NOTE OF OPTIMISM ;Y Lw41 Da ii4 CLOUDY WARMER See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVIH, No. 203 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, AUGUST 8, 1948 Con gress Ajourns; OK's AntiInfla PRICE FIVE CENTS ion Bill 4'. .4 y/ 9,000 Cram For Session's Final Exams Vets To Return For Post-Session More than 9,000 University stu- dents will wind up the summer session with final examinations i next week-and then head for a four week vacation before the opening of the fall semester Sept. " 21. Examinations are scheduled for Thursday and Friday. From Aug. 16 to Sept. 10, approximately 100 students, mostly veterans, are ex- pected to attend a post-summer session. The four-weeks course will offer three courses of three hours credit each and will be available under the GI Bill of Rights. Entering freshmen and transfer students will arrive in Ann Arbor Sept. 13 for the fall orientation program. Registration for all students will be held Sept. 15-16. Fall classes will be open Sept. 20. In the post-session, students will 4be allowed to take only one course. Wives of veterans may in on the 'courses without registration. Scheduled for the post session are modern economic society taught by William B. Palmer, nineteenth century Europe taught by Prof. Harry De Vries of Michi- gan State Teachers College; and modern social problems taught by Prof. Werner S. Landecker. Registration for these supple- mentary classes will be held Thursday and Friday of next week. Price To Head losson Group Professor To Start Speaking Campaign Hickman Price Jr., Kaiser- Frazer vice-president in charge of export was announced today as the chairman of the district "Slos- son for Congress" committee. Washtenaw CIO Council Presi- dent Kenneth Sisson is vice chair- man of the Slosson group with Prof. Robert C. Angell secretary, Neil Staebler, treasurer, and Tom Walsh, publicity director. Committees being formed in each of the four counties, which include representatives from pro- fessional, labor, business, farm, and minority groups will be named early next week, Price an- nounced. Prof Slosson will open a speak- ing campaign with an address at the Washtenaw Democratic Club's picnic next Sunday at 1 p.m. at the Dexter-Huron Park. The following week Slosson will speak at mass registration rallies in Jackson, Lenawee, Monroe and Washtenaw Counties, appearing here in Ann Arbor on August 20th. The Slosson Committee has set $10,000 campaign fund goal. "In this critical period in inter- national and domestic affairs, it is imperative that men of top cali- ber talent be sent to Congress to do our thinking and planning," Price declared. "Preston Slosson is one of these men. He has spent a lifetime studying world and national eco- nomic probltms. Seldom in the history of our Congressional Dis- trict," said Price, "has the elec- torate had the opportunity to sup- port a man of Slosson's stature." "Since Slosson's candidacy was announced last month, a host of support from Democrats, inde- pendents, and Republican voters alike has been received and ac- cepted," continued erice. Shugg Appointed To Atomic Group ' WASHINGTON, Aug. 7-(/P)- Carleton Shugg, now managing the Hanford, Wash., Atomic Plant, will become Deputy Gen- AND HE'S THE WINNER DOWN IN TENNESSEE-Rep. Estes Kefauver, a candidate for the nomination to the U.S. Senate, watches as his wife pins campaign button on Hollis Reid, one of the "Committee for Kefauver" election watchers guarding polling booths at Memphis, Tenn. Kefauver won the nomination, defeat- ing candidate sponsored by political leader E. H. Crump. MEAT BOYCOTT: Housewives Speek Attack On High Cost of Pork Chops CHICAGO, Aug. 7-(P)-Budg- et-harried housewives increased their buy-no-meat campaign over telephone wires today in the face of a government prediction that meat prices will go higher. The boycott plan, originating in Dallas, spread to such cities as Louisville, Salt Lake City, Kansas City, San Francisco, Indianapolis, 16 cities in Texas and half a dozen in Wisconsin. Theshousewives' crusade was aimed directly at one of two causes given by the department: record consumer buying power and a de- SL Asks Help In Circulating Ban Petitions Volunteers to help the Student Legislature circulate petitions dur- ing registration week were called for by Marshall Lewis who heads the SL drive to change the Uni- versity's political speakers' ban. The petitions will be used to substantiate the Student Legis- lature's resquest that the Regents authorize it to sponsor a series of political meetings this fall which would be open to the cam- pus. Circulation of the petitions dur- ing registration week is necessary because the Regents meet during the first week of school, Lewis ex- plained. Current Regents rulings limit attendance at political meetings to the members of the student group which sponsors the meeting. Dean Erich Walter of the Office of Student Affairs refused to per- mit the SL to circulate them dur- ing the summer session on the ground that many of the signers would not be here this fail. cline in the output of meats and other livestock products. Predict Price Advance Meanwhile the agriculture de- partment predicted that meat and other livestock prices will lead a retail food price advance in the next few months. In Indianapolis, however, an of- ficial of Kingan & Co., meat pack- ers, discounted the government prediction and said beef and pork prices would fall in September or October as farmers bring in stocl. And in Chicago, a spokesman for the major packers said that "although we have no crystal ball capable of forecasting future prices, more adequate meat sup- plies are expected this fall and winter, due to seasonably in- creased marketing of livestock. Prices then, as always, will be es- tablished by the overall demand of consumers." Phone Drive But the women who pay the grocery bills teamed for action. Ten thousand Dallas women promised to support the boycott idea, which started when 71-year- old Mrs. R. D. Vaughn, president of the Dallas women's chamber of commerce, took to the tele- phone. The idea spread across Texas, whene in 16 cities women agreed to stop buying meat on August 9. Some sales already have fallen off, but there has been no general reflection in prices to date. Otis Bryant, president of the Dallas independent grocers, told the women that poultry and pro- duce prices may shoot up as a re- sult of their drive. The Daily ceases publication for the summer session with this issue. Publication will be resumed at the beginning of the fall semester. West Awaits Resumption Of Russ Talks Expect Several Molotov Meetings MOSCOW, Aug. 7-(P)-Envoys of the three Western powers ex- pect a call from Soviet foreign minister V. M. Molotov tomorrow or Monday to resume negotiations to solve the East-West deadlock in Germany and perhaps all Eu- rope. After two lengthy meetings with the Russians-one Monday night with Prime Minister Stalin and another last night with Molotov- all or most of the issues between the four powers have been brought into the open and laid on the con- ference table. The present stage was de- scribed by an authoritative source here as a "negotiations period." (A British diplomatic source said in London the Western powers thus far have failed to agree with Russia on a broad basis for four-power talks on Germany. The informant said some progress was being made in the negotia- tions but Russia had raised objec- tions to "certain concrete pro- posals" made to Molotov last night.) The negotiations period as such may continue for some time. In other words, there may be several more meetings with Molotov before all four negotia- tors are ready to report back to Stalin. Atthis point, things are be- lieved to be proceeding all right. There have been a lot of frank ex- changes over the Berlin question and Germany. The three western envoys have been talking pretty bluntly tbout the Berlin blockade and the Soviet has been just as frank about allied plans for a Western German government, it was said. * * * Berlin Fears New Munich Socialist Paper Calls For Western Stand BERLIN, Aug. ?-(a-Concern was reported growing among Western Berliners tonight that a "new Munich" may be in the mak- ing in four-power negotiations on Germany taking place in Moscow. Calling for a firm Western stand against new demands by the Rus- sians, the Socialist newspaper Telegraf said the "brave attitude displayed by Berlin" under the So- viet blockade had "earned this city assurances of a free democratic life." Fears Compromise "Unfortunately," the newspaper said, "there is evidence today that, despite their sorry experiences since 1945, the democracies again are inclined to trust the promises of a totalitarian power. Anyone who believes that the differences between the democracies and Rus- sian totalitarianism can be re- solved merely on the German problem or the Berlin question is on the road to a new Munich." Socialist Otto Suhr, chairman of the Berlin City Council, told a rally of Berliners in the French sector that a "poor compromise must not be decided upon at the cost of us Berlin cellar-dwellers." Protest Slave Camps More than 1,000 Germans packed a Western Berlin audi- torium today to portest against what they termed "police state and concentration camp terror" in the Communist-ruled Russian oc- cupation zone of Germany. Several former inmates of Rus- sian zone camps said they esti- mated the total of those confined runs into "hundreds of thou- sands." They claimed conditions in some of the camps are as bad as those which the Nazis had run. The meeting was sponsored by the Democratic Youth Union of Berlin and had as its theme" sil- ence is suicide." Congress Box Score WASHINGTON, Aug. 7-(3)-Here's the score: Granted in Full: A $65,000,000 loan to the United Nations to finance construction of a permanent headquarters in New York. Granted in Part: Anti-inflation legislation-Congress voted authority to the federal reserve board to restrict installment credit and to tighten up on bank reserve requirements. A minor part of the broad anti-inflation powers asked by the President. Housing legislation-Congress approved a bill providing limited federal aid for low-cost housing and large rental projects, but lacking the subsidized public housing and slum clearance provisions of the Taft-Ellender-Wagner bill recommended by the President. Progress Reported: International wheat agreement-the Senate foreign relations committee approved the international wheat marketing agreement- but left it for the next Congress to act upon. Rejected or Ignored: Civil rights. The great bulk of the President's anti-inflation program, including revival of the excess profits tax, regulation of commodity speculation, stronger rent controls, stand-by rationing authority, price and wage controls, and authority to allocate scarce commodities. Federal aid to schools. Raise the minimum wage from 40 cents to 75 cents an hour. Increase social security benefits. Liberalize displaced persons act. Make appropriations for additional public power projects. Revise federal pay legislation. More money to administer housing laws. Buy automobiles for disabled veterans. Repeal a rider ousting two reclamation department officials. 'IMPEACHMENT' TALK: Ferguson Accuses Truman Of Concealing Public* Affairs 11 WASHINGTON, Aug. 7--()- Senator Ferguson spoke sternly of "impeachment" today in accusing President Truman of lowering "an iron curtain between Congress and the public business." His complaint was against the executive's refusal to let the law- makers have "loyalty" investiga- tion records of government work- ers. There was no comment forth- coming from the White House. In a speech prepared for the Senate, Ferguson declared: Threatens Impeachment "Congress is rapidly being pushed into the intolerable posi- tion of having either to legislate through a blind spot or compel the President to answer for his conduct in an impeachment pro- ceeding. "We do not want representa- tive government, reduced to such a ridiculous position." Ferguson is chairman of the Senate investigations subcommit- tee which closed its public hear- ings on the case of William W. Remington this week because, the committee said, Mr. Truman re- fused to turn over necessary rec- ords and information on Reming- ton. Remington Case Remington, 30, is a Commerce Department official. He has been suspended while inquiries are be- ing made into charges by Eliza- beth T. Bentley that he gave her wartime information for a Soviet spy ring. Ferguson said that as a senator, President Truman "had been in- tensely critical of this secrecy," Friends Don't Know Texan Minus Stetson A boy from Texas isn't interest- ed in a girl from Tennessee. At present he is more worried- $10 worth-in discovering the whereabouts of his two-gallon Stetson. The finder of the hat, which was lost August 4, in the neighborhood of the East Quadrangle, will be paid the $10 by Lee Hanson, Uni- versity student from Texas, who claimed the hat has "sentimental value." Without it, his friends don't even recognize him, according to reports. built up under President Roose- velt. Finds Change "But when he became Presi- dent," Ferguson continued, "he be- came the willing prisoner and mouthpiece of this power clique." Ferguson noted that Congress has the "final word" under the Constitution and added that if a President "carried the powers of his office to unconscionable ex- tremes, the Congress can dispose of him by impeachment proceed- ings." Koral Named Key Witness In SpyTrials WASHINGTON, Aug. 7-(P)- The House Un-American Activi- ties Committee revealed today that Alexander Koral is the mys- tery witness supposed to help crack the real story of a red spy network. But the committee was as mys- terious as ever who Koral is. Described as Key A subcommittee which hurried to New York yesterday to see the key witness questioned Koral last night. In Washington today, Rep. Mundt (Rep., S.D.), acting com- mittee chairman, told reporters: "The fellow they went up spe- cifically to see was Koral. He was supposed to lead to another wit- ness not yet mentioned." In New York, the subcommittee fired questions today at: Browder Talks Earl Browder, deposed head of the Communist party; Victor Perlo, accused of being leader of one group of government officials alleged to have slipped wartime secrets to Russian agents; Whit- taker Chambers, who has testified already that he was courier for a pre-war Communist underground in Washington of which, he said, Perlo was a member. Arrangements were under way to question both Koral and Perlo in public hearings heredMonday. The plans will be worked out to- morrow at a special Sunday ses- sion of the committee. The sub- committee is supposed to report then on its New York trip. v to Federal Reserve System. The Senate beat back by a 53 to 33 vote a Democratic attempt to re- vive rationing, price and wage control powers. The Truman plan to bring back the excess' profits tax wasn't even considered. Republicans said their housing bill would encourage the construc- tion of low-cost homes and rental housing" But it omitted the fed- eral subsidies for public housing and slum clearance that were fea- tures of the Taft-Ellender-Wagner bill endorsed by the President. Mr. Truman had his way without quibbling on only one major item. The lawmakers ap- proved a $65,000,000 interest- free loan to the United Nations for construction of permanent headquarters in New York. Until the last couple of days, two extracurricular developments stole the show from the actual lawmaking. One was a successful 5-day filibuster by Southern Dem- ocratic senators against the anti- poll tax bill. The other was a sen- sational series of hearings, before House and Senate Committees, on charges that Communist spies and sympathizers had wormed deep into the Federal Government. In its last long day, Congress cleared first the housing bill, then the anti-inflation measure. Senator Barkley (Dem., Ky.), President Truman's running mate in the fall campaign, pleaded for adoption of the White House anti- inflation program. He said a do- nothing policy would endanger America's economy and national security and impair the nation's foreign policy. Inaction on high prices, he declared, will cost the American people $10,000,000,000 in the next year. But Senator Taft of Ohio, the Republican policy chief, asserted bluntly: "Price controls won't work in America in peacetime." UAW Authorizes Ford Settlement DETROIT, Aug. 7-(P)-A new wage settlement with the Ford Motor Company has been ratified by approximately 75 per cent of the UAW-CIO locals, Ken Bannon, UAW Ford director, announced today. Among the latest to ratify the agreement was the Highland Park local 400. The agreement calls for a flat 13-cent hourly wage boost and in- cludes a new insurance plan. Afftected by the new contract are approximately 116,000 workers at 46 Ford plants in 25 states. The new rate would make the Ford hourly scales of $1.67 the highest among the major auto producers. TobinNamed To Secretary of Labor Post Senate Approval Blocked by Taft WASHINGTON, Aug. 7-(P)- President Truman nominated for- mer GovernorMaurice J. Tobin of Massachusetts to be Secretary of Labor tonight but Senator Taft (Rep., Ohio) blocked Senate con- firmation. However, legislators said Mr. Truman can give Tobin a recess appointment while Congress is in adjournment. They said Tobin then can serve and draw pay pending action at the next session of Congress. Boston Mayor Tobin, former democratic mayor of Boston as well as governor of the Bay State, would succeed the late Secretary Lewis B. Schwel- lenbach. Senator Barkley of Kentucky, the Democratic vice-presidential nominee, askedhfor Senate con- firmation tonight on the ground that, barring "extraordinary cir- cumstances, the President has the unquestioned right to choose members of his own Cabinet." Taft Objects Taft said there is no Senate rule which permits action on a Cabinet appointment before it has been examined by a committee. The Tobin nomnation came up after Senate committee had ended their meetings for the special session. Barkley replied that 'he wasn't seeking to invoke a rule, merely asking for a courtesy confirma- tion. Taft noted that the President can make a recess appointment Monday. Lost in the rush were some ap- pointments of Republicans, such as the choice of Warren R. Austin, former GOP Vermont senator, as chief of the American delegation the United Nations general as- sembly meeting in Paris next month. Israel Plans Immigration Prepared To Admit 100,000_Annually LAKE SUCCESS, Aug. 7-Wes)- The Israeli government said today it is prepared toadmit Jewish im- migrants at the rate of 10,000 annually. This statement appears in a re- port from Moshe Shapira, Israeli Minister of Immigration, which was circulated among United Na- tions delegations. Shapira reported 25,000 Jewish immigrants had entered Israel in the first nine weeks after the pro- visional government came into ex- istence May 15. The Israeli immigration pro- gram, Shapira said, will give pri- ority to Jews detained by the Brit- ish on Cyprus and to displaced persons still in camps in Europe. Legislators Block, Ignore, Rewrite Truman Program GOP Housing Bill Cuts Out Federal Subsidies, Slum Clearance Proposal WASHINGTON, Aug. 7-(M)-Congress wrote its own ticket today on anti-inflation and housing legislation, then slammed the door on the extra session called by President Truman. The House adjourned at 8:31 p.m., the Senate at 8:39 p.m. They had met July 26 and had been in session 11 working days. The adjournment was until December 31, with a provision that the session may be resumed earlier on call of the Republican leaders. With a few minor exceptions, the lawmakers rewrote, blocked, or just plain ignored the far-ranging program Mr. Truman pre- sented with an "urgent" label. The President's eight-point anti-inflation program emerged cut down to two: Revived curbs on installment buying and higher reserve requirements for banks belonging HEARTS AND FLOWERS: Botanist Reports True Love Rare Blossom in United States By KEN LOWE True love is almost non-existent in the United States, according to Dr. Acosta-Solis, research botanist from Ecuador who is just complet- ing two years of study at the Uni- versity.4 In a pamphlet entitled "My Two Year Stay in the United States," Dr. Solis claims that this condi- tion exists because "materialism has usurped fields of love, matri- mony and the home." Sloppy Dress Here Speaking of 'North American fessors in the northern hemisphere work diligently at their studies, in contradistinction with the prevail- ing trend in South America where "they usually engage in politics." U.S. Friend In spite of his occasionally caus- tic comments on North American customs, Dr. Solis has acquired a deep and sincere affection for this nation and intends to devote part of his busy day to promoting greater understanding between the United States and Ecuador when EUROPEAN OASIS: Switzerland Still Prosperous, Stable (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the last of a series of articles by two former Daily staff members touring Europe.) Rv ARCHIE PARSONS tions, clean streets, and flower- bedecked homes-as much a part of the beautiful scenery as her famca mmtins and i mint vil.. san state institutions. For the seventh year, this University is sponsoring the Summer School of Ernnean Studies a five-week