A CHECKERED PAST See *Page 4 Y A*FA6 Lwt a D43ziAr n SUNNY AND PLEASANT Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVIII, No. 198 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, AUGUST 1, 1948 PRICE FIVE CENTS Taylor Says Major Parties Bury Issues Charges Headed For 'Fascism' GRAND RAPIDS, Mich., July 31 (IP)-Senator Glen H. Taylor, of Idaho, tonight accused the Repub- lican and Democratic parties of combining forces in Congress "to bury every important issue with talk." The Progressive Party Vice Presidential candidate said in a radio speech that the current fili- buster in the Senate "is a filibus- ter of both old parties." He add- ed: "It is not a filibuster on the poll tax alone. It is a filibuster against price control and housing and se- curity as well. And it is a fili- buster which exists only because both parties want it to exist. Guarantees "It is the guarantee that the Democrats can preserve state rights over human rights, and the Republicans profits over prosper- . . ity "# Taylor said that the Democratic party is "controlled by the mili- tary men and Wallstreeters." He charged that the Repubican Party is subservient to "the monopolists and special interests groups - of this country." New Progressive Party wants to "preserve our democratic form of government," he said. "We are not at all certain," he added, "that our economy or even our democracy can withstand the greaw economic upheaval toward which "we are rushing because of the monopolistic and militaristic policies of the bi-partisan coali- tion." Wallace Candidacy Taylor told his audience . that the nation is fortunate to have in Henry Wallace, Progressive Presi- dential candidate, "a. man willing to face the abuse, the Red-baiting, 'he vilification and ridicule and peak out against this aness." Of himself, he said: "I don't know what the out- come of this political campaign is going to be. I know that I will be fortunate if I retain my liberty and freedom of action because we have gone a long way down the road toward fascism." Taylor opened his speech with a blistering attack on the press, which he accused of distorting ]news, emitting news "contrary to the big business point of view and deliberate falsehoods which are fed to the people by syndicated writers and editorial columns." 'All Time Low' "I am forced to state," he said, "that some of the syndicated col- umnists (which he did not name) have reached an all time low in the way they have deliberately misrepresented the events which transpired at the recent Pro'gres- sive convention. Their flat state- ments that Communists were in control for example had no foun- dation in fact." "In view of the degeneration of the press into a tool of special in- terests, we can be thankful for the development of radio. TV Enlightenment "I believe that television will be an even greater instrument for the enlightment of the American peo- ple. Neither an editorializing col- umnist nor a radio commentator can distort the facts when the people 'can both see and hear what is transpiring." Senator Taylor held meetings with party officials here and in Detroit prior to his speech to- night. "If I ever became convinced that such was the case, I'd leave it," he told reporters. The Senator, accompanied by his wife, Dora, and three sons, Arod, 13; Paul John, six, and Gregory, two, told interviewers at the press conference that the new Progressive party is not Commu- nist dominated. losson To Spea At Willow Village Prof. Preston W. Slosson, can- didate for the Democratic nomi- nation as Congressman from the Michigan Second District, will sneak on "The Taft-Hartley Law" Truman's Control Plans Called Failure by GOP Capehart Cites Public's Lack of Interest In President's Anti-Inflationary Proposals WASHINGTON, July 31-(P)-Republicans contended today that President Truman's demand for price control and rationing authority has flopped with the public. In support of this view, Senator Capehart (Rep., Ind.) told a reporter that despite an open invitation by Chairman Tobey (Rep., N.H.) the Senate Banking Committee has not received even one request for permission to testify on the anti-inflation question. Not Interested "The public just doesn't seem to be interested in this problem- at least, if it is, it isn't taking the usual methods of letting Congress know about it," Capehart said. "Ordinarily when the President brings some program before Molotov, Western es Hig6h7 Pow ers Meet Spy Nam U, s. :+ KENNETH C. WHEARE to conclude lectures '' * * * Prof. Wheare To EndSeries The University's Summer Lec- ture Series on "The Economic Re- construction of Europe," will end this week with two lectures by Prof. Kenneth C. Wheare, promi- nent British political scientist. Prof. Wheare, of the University of Oxford, will discuss "Ideolog- ical Conflicts and Reconstruction," in the talks. His specific topic will be British economic policy and re- construction at 8 O p.m., Tuesday, in the Rackham Lecture Hall. Later, heawill review the "political factors" in European recovery, at 4:10 p.m., Thursday, in the Rack- am Amphitheatre. The speaker is a native of Aus- ralia and a graduate of the Uni- versity of Melbourne. He entered the University of Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar in 1929, and be- came a member of the faculty in 1934. Prof. Wheare is the author of several books. Old Chimney Stands Fast A tough, 52-year-old Univer- sity chimney behind the West En- gineering building came out with a draw in a battle with demoli- tion workers yesterday. The wrecking crew swung a heavy steel weight to and fro from a boom to shatter bricks loose from the campus landmark. How- ever, eighteen feet of stone foun- dation and brick still stand ami broken bricks and rubble. The chimney and heating plant were built in the summer of 1894 when the 1879 plant proved in- adequate. /Congress, we get heavy mail for and against it. But I have received less than 25 letters and telegrams about the President's proposals." Other key Republicans reported the same lack of response. At the same time, however, the Democratic National Committee said in its weekly "Capital Com- ment" that "many" of the "plain people" of the country had written and wired to President Truman and Democratic leaders in support of the program. Trained Seals "President Truman's program for the special session of Congress made sense to almost everybody but the Republican Congress and the journalistic trained seals and editorial writers dedicated to the defense of that do-nothing legis- lative body," the party organ de- clared. Capehart said the Banking Com- mittee may be able to get down by midweek to drafting legislation leaders expect to bring before the Senate by Thursday or Friday. Senator Taft (Rep., Ohio) has said Congress probably will adjourn next Saturday. Capehart said he thinks a com- mittee majority might be willing to recommend a return of install- ment buying controls and the tightening of bank, credit. The Senate passed installment curb legislation which now is pending before the House. No Indication There has been no indication, however, that the Representatives will act on it. They may take up later in the week, however, a Senate-approved measure to au- thorize a $65,000,000 loan to build a permanent headquarters for the United Nations in New York City. The Senate, tied up in a South- ern filibuster against the Anti- Poll Tax Bill, may see some action on that score Monday. Senator Wherry of Nebraska, acting GOP leader, told reporters he will file a petition to limit the Anti-Poll Tax debate early in the week. Regulations Such a petition called cloture, requires the signatures of 16 Sen- ators. If approved by a two-thirds vote it would limit each Senator to an hour's talk. "We might as well recognize there is a filibuster and take what- ever steps we can to end it,". Wherry said. If the cloture move fails-as many believe that it will-Wherry said the next Republican move may be to try to change the Sen- ate rules. The cloture petition seemed like- ly to be rejected by Senator Van- denberg (Rep., Mich.), the Sen- ate presiding officer, as out-of- order. Wherry said the Republicans could appeal the ruling. woman Says Currie, Whi te Gave Secrets Rankin, Thomas Ask Grand Jury Inquiry WASHINGTON, July 31- P)- A woman who confessed she spied for Russia told amazed Congress- men today that one of the late President Roosevelt's confidential aides and a former Assistant Sec- retary of the Treasury gave out wartime secrets which reached the Soviets. She named them as: Lauchlin Currie, Nova Scotia- born administrative assistant to Roosevelt from 1939 to 1945, and Harry Dexter White, former As- sistant Secretary of the Treas- ury. The testimony came from Elizabeth T. Bentley, 36-year- old Vassar graduate, who ap- peared before the House Com- mittee on Un-American activi- ties. Simultaneously, a Senate sub- committee headed by Senator Ferguson (Rep., Mich.) was questioning William W. Rem- ington, 30-year-old Commerce Department official, whom Miss Bentley named yesterday as a Communist who supplied her with secret information during the war. Remington has denied that he ever belonged to the Communist Party, or that he ever gave Miss Bentley any secret or confidential information. Chairman J. Parnell Thomas (Rep., N.J.) of the House com- mittee demanded that a special grand jury be summoned in Wash- ington to look into "espionage in government." Seconding the demand, Rep. Rankin (Dem., Miss.) declared that the grand jury's inquiry should be broad enough to take in state, county and city em- ployes too. Miss Bentley told the commit- tee that although Currie was not a Commnunist, he '"gave us some information, he had in- side information on government policies." Due to Currie, she said, information reached the Russians that the United States was about to 'break' the Rus- sian code. She testified that White, the Treasury official, gave informa- tion to one N. Gregory Silvermas- ter which was relayed on to her and eventually to the Russians. She described Silvermaster as a Communist and agent of the Rus- sian secret police who was em- ployed at the time by the U. S. Farm Security Administration. He no longer is with the govern- ment.. Miss Bentley named several oth- er former government employes. She said there were two principal "groups" in the government with which she dealt: the Silvermaster group and the Perlo group. The latter, she said, was headed by Victor Perlo, formerly employed by the War Production Board. She testified that the Perlo group included: Allen Rosen- berg of the Foreign Economic Administration, Donald Wheeler of the Office of Strategic Serv- ices, Edward Fitzgerald of the War Production Board, Harry Magidoff of the Commerce De- partment and Charles Cramer, whom she identified as a former employe of a Senate Education and Labor Subcommittee. She said Cramer told her he was a long-time member of the Communist Party, and she added that Rosenberg, Wheeler and Fitzgerald also belonged to it. (Robert E. Stripling, counsel for the Un-American Activities Com- mittee, said later that Cramer's real name is Krivitsky.) HIGH AND DRY-Canadian coastwise steamer Sardena shown with her nose well in th her midsectioh bedded deep in reef at False Bay, British Columbia. The 1,500-ton vessel en this position when she crashed into the reef during a recent run. Large Profits Mark Trend Of Industries Oil Companies Show Greatest '48 Gains NEW YORK, July 31-(IP)-High profits, with oil companies in the lead, are marking the trend for American industry in the first half of 1948, an analysis of earnings reports showed today. Terrific gains compared with 1947 are common. "Highest in history" is a phrase repeated con- stantly. But at the same time, there was a clearly marked slowing down here and there in the rate that profits increased this year over last. Companies are not embarrassed with their explanations of these mounting profits. They point to the sharp decreases in the rate of profit gain in other companies and say: "This could happen to our company." "Wages for workers have gone up, so why not increased wages to stockholders, too?" There is growing talk about "break-even points." Gross income must be very high before profits appear, companies explain, but when gross income drops the prof- its will disappear rapidly. Further- more, cost of replacing equipment has soared. That is a plow-under program. They hope to reap a harvest of profits in the lean years. "We are growing fat now," said one execu- tive, "but the lean years are sure to come." KITTEN FOR THE ASKING: Former Play Pro Actre In Search of New Home A distinguished local stage ac- tress is looking for a home. She is "Uncle Elizabeth," feline lead in "I Remember Mama." With the closing or the play, Uncle Eliz- abeth must either ,ind a perma- nent home of be returned to the Humane Society, by her 'agent,' Marcia Miller, '49. Miss Miller, who signed up to work in the play's properties de- partment, met "Uncle Elizabeth when she innocently told the play U.S. Attorneys Meet on Black GOP Charges DETROIT, July 31-(/P)-Michi- gan's U. S. District Attorneys met in a private conference here to- day, Although there was no official confirmation, it was assumed that the talk dealth with Attorney General Eugene F. Black's charges against Republican Party leader- ship. Recently Black said he had rea- son to believe GOP heads had per- mitted irregularities in the han- dling of political campaign funds. Black's statement brought heat- ed denials from the party leader- leadership and he was invited into court to prove his charges, Joseph F. Deeb, U. S. Attorney for Western Michigan, cane un- heralded to Detroit today to talk with Thomas P. Thornton, who heads the similar Federal office for Eastern Michigan. If any corrupt practices charges are brought-as Black as inti- mated-the procedure would be in the Federal courts. The statement said the informa- tion related to "matters within the jurisdiction" of the Eastern Ju- dicial district. "What has been received today is being turned over to the U. S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan for his considera- tion." director that "she di mais." The kitten, hal at the awkward aig ward from then on. Ready for the Cue Up to the fourth an formance last night, spent her time seein feline protege had a dages in place and the ket was ready for thec In the play Uncl is the, pet of Dagm nine year old daughte is just "Elizabeth" brother Nels reveals t life,' that 'she' is a 'h tually Uncle Elizab should be Elizabeth.) Great Moment High point for the r tress is when, after, counter with a dog, sh be dying. Despite th of Dagmar, the famil chloroform her. Howes only gives Uncle t chance to get well an tion that "Mama car thing!" continues. Today, Uncle ElizabE actress, but she doesn' She would like tot apartment at 520 Jef enjoy crawling into and playing the "extro delight of Miss Mill roommate, Ennid Kirk The only. flaw is Elizabeth is a "temp in the building and mi morrow er Tuesday. Well Trained Feline Besides having a r petite for everything f potatoes to rolls an people eat in the mar tors watch a ping-pon cle Elizabeth is a feline. She is playf fectionate, but sleeps q kitchen at night with a sound-traits she p the home of an Ann A who left the city and pet over to the Huma If you know of a former actress witht position, telephone Mi 2-0666. Officials Soviets Hear SLatest Plans To Negotiate Diplomat Back with .:.wi 'SurprisingSpeed' (By The Associated Press) Representatives of the Western Powers were granted unexpected interviews with Russian Foreign ' .'"t Minister V. M. Molotov last night he?> during which they gave him their latest proposals for settling dif- ferences between the East and the West. U. S, Ambassador Walter Bedell Smith conferred for more than an hour with the Soviet official. Frank Roberts, Britain's special envoy, said he also was granted an interview. French sources in- dicated that Yves Chataigneau, their Ambassador to Moscow, like- wise had seen Molotov. Neither Smith nor Roberts c air and would comment on the nature ded up in of their conversations with the Russian official. The Russian foreign office had said Friday that Molotov was "not in Moscow" and the speed with which he returned to the Soviet capital surprised Ameri ss can spokesmen, In London, a responsible British diplomat said the U. S., Britain and France had given to Russia in writing their terms for enter- ing into four-power negotiations fd like ani- to etd the East-West cold war, e-gr wn an The British diplomat said the western statements made it clear that: 1-They reject Russia's argu- d final per- 'ment thit their right to remain in Miss Miller Berlin has been forfeited by their tg that her decision to set up a West German 11 her ban- Government, at her blan- 2-They intend to stay in Ber- cue. lin. e Elizabeth 3-They are prepared to talk ar, Mama's about differences all over Europe. r. Her name 4-While ready for these talks until older on the highest levels, they first ex- he 'facts of pect Russia to restore traffic links e.' (But ac- between Berlin and the western eth's name occupation zones. The Moscow developments coincided with signs elsewhere homeless ac- that relations between East and a brief en- West are at the moment on the e appears to downgrade. Le pleadings Molotov's ranking deputy, An- y decides to drei Y. Vishinsky, Soyiet dele- ver the sleep gate to the Danube Conference Elizabeth a in Belgrade, meanwhile chal- d the tradi- Inged the Western Powers to ac- n do every- cept Eastern bloc decisions in the conference or to take a walk. eth is an ex- Vishinsky, conscious of the fact t mind that. that Soviet satellites form a ma- stay in the jority behind him at the confer- fferson, and ence, told Britain, France and the paper bags United States: vert" to the "The door was opened for you to er and her come in. The door is open for you , Grad. to go out." that Uncle Another example came from orary guest" Berlin where attention was cen- ust leave to- tered once more on the possibility that the Soviets might try to close one or more of the air corrdiors avenous ap- by which the United States and rom mashed Britain are feeding the people in d watching blockaded western Berlin. nner specta- g game, Un- well-trained ord Prices ul and af- .uietly in the To RiseAgai out making )icked up in rbor woman DETROIT, July 31--P)-Prices 1 turned her of Ford Motor Co. passenger cars ne Society, are going up again for the second home for a time in less than two months. a great dis- A company spokesman con- ss Miller, at firmed that a price boost is pend- ing but did not say what it would amount to. "We are still analyzing our costs in relation to the recent increase in the price of steel and the sub- stantial wage increase granted to o employes," a company source said. However, he added, dealers have been notified that a price increase may be expected "within a few irl punches days." of dough. The company recently granted out 750,000 the CIO United Auto Workers a urs, slightly 13 cent an hour wage increase for World News At A Glance (By The Associated Press) DETROIT, July 31-The Detroit Edison Co. today raised wages and salaries of its 10,000 employes in Detroit and Eastern Michigan. Hourly rated employes of the utility firm were boosted 11 cents an hour. Salaried workers got a nine per cent increase. Both were retroactive to July 26. * * * * TORONTO, Ont., July 31-Canada's special austerity 25 per cent Excise Taxes were abolished tonight in a series of gov- ernment announcements from Ottawa. * * * * WASHINGTON, July 31-Federal civilian payrolls rose to 2,092,301 in June, an advance of 26,004 over the May total, the Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures reported today. WASHINGTON. July 31-Two rival unions announced plans to set up efforts to win a third round of postwar wage increases from the telephone industry. * * * * FLINT, July 31-Officials of Local 659. CIO United Auto Workers Exams Ignored -II Police are searching the city today for a thief. Their only clue is that the man if definitely not a student.. The purloiner made off from Strauss House, East Quadrangle, with an 8-11 inch steel box con- taining old examination papers, But one mistake removed 9,000 scholars as suspects. According to the Ann Arbor Police, the villian took the box, valued at $10 and left the exams. STOREHOUSE IN DENVER: MintEmploye Guards Stored G in m OB RGT (O2B DENVER, July 31--(P)-"Keep- ing an eye" on five and three- quarter billion dollars worth of gold is one of the jobs of Moses The employes don't have a chance to get rich even acciden- tally. - .. ,1 . , . , i,.:. ..,.ie .i .- ... siasm as a hired g cookies from a sheett They can punch pennies in eight hoi