LESSER OF TWO EVILS? See Page 2 Y Lw6 DahtI' IN(CREASING CLOUD)INESS Latest Deaineljl in the Stte :VOL. LIII, No. 202 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1948-_. -- PRICE FIVE CENTS West Envoys To Continue Soviet Talks Meeting Expected For Tomorrow MOSCOW, Aug. 6-'P)-U.S., British and French envoys will hold more meetings with Russian officials before any final agree- ments materialize as a result of the current Four-Power talks, it was learned tonight. i A highly informed source said there may be another' conference with the Russians tomorrow, but this is unlikely. A meeting Sunday seems more probable, the source said. Today's conference with For- eign Minister V. M. Molotov was described as "very thorough." It lasted three hours. Prime Minister Stalin was not present. Another Try At this meeting U.S. Ambassador s Walter Bedell Smith, French Am- bassador Yves Chataigneau, and Frank Roberts, special British en voy, visited the Kremlin for an- other try at solving East-West dif- ferences. It appeared tonight that several more meetings may be in order before the current conversations come to an end. It was almost a certainty they would continue into next week. Although the going may seem slow, it was learned on excellent authority that there is no need for pessimism. In fact, the oppo- site is true. It was learned that the Western Power negotiations with Molotov are proceeding smoothly. Non-Committal The Western envoys' conference with the Soviet Foreign Minister today lasted an hour longer than their meeting last Monday with Stalin. They emerged from it smil- ing but non-committal. "We met with Molotov. No com- ment," Smith told newspapermen. (London dispatches said diplo- matic circles there believed the three Western Powers had sub- mitted specific questions which they believed should be discussed at a new four-power conference on 't Berlin, Germany and perhaps Eu- rope. New Meeting? (The dispatches said an an- nouncement may be made this weekend of the time, place and scope of a new meeting of the Foreign Ministers Council. State ; Department spokesmen in Wash- ington said no agreement on such a meeting has yet been reached. EA meeting of Secretary of State George Marshall, Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov, British Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin and French Foreign Minister Rob- ert Schuman might be preceded by a get-together of their dep- uties to lay the groundwork. (The last two meetings of the Foreign Ministers Council - in Moscow, March 10 to April 25, 1947, and in London, Nov. 25 to Dec. 15, 1947-ended in a dead- lock on peace treaties for Ger- many and Austria.) Dewey Plan To Widen DP Act Rejected WASHINGTON, Aug. 6-()P)- Republican Presidential nominee Thomas E. Dewey got his first "no" from Capitol Hill today when a Senate sub-committee turned down his request to liberalize the Displaced Persons Bill at the special session. Sen. Revercomb (Rep., W. Va.) said Dewey asked revision of the law, which has been criticized by a number of Republicans and Demcrats on the ground that it discriminates against many Jews and Catholics. In Pawling, N.Y., James Hag- erty, Dewey's press secretary, said there was no comment on Rever- comb's statement. Revercomb. chairman of the Judiciary subcommittee, said "1 emphatically deny" that the bill is discriminantory. Revercomb added that the issue cannot be '~"dealt with in haste or under pressure" and should be explored at the hearings at the regular Congressional session next year. Fourteen Michigan Students Prepare For National Congress of NSA Group Fourteen Michigan students will represent the University at the first Congress of the National Stu- dent Association to be held at the University of Wisconsin, August 23-28. They will meet with over 600 other students who represent nearly 750,000 students in the 250 member colleges and universities throughout the country. Heading the delegation will be Tom Walsh, chairman of the Student Legislature's NSA Com- mittee last year, and Harvey Weis- berg, NSA regional chairman for the state of Michigan. Solves Problems Other delegates are Gellert Seel, Blair Moody, Norris Domangue, Dick Hooker, and Arlyn Rosen, Roma Lipsky, Marvin Failer, El- liott Charlip, Dorrianne Zipper- stein, Donald Calhoun, Marshall Lewis and Lou Weisberg are the alternate delegates. Designed to aid stuczent govern- ing bodies in solving problems on Official Says U.S. Sent Reds Atomic Metal Uranium Shipped As Late as 1945 WASHINGTON, Aug. 6-()P)- The United States shipped Russia a "significant" amount of una- nium metal-the base stuff of atomic bombs-as late as 1945, Rep. McDowell (Rep., Pa.) told the House today. He said it followed up shipments of 2,720 pounds of uranium com- pounds in 1943, when Russia was asking for the rare material by the ton. McDowell is a member of the House Committee on Un-Ameri- can Activities which has been conducting a series of sensational hearings into tales of communist spying in wartime Washington. Secret Rendevous The committee took a breather today, but did so with a flourish. Acting chairman Mundt (Rep., S.D.) said a picked group from the committee had been dispatched to a secretnrendezvous with a mys- tery witness. The point of contact was not disclosed. Senate investigators, who have been conducting a parallel in- quiry into the alleged spy ring, shut down their hearings, too, after a brief morning session. Chairman Ferguson (Rep., Mich.) complained- that an order from President Truman has caused 'the withholding of loyalty files they need to check on charges of com- munist infiltration into the gov- ernment. McDowell first told the Un- Amea ican Activities Committee abouturanium shipments yester- day, saying that a total of 1,300 pounds of compounds of the radio- active element had been shipped to the Soviets in 1943. 'To Appease Them' The actual uranium metal went in 1945, he said, declaring it was sent to the Soviets "to appease them." He told reporters he "un- derstands" the amount was some 25 pounds. McDowell told reporters later that Russia had asked for the uranium compounds to use for medical purposes and experiments in physics. While Russia was suf- fering heavy war casualties at the time, McDowell said he thought the Soviets really wanted the ma- terial for atomic research and to get a line on what this country was doing. He asserted that Russia ob- tained uranium "as a result of pressure of the highest kind." He added that his information is based on the etstimony of more than 30 persons, presumably heard in secret sessions. Soviets Urge East Control - Of All Danube BELGRADE, Yugoslavia, Aug. 6--(P)-Russia asked the Danube Conference today to brush aside American proposals and concen- trate instead on a Soviet plan to place the river under the exclu- sive domination of Eastern Eu- rope's Communist states. In making thi move Soviet Dep- uty Foreign Minister Andrei Vish- insky also rejected a British pro- posal that the International Court at the Hague be asked to deter- mine the present validity of pre- vious Danube agreements. Soviet Majority With the Communist states in the majority and voting as a bloc, the acceptance of the Russian plan was regarded as certain. The test will come tomorrow on the question of adopting a working draft for a new Danube Conven- tion to replace the 1921 Paris ac- cord. The United States, with British and French support, is advocating the creation of an 11-member Danube Control Board which would include representatives of the three major Western Powers, Austria and eventually Germany. Westerners Excluded Under the Soviet plan the West- ern Powers would be excluded from the board. The American plan also would have navigation of the Danube free and open to the commercial vessels and persons of all nations on a footing of equality. Meat Boycott Plan Sum ested for City The war against meat prices be- ing waged by housewives in scat- tered areas of the United States opened yesterday in Ann Arbor with announcement of a week- long boycott for next week. The plan, which would result in no business for local butchers from August 9 through August 16, was proposed by Mrs. Rhea Kish, 701 Mt. Pleasant St., who is executive secretary of the Washtenaw Coun- ty Progressives for Wallace. Several women groups are con- sidering support of the boycott with some suggesting delay to a later date when the drive can be organized more completely. Similar campaigns, with a view to cutting meat prices, are now underway in Dallas, Texas, and seVeral other large cities. Not Available OTTAWA, Ont., Aug. 68-(/P -- Prime Minister W. L. MacKenzie King told the Liberal Party con- vention today he would not be drafted. their campuses, the NSA congress will include flexible workshops on such national problems as eco- nomic aid to students, discrimina- tion, cultural activities, relief drives on campuses, and travel and reconstruction abroad. Student, faculty and business experts will be available for consultation. Workshop reports will serve as the basis of NSA's activities during the coming year. Twenty Michigan students are spending the summer in Europe in travel, study, or work-camp projects sponsored by the NSA. Two Seats Established last summer as the national organization represent- ing college and university student bodies, NSA has been awarded one of the two student seats on the United States Commission for UNESCO. Campus NSA activities include co-sponsorship with the Ann Ar- bor Junior Chamber of Commerce of International Week which in- cluded a mock-UN assembly last spring, introduction of a foreign student speakers bureau and an international correspondence ex- change, and participation in a state-wide government clinic with 18 other Michigan schools. Michigan delegates will distrib- ute information about the Uni- versity's Phoenix Project as well as present reports on the "student experts" orientation program and faculty grading system inaugurat- ed by the Student Legislature. Russians Hint Allies Violate Air Corridor BERLIN, Aug. 6-(/P)-The of- ficial Soviet News Agency charged tonight that British and American airplanes violated flight regula- tions 62 times in five days and hinted that planes committing violations can be forced to land. This was the first time since the start of the big Anglo-Ameri- can aerial supply operation into Soviet-blockaded Berlin that the Russians have mentioned the pos- sibility of forcing planes down. Previously, the Russian-con- trolled press had talked of de- claring closed one or two of the three air corridors to Berlin from western Germany. The official Russian agency ANB said there are specific regu- lations for forcing down planes which fly over unauthorized areas. The agency said the 62 viola- tions occurred between July 31 and Aug. 4, and consisted of low- level flights over Soviet airports and'towns. On the currency front, western occupation authorities announced that attempts to reach satisfac- tory arrangements for the release of blocked east-mark accounts "have now been brought to noth- ing." ~Spy Givenl Gale - Muid WASHINGTON, Aug. 6 - Rep. Mundt (Rep, S.D. said to- night that William W. Remington, of the Commerce Department, who has been accused of supplying in- formation to a Russian spy net- work, "has been removed from his job." Mundt said on a radio program that this is one useful result that has come from Congressional in- vestigation of Soviet espionage ac- tivities. He said that previously Remington had been on vacation and on leave from his Commerce Department position but has been removed from the job since the hearings began. Secretary of Commerce Charles Sawyer has announced that Rem- ington, who was in the office of international trade, has been place on "indefinite leave" until the question of his associations has been cleared up. A spokesman for t department said tonight that was still the situation, that Remington had not been "fired." Mundt is acting chairman of the House Un-American Activities Committee, which has been con- ducting one ohase of the spv in- Congress Pans Own Legislation, Def ieessidnt Anti-Inflation, Housing Bills Are Readied for Last Session Passage WASHINGTON, Aug. 6-(/P)--Congress defied President Truman tonight by preparing to pass its own anti-inflation and housing bills tomorrow and then go home. With GOP leade,:s in firm control, the legislature paid no atten- tion to Mr. Truman's demand that it stop concocting "feeble compro- mises" and adopt his cost-of-living and housing programs. The Senate passed a home-building bill minus the slum clearance and low-rent housing subsidies the administration asked. Leaders expected House approval tomorrow. The Senate decided to vote at 2 p m.. tomorrow on the GOP anti - inflation bill, already * * * FATAL TRAILER TRUCK PLUNGE-Two Detroit men were killed August 5 when a trailer truck in which they were riding (bottom) crashed through a guard rail of the east approach of the MacArthur Bridge on the Illinois side of the Mississippi River at East St. Louis, Ill. CHUMP LOSES OUT: Political Dynasty of Memphis Crumbles in Stunning Defeat NASHVILLE, Tenn., Aug. 6- (/)-The potent E. H. Crump po- litical dynasty of Memphis and a lesser Democratic organization long allied with it in Tennessee went down in stunning defeat to- day as the final ballots were counted from yesterday's violence- punctuated elections. The landslide which engulfed the Crump forces was such as Crump himself had buried his op- position without setback in' 20 years. Crump's choice for the state's two top, nominations - for U.S. senator and for governor-were soundiy whipped. Only the Tenth Crump's choice for governor, in- cumbent Jim McCord, seeking a third two-year term, carried only the tenth (Shelby County-Mem- phis) district and the first district in ;republican East Tennessee. His senatorial candidate, John A. Mitchell carried only his home district, the fourth in middle Ten- nessee, and the tenth. The state has 10 districts. Victors in the senatorial and gubernatorial contests were Estes Kefauver, veteran of 10 years in the lower House of Congress, and Gordon Browning. Kefativer Nominated Kefauver was nominated to the Senate seat now held by Tom Stewart, who sought reelection. Browning was nominated for the goveinor's seat he won for one term in 1937. Browning won his previous race with a Crump support but broke with him and became his bitter political enemy. He pitched his campaign on a "Down With One- Man Rule" slogan. McCord conceded his defeat to- day as did Stewart. Crump made no statement. Stewart was an- other one-time ally of Crump but was dropped by the Memphis po- litico in this campaign. Means Election Democratic nomination in Ten- nessee usually means election. But Roy Acuff, nominated for govei nor in yesterday's Republi- can primary, and Carroll Reece, former GOP national chairman, nominated for the Senate, said they'd make it a contest in the November general election. The biggest surprise of yester- day's results was the vote piled up in Memphis by Kefauver. Hereto- fore a Crump opponent could count his vote there in the hun- dreds or low thousands. Out of 11 of Shelby's 126 pre- cincts, Kefauver polled 21,181 votes. Browning didn't fare as well there, but he amassed a heavy vote elsewhere in the state. While unofficial tabulations told a story of the Crump organi- zation's thrashing in the statewide Democratic primary, the National Guard moved into Benton in southeast Tennessee to quell con- tinuing election strife which has left two dead and five wounded following a Polk county general election. * * * 'Guards Quell. Election R iot. T ennessee Flares Up Over Election Strife BENTON, Tenn., Aug. 6-W)P- National Guardsmen with bayo- nets rolled into this gun-bristling southeastern Tennessee county seat today to quell continuing election strife which has left two reported dead and five wounded. The troopers came at the direc- tion of Gov. Jim McCord as ten- sion remained high in a county general election dispute which flared up yesterday. They were preceded a few min- utes by a second ambush shooting within 24 hours. The first ended in the death of one man and the wounding of another. In subse- quent gunplay another man was slain and four persons wounded. Today's ambush attack was di- recte3 at a heavily armed motor- cade bringing a disputed election box from nearby Copperhill to :Menton. The driver of a car at which a single shot was fired was cut by glass fragments. The gunplay apparently was touched off by the election and tenseness engendered by it, but no official spokesman has yet openly blamed the disorder on political strife Undertaker H. E. Brewer said four other persons were wounded in election-night shootings. Sigler Will Speak Here Michigan's Gov. Kim Sigler will speak here Aug. 16, climaxing Washtenaw County's Rededica- tion Week. Sigler's speech will keynote "Civic Organizations Day" which will also feature a parade, barbe- cue and civic program. The governor will speak at Ferry Field. passed by the House. It is de- signed to restore wartime curbs on installment buying, and to restrict bank credit. Democrats, in a last-ditch and probably futile effort, will try to substitute the Truman program of rationing and wage - control powers. If all goes according to GOP plan, the extra session the Presi- dent called will be over late to-.F morrow afternoon, and the legis- lators will be on their way home,t probably to be followed by new denunciations from the Whitee House. A preview of one reply the Re-I publicans will make in the coming campaign wars was given by1 Senator Taft of Ohio, Republi- can leader.t He told the Senate many per- sons have expressed the opinion1 that if Congress goes too far in applying the economic brakes, a dangerous deflation may re- sult. Senate passage of the housing bill came after a fight which split Republican ranks. President Truman had asked for action on slum clearace, public- owned low rent homes, aid for rural homes. These provisions are contained in the Taft - Ellender - Wagner housing bill, Sen. McCarthy (Rep., Wis.) worked up a compromise bill that contained many of the provisions of the T-E-W bill, but ignored government subsidized projects. In a surprise move yesterday, the Senate Banking Committee decided to disregard McCarthy's compromise measure and gaffer, instead, the T-E-W bill. Argu- ment was bitter and heated over this decision, with Sen. Tobey Rep.. N.H.) chairman of the banking committee, champion- ing the T-E-W bill. But the Senate today overrode its banking committee and voted 48 to 36 to substitute McCarthy's measure for the T-E-W bill. Ap- proval of the substitute came on a voice vote later. 'Senator Taft, one of the au- thors of the T-E-W bill, advocat- ed passage of the compromise, saying the other and more com- prehensive measure could wait for the regular session in January. Opera Tickets Still Available Seats for this afternoon's spe- cial matinee performance of the double opera bill are still avail- able, Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre officials announced yesterday. Tickets for "La Serva Padrona" and "Down in the Valley," which will be broadcast over a national hook-up during this afternoon's performance, sell for $1.50, $1.20 and $.90. They may be obtained at the Lydia Mendelssohn box of- fice. Performance will begin at 2:15 p.m. Nation-wide attention has been attracted by the all-student opera bill. The National Broadcasting Company's presentation of Kurt Weill's "Down in the Valley" marks its radio premiere. McGrath Puts Dewey on Spot Urges Direct Action In Anti-Inflation Fight WASHINGTON, Aug. 6-()- Republican Presidential Nominee Thomas E. Dewey was challenged tonight to use his influence to get Congress to pass a "strong" cost-of-living bill or "surrender any moral right to speak about high prices during the campaign." The challenge came from Sen. McGrath (Dem., R.I.), chairman of the Democratic National Com- mittee. McGrath said that reports from Pawling, N.Y., where Dewey is "as- siduously saying nothing" indi- cate that the GOP candidate de- sires to make inflation an issue in the coming campaign. "This amounts to a proposal to debate the issue of who failed to lock the stable door after the horse was gone. It is still not too late to do something about infla- tion," McGrath said in a state- ment. He charged that the Republican Party is to blame for today's dan- gerously high 'cost of living, but added: "That might be forgiven by some voters if Governor Dewey honestly admits the Republican mistakes of the past and forces constructive and workable legis- lation out of this Congress at this special session." But his continued silence, said McGrath, may turn out to be "the most expensive silence in Amer- ican history." Indicted Reds Reelected by CP Convention NEW YORK, Aug. 6--(M-- American Communists today re- elected to high party posts all 12 leaders indicted on charges of ad- vocating the overthrow of the U.S. government. They also announced officially their support of Henry A. Wallace for President. A 3,000-word platform, adopted at the final session of the party's 14th annual convention, called on all Americans "who hate Fascism to defend the rights of Commu- nists," and lauded Russia as the world's "strongest bulwark for peace." The platform, which announced support of Wallace instead of a Presidential candidate of their own, said the Communists would back the Progressive Party with- out seeking any "special position" in it. In announcing the reelection of William Z. Foster as national chairman as well as the reelection of the 11 others as members of the party's national committee, the convention asked Americans "to help explode the myth that Communists are foreign agents or advocate force and violence." The indictments againstFoster and the 11 others, returned two weeks ago by a Federal Grand .Jury, charged them with advocat- ing and teaching the overthrow of the U.S. government by force and violence. All now are free on bail. Reelected as general secretary of the Party was Eugene V. Dennie. World News At A Glance By The Associated Press NANKING, Aug 6-Official Chinese government reports today said 3,500 persons were drowned and 400,000 made homeless by the flooding Yellow River in northern Nonan province. Such preliminary reports frequently exagerate casualties but the Water Conservatory Ministry said officials on the spot described the flood as "the worst in a hundred years." * * * * SAN ANTONIO, Tex., Aug. 6-Four Air Force fliers were killed when two training planes crashed in the air and plummeted to the earth north of here today. . Therfour were on a routine training flight from Randolph Field here. * * * * WASHINGTON, Aug. 6-Retail food prices are likely to go still higher during the next few months, the Agriculture Department said today. RECORD NUMBER: Electrocardiogram iAids Heart Station By JOHN NEUFELD I raph i c Di a osis, which form erly ducted the strenuous six day nro-