THE LARGE UNIVERSITY See rage 2 1 Y Lwj 43rn1 Daii4A FAIR, 'WARMER Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LViii, No. 185 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, JULY 15, 1948 PRICE FIVE CENTS Soviets Offer To egotiate in Berlin Crisis Pres. Truman Chosen on irst Ballot , * * * Rea Explains SAC Ban of 'Students for Slosson' Victory Squelches Southerner's Revolt Asks Discussion Of Four Power Rule of Germany Russia Blames Current Situation on Violation of Quadrapartite Contr6l By The Associated Press LONDON, July 14-Russia said today it will negotiate with the Western Powers over the Berlin blockade only if the talks include the whole question of four power control over Germany. In a note to the United States made public by the Moscow radio, the Soviet Union blamed the current situation in Berlin on violations by the United States, France and Britain of four power agreements. The United States protested to Russia July 6 over the Soviet land blockade of Berlin. The Russian reply said the three Western Powers had broken a four power agreement for administration of Germany as a *n Associate Dean Walter Rea yes- terday issued a statement for the Student Affairs Committee out- V lining the committee's reason for denying recognition to the Stu- dents for Slosson club. ..."It is the opinion of the com-. mittee that the major party groups already have been rec- ognized on the campus, that these organizations are now ac- Jews Prepare Big Offensive Soviets Threaten UN Council Truce Plan CAIRO, July 14-)-A decisive battle for Jerusalem appeared to be shaping up today around La- trun where the Arabs have plugged Jewish supply roads to the Holy City. The Jews are pressing an of- fensive from the coastal plain in an effort to pry loose the Trans- Jordan Arab Legion's grip on the Latrun bottleneck. But Legion ar- tillery still dominates this area. A victory here would decide the success or failure of the siege of Jerusalem. In the Holy City itself, Arab Legion and Trans-Jordan tribal riflemen, supported by the Le- gion's heavy artillery, began a fight for Jewish-held Mount Zion, which is a threat to the Arab left flank. At Lake Success, Russia tonight suddenly objected to several key sections of the American proposal for ending the Palestine war. The Soviet stand threatened to delay or even kill the plan for the Security Council to issue a cease- fire order to the Jews and Arabs. If accepted, the Soviet counter- proposals would eliminate Count Folke Bernadotte from the picture. The United States resolution provides for tpe UN mediator to supervise a truce of unlimited du- ration and continue efforts at - 1 mediation. Russia moved to strike out all these sections. Gromyko accepted the sections of the resolution calling for a council order to the Jews and Arabs to stop fighting within three days. Failure to comply would open the way for invoking diplo- matic and economic sanctions or even the use of international mil- itary force. U. S. Deputy delegate Philip C. Jessup told reporters he is study- ing the developments. He said the United States might make some changes in wording but would not agree to dropping Bernadotte. Law Forum SSet TioOpen Three lectures will open the In- ternational Law Forum spon- sored by the law school today, in Hutchins Hall. Prof. Lawrence Preuss, of the political science department, will discuss "The Conflict Between In- ternational and Domestic Law," at 2:30 p m. Dr. Yuen-li Liang, former chair- man of the Security Council Com- mittee of Experts, will speak on "The Legal Status of the United Nations in the United States," at 4 p.m. Prof. Emeritus, James L. Brierly, of Oxford Univ ersity, will conclude the day's talks speaking on "The British Approach to International ,,Law," at 8 p.m. Lectures by Charles S. Rhyne and William W. Bishop, Jr., will continue the series tomorrow. Sigler Petitions For Second Term tively supporting their candi- dates for office and that addi- tional student political clubs would represent a duplication of existing effort. "Also by this action the com- mittee establishes a policy of not recognizing political clubs or organizations whose activities support or endorsement of in- dividual candidates, especially at state or local levels. "This decision of Student Af- fairs Committee in no way con'- stitutes a" reflectin upon any political candidate, nor does it suggest a desire to restrict the privilege of individual students to personally support their' choice of candidates." Meanwhile, Thomas Walsh, temporary chairman of the Stu- dents for Slosson, urged President Ruthven in a letter to ask the Student Affairs Committee to re- consider its action. Walsh pointed to President. Ruthven's "constant efforts to in- sure true liberal education in spite of adverse efforts" and termed the denial of recognition "an in- fringement of the rights of Uni- versity students to organize and engage freely in the legitimate discharge of their civic responsi- bilities." * * * SL Condemns PU' Action 0on _ SlossonClub The Summer Student Legisla- ture adopted a resolution de- nouncing the action of the Stud- ent Affairs Committee in denying recognition to the "Students for Slosson" club. In the meeting last night, Mar- shall Lewis moved that the com- mittee be condemned on the following grounds: "1. That one of the primary objectives of the educational in- stitution is to afford the student the opportunity to best prepare himself to accept the responsibil- ity of citizenship, and that only a positive effort to give the student access to.information is consistent with the aim of education. "2. That the University author- ities should give the student body credit for sufficient intelligence and maturity to digest and accept or reject any social or political principals which may be present- ed to it. "3. That if the students of this campus wish, on their initiative, to support any particular political candidate or platform not incon- sistent with the law of the land, they should not be denied access to those facilities which are in- tended for the use of the stud- ents." Two Dixie Delegations Walk Out In Rebellion Over Civil Rights Plank CONVENTION HALL, Philadelphia, July 15 - (/P) - Harry S. Truman was nominated for President early today by a Democratic Party facing its worst split since before the Civil War. The President won the nomination on the first ballot after one southern delegation and half of another one stormed out of the con- vention in rebellion against the 1948 platform endorsement of Mr. Truman's civil rights program. The official result of the balloting nominating President Truman was: President Truman 94712; Sen. Richard Russell of Georgia 263; Paul V. McNutt of Indiana /2; not voting 23. As the President made ready to accept the nomination in person, I Riots, Strikes Hit Italy After Red Wounded Togliatti's Condition SlightlyImproved ROME, July 14--()--A Sicilian law student shot and dangerously wounded Italy's top Communist Palmiro Toglitti today. Five persons wei'e killed in Communist-inspired rioting and a general strike was called in pro- test against the attempted assas- sination. Late tonight doctors said Togli- atti was slightly improved. He still is suffering shock from three gun- shot wounds received just before noon as he was leaving the Cham- ber of Deputies to buy ice cream. Italy was tense and civil strife swept through the land. Many citizens feared the shooting might give the extreme left a pretext to seize the power denied it in the April elections. DeGasperi Statement In Rome, De Gasperi, who hurried to Togliatti's side at the hospital, told newsmen: "It is the worst thing that could have happened." In Parliament, Communist Deputy Giancarlo Pajetta de- manded a vote of non-confidence tomorrow on De Gasperi's gov- ernment. The Communist Party of Russia said tonight it was "outraged" by the shooting of Communist Lead- er Palmiro Togliatti in Italy. Five Bullets Fired Police nabbed 25-year-old An- tonio Pallante, who fired five bullets at the Moscow-trained Communist leader. - Police quoted him as saying further that he could not, as an Italian, "tolerate" Togliatti's par- ticipation in meetings of the Com- inform, the Russian-led Commun- ist International Information Bureau. angry Dixie rebels called a con- vention of their own at Birming- ham, Ala., next Saturday-to dis- cuss forming a new party with an anti-Truman states rights candi- date. The President planned to spea as soon as the national ticket was CONVENTION HALL, Phila dephia, July 15- (P) - Sen. Alben W. Barkley of Kentucky was nominated by acclamation by the Democratic National Con- vention today as its i948 Vice- 'Preidential candidate. made complete with the nomina- tion of Sen. Alben W. Barkley of Kentucky for Vice-President. Mr. Truman romped home handily in his race for the nomi- nation. He got 947'/2 votes to 263 for Sen. Richard Russell of Geor- gia and one half of a vote for Paul V. McNutt, former governor of Indiana. The President won, but it was by no means unanimous. Whil some delegates voted against him in protest, others didn't vote at al Dixie Revolt Russell was thrust forward as a candidate in a final gesture of defiance by Dixie rebels agains; the President many of them now are cwvig to beat in the Novem ber election. McNutt got into thL edge of the picture the same way. Somr of the Souterners shout- ed in the conven ,ion: "Truma can'ti win.." How much luck he would have against Republican Thomas E. Dewey and Third Party contend- er Henry Wallace was something for all America to decide. One rebellious southerner, C. J. Bloch of Georgia, shouted to fellow delegates: "You know-and if you don't know you'll learn it now-the Democrats can't elect a President without the votes of the South." Dixie delegates, almost without exception, tossed their ballots to Russell in futile protest against Mr. Truman and his demands for Federal laws against lynching, poll taxes and racial discrimina- tion in jobs. Civil Rights Northerners used their heavy voting superiority in this conven- tion to write into the party plat- form only yesterday a strong and specific endorsement of Mr. Tru- man's civil rights stand. But ironically for the South, and its spectacular but losing battle, it was 13 of NorthrCarolina's 32 votes that pushed Mr. Truman be- yond the 618stotal he needed to win on the first ballot. The President himself had come up from Washington by special train, with Mrs. Truman and daughter Margaret. He came to the auditorium, but not to the stage. Friends of the President predict- ed he will call a special session of the 80th Congress and set July 26 as a probable date. Then came the Vice Presidential nominating. Wilson W. Wyatt, who used to be mayor of Louisville and Na- tional Housing Administrator, put up Sen. Barkley and went into a long speech. DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE-President Harry S. Truman, who inherited the world's toughest job upon the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt, was chosen on the first ballot by 947%! votes to carry the Democratic banner against Republican Thomas E. Dewey in the fall Presidential elections. ,' * * * Two States Walk Out as Dems ApproveStrong ightsPlank By DICK MALOY and convention session which precipi- JOHN CAMPBELL tated the walkout of two states. PHILADELPHIAy July 14--Lib- In a seething session which i- threatened to explode at any mo- eral forces in the Democratic ment, the delegates tossed out a Party squeezed through a strong watered down Civil Rights plat- Civil Rights program in a wlid form plank by a narrow 69-vote - - -- - -- margin and substituted a strongly worded document embodying Pres- GoVernm entident Truman's recommendations to the 80th Congress. The Michigan delegation solid- s UM Wly cast 42 votes for the Tru- man plank with Wolverine dele- gate Bob Siebert carrying the Suit dMichigan placard in a spontane- ous parade. PITTSBURGH, July 14-(-P)- Three Hour Session Coal flowed again from steel com- The vote came at the close of a pany-owned mines today as the Ifthree-hour session punctuated by governmep't withdrew its injunc- rebel yells, Northern demonstra- tion suit againstthe United Mine tions and incessant calls for order Workers in the captive contract by Chairman Sam Rayburn. WcaerWsinteopn. cnrat About half of the Alabama dele- case at Washington b n gation walked out of Convention Captive miners, who began a Hall in protest of the Civil Rights work stoppage July 6 for lack of plank after the opening of the a contract, resumed work upon the second session. They had planned strength of yesterday's contract to withdraw at the end of the af- signing, obtained through the in- ternoon session, but the meeting- sistance of Federal Judge TI-Alan was swiftly adjourned as the Ala- Goldborogd bama Chairman vainly sought In the capital, the jfudge today recognition from the floor. permitted the National Labor Re- High party leaders pressured lations Board to drop its injunc- the Alabama. group to stay during Dion proceedings in view of the the recess period, but they re- new contract. Operators of the mained adamant in their deter- captive, or steel company-owned, mination to leave. mines signed the agreement upon Mississippi Too the UMW's promise to modify its Virtually all of the Mississippi union shop clause should later delegation also walked out. Handy court rulings require it. Ellis, chairman of the Alabama The NLRB made it clear it was delegation, said that 13 6f the dropping the case reluctantly and Alabama's 26 delegates and 23 al- still regards the contract as illegal ternates were leaving along with because under the Taft-Hartley 30 Mississippians. Law a union shop clause cannot The new Civil Rights plank now be inserted without an NLRB elec- spells out a program of anti-lynch tion. This is not available to the laws, anti-poll tax legislation, a UMW at present, since its presi- fair employment practices law and dent, John L. Lewis, has not I an end to segregation in the armed signed a non-Communist affidavit, services. whole by proposing a separate < government for Germany. This referred to the action of the Western European Union in pav- ing the way for eventual self rule by Germans of the western zones. The Western Allies "thereby un- dermined also the legal basis on which rested their right to par- ticipate in the administration of Berlin," the note said. The Soviet government, it add- ed, is "striving for the speediest elimination of the difficulties" which led to the Berlin blockade and declared: "Moreover, if necessary, the So- viet government will not object to ensuring sufficient supplies for the whole of greater Berlin by its own means." The note was broadcast in Rus- sian and translated here by the Soviet monitor. It was a copy of the one delivered today to the U.S. State Department in Washington. Britain and France also received their replies today. The note to the United States said "the Soviet government must reject as altogether un- founded" contentions that cut- ting off surface communications between Berlin and the Western zones of Germany constitutes a violation of existing agreements relating to the administration of Berlin. It described these as "measures for restricting transport commun- ications" to protect the economy of the Soviet Zone from disor- ganization. Russia said the three Western Allies have failed to complete measures for the demilitarization of Germany as agreed, "and such an important center of German war industry as the Ruhr region has been removed from the con- trol of the four powers." The Western Allies, the note said, have disrupted four power decisions on reparations from the western zones. .."By separate actions of the governments of the U.S.A., Great Britain and France," the reply said, "quadrapartite con- trol machinery in Germany has been destroyed, as a result of which the control council has ceased to function."- Replying to the American pro- test that the United States occu- pies its sector of Berlin by right, deriving from the defeat and sur- render of Germany under four- power agreement, Russia said: "Thereby it is merely confirm- ing that the existence of the above mentioned right in relation to Berlin is bound up with the oblig- atory fulfillment by the powers occupying Germany and quadra- partite agreements concluded be- tween them in relation to Ger- many as a whole. Dr. James K. Pollock, chairman of the political science department and Special Government adviser, yesterday sounded a note of op- timism for the speedy recovery of Western Germany. But Dr. Pollock, who has re- turned from a seven-week tour of Germany where he was a special adviser to military governor Gen. Lucius D. Clay, predicated his op- timism with three conditions. These conditions are: 1. Resolution of the Berlin crisis. 2. Support of the recent cur- rency reform by increased pro- duction or current gains will be illusory. 3. Continued progress in the de- velopment of a western German governmental framework within which the entire economy of West- ern Germany can be guided and controlled. Germany 'Breathing This was Dr. Pollock's third trip to Germany as an adviser to Gen. Clay. He said it was "the first time since the occupation began three years ago that Ger- many seems to be breathing, not gasping." "I look forward to a progressive bettering of the economic situa- tion in Western Germany, depen- dent on the stated conditions," he said. He disclosed ,that the calorie in- take of the Germans has been upped in the Bizonal area from 1,550 calories a day to 1,750 result- ing in better nourishment and less worker fatigue. Minimum calorie requirements for good health are 2,200 per day, according to doctors. At one time during the occupation, the Ger- mans were receiving from 1,000 to 1,200. Other gains noted by Dr. Pollock were the record set last month in coal production in the Ruhr and the effects of the recent currency reform. "The devaluation of the Ger- man mark has given the German people new confidence and vir- tually wiped out the black mar- ket," he said. Pots and Pans "Pots and pans and other dur- able items suddenly appeared in the windows. Farmers also are no longer hoarding their goods, but bringing them to market." However, Dr. Pollock warned that a "hard" currency was of little value unless it was backed up by continued production. He said that an increased flow of goods was necessary to prevent inflation and to put Germany back in the export market. Political observers regard the absence of German exports as a vital factor in the general disrup- tion of Europe's economy. During Dr, Pollock's stay in Germany he visited all sections of the three western zones where he noted that steps are being taken to coordinate th governments of Prof. Pollock Optimistic for West Germany Cites Conditions for Economic Recovery SWorld News At A Glance (By The Associated Press) DETROIT, July 14-The Ford, Motor Co. gave the CIO-United Auto Workers what it called its "final offer" tonight-a flat 13-cents an hour wage increase and other non-wage benefits. The union's last counter proposal had demanded a flat 14-cent an hour raise and other benefits boosting the demand to a total of 28 cents. * * * * SARNIA, Ont., July 14-Three striking seamen were shot late today during a pitched battle between crew members of the Cana- dian steamship Lethbridge and a boarding party of strikers who climbed aboard as the ship docked here. LANSING, July 14-Attorney General Eugene F. Black today came up with a new plan for financing his Genesee County and Detroit Auto Rackets Grand Juries. He asked Auditor General Murl K. Aten to encumber approxi- mately $20,000 of unexpended departmental salary funds for use by the grand juries. HOUGHTON. Mich.. .Tuly 14--Forest fires which have rared i DAILY COVERS CONVENTION:I Dems for Dougias soom Soon Over I By JOHN CAMPBELL (Daily Correspondent) PHILADELPHIA, July 14--The short-lived Douglas boom reached its height Sunday night when two youthful supporters succeeded in been Whispering "un-American" and pointing to Wallace head- quarters on Walnut Street. South Caroline's Governor ganized to set up any pre-conven- tion headquarters. No one seemed to care. At least one lady was weary of