MY FIRST FOURTH OF JULY See Page 4 Ci r Sr t rn Latest Deadline in the State a t t4p -, ._. S A.. r A FAIR, LESS HUMID _ _ _ _ __ VOL. LIX, No. 158 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JULY 10, 1949 PRICE FIVE CENTS 1 1 Truman Asks Monopolies Investigation Congress Inquiry Ready To Start WASHINGTON -()-President Truman yesterday threw the re- sources of 12 government depart- ments and agencies behind a Con- gressional investigation of "mon- opoly power" in this country. Mr. Truman ordered the direc- tors to give the "fullest possible cooperation and assistance" to Chairman Celler (D-N.Y.) of the House Judiciary Committee which plans to open the inquiry tomor- row. * * * MR. TRUMAN told Celler in a letter that he is "whole-heartedly in favor" of the Committee's ob- jectives-to determine how and where the anti-trust laws need strengthening. "There is no more serious prob- lem affecting our country and its free institutions," the President said, "than the distortions and abuse of our economic system which result when unenlightened free enterprise turns to monop- Mr. Truman said that "this long-standing tendency toward economic concentration was ac- celerated" during the war with this result: "That to a greater extent than ever before, whole industries are dominated by one or a few large organizations which can resist' production in the interest of high- er profits and thus reduce employ- ment and purchasing power." MR. TRUMAN said he had ask- ed the following agency heads to do all possible to aid in the in- quiry: The Attorney General, the Sec- retaries of the Treasury, Defense, Agriculture, Interior and Com- merce; the Chairmen of the Fed- eral Reserve Board of Governors, Securities and Exchange, Inter- state Commerce, Federal Com- munications& and Federal . Power Commissions. Chiang Flies To Philippines For Meeting MANILA - (M)-Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek arrived in the Philippines today for secret con- ferences with President Elpidio Quirino, it was learned reliably. A Chinese Air Force plane brought him from Formosa to Basa Air Field, near Clark Field, north of Manila. FROM THERE, an informant said, he transferred to a Philip- pines Air Force plane for the short hop to Baguio, the mountain summer capital 150 miles north of Manila. 1. An Anti-Communist Pacific Alliance, such as Quirino several times has publicly proposed; and 2. Possible establishment by Chiang of a future home in exile in the Philippines. (This would imply that Chiang anticipates eventual loss of his present re- doubt, the island of Formosa, 250 miles north of the Philippines.) President Quirino, who is his own Foreign Secretary, arrived in Baguio yesterday by train. After his arrival, a spokesman said: "We have no definite knowl- edge of Chiang Kai-Shek's com- ing in response to our previous invitation for him to visit the Philippines." Jury Indicts Flooded Men BIRMINGHAM--(P)-A grand jury today charged 14 persons with taking part in hooded hoodlumism in the Birmingham area recently. The county jury returned 44 in- dictments after a special session called to investigate night riding activities. It recommended that the in- quiry be continued by a new jury to be organized Monday. ARRESTS OF those indicted .r1 he2 A ... ALGER HISS AND WIFE LEAVE COURT-Alger Hiss and his wife, Priscilla, are surrounded by group of spectators as they leave Federal Court at New York during jury deliberation of his perjury case. Later, Judge Kaufman dismissed deadlocked, jury unable to agree on verdict. New trial may take place in fall. * * * * Washington Committee Debates Hiss Reopening WASHINGTON-(P)-Split in advance, the House Un-American Activities Committee is heading into a showdown Tuesday over re- opening the Hiss-Chambers case. Chairman Wood (D-Ga.) is dead set against it. Three Republicans and one Democrat on the committee are for it-at least for prying into the case part way. * * * * PRIMARILY, THEY WANT to summon for questioning Mrs., Hede Massing, former wife of Communist leader Gerhart Eisler. Eisler skipped the country last May. * * Patterson DefendsJudge NEW YORK - P) -- Federal Judge Samuel H. Kaufman's han- dling of the Alger Hiss 'case was defended yesterday by Robert P. Patterson, former Secretary of War and one-time federal judge. Patterson said in a statement: "I have known Judge Kaufman for many years and esteem him high- ly. I have followed his career on the bench and I am convinced that he is an able and conscientious judge. * * * "HIS RULINGS in the Hiss trial and his charge to the jury, as re- ported in the public press, struck me as eminently fair. "It would be a blow to the in- dependence of the judiciary and to the sound administration of justice if a judge were to be in- vestigated by a committee of Con- gress whenever the committee didn't like the ruling made by the judge or did not agree with the outcome of the case tried by him. "The statements of Congressmen critical of the judge are therefore to be deplored." China Reds Free Consul SHANGHAI - (k') - U.S. Vice Consul William M. Olive, who was released yesterday by police of this Communist city after three days in jail, "was utterly, brutally beaten," Consul General John Ca- bot declared. The Communist Liberation Daily published a statement attributed to Olive that "I have not received any ill-treatment during my de- tention." * * * "ANY STATEMENT such as that which appeared in the Liberation Daily was obtained from him as a result of the barbarous treatment he received," Cabot asserted in a press conference late yesterday. It was learned only that he was fearful and highly nervous. Consul General John Cabot would not permit him to com- ment, saying it "might endanger him." It appeared that a State De- partment protest had some effect on the police attitude, which ap- peared to have undergone some yhange in the past 24 hours. The prosecution tried to put her on the stand in the New York perjury trial of Alger Hiss, former State Department offi- cial, after Hiss had testified that he did not know her. Federal Judge Samuel H. Kauf- man refused to let her testify. He did not explain but termed her testimony inadmissible. Hiss was charged with lying when he denied having known WhittakeriChambers, former Com- munist espionage agent, as late as 1938 and having given him secret documents. THE JURY failed to agree on a verdict but was eight to four for conviction. A new trial is planned. It was the un-American Activi- ties Committee which first broke the sensational Hiss - Chambers case. And now Rep. Francis Case R-S.D)t says he will insist at a meeting Tuesday that Mrs. Mas- sing be called for testimony. He said he and the Committee can do nothing about the per- jury charges against Hiss but that her testimony might be of value to the committee. He said he would favor keeping the testimony secret until after the new trial. Rep. Moulder (D- Mo.) told reporters he is for quiz- zing Mrs. Massing but isn't sure the testimony should remain sec- ret. An inquiry, he said, would be a "real public service." * * # REPRESENTATIVES Nixon (R- Calif.) and Vede (R-Ill.) are backing Case, too, on calling in Mrs Massing. Nixon says Congress also should look into the way Judge Kaufman conducted the Hiss trial. He says Kaufman was prejudiced against the prosecution. Other members of the tn-Amer- ican Activities Committee showed little inclination to go along with an investigation of Kaufman. A ustralians Seize Communist Files SYDNEY, Australia -OP)-Two truck loads of the Australian Com- munist Party's documents and files were seized by police today in a raid reported aimed at tracing labor union funds which might be used to aid striking coal miners. New Speech Department Play To Open 'Glass Menagerie Starts Wednesday Tennessee Williams' fragile and poignant "The Glass Menagerie" becomes the third in the summer series of dramatic productions of- fered by the Department of Speech next Wednesday, when the play goes on the Lydia Mendelssohn boards for a four-day run. Direction will be by Hugh Nor- ton, of the University speech de- partment. STARRING Lucille Waldorf as Amanda, the Mother, Williiams' first Broadway triumph follows production of "On Borrowed Time" and "Life With Father." The latter closed last night, play- ing to a sell-out house. Shirley Loeblich will play Amanda's daughter, the psycho- pathic Laura. The son's role will be taken by Jim Bob Stephenson, who won recent praise for his characterization of the unusual Mr. Grimes in "On Borrowed Time." The final part, that of the Gentleman Caller, will be taken by Ted Heusel, "On Borrowed Time's" convincing Dr. Evans. Opening March 31, 1945, on Broadway after a successful run in Chicago, "The Glass Menag- erie" became an immediate hit and brought fame to author Wil- liams. His success prompted one New York critic to say, "He is a composed, confident dreamer who is both observant and self-cen- tered, sympathetic and remote." SEMI - AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL, the play is based on conditions of Williams' life in St. Louis. It pre- ceded two other hits by the 35- year old playwright --"Streetcar Named Desire" and "Summer and Smoke." Awarded the New York Drama Critics Circle Award for the 1944-45 season, Williams' initial success was lauded for "its sen- sitive understanding of four troubled human beings." All four roles offer a challenge to the players in the speech de- partment's latest endeavor. Mother is both an amusing and pathetic figure, dominating, impoverished, and living on memories of a glor- ous South. * * * TOM, HER SON, is a shiftless -reamer, an inebriate and a rebel of his environment. Laura, a shy, tender, heart-broken cripple, is the ,enter of a hopeless love affair lanned by Amanda for her daugh- ter and the Gentleman Caller. Incidental music, written es- pecially for the play, is by Paul Bowles and arrangement is by Director Norton. Helen Forrest Lauterer, of the University of Oklahoma, is cos- tumerfor the production and Oren Parker, of the Yale Drama School, is set designer. Tickets for the four perform- ances will be on sale at the The- atre box office, in the Michigan League. Expert To Talk on Canadian Folklore Charles Marius Barbeau, Cana- dian ethnologist and student of folklore and art, will present three lectures here next week. He will speak on "The Folklore of French Canada" at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Rackham Am- phitheatre. This talk will be the fourth of a series on American- Canadian relations. French-Canadian folk songs will provide Barbeau with a topic on Thursday, when he speaks at 4:15 p.m. in the Kellogg Auditorium under the auspices of the School of Music. He will address Le Cercle Fran- cais Thursday night on "Les Arts traditionnales au Canada." An anthropologist at Ottawa's Canadian National Museum since 1912, Barbeau is also a member of the faculty of Laval University, at Quebec City. LONDON REDS IN ANTI-U.S. DEMONSTRATION -- Women Communists with placards protesting the presence of U.S. soldiers in England marched through the streets of London last week. Women's parade was part of demonstration in which several hundred Communists demanded that England accept "no more Yank dollars" and that she "send the Yanks home." Mounted police kept the marchers from approaching the U.S. embassy. Truman Will Paesent New Economic Suggestions WASHINGTON-(P)-Reports of mounting unemployment were sized up without alarm yesterday by a Congressional committee while President Truman finished writing out his prescription for a national economic tonic. The President will send his recommendations to Congress to- morrow in his mid-year economic report. It is being awaited with more than usual interest because of business slumps in some fields and the rise in the number of persons out of work. THOSE CONDITIONS, a Senate-House economic subcommittee conceded, are shortening the average work-week, forcing acceptance Planners Discuss Help for Britain U.S. Multi-Billion Dollar Loan Proposed as Stabilization Measure WASHINGTON-(A')-Highly placed American and British policy Manners, alarmed about Britain's economic crisis, yesterday were reported considering a variety of remedies so drastic they probably would require radical changes in the policies of both countries. Perhaps the most dramatic project under discussion from an American viewpoint is a proposal for a multi-billion dollar stabiliza- ion loan. Under it, the American government would undertake, by using the dollars when necessary to buy pounds, to support Britain's nagging currency at some new rate of exchange lower than the present $4.03 per pound. OFFICIALS CONCEDED that this would raise several problems )f its own. It would require devaluation of the pound which the Brit- ish government thus far has stout- of more part-time jobs, and wip- ing out most overtime pay. Even so, the subcommittee said, the best estimates of gov- ernment agencies show thatk while joblessness is increasing, it is "not now at unreasonably high levels for the country as a whole." In fact, the lawmakers added, figures compiled by the same agencies show that, despite the climb of unemployment, more persons are working than in any previous year except 1948. * * 4 THAT NATIONAL job picture was presented in a preliminary re- port by the economic subcommit- tee which soon will start what its chairman, Rep. Hart (D-N.J.), calls an "intensive investigation of the unemployment problem" Today's report simply summarized data already available from gov- ernment sources. Meanwhile, the CIO United Electrical Workers charged that the Administration is misrepre- senting the seriousness of the unemployment situation. The union sharply disputed the accuracy of census bureau figures estimating unemployment last month at 3,800,000. The UE said at least 5,400,000 were jobless at that time. "Administration officials ignore the fact that it is the more than 3,000,000 unemployed who make a recession, not the 59,000,000 em- ployed," theunion said in a state- ment. ANOTHER economic indicator: became available today from the agriculture department. It report- ed that American farmers had 10 percent fewer dollars to spend in the first half of 1949 than in the corresponding period of 1948. And it predicted a further decline of farm prices if production contin- ues large.! Those who help shape Adminis- tration policy anticipate that the President will outline a program designed to boost production and put a check rein on joblessness. They are predicting he will set a goal for the output of some $300,000,000,000 of goods and ser- vices a year-a level 18 per cent above the present rate. * * * Services See Employe Cut WASHINGTON - (P) - The Armed Forces are studying the feasibility of a drastic cut in the number of their civilian employes. While the survey so far appears to have produced no definite over- all figure, it was learned that there is a possibility it may run from 100,000 to 200,000. * * * SUCH A FIGURE would be the heaviest reduction in civilian em- ployment by the Armed Forces since the general reduction after the war. The total employed May 30 both at home and overseas was 857,365. An official reference to it was tucked away in testimony by De- fense Secretary Johnson before a Senate appropriations subcommit- tee considering the money bill for the military for the fiscal year which started July 1. Johnson told the committee that without hurting the combat effi- ,iency of the Army, Navy or Air Force, he thought about $1,000,- 300,000 could be saved by eliminat- ing wastage and duplication "and oy cutting down unnecessary civil- ian employment." To Give Collegium Musicum Concert The Collegium Musicum will present another program of Ren- aissance music at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Rackham Assembly Hall. The concert of 15th and 16th Century music will be under the direction of Prof. Louise Cuyler. A vocal ensemble will sing mad- rigals of Orlando di Lasso, Ciaches de Wert and Andrea Gabrieli. Samuel Durrance, baritone, will sing two >urcell songs. In addition, a brass ensemble will play compositions by Pezel, Holborne and Palestrina, a string ensemble will perform "Fancies with Ayres" by Jenkins, and harpsichord music by Bach, Cou- perin, Sweelinck and John Bull will be heard. ly resisted; Congressional approval of the stabilization fund, a move which many administration lead- ars consider politically impractical at present; and an unprecedented agreement for the United States and Britain to coordinate their fi- nancial policies. Despite all these problems, the stabilization idea has been dis- cussed as a possible line of at- tack on Britain's economic diffi- culties by Secretary of State Acheson's advisers and-by the British financial advisers who help form the policies of Sir Stafford Cripps. Inquiry behind the scenes shows that these official experts on both sides are concluding that no stop- gap measures can deal finally with Britain's long-range crisis, and that the Marshall Plan itself is not enough. NO RECOMMENDATIONS are expected to be arrived at in time for the present session of Con- gress-even if there was any dis- position on Capitol Hill to tackle such a great new foreign issue. There is a growing belief in both American and British government circles here that action, when and if taken, will have to come simul- taneously on several fronts and that this can only be arranged by top-level conferences. The point which both Amer- ican and British experts here emphasize in response to ques- tions is that Britain is living be- yond her means and cannot change the situation solely by increasing her dollar income, al- though that would be an enor- mous help. The Britishers particularly argue that the problem is much greater and involves the fact that Britain owes huge amounts of money to other sterling countries. Tied in with this is the fact that Britain is sending goods to Ger- many at the race of about $70,- 000,000 a year. Although this re- quires few or no dollars it is never- theless regarded here as a burden on Britain's economy. veterans Start Drive To Keep 52-20 Clause A group of veterans on campus are starting a drive for the re- tention of the 52-20 provision of the 0.I. Bill of Rights. They will meet at 7 p.m. at the Union and are inviting student organizations and individuals to join in the campaign to save 52- 20. * .* 52-20 IS THE FEATURE of the G.I. Bill which gives unemployedl veterans compensation of $20 a week for as much as one year. Un- less Congress extends it, veterans Governor To Speak Here Wednesday Gov. G. Mennen Williams will speak on "'he State Looks at Ed- ucation" at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Rackham Lecture Hall. The public address will climax a Placement and Guidance Con- ference sponsored by the Univer- sity's Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information. ACCORDING TO Bureau Di- rector T. Luther Purdom, college placement officials and business representatives from several mid- western states will participate in a day long program of workshops on technique of placement in business, industry and teaching, to be heldsWednesday. The workshops will meet from 10 a.m.. until noon and from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Business Ad- ministration Building in place of Purdom's summer, class in placement techniques. A special panel discussion on "Employment Opportunities for Women" will be held at 4:10 p.m. in the Rackham Lecture Hall. Par- ticipants will be Dora Heilman, county supervisor for the Bureau of, Social Aid at Saginaw; Olive Saunders, of the Chrysler Corp. personnel department in Detroit; and Harriet Russell, director of training for the Wurtzburg Co. of Grand Rapids. Johnson Sees N1o Danger in Atom .Pictures WASHINGTON-(P)-Secretary of Defense Johnson said today the publication of pictures of atomic energy facilities "caused no sig- nificant harm" to national secur- ity. Senator Hickenlooper (Rep., Iowa) retorted: "Just another ex- ample of minimizing vital secur- ity." * * * - JOHNSON added, however, that "some senior officers expressed deep concern "at the time the pho- tographs were published. And the Secretary said that the national military establish- ment he heads will in the fu- ture require military clearance prior to publication of pictures a of major atomic installations. He said arrangements have been made with the Atomic Energy Commission to insure such clearance. will be unable to get the money after July 23. "Only information and photo- So far, the AVC has pledged graphs which do not jeopardize se- its full support, and has, con- curity will be released in the fu- tacted local veterans' organiza- ture," Johnson said. tions, such as the town's AVC, the Legion and the VFW, withU the view of forming a coalition U O g Young Progressives have iills Russian also been active in an auxiliary canacity and have circulated ueti- 'DISSONANT, BUT NOT ATONAL': i ae regor By JOHN NEUFELD OTH T, is not forhiddin a nn the nro To Play Hi ndeiith Work tions. AVC Chairman John Sloss hopes that other student organizations will support the movement. Gov- ernor Williams has come out in favor of the proposed extension. FORMER AVC chairman Jack Geist, now a graduate student working on a research project, ad- FRANKFORT, Germany-)-- A U.S. Army officer on border patrol in the American Zone said today he killed a Russian soldier in a rifle duel at 30 feet. Lt. William C. Linderose, of Port Huron, Mich., said three Rus- sians "began shooting at me so I shot at them." rr--;A-_- 4-^t- ",n- Vv4 nw ER MUSIC to be heard on1 gram, which will take place i country. He spends most of his: time giving private lessons. music, not as dry counterpoint," he exnlained. "Hindemith is a It