STUDENT MORALS See Page 4 Y Latest Deadline in the State 11n ai4' FAIR, WARMER VOL. LX, No. 5 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1949 PRICE FIVE CENTS i I Ford, Union sign Pension Plan Contract O.K. Retirement At $100-a-Month DETRIT-()-A unique new contract permitting Ford em- ployes to retire on $100 a month set a goal yesterday for millions of other workers. The unprecedented 30-month agreement was reached yesterday morning by Ford Motor Co. and the CIO United Auto Workers. It ended a 118-day bargaining battle and, at the last minute, headed off a strike of 115,000 Ford workers. UNDER THE terms, employes with 30 years service can retire at 65 with full pensions. Ford will pay the entire cost, adding enough to Federal Social Security bene- fits to bring the total to $100. The new Ford contract calls for no wage increase. It follows broadly the recommendations of President Truman's Fact-Find- ng Committee in the steel dis- pute. Many other unions fighting for economic security undoubtedly will use the contract as a bargaining weapon. IMMEDIATELY there was a question whether Ford's grant of benefits equal to 10 cents an hour would boost the firm's prices. Henry. Ford II, company president, said frankly in New York he didn't know. "We have no plan for change in prices at this time," he said. "In view of the pension plan, which is an increase in the cost of labor, no matter what you call it, we'll have to look over the situation carefully." The pensions will cost Ford an estimated $20,000,000 annually. * a THE CONTRACT was a clear victory for the UAW on one im- portant point: That the company should foot the entire pension bill. Most of heavy industry had been solidly refusing to grant any pensions to which employes did not contribute. Ford is the first major crack in this wall of opposition. UAW officers expected the rank-and-file members to ratify the contract quickly. The pension plan is also the first in the car- making field. Negotiators fought for almost 35 straight hours Tuesday and Wednesday over final contract de- * tails. The UAW had set a bar- gaining deadline at 12:01 a.m. yes- terday but they went on for two additional hours and reached agreement. Industries May Ask Security Boost- -Haber By AL BLUMROSEN Ford Motor Company now has an incentive to plug for higher social security benefits which are "the best way" to deal with old age pensions Prof. William Haber of the economics department said yesterday. Since the company plan is tied r into the federal social security act, it is to the company's advantage, to have federal payments as high as possible, Prof. Haber explained. "When the benefits under the federal act are increased, the com- pany pension to the individual is decreased," he said. If other industries follow the Ford-UAW plan, they too would want higher social secur- ity old age payments. "Such a revision of the federal laws would be to the advantage of all insured workers, organized or not," he added. Prof. Haber was critical of the industrial pension scheme as an unsound way to deal with the problem of old age security. "Workers in strongly organized industries would get higher and more certain pensions than those *in unorganized or poorly organ- ized industries if the plan were widely adopted," he said. WORKERS IN marginal indus- Tokyo Rose Convicted 49 GUILTY OF TREASON-An expressionless "Tokyo Rose," Mrs. Iva Toguri D'Aquino, leaves federal court room at San Francisco, Calif. The jury in her trial found her guilty on one count of treason out of the eight with which she was charged. * 4' * * Toy Rose' Convicted koOn One Treason Count Foreign Aid Bdill Okayed By Senators Measure To Cost 5 Billion Dollars WASHINGTON-(IP)-The Sen- ate yesterday passed a $5,809,890,- 000 bill for foreign economic aid, already approved by the House, and sent it to the White House. Senate approval of the huge aid measure was by voice vote. THE HOUSE had passed the bill earlier in the day against lit- tle more than token opposition. Passage of the economic aid measure came within 24 hours after both chambers had ap- proved a $1,314,010,000 military aid bill to help friendly nations re-arm. Taken together, the $7,124,000,- 000 measures are designed to strengthen the noncommunist world in the cold war against Red aggression. THE BILL represents a compro- mise on separate measures already approved by each chamber. It gives Marshall Plan Administrator Paul G. Hoffman about 10 per cent less than he originally requested for European Recovery Program spending. Here is the breakdown on where the money will go: Economic recovery in non- Communist Europe - $3,778, 380,000 for 12 months. The House originally voted $365,8,- 470,000 for 102 months, the Senate $3,628,380,000 for 12 months. Marshall Plan expenditures dur- ing the last three months of the fiscal year ended June 30, 1949- $1,074,000,000. Greece and Turkey-$45,000,- 000. U.S. military government and relief in Germany, Austria, Ja- pan and the Ryukyu Islands - $912,500,000. For the Senate-House "Watch- dog" Committee which checks. on the ECA spending-$110,000. * * * HOUSE AND SENATE approved the arms measure yesterday and sent it to the White House for President Truman's signature. The first shipments of arms - surplus guns, tanks and other weapons from U.S. military stores -are expected to start moving i Steel Strike Imminent Final Peace Sessioi PROJECTED HOSPITAL-This is the way the new Veterans Hospital in Ann Arbor will look when finished, according to the architect's drawing of the project. Planned to accommodate 500 beds, the hospital, when completed, will also treat local out-patients. Excavations for the main building of the project begin today. VA Hospital Excavations Begin Today as SAN FRANCISCO - (P) - Mrs. Iva Toguri D'Aquino, Los Angeles- born broadcaster on Radio Tokyo during the war, was convicted yes- terday of one of eight charges of treason. She will be sentenced Oct. 6. An audible "Oh" of apparent disappointment swept Judge Mi- chael J. Roche's federal courtroom when the verdict was announced after four days of deliberation. Most of the spectators had expect- ed an acquittal. Democratic Sweep Seen, By Truman KANSAS CITY-(P)-President Truman declared here last night that the Democratic Party will "win in 1950" and again "in 1952" by campaigning on his "Fair Deal" program. In a fighting party speech at a testimonial dinner for Demo- cratic National Chairman Wil- liam M. (Bill) Boyle, Jr., the President also : 1. Predicted enactment of his program if it "takes all summer, all next winter and all next sum- mer." 2. Declared that this nation can establish an income up- wards of 300 billion dollars an- nually and an income of $4,000 per family for one-fourth the population who, he said, now have less than a $2,000 income per year. 3. Hinted at the approaching marriage of Vice-President Bark- ley, another speaker, with these words : "I am glad to get the distin- guished Vice-President to visit some place in Missouri outside of St. Louis. "He is a grand man. I am ex- ceedingly glad that he is about to become a citizen of Missouri." Barkley's frequent dates with Mrs. Carleton Hadley, St. Louis widow, had stirred repeated re- ports that a wedding might be in the offing. NEARLY 9,000 persons packed into Kansas City's spacious Mu- nicipal Auditorium to hear the President's speech which ap- peared to keynote the Democratic Congressional campaign of 1950. Of this number nearly 3,000 paid $15 a plate for a steak dinner. 'Later Years' SresBegins Se Dr. Wilma Donahue, University lecturer in psychology, last night outlined the purpose and program of the University Extension Serv- ice lecture series, "Living in Later Years." Dr. Donahue, speaking in the Bus Ad building, explained that IVA, DUBBED "Tokyo Rose" by American GI's who heard her pro- grams on the "Zero Hour," sat with head bowed when the verdict was read. As stoical as she had been during the 12-week trial, she maintained her composure, al- though earlier in the day she had appeared near collapse. The count upon which she was convicted was that of making a broadcast concerning the loss of American ships. The six men and six women of the jury declined to reveal how the polling went during their de- liberations. NEWSMEN TOLD jury foreman John Mann that the press table had voted 9 to 1 for acquittal, and he said: "Well, you're not so far off. from us." He declined to ex- plain. Although dog-tired, the jurors twice rejected the judge's offers of a recess in order to drive toward a verdict. ~ * * * THE MINIMUM sentence Iva could receive is a five-year prison term plus a $10,000 fine. The Max- imum sentence is death. Defense Attorney Wayne Col- lins said he would appeaL Tom De Wolfe, chief prosecutor, termed the verdict "A just one for the United States." ' * "IT WAS ARRIVED at by an intelligent jury after apparently long, serious and persevering de- liberations." Judge Roche also compli- mented the jury for its patient, hard work. The trial cost the government well over a half million dollars. While the defense argued that Iva's Tokyo Rose broadcasts were harmless entertainment-that she even managed to slip in an occa- sional piece of information valu- able to the Allies-the prosecution termed her an 'arch traitoress" and a "female Benedict Arnold." Meeting of CED Scheduled Today A meeting of the Committe to End Discrimination will be held at 4 p.m. today in the Union. All former members of the or- ganization and other interested individuals may attend. overseas by mid-November. Rifle Fire Hits Coal Convoy PITTSBURGH -(AP)-Dynamite blasts and rifle fire hit the na- tion's coal fields yesterday and a mine official said it was "out and out sabotage" on the part of John L. Lewis' United Mine Workers, Nearly 10,000 non-union miners were on the job throughout the country in defiance of UMW pick- ets. Lewis' union quit work 11 days ago in a walkout that has idled 480,000 coal miners.' IVteanwhile, hints of a major break in the work stoppage came from widely scattered points on the black map of coal. But at a White Sulphur Springs, W. Va., conference between the union and northern and western operators, the UMW turned down for a fourth time an offer by the operators to extend the main pro- visions of the old wage contract until March 31, 1951. In central Pennsylvania, hidden riflemen let loose with a fusillade of shots at a 15-truck coal convoy descending Snow Shoe Mountain. No one was hurt. A 10 man construction crew will begin breaking ground at the Ful- ler Rd.-Glacier Way site today for the main building of Ann Arbor's new 500-bed Veterans Hospital, according to Wayne T. Bell, con- struction superintendent. Surveyors mapped out all boun- daries of the 17-acre triangular site last week and workers are now ripping off the top soil. LAST WEEK the government Attlee Gains Sizeable Vote Of Confidence LONDON-01)-The House of Commons gave Prime Minister Attlee's Labor Government an overwhelming vote of confidence last night in,; a showdown on deval- uation that might have forced Britain into a new national elec- tion immediately. The government's action cutting the value of the pound sterling from $4.03 to $2.80 as a means of bettering Britain's economic po- sition was approved 342 to five, with members of the Conservative opposition abstaining. * * * A MOTION of no confidence proposed by Winston Churchill, stocky leader of the Conservatives, was defeated a few minutes earlier by a vote of 350 to 212. The 212 votes in opposition equals the highest vote ever cast against the Labor Govern- ment since it took office in 1945. The Government bill for nationalization of the steel in- dustry enco ntered the opposi- tion of 212 members Nov. 17, 1948, but passed. If the Government had failed to win on the motion of confi- dence, it would have been force, to resign. This would have neces- sitated a new Parliamentary elec- tion at once. THE VOTES wound up three days of debate. The largely Con- servative House of Lords, which exercises little influence, voted 93 to 24 against the government's economic policy Wednesday. awarded low-bid contracts to the J. C. Hedin Construction Co. of Washington, at contract cost of $7,152,000. Nine stories high, the Veter- ans Administration project is designed to accommodate both in and out-patients. Atop the hospital will be a two-story penthouse, housing machine rooms and air-conditioning units. A staff of ten nurses and the same number of hospital atten- dants will find comfortable living quarters in a residential structure planned behind the main building. AND FOUR additional apart- ment buildings will house a size- able army of personnel, according to Bell. Questioned on a probable completion date, Bell declined to make a guess, saying any in- w orld News Round- Up By The Associated Press MOSCOW - Soviet Russia has broken off her war-born mutual aid treaty with Yugoslavia on grounds that Premier Marshal Tito's government is linked with foreign imperialists in "hostile and disruptive work against the U.S. S.R." Theutreaty normally would have run until 1965. * * * WASHINGTON - Blockading Chinese Nationalist warships nabbed three American mer- c ant vessels yesterday, con- fronting the United States with a new issue in relations with China. The ships were "detained" off the Yangtze River entrance be- low Communist-held Shanghai and notified that Nationalist naval officers were coming aboard for an inspection. * * 4' WASHINGTON - The Senate last night passed 52 to 14 a bill to boost the pay of cabinet mem- bers and other top level govern- ment officials. It goes to the House which has approved a bill calling for gen- erally larger salary increases for some 240 key executives. formation must come from gov- ernment officials. But he said he hoped to finish excavation work in "possiblysix weeks." The entire hospital area will be served by a modern garage, boiler house, incinerator building and water reservoir, Bell added. IRONING OUT of details for the project has long been delayed by a city ordnance prohibiting sewers and water supply facilities in areas outside Ann Arbor. Since December, 1947, when Mayor William Brown intro- duced the proposal to the City Council, negotiations between VA and city officials have been carried on. Not until last week, however, was an amendment passed voiding the sewer-water ordnance and giving the build- ers free rein. Mayor Brown offered nothing but praise for the ten-unit project. In an earlier statement, the Mayor predicted it would bring more peo- ple into the city than any other single enterprise. Rushee Jam Causes IFC Room Switch The unexpectedly large number of men signing up for fraternity rushing caused a last-minute switch in the location of last night's general rushing meeting from Rm. 3KLM, Union, to the Union ballroom, pleased IFC lead- ers reported. Approximately 700 students signed up for rushing and attend- ed last night's meeting. There, fraternity and administration leaders discussed various phases of fraternity life for the rushees' in- formation. The Lambda Chi Alpha glee club, champions of last year's IFC Sing, provided vocal enter- tainment. is Fail Small Steel Firm Signs Agreement Pittsburgh Men StrikeYesterday PITTSBURGH-(P)-One small steel company yesterday accepted the CIO United Steelworkers' terms but all other signs pointed to a nationwide steel strike 0t midnight tonight. As other companies banked their furnaces-and some workers already were leaving their jobs- Portsmouth, Ohio Steel Corpora- tion signed a contract to break the steel industry's united front. IT AGREED TO foot the pen- sion and insurance bill for its 1,000 employes. Previously all steel companies had insisted that if their workers wanted a social se- curity program they would have to help pay for it. There was no indication that the Portsmouth agreement would set the pattern for the steel in- dustry. Everywhere the picture looked bleak. CONTRACT TALKS between the CIO United Steelworkers and the steel industry seemingly were getting nowhere but they melt again last night. In two important instances, with Bethlehem and Republic, they collapsed complete- ly. Since it takes from 24 to d4 hours to halt steel operins4 the banking of furnaces had be gun. Steelworkers walkouts actually got under way near Pittsburgh, 36 hours before the strike deadline. Crucible Steel Company said picket lines formed outside its Midland plant and forced the mill to shut down, idling 7,000. Crucible called it "a full-fledged strike." * * * SHOULD THE worker help pay for his pension and insurance pro- gram? U.S. Steel, the nation's biggest producer, said yes. So did the No. 2 and 3 producers, Bethle- hem Steel Company and Re- public Steel Corporation. President Philip Murray of the CIO and the steelworkers said no. He said that the companies should foot the bill. And he pointed to a . report by President Truman's fact finding board which recommended that the cost should be borne by the steel industry. Student Tryout Aspirants ,Jam Publications More than 150 students crowded ipto the Student Publications building yesterday to sign up for the staffs of The Daily, 'Ensiah and Gargoyle. Anyone not able to attend yes- terday's meetings .may still try MARK STABILIZED TOO: German Social. Conditions Normal, Student Pair Say K-. * * * out for student publications by PRINTING difficulties caused ,leaving his name and address in a temporary delay in the issuance The Daily senior editorial office. of rushing pamphlets, but the * * * booklets have since been mailed to THE DAILY still has openings all rushees. Any rushee who does for students interested in general not receive a pamphlet in today's newspaper work, drama and music mail may obtain one between 9 criticism, photography, advertising and 12 a.m. tomorrow at the IFC and circulation, EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the third in a series of articles by two Daily staff members who spent the summer in Europe as leaders of an NSA study tour. By BARNEY and DOLORES LASCHEVER Germany, though politically in a state of flux, appears to have achieved some degree of social normalcy.. German currency, which G.L's during the early days of the occupation used "to paper the walls," is now reasonably stable. * * * * THE LEGAL RATE of exchange is three German marks for an American dollar, and the blackmarket will bring only from five to seven. Previously the dollar was worth 10 times its official value. Shops have sprung up among the ruins and sell every- thinz from confectionarie to shoes anoA tnear hinz. The castle contains the largest wine flask in the world-broad enough for a small dance floor to be built on top. * * * * BEFORE WE LEFT Frankfurt we drove to Mainz in the French Zone to attend the Wine Festival, where the wine barrels sealed two years ago were tapped for the first time. An annual celebration before the war, this is the second event of its kind since the Occupation began. The week-long festivities were held among the ruins of the Coli- seum on the banks of the Rhine. Wine merchants from all over the world came to test the wines as they came from the kegs. Offices, located in Rm 3C, Union. Any men who wish to sign up for rushing, and who have not yet done so, may still sign up from 3 to 5 p.m. today, between 9 and 12 a.m. tomorrow, or be- tween 3 and 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday of next week, in Rm. 3C, Union. A supplementary rushing list' containing the names of these rushees will be available to every rushing chairman from 3 to 5 p.m. Friday in thefIFC offices. * * * THESE LATE signers have been .... .a-1 - T , t '7._ . ,. . . - _ t Any second semester fresh- man, sophomore, junior or sen- ior eligible for extracurricular activities' may work on student publications. Valuable experience in all phases of journalism may be gained through work on campus publications. NEXT tryout meeting for The Daily business and editorial staffs will be held at 4 p. m., Thursday, Oct. 5. First tryout session of the 'En- ian editorial staff will be held at 4 p. m. Tuesday in the Student --*.. *, a.1