Home, are happily indulging themselves during the third annual Sigma Alpha Mu Orphan's Day Picnic. GENERAL SPEAKS:- Individuals Must Work To Stay Free Says Hunt The U.S. must be strong, morally and militarily, if it is to retain its free position in the world Lieut. General LeRoy P. Hunt, Com- manding General of the Fleet Marine Force, Atlantic, said at an alumni dinner of Phi Gamma Delta last night. Against such a foe as Russia, the Guadalcanal veteran said, we have no other alternative. * * * * TO GET AND KEEP this strength, Gen. Hunt indicated, Ameri- can's must stop trying to get something for nothing - as individuals they've got to get out and root Gives Reason For Showing 'Ra ist film By AL BLUMROSEN and PHIL DAWSON "Birth of a Nation" silent film to be shown by the speech de- partment Wednesday, met with strong objections from a student- faculty group yesterday because it is anti-Negro, but Prof. G. B. Densmore, chairman of the speech department, said the film was be- ing shown only to illustrate act- ing and producing techniques. The group of approximately 25 students and faculty members termed the film "insulting" and said it should not be shown with- out adequate explanation and analysis. *' * * PROF. G. E. DENSMORE of the speech department said that the department had no idea that the movie would offend anyone.,"We want to show students the acting and producing methods used in si- lent movies." The committee listed condi- tions under which it would not oppose showing of the picture. They asked an introduction of the film at the time of showing which would "reveal its profound- ly racistdcharacter." Prof. Dens- more said, "We will be glad to al- low any of the people to make an introduction to the movie." "We will disavow any connec- tion with the subject matter'of the film," he added. The committee also asked for a detailed technical analysis of the film. PROF. WILLIAM HALSTEAD of the speech department, who was slated to introduce the film said he planned to stress that "the film was brought because of its historical importance in demon- strating motion picture technique and not because of its content." The third request of the com- mittee: that a film treating the Negro in America on an intelli- gent level be shown in the near future was turned down by Prof. Densmore because of costs and the difficulty of securing an au- for themselves. "Any system of government which is going to give a man who doesn't work as much as one who does, is doomed to failure." "The decent citizens of this country must stop 'letting George do it' and start pulling more than their own weight in their com- munities and country," the gen- eral emphasized. At the same time, he warned, we must continue to support the * * * Rail Strike Spreads As Meeting Fais Two Michigan Lines Threatened CHICAGO-(P)-Both sides in the locomotive firemen's strike met together with a government mediator yesterday but the con- ference broke up without a settle- ment as the strike spread to a fifth railroad, the Union Pacific, and threatened two Michigan lines. There was no indication when a new meeting aimed at reaching an agreement in the dispute would be held. The strike, meanwhile, spread irr the East and West. * * * FRANCIS O'NEILL, Jr., chair- man of the National (Railway) Mediation Board, did say, how- ever, that more such conferences would be held later in Chicago. O'Neill said yesterday: "We said there was a dead- lock yesterday. Today all we can say is that the case is not set- tled." O'Neill said there was a full and frank discussion of all issues and the conferees have returned to their own groups for further discussion. * * * BUT EVEN as the union repre- sentatives were attending the con- ference, the Brotherhood of Loco- motive Firemen and Enginemen extended its strike to th south- western district -of the Union Pa- cific Railroad and sought to cut the Pennsylvania Railroad's op- erations in the East and South. The Brotherhood of Locomo- tive Firemen and Enginemen di- rected its members to refuse to man Union Pacific trains in the southwest district i between Salt Lake City and Los Angeles. In Chicago, a union spokesman said he understood those trains must pass over 100 miles of tracks cwned by the strike-hampered Sante Fe. MEANWHILE the rail strike threatened to spread to two more major carriers serving Detroit and Michigan. Waldo Smith, acting vice- president of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and En- ginemen, said in Detroit yester- day that the additional lines would be the Grand Western Trunk Railroad and 'the Wa- bash. Smith said the brotherhood is studying a move to call out fire- men on eastern lines of the New York Central system. City Budget HighestYet Ann Arbor City Council in- formally approved a record $1,290,983 city budget calling for a tax rate of 12.79 mills yesterday. This rate, $12.79 per $1,000 of assessed valuation, is $1.31 more than last year's rate. Several aldermen renewed old pleas that the city find additional sources of revenue to cover its growing expenses. They pointed out that industries were being forced out of Ann Arbor because of the increased expenses of op- eration. SPEAKS AT CONFERENCE: Jobs Increase Prestige Says Vocation Expert STRIKING FIREMEN-Four Pennsylvania Railroad firemen picket the entrance to the Polk St. freight yards in Chicago as the Brotherhood of Firemen's strike spreads. Latest road affected is the Union Pacific, which uses over 100 miles of track owned by the strike-bound Santa Fe. Attempts at settlement yesterday proved fruitless. Most people don't think of their work primarily as a means of earning a living, Robert Having- A'hurst said yesterday. Havinghurst, chairman of the University of Chicago committee on human development, addressed a one-day conference on high- school vocational education. * * * HE TOLD of studies which his committee had made indicating that jobs, besides earning a man's money, increased his self-respect and prestige. Therefore it is vitally import- ant, Havinghurst told the voca- tionalists, that they succeed in matching up the right pupil with the right job. In the morning session, the con- ference's 200 delegates gathered from all over the state, heard the problem of exactly what vocational problem a high school should of- fer, attacked from three view- points. * * * HAVINGHURST, in his morning speech, declared, that since high schools can not be expected to fill every student's vocational need, they should let a student drop out if he can make faster advances vo- cationally outside of school. Philadelphia high school prin- cipal William Cornog felt that it was more important for a student to learn cultural subjects than to learn an occupation. The opposite view was taken by Earl R. Sifert, Maywood, Ill., prin- cipal, who said the preparation for an occupation is essential in the Amendments With the Union general meeting for constitutional re- vision scheduled for Tuesday night, The Daily today pub- lishes the amendments which will be up for consideration. The amendments, and compli- mentary stories, may be found on page six. education of the youth for a full life. The conference was sponsored by six state educational organiza- tions. Ralph C. Wenrich was gen- eral chairman. World News Roundup By The Associated Press NEW YORK - A strike of 700 Pan-American World Airways flight attendants, supported by 3,000 -maintenance workers, was called off yesterday 17 hours after it started. The walkout, which began mid- night Friday, was cancelled late yesterday afternoon when both sides agreed to submit disputed is- sues to arbitration. * * * WASHINGTON - U.S. diplo- mat John Vincent, who is re- ported to be "case No. 2" in Sen. Joseph McCarthy's (R-Wis.) charges of widespread Red in- fluence in government, said yes- terday the State Department would make a statement on the matter when warranted. * * * TAIPEI, FORMOSA - A new commando-type raid on the Com- munist mainland 140 miles south of Shanghai was reported yester- day in official Chinese Nationalist dispatches. * * * WASHINGTON - A group of Republican Senators yesterday made the opening move in an at- tempt to cut another quarter bill- ion dollars or more from the for- eign aid bill. * * * TOKYO-A fire roared through the town of Agematsu early to- day, destroying 1,000 houses and injuring 150 persons, Japanese press reports said. Funud Fight Post poned* By Recess State Legislators ambled out of the capitol building in Lansing Friday for a week-end recess after setting tlle stage *for a Senate battle which will probably center around the proposed $11,572,945 University appropriation. Governor G. Mennen Williams officially noted the Republican- dominated Senate Finance Com- mittee's effort to slash $72,000,000 from his proposed state budget for the 1950-51 fiscal year. TAKING A STAND for an in- creasedUniversity appropriation he declared, "to further hamper this strong educational institution is bad." Governor Williams favored a grant of $12,500,000 for the Uni- versity in his budget mesage. But this .figure .was .more .than $1,000,000 short of the $13,870,- 000 considered necessary for operations by the University. A Senate floor fight loomed as Ferndale Republican George N. Higgins rebelled against his party by taking a stand for a University. appropriation increase of $500,- 000. IT WAS REPORTED in Lansing yesterday that University officials wil attempt to have $500,000 of a proposed $1,500,000 capital outlay budget transferred to the opera- tions budget. Senator Higgins' stand is substantially the same. The $1,500,000 proposed for capital outlay would be used to start construction . of !the out - patient clinic at University Hos- pital which would cost an esti- mated $2,800,000. The remaining $1,300,000 would have to be ap- propriated next year. President Alexander G. Ruthven blasted the committee's attempt to cut the University appropria- tion late Friday, charging that the University will be forced to operate under "serious handicaps" if the grant is not "substantially increased." Close Two Consulates; 22 Expelled Cite Czech Lack Of Independence WASHINGTON -- (P) - The United States yesterday ordered a wholesale ouster of Czech diplo- mats from this country and charged that Czechoslovakia's so- viet satellite government is unable to cohtrol its own foreign policy. The American counterstroke, following a Czech ejection of about 40 U.S. diplomats last week, will send an estimated 22 out of the 33 Czech representatives home- ward "within a reasonable time." THE PRAGUE government was ordered to close its consulates in Pittsburgh and Cleveland, leaving only the Washington embassy and the New York consulate to operate at a reduced level. Furthermore, the State De- partment declared in a coldly angry statement "this govern- ment is examninng the situa- tion not only with respect to the present but also for the fu- tu e" - a clear hint of possible further moves against the, Czechs. The action was announced by the State Department as the latest in a series of clashes with the Eastern European state which, in its pre-Communist days, was closely tied to the United States in friendship and trade. PREVIOUSLY the U'nited States had closed the Czech con-i sulate at Chicago after the Czech government had cracked down on the United States information service offices at Prague and Bratislava and forced the recall of American press Attache Joseph C. Kolarek. The Czech Government made the usual charges of spy activi- ties on the part of the United States, which hotly denied them. In Cleveland Stanislav Dvo- rak, a Czechoslovakian consul, said yesterday he had received orders from -his government in Prague to close his office. He would make no other com- ment. Truman Raps GOP Critics Of Trade Plan FARGO, N.D. - () - President Truman said yesterday the "Yes, but boys," who he said were for- mer isolationists, want to wal off foreign trade, halt European aid "and let the Communists take over." Earlier, at Fort Peck Dam, Mont., President Truman had termed a strong and prosperous United States "the world's best hope for peace." IN AN OBVIOUS challenge to Republican critics of the recipro- cal trade agreements program, the President said in the Fargo speech that the same people "who always stand in the roanl of progress" want to follow the road of "econo- mic isolationism." After a day in which he spoke briefly at whistle stops in Mon- tana and North Dakota, Tru- man turned to a discussion of foreign trade at Fargo. Calling for congressional ap- proval of the International Trade Organization charter, the Presi- dent said it is opposed by "Yes, but" people who used to say in the 1920's, "We are isolationists." The president came to the heart of the nation's wheat belt not only -Daily-wally Barth LT. GEN. LEROY P. HUNT skeleton of military force which we now have, no matter how ex- pensive it may seem. Further, Gen. Hunt cautioned, we must not abandon the United Nations, since it is the only pre- sent instrument we have to bring world wide effort for peace. * * * TURNING TO the American college scene, Gen. Hunt said that "there is nlothing in the basic principles ofcollege fraternities that is forbidden in the law of our land." Therefore, he reasoned, frater- nities have a perfect right to live on. REMEMBRANCES OF THINGS PAST: Faculty Wives Tell of Mother's Day Experiences ---- By NANI BYIAN Like other mothers on the sec- ond Sunday in May, those of fac- Times have changed, how- ever, and now he calls her up from Harvard on Mother's Day. tween my two sons and their father, and I have been ordered not to dust a certain book shelf," everything from plastic evening bags to pot holder.s * * * Mother's Day sometimes pre- sents a problem in the household of Prof. Louis Hopkins of the