DEMOCRATIC DILEMMA Se Page Krg, r Datiti CLOUDY, Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVIII, No. 179 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1948 PRICE FIVE CENTI Tito Slapped By Russians For Defiane Albania Dismisses Yugoslav Ultimatum LONDON, Wednesday, July 7- (P) - Premier-Marshal Tito's Yugoslav Communists got twc hard answers early today to thei defiance of the nine-nation Com- munist International Information ~' =Bureau (Cominform). Russia's Communist Party said i ,' it has rejected an invitation tc send a delegation to the Yugoslav Communist Congress opening in Belgrade July 21. The announce- m, ent was made here just before midnight through the Soviet News Agency Tass and the Moscow ra- dio. SAn hour later, Tass reported ' little Albania defied Yugoslav warnings that she must resume economic relations with her bigger neighbor or face the consequences. O utside Family The Yugoslav Communist Party placed itself 'outside the family of Communist Parties," the Russian Communique said, by its refusal to attend a Communist International Information Bureau meeting in Romania last month. At that meeting, other members of the' nine-national Cominform dis- cussed Tito's alleged deviations from the Marxist line. The central committee of the Russian Communist Party, which Stalin has served as general sec- retary since 1922, thus repeated in almost identical words a charge in the original Cominform blast at Tito. The Russians implied that the situation remains the same-the Yugoslav Communists have not repented of their "Trotskyist" ac- tions charged by the Cominform and, therefore, still are not wel- come back into the Communist fold. Tirana Dispatch The Tass dispatch !rom Tirana, capital of Albania, said the Alban- ians were taking "strong meas- ures" to guard their frontiers with Yugoslavi and Greece against "hostile elements," The Cominform's original blast against Tito and the Yugoslav Communist Party said the Yugo- slays, by their actions, had placed themselves "outside the family of the brotherly Communist Parties." The Cominform called on the "healthy forces" within the Yugo- slav party to force party leaders to mend their ways. If this fails, the Cominform said, the leaders should be replaced. Council. Acts On Ar11 Arbor y. The city council moved to help eliminate the local housing short- age and then took action that may lead to a restriction of tempo- rary housing facilities. An ordinance requiring the posting of a bond to cover costs a: of public improvements (water, pavement) in undeveloped subdi- vision areas before such additions could be made was amended to allow the council to waive the bond requirement when it felt it expedient. The passage virtually assured. that work would begin on the construction of more than 80 homes in the Arbor View Subdi- vision. Officials of the Home Realty Co., owners of the project, had protested that the unamended ordinance required an outlay of too much of the company's operat- ' ing capital. Eventually the project is expect- ed to include more than 300 homes. An ordinance to cease issuance of licenses for trailer homes and require the removal of all trailer dwellings by Oct. 1 passed a first reading. Final action is expected in' August. The University trailer camp will be unaffected. Disregarding the camp, there are 52 licensed trailer homes in Ann Arbor, according to Dr. J. A. Wessinger, city health of- icer. Directory Sales In Third Editioii Eisenhower, Douglas Are Nanmed To Stop Truman By The Associated Press A last ditch stop-Truman movement drove grimly ahead last night in the hope that General Dwight D. Eisenhower can be drafted for the Democratic presidential nomination despite his refusal to take it. New attention was thrown on the name of Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas as a possible nominee with the same aim of side- tracking the President's ambitions for election. In Massachusetts, all delegates to next week's nominating con- vention were urged to support Douglas. Letters were sent them by a committee headed by former U. S. Rep. Thomas H. Eliot. Eliot said Douglas had not authorized the action. Douglas' name will be put before the convention, asserted Leon C. Henderson, chairman of Americans for Democratic Action. Hen- derson said in a statement that ADA still hopes Eisenhower can be persuaded to run. In Illinois, an unofficial survey among members of the 60-Vote * * * delegation indicated Mr. 'Truman Western Nations Address Kremlin Allies Confer on American Support For Newly-Created European Union WASHINGTON, July 6-(I)-The United States, Britain and France today called on the Russian government itself to lift the block- ade of Berlin. They warned the Kremlin that the Western powers take an ex- 'remely serious view of the German crisis. At the same time the Western nations began a series of confer- ences designed to produce a formula for American military support to the Western European Union. The double-punch technique employed by Secretary of State Marshall in the two latest moves in the cold war possibly was arranged to impress this upon the Soviets:d * * the Western powers are determin- ed not to back down in Berlin or j j anywhere else but rather toget _about the job of organizing their "' ni Telegram Sent by Club in Ann Arbor The Democrats for Douglas Club Sof Ann Arboruhas sent a letter to SPresident Truman requesting he withdraw his candidacy for the Democratic nomination. The letter was signed by Everett Reimer, chairman of the group . It stated that the President had inherited one of the most difficult and trying jobs that ever fell to the lot of any man, but that de- spite his heroic efforts, "confi- dence in his Administration has been withdrawn by the American people." Miracle Needed "Barring miracles, it seems cer- tain that should you seek election to the presidency in November, the Democratic Party would be de- feated," the letter said. The note claimed that a Demo- cratic defeat would be a serious blow to both the party and the common people of the nation. The President vas told that the people "want most an opportunity to continue the Roosevelt tradi- tion." "You have it in your power to make a decision that will go down in history as an act of unpar- alleled self-sacrifice and states- manship," the letter added. Asked to Withdraw "With the greatest respect for your position and your record, we ask that you withdraw your can- didacy," it said. Nowhere in the note was Su- preme Court Justice William O. Douglas' name mentioned. Only by inference was he suggested as an alternate candidate. Elsewhere in the Ann Arbor po- litical scene, Leslie A. Wikel, Ann Arbor pharmacist, announced his candidacy for the Michigan State Senate from the First District. Mr. Wikel will run on the Dem- ocratic ticket. He has been en-a dorsed by the Washtenaw and thet Pontiac Democratic clubs. Veteran Candidate At present, he is Washtenaw County coroner and was State Di-r rector of Drugs and Drugstores in 1941-42. During World War II, Mr. Wikel commandedthe 114ths Company of the Michigan Statet Troops. He made his bid for political office because he felt that a bus- inessman is needed in the Senatec to cope with "the multitude ofc governmental activities and com-a plex financial problems" which the state has to deal with. Mr. Wikel is' married and has two children. ''had gained strength after the lat- est Eisenhower disavowal of polit- ical ambitions, while some pro- Eisenhower delegates indicated a leaning to Douglas. Pro-Truman Illinois leaders ; discounted the Douglas talk then. One stop-Truman leader, Wil- liam Ritchie, Nebraska State Democratic Chairman, said he will suggest Senator O'Mahoney of Wyoming for the Presidential nomination. O'Mahoney is a' can- didate for the Vice ,Presidential nomination and a friend of Mr. Truman. Although pre-convention cau- cuses still were scheduled by anti- Truman leaders, the President's backers exultantly viewed the Eisenhower statement as the clincher for Mr. Truman's nomi- nation on the first ballot. While the Democrats wrangled over their presidential choice, Thomas E. Dewey, the Republi- can nominee, planned an invasion of the South. A spokesman said Dewey will make speeches in North Carolina and Maryland at unannounced dates. Visits to Indiana and Flat Head Lake in Montana also are planned. Eisenhower's "No!" was sub- jected to a close between-the-lines study by those who seek to draft him, looking for loopholes. He said he couldn't take the nomination, They hoped, how- ever, that he wouldn't refuse to run if chosen by the convention opening Monday. James Roosevelt, California State Chairman and son of the late President Franklin D. Roose- velt, declared the Democrats should nominate Eisenhower as a "national candidate." But other politicians were freely predicting a first ballot victory for President Truman. AVCTo Hol Ini tia.lMee ting Group Will Discuss Organization's Aims The campus chapter of the American Veterans Committee will hold its first meeting of the summer session at 7:30 p.m. today in Rm. 305 of the Michigan Union. Nancy Bailey Rickert, director of occupational therapy at the Veterans' Rehabilitation Center, will speak on "Occupational Ther- apy and Emotional Rehabilita- tion." Following the lecture, members and guests will participate in a group discussion on the purposes of the AVC. Parliamentary proce- dure will be abandoned in favor of a new psychological technique in group discussion, it was an- nounced. This will be the first meeting of the group to employ the experimental technique. FIREMAN SEARCHES WRECKAGE OF CRASHED SWEDISH AIRLINE- Fireman searches through a portion of the tangled wreckage of a Swedish airliner in wooded area near Northolt Air- port, London, after it collided with an RAF transport and crashed (July 4). Portion of tail assembly with company's identifying marks is visible. All aboard both planes were killed. Bernadotte Peace Proposals CAIRO, July 6--4/P)--The Israeli government turned down Count Folke Bernadotte's Palestine peace proposals today. He promptly announced he will continue peace talks even if fight- ing resumes. The United Nations mediator made this statement on arriving from Tel Aviv, where he was asked by the Israeli government to "re- * * * Palestinet Fch Blocks Haifa IEL AVIV, Israel, July 6 /P). The main TIel Aviv-h aifa highway was blocked tonight by a heavy battle between Jewish and Arab The clash ccursed as Count Folke Bern<-lo tte traveled from Tel Aviv to Cairo in an attempt to extend the uneasy Palestine truce., Few details of the fighting 10 miles south of Haifa were avail- able here. Two United States Ma- rines driving United Nations truce team trucks were turned back by Arabs who fired on them for 40 minutes before they waved a white flag to end the shooting. MVarinxes Alttacked Private Charle Phalern, 19, of Bluefield, W. Va., a nd PErivate Lewis Taylor, 1,9, of Jackson, Miss, said they were forced to pull their truekstao a ditch and crawl for cover under rifle and machzineguzn fire from Arabs dominating the road between Tireh and Jara. This occurired about noon. There was no official indicationr' how seriously Jewish authorities here regarded the highway clash. Telephone lines between the two cities were cut William K. McC'lure, Pathe News cameraman who drove from Haifa to Tel Aviv late today was fired on by Arabs about 20 miles south of Haif a. Arab Bullet Phalen, whose white-painted UN truck was hit by an Arab bullet, said he saw more than 100 armed Arabs on both sides of the main road "We'd been told by a Jewih military policeman the road was clear, but when we got about 75 yards from a bus, two trucks and a car burning on the road, the Arabs opened up," Phaen told newsmen "Taylor and I drove our trucks into a ditch and jumped for cover, but heavy firing continued for 40 m inutes.," Phalen said the firing died down and he waved a white flag which had been mounted on the truck, Most Arabs who approached wore no kind of uniform, he add- ed. Israeli Communique An Israeli communique said to- night three Jews were wounded by Arab rifle and machinegun fire from Ein hazal and Jaba. It said "the Arab fire continued until silenced by a Jewish armored car." It indicated the action was continuing and said "Israeli armed forces are taking appropriate ac- tion ." The communique described the t wa villarcs na "Arah nrkt an consider" his plan for ending Arab-Jewish warfare. In Tel Aviv Bernadotte received from Israeli foreign minister Moshe Shertok a 1,000-word reply to the mediator's proposal to turn Jerusalem over to Arab rule, make Haifa a free port and regulate im- migr'ation. Deeply Wounded' The reply said the Israeli lead- ers were deeply wounded b the Jerusalem suggestion and ex- pressed emphatic opposition to any restriction on immigration. It said Bernadotte's proposals "appear to ignore" the United Na- tions partition decision and add- ed: "It is indeed the conviction of the provisional government that the territorial provisions affecting the Jewish state now stand in rieed of improvement in view both of the perils revealed by Arab aggression and the results achieved by Israel in repelling this aggression," Doors Still Open At a Tel Aviv conference Berna- dotte said he did not know wheth- er the Jews and Arabs would agree to extend the Holy Land truce but added: "I have a feeling the doors are not closed." Explaining why he 'suggested that Jerusalem be demilitarized under a United Nations guard, he said: "If war would start again I am afraid holy places would be dlestroayed." The four-week truce ends Fri- day. Replies Expected 2Bernadotte said he plans to fly back to Tel Aviv tomorrow to re- ceive the Jewish reply to his truce extension proposal. In Tel Aviv, a government spokesman said the Israeli cabinet will hold a special meeting tonight or tomorrow to discuss the proposal. An Egyptian cabinet source said last night that a .majority of Arab leaders oppose an extension. The chiefs of staff of the Arab armies were summoned to a m.eting here today. Employc Hurt Howard P. l-inson, emnploye of the Cushing Motor Sales, 514 E. Washington, was injured late last night when gasoline in the com- pany garage ignited. Hinson, who was welding the gas tank of a vehicle received back injuries and face lacerations while escaping from the car when a sudden burst of flame enveloped it from beneath. Firemen arriveda and extinguished the blaze in five minutes. Company employes said the fire might have been caused by failure own strength without further de- Coal l iners layo take a personal role in the new developments, Marshall de- U t layed until tomorrow a scheduled Stay ,ut AskI ~ nnstchdrd ' physical examination at the Ar- my's Walter Reed Hospital and For Contract came to his State pepartment of- fice today. His decision to do this evidently ProductiOn of Steel followed a final agreement among Skids Id'1l the United States, Britain and mmeiaey France that, since the efforts of the three Western powers to get PITTSBURGH, July 6--(P)-~ the Berlin blockade lifted by ac- Protesting lack of a contract, 40.- tion in Berlin itself had failed, a 000 coal miners employed at steel- direct approach to Moscow had company-owned pits stayed away to be made. , from work today. The three governments Steel production started an im- agreed that they would send mediate skid. separate but similar notes to An additional 45,000 miners Moscow. This allowed the failed to show up at commercial French, if they wished, to soft- mines in West Virginia and West- en the wording of their declara- ern Pennsylvania, but their exact tion-and the United States to status was not immediately made take as tough a position as it clear. Elsewhere commercial pro- desired. duction was near normal, Marshall summoned Soviet captive Miners ambassador Alexander S. Pan- T e captiversine°.were idlein yushkin to his office at 11 Thve catie meswere id in, o'clock (EDT) this morning. five sta.te&:--Penznsylvania, 'West 'anyuashkin, juast back from a Virginia, Alabama., Kentucky, and weeknmd in the ccuntry, sent Utah. Steel firms refused to sign word that he would be unable to 4 contract with them because of a get there until 11:30. le was es- union shop demand. corted into the office by State The majority of the nation's Department counsellor Charles 400,000 bituminous miners are E. Bohlen, who speaks Russian employed by commercial pits, and is one of MVarshall's top ex- whose coal goes to homes and in- perts on the USSR. dustries other than steel. Ending Meanwhile the lobby of the ex- their annual 10-day vacation, the ecutive offices on the fifth floor of bulk of them renewed work under the air-conditioned State Depart- a new contract granting a $1-per- ment building became a busy day pay boost and doubling to 20 place. The British ambassador, Sir cents their welfare fund royalty Oliver Franks, French envoy Hen- on a ton of coal. ri Bonnet, and representatives of Commzercial Miners Belgium, the N etherlands and Thirty-five thousand commner- Canada streamed into the office cial miners failed to show up in of Undersecretary n State Lovett. West Virginia, but they were des- The Panyushkin conference cribed as merely slow in starting lasted only 14 minutes. When the after a vacation, ambassador came out he would ____._______ tell newsmen only that he had re- ceived a note from Marshall and that he did not know what was in Czecns Cheer hhddnona it. He said that Marshall had not discussed the Berlin situation with Eduard en him. Later, press officer Lincoln White announced that Panyush- PR 7E, Czechoslovakiza, July kin "was given a note regarding 6-i'-Former President Eduard the situation in Berlin." White Benes was cheered today by 80,000 said Marshall told him the note persons marching through Prague I would be kept secret "until the in the Sokol Congress parade. Soviet government had a reason- 1n te SkolCongessparde, able period of time" to study the There were no cheers for his note arnd make its reoly" Communist successor, President The meeting of the Canadian Element Gottwald. and Western European ambass- The paraders also shouted slo- adors with Lovett lasted 80 min- gans for Yugoslavia, Premier Mar- utes. An official announcement shal Tito, Russia, Premier Stalin said that the talks beginning and the United States. Scores of day were an "informal and ex- small paper American flags ap- planatory exchange of views peared in the parade, carried by concerning problems of common individuals. They drew cheers interest in relation to the Sen- along the route, ate resolution of June 11, 1948." The Sokol is a national cul- Press officer White said the tural and physical training organ- meetings are expected to continue ization. It is not political but it for some time and no information has had a reputation for being will be given but about them until anti-Communist. The scale of to- decisions are reached. Both of to- day's cheers for Benes and the day's developments, therefore, openness with which they were had a delayed reaction element so voiced gave the Sokol demonstra- :far as the public is concerned. tion a political tinge that it has What actually is going on behind i .3. ~ To Oust Allies British Office Denies GivingInformation PARIS, July 6-(IP)-Evidence of a Moscow-inspired plot to force the United States, France and Britain out of Berlin was reported by the French Foreign Ministry today. The reported plot first was dis- closed through the publication in Le Figaro, conservative Parisian morning paper, of a purported se- cret document sent by the central committee of the German Com- munist Party to the Berlin cells of the movement. British Denial A spokesman for the Qua D'Orsay said his government had received confirmation of the Communist plot from the British. I'he British in London disclaimed giving the French any note on the affair. In the newspaper account, the move to oust the Westerners wa to begin with a break-down of public services; continue with street riots between Communists and the German police; and end with the Soviet army moving in to protect the western occupation forces by corralling them in a special reservation, Conununist Demonstrations The newspaper document said Communists should demonstrate for a unified government. It added it must be assumed there will be numerous dead and wounded when the German police inter- vene. Soviet forces then would ap- pear, it said, and a provisional government set up at a mass meeting of workers would declare a state of general public crisis. All this would take place only in case of increased tension between Russia and the west, it said. Order Note Destroyed The note ended with instruc- tions that it be destroyed. It was reported to have been turned over to the Western allies by a member of one of the Communist cells in Berlin. Announcement of the plot caused a stir in French political and diplomatic circles. A govern- ment source said the French army believed it had sufficient forces in its sector in Berlin to deal with any disorders. * * * Russians Stop Truck Exports From Berlin BERLIN, Juy 6-(AP)-The Rus- sians stopped the truck export of food and other essential comnod- ities to Western Berlin from the Russian sector today, Western-li- censed newspapers reported. This action appa'rently steered the Berlin crisis toward a climax. The Russians, in another of their long series of protests, charged the Americans with vio- lating flying safety rules. The Soviet-licensed news agency ADN said a new protest was sent to American authorities by the Russian section of 'the Berlin air center. "The Americans by their unilateral violation of rules for control of flying traffic," the pro- test said, "take full responsibility World News A t A Glance By The Associated Press ISTANBUL, Turkey, July 6-Acting on urgent orders. American warships sailed out of Istanbul and Naples harbors under forced draft today with their destination a mystery. * * * * MONTREIAUX Switterland, July 6-A deadlock between Communist and anti-Communist delegates marked the end of the second assembly of the World Jewish Congress today. * * * * NEW YORK, July 6-The bodies of 4,300 American war dead are scheduled to arrive Friday from European battlefields aboard the U. S. Army transport Oglethorpe Victory. * * * * ORIZABA, Mex., July 6-General Alejo Gonzalez Gonzalez said tonight all 16 persons aboard a wrecked U. s. plane on Ora- zaba Peak are dead * * . . to drain completely the gas tank. never had before. the scenes remalns to be disclosed. EUROPEAN ECONOMIC RECOVERY: German66 Isu adT eov~ o Russia must forget Communist control and exploitation of Ger- many if there is ever to be any settlement of the German issue, Dr. Edward S. Mason, dean of the to exploit the nation economically by collecting more than ten bil- lions in war reparations-which would mean that the United Russians are convinced that the spread of Communism In Europe is atyan end and they wont get everything they want without