BAR MECZ DE FEAST See Page 2 w 41w D43a ii4 FAIR, JUST AS COLD Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVII, No. 21S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 24, 1947 PRICE FIVE CENTS CIO Officials Silent About Red Charges May Incriminate, They Tell House By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, July 23 - Three officers of a CIO tobacco union in North Carolina refused today to tell a House committee whether they are Communists, while a Wisconsin CIO strike lead- er was indicted on charges of falsely swearing that he was not one. The three, Edwin K. McCrea, Robert C. Black and W. Clark Sheppard, told the Un-American Activities Committee that they based their refusal on the ground that to answer "may incriminate" them. Witnesses Testify Previous witnesses had said the men were Communists and that the local involved, at Winston- Salem, N.C., was Communist-con- trolled. McCrea is an Interna- tional Representative of the CIO Food, Tobacco and Agricultural j Workers assigned to the local. Black and Sheppard are co-chair- man of the local. w The Wisconsin man indicted here is Harold Christoffel. Christoffel's perjury indictment was brought by a Federal grand jury at the request of the Justice Department. The Department. acted after the House Labor Com- mittee had asked "such action as may be appropriate" following the accused's sworn statement to the Committee that he was not a * Communist. Headed UJAW At Milwaukee Christoffel was president of Local 248 of the United Auto Workers in 1941 when the union called a long strike against the Allis-Chalmers Company of Mil- waukee, makers of farm machin- ery then with defense contracts. He appeared before the Com- mittee last March, in its study of whether subversive influences were in on the strike. He said he was not a Communist. How ever, the grand jury charged that he "was then a mem- ber of the Communist Party and had . been such member several years prior thereto and had work- ed with the Communist Party and with the Communist Political As- sociation." Police Called To Halt Picket Line Violence BENTON HARBOR, Mich., July 23--(P)-A force of 60 state po- lice, carrying arms, patrolled the gates of the strikebound Rem- ington-Rand Corp. toda.y afte 500 CIO pickets skirmished with local auhorities for the third time in as many days. The police were ordered to the scene after Berrien County Sher- iff Erwin Kubath said "The sit- uation has passed beyond my con- trol" and warned that new dis- orders might break out-Thursday. Fire Hose Used Sheriff's officers used a fire hose today to disperse the pickets, three of whom were arrested. No casualties were reported. An estimated 400 employes walked out June 23 in a demand by Local 931, CIO United Electri- cal Workers, for a 15 cent an hour wage increase. Sheriff Kubath wired Gov. Kim Sigler that "A state of insurrec- tion" existed and asked state po- lice "or such other forces at your command" to cope with the sit- uation. Governor Obliges The governor responded a few hours later by directing troopers from police posts throughout the state to reinforce Berrien County, Benton Harbor, Niles and St. Jo- seph officers at the strike scene. The union's demand for .a 15 cent an hour wage boost at Ben- ton Harbor was answered by a company offer of seven cents and six paid annual holidays. Menser of NBC Will Lecture Here Clarence L. Menser, vice-presi- dent in charge of Programs for the National Broadcasting Coi- pany will sneak on the subject of Truman No Longer Seen As Little Man in Big Job Counters Questions on NLRB Appointments With Complete Competence and Poise By TOM WALSH Special To The Daily EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first of a series of interpretative articles on political trends and personalities in Washington by a Daily staff corres- pondent. WASHINGTON-Meeting the President of the United States is quite a thrill, but it is a far greater thrill to watch Harry Truman in action and to come away confident that, whatever his shortcomings when he first took office, he is now a competent chief executive in his own right. U.S. Warns Security Council Bulgaria, Albania, Yugoslavia Menacing Peace; Dutch Troops Capture Java Coast Port That's the impression I got las Safest Spot For Parking Is at Home The safest place in the world to park your car should be in front of a police station, but the city police found out otherwise. They are minus the services of a scout car this week after a trac- tor and trailer smashed into it on Fifth under the surprised eyes of the officer on duty. The entire side of the car was mashed and the wheels on the opposite side were knocked up on the curb. The officer on duty ran out to find the driver-but there was no driver. The truck had rolled down from a parking space across the street from the City Hall all by itself. The driver showed up later. He was given a ticket for failure to set brakes. Later investigation showed that he didn't haveany anyway. The tractor and trailer belongs to a local trucking company. Po- lice reported that the company intends to support the driver. Widow of VU Patron Dead Rackham Services To Be HeldFriday DETROIT, July 23-G'P)-Fu- neral services will be held here Friday for Mrs. Mary A. Rackham, 83-year-old widow of Detroit phil- anthropist Horace H. Rackham, who died at her home here yester- day after a five-year illness. Mrs. Rackham, a native of Fen- ton, devoted her entire adult life to the charities and educational institutions she and her late hus- band financed, from the Horace H. and Mary A. Rackham Fund which grew from an original $5,000 investment in the Ford Motor Company. Rackham, a ayoung attorney, married Mrs. Rackham in 1886 and later moved to Detroit where he and his law partner, John An- derson, drew up incorporation papers for the projected Ford Motor Company. Years later, when the Ford investors were bought out, his original $5,000 in- vestment had grown to $12,500,- 000. French Movie To Be Shown "Children of Paradise," French film with English sub-titles, will be presented at 8:30 p.m. tomor row and Saturday at Hill Audi- torium under the sponsorship of the Art Cinema League and the AVC Campus Chapter. Jean-Louis Barrault, Arletty and Pierre Brasseur will star in the picture, which is the story of the strange love of a French mime, and a Parisian actress in the days of 'King Louis Philippe. Tickets may be purchased at the Hill Auditorium box-office. t week at a White House press con- ference at which thePresident announced his appointments to the National Labor Relations Board. The sight of five or six news- reel men loading their cameras and more than fifty of the na- tion's top correspondents lined up outside the door to the Presi- dent's office attested to the im- portance of the occasion and led me to expect a very formal meet- ing. Several Announcements Falling in behind the regular Washington correspondents who charged into the circular, high- domed office, I jockeyed into a favorable position just as the President said, "I have several announcements for you this aft- ernoon." Standing in front of his wide mahogany desk, the Presi- dent seemed very much at ease as he read off his appointments in the slow monotonous voice that is familiar to millions of radio lis- teners. As soon as Mr. Truman finish- ed speaking, a barrage of ques- tions followed. The chief execu- tive obligingly repeated some bio- graphical data andspelled the name of Robert Denham for a slow reporter and smiled noncom- mittally at another who wise- cracked about-thefact that the new appointee was a Republican. Quite relaxed, the President ap- peared to be having a good time as he tossed back at the reporters the loaded questions in the repar- tee which followed. They Have To Be Were the new appointees in favor of the Taft-Hartley Act? "Of course they are. They have to be," Truman shot back. (Un- der the Taft-Hartley Act, the gen- eral counsel is the key figure in the NLRB.) What would he say in a veto message tomorrow? "It will be read in the House tomorow. You have only 19 hours to wait," came the prompt answer. Though the interplay of words was rapid and skipped quickly to a dozen different topics, it was not formal. A White House old- timer tried to pin him down about a trip to Brazil. Laughing eas- ily he parried with, "I've wanted to go for a long time. Ihaven't made any plans yet, Smitty, but I'll let you know in plenty of time to pack." The Way He Gave Them Most remarkable to me was not the answers he gave but the man- ner in which he gave them. No longer, at least, can Harry Tru- man be considered a "little man in too big a job" as he was so often labelled when he first took office. The President's self-as- surance provided an enviable mod- el and he was was in complete command of the situation n throughout the conference. I left the. White House inspired by a confidence in our chief ex- ecutive which made the formality of being introduced and shaking hands with Harry Truman seem like an anti-climax.' Princeton Linguist Gives History Talk The history of scientific lingu- istics, from its foundation in the early nineteenth century, was re- viewed by Prof. Julian Bonfante, of Princeton University, in the ninth of a series of public lectures offered by the Linguistics Insti- tute, yesterday, in Eackham Am- phitheatre. Take Cheribon In Long Drive On Three Sides Systematic Scorched Earth Policy Begun By The Associated Press BATAVIA, Java, Thursday, July 24-Dutch troops driving in from three sides have captured the im- portant north Java coast port of Cheribon, semi-official dispatches from the Cheribon area said to- day. The reports said Dutch forces moved into the city, 130 miles east of Batavia, yesterday after- noon. Cheribon's Indonesian de- fenders offered no resistance and bridges in the area were captured intact, the dispatches added. The port city was captured by troops who pushed halfway across Java from Bandoeng. It is in the heart of the rich north- west Java rice growing area. The capture of Cheribon occur- red as Indonesian Republicans be- gan a systematic application of a scorched earth policy. Four Republican towns were put to the torch by the Republi- cans, an Indonesian communique announced. Salatiga, important objective south of Semarang, was burning when Dutch forces enter- ed the town. The retreating Republicans also put the torch to Lawang, 12 miles north of Malang, in East Central Java, toward which other Dutch forces were advanc- ing, and to Soemedang and Tit- jalengka, 20 miles east of Ban- oeng, in western Java. In Sumatra, to which the fight- ing has spread, an official Dutch dispatch said irregular Indones- ian soldiers belonging to the so- called People's Army had burned more than 100 homes before evac- uating Arnhemia, a few miles south of Medan. In East Java, Dutch troops striking south from the Probo- linggo beachhead and west from the eastern port of Banjoewan- gi threatened to slice the Re- public in two by cutting off 2,400 square miles of the island from contact with Republican centers to the west. The Dutch air offensive was steppedup today. Jogjakarta's air- port was bombed at noon again. Merger Bill Ready for OK By Congress WASHINGTON, July 23-(1- "Must" legislation to unify the Army and Navy was shaped up for passage when a Senate-House conference committee approved it tonight. The action helped smooth the path for hoped-for adjourn- ment Saturday. The compromise on the bill strongly advocated by. President Truman will go to the House and then to the Senate for final action. It provides separate Army, Navy and Air Forces departments un- der one cabinet officer, a Secre- tary of Defense. Laborious Day Action climaxed a laborious day in both chambers which sweated to get their calenders cleared of large numbers of secondary bills. Over them hung the shadows of six large appropriation bills which must be approved to achieve the Saturday vacation goal. The money bills involving many billions were in various stages of agreement. They have to pass to run the Government this fiscal year. They include finances for the Army, the veterans and for-. eign aid. The Senate Republican leader- ship met and gave its backing to a proposed group of special in- vestigations to be conducted after adjournment. HCL Heads List Atop the list the policy com- FINAL 'VOYAGE'-The tattered hulk of the once-proud French liner Normandie, which burned in New York while being converted to a U.S. troop transport, is shunted a few hundred feet out of a Newark city ship channel to avoid a penalty on expiration of the scrapping the vessel. COLLECT $700: Spencer, Jackson Received Enthusiastically At Rally lease of Lipsett, Inc., which is Petition For Callahan Act Referendum 4/- i By FRED SCHOTT Four speakers and singer Ken- neth Spencer climaxed a $700 tag day last night by presenting the anti-lynch issue from several points of view in a Rackham Lec- ture Hall rally. Before an audience estimated at 400, Prof. Preston W. Slosson, of the history department, main speaker of the evening, discussed three aspects of the problem: 1. The downward trend of lynchings over a period of 47 years. 2. The enforcement of existing anti-lynching legislation, and the necessity for a federal lynching law. 3. The weakening of "our voice of freedom" by toleration of dis- crimination, in the eyes of for- eign powers. Prof. Slosson referred to the recent Carolina lynching trial, noting that although individuals were singled out from the mob, the jury did not convict the ac- cused lynchers. Kenneth Spencer, well-known bass baritone, received enthusias- tic responses to his songs, most of them spirituals. He sang "City Called Heaven," "Freedom is My Land," "Go Down, Moses," "Ham- mer Song" and "Old Man River," dedicating them "to the men and women fighting for freedom in the south." AVC representative Alfred Mil- stein, recently ,returned from Washington, explained what pro- gress has been made by anti- lynch proponents in Congress this session. Milstein urged citizens to pressure Congressmen and to "carry the fight" until Congress reconvenes. Special Projects Director Ar- thur G. Price of the Southern Youth Congress explained the work of the Congress in a brief message. He said his organization is at- tempting to educate young Amer- ica to the evils of lynching be- cause "only the youth of America have the drive to correct this evil." Although there is a deepening crisis of lynching, he said, there are other key issues to be dealt with concerning the right of cit- ienship-voting, for instance. Speaker Blyden Jackson receiv- ed repeated laughter for his tongue-in-cheek recounting of what he called "lynching atti- tudes." In a mock serious tone he list- ed four "attitudes.": 1. "They don't lynch my kind of people.' 2. "Not many people are lynched anyway." 3. "They don't lynch people up here you know." 4. "And anyway the people who are lynched ought to have some- thing done to them anyhow." Marshall Field Plans To Buy ChicagoTines CHICAGO, July 23-(IP')-Mar- shall Field, publisher of the Chi- cago Sun, announced today he had offered to buy the Chicago Daily Times, afternoon tabloid, "to expand my Chicago newspaper interest." Field said he had offered $60 a share for the stock of the Times, and that Richard J. Finnegan, publisher of the Times, and two of his associates, "are agreeable to that price" and were trans- mitting Field's proposal to their fellow stockholders. Finnegan said there were 88,-l 977 shares of Times' stock out- standing and that "Mr. Field will buy all shares that are offered to! him." In the event that all out- standing shares were sold to Field the total purchase price of the Times would be $5,338,620. The Times publisher said Field had stipulated that "at least" 65,- 500 shares-roughly 75 per cent of the total-"should respond favor- ably by Aug. 23, unless the time is extended." This would indicate a desire on Field's part to spend at least $3,930,00 for controlling interest of the Times. Field said he would remain as publisher and editor of the Sun. The Sun's publisher stated he hoped to publish the Sun in the morning, the Times in the after- noon, and a Sun-Times on Sun- day. (ity By To Be Canvassed Joint Committee Apportioning and canvassing of the city with petitions calling for a referendum on the Callahan Act is underway, spokesmen for a joint Committee to Repeal the Callahan Act announced today. Prof. John L. Brumm, of the journalism department, and Prof. Wilfred Kaplan, of the mathemat- ics department, were elected co- chairman of the Committee by delegates from six campus and town organizations, Monday at the Union. Included are: the Pro- gressive Citizens of America, Americans for Democratic Action, American Veterans Committee, National Negro Congress, Michi- gan Youth for Democratic Action and the Inter-Racial Association. 200,000 Signatures Sought The campaign is being coordin- ated with a state-wide movement that seeks to obtain 200,000 valid signatures by October 10. The state Committee to Repeal the Callahan Act, headed by Henry Sweeney, former judge of Record- ers Court and member of the city council in Detroit, includes Pro- fessors Preston Slosson, John Shephard, Lewis- G. VanderVelde and Theodore Newcomb. Brumm Speaks on Bill Expressing his pleasure at see- ing that students are aroused and ready to fight, Monday, Prof. Brumm said that the Callahan Act threatens academic freedom. The public has been conditioned by propaganda and political man- euvering on the part of minority groups and individuals, he ex- plained, to the point where they are susceptible to the fears of sub- versive activity beyond anything that exists. It is surprising, he said, that the press has not raised its voice, since by the Act any pubications can be suppressed. The definition of foreign agents in the Callahan Act, which is far too broad, declared Prof. Kaplan, would include such organizations as the Federal Council of Churches, the Boy Scouts of America and the United Nations. Extraordinary powers are given to the attorney general, he said. Johnson Says Balkan States Lack Liberty Demands UN Warn Nations 'Keep Order By The Associated Press LAKE SUCCESS, July 29-The United States removed diplomatic wraps today and bluntly told the United Nations Security Council that Yugoslavia, Albania and Bul- garia were a menace to interna- tional peace. AmericaneDeputy Delegate Her schel V. Johnson said there was not "the slightest evidence of civ- il liberties" in the three Soviet satellites and "a dictatorship is a dictatorship no matter what you call it." He demanded that the Coun- cil warn the three nations "to keep order in their own houses and leave other people's affairs alone" lest a war break out in the Balkans affecting the whole world. It was the second time in a U.N. meeting today that diplomatic talk was drop- ped., Noting that Johnson had "be- gun to speak candidly," Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko jumped into the de- bate to say: "Bulgaria, Yugoslavia and Al- bania do not need the advice of the United States on their inter- nal order. If such advice is given from the rostrum of the United Nations, although not asked for, the only explanation is that these authors overestimate the impor- tance of their advice." Previously Russia's vigorous de- fense of Albania in a U.N. mem- bership committee touched off one of the strongest personal at- tacks ever leveled at a Soviet dele- gate here. The United States and Aus- tralia quickly joined Britain's Valentine G. Lawford in lam- basting Krasilnikov, Soviet dele- gate to the committee and for- mer minister to Iceland. Krasilnikov delivered a 30- minute speech castigating the Western Powers for their oppo- sition to the admission of Albania and accusing them of attempting to "undermine the Young Peop- les Republic of Albania." He said all the reasons advanc- ed by the United States and Bri- tain were based on "false accusa- tions" and that they were at- tempting to get the Tirana gov- ernment to accept conditions dic- tated by foreign powers. He added that certain powers would not be satisfied unless they could seat a man on the Albanian General Staff to suppress the democratic element in Albania. Ample Crops In Poland End American Aid WASHINGTON, July 23-(IP)- The United States excluded Pol- and today from a prospective $15,- 000,000 share in American foreign relief and there were indications that Hungary also would be ruled out because of improved crop prospects in Soviet - dominated Eastern Europe. The State Department an nounced the action on Poland, publishing an official report say- ing the country has sufficient food in sight for minimum needs until at least the end of this year. Secretary of State Marshall said Poland's boycott on the Par- is Conference on the Marshall plan for European recovery was not the reason for the exclusion, Colonel R. L. Harrison, special assistant to Secretary of Agri- cultural Anderson, made the sur- vey of Poland's needs at Marshall's request. World News at a Glance By The Associated Press SAN JOSE, Costa Rica, July 23-At least five persons were killed by gunfire and 59 wounded in a series of political clashes and street fights in San Jose and other Costa Rican cities which began last Sat- urday and were brought under control today by police. WASHINGTON, July 23-Secretary of State Marshall in- dicated today the United States will reconsider its proposal for an immediate veto-free start on drafting a Japanese peace treaty 'PURELY COINCIDENTAL': Man Wanders into Capitol with Pistol WASHINGTON, July 23-( P)- A man with a pistol in his pocket was arrested in the Capitol today iut after President Truman had in a washroom one floor below the Senate chamber by policemen who said they noticed the weapon Shelby, who asked the man if he had a permit for the pistol. Both officers said Spires denied