; LY PRE-CONVENTION ISSUE Latest Deadline in the State :3a ti4 { 4 a + . " r, PARTLY CLOUDY, WARMER VOL. LXII, No. 180 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JULY 6, 1952 FOUR PAGES 1 * * 98- Years of Battle Mark GOP History By HARRY LUNN Ninety-eight years ago today a group of influential Michigan citizens gathered in a grove of oaks at Jackson to form a new "radi- cal" political party. With great fanfare and enthusiasm they named themselves the Republican Party and adopted resolutions pronouncing slavery a moral, social and political evil and renouncing all legislation that promoted its extension or continuance. * * * *, A COALITION of elements from the old Whig, Democratic, Free Boil and Know-Nothing parties, the Republicans quickly grew in power. In 1856 they entered the explorer James C. Fremont as a presidential candidate. Unfortunately for the Republicans Fremont was not a particularly auspicious or outstanding candidate and he lost. However, he polled enough votes to make the young party a definite threat to the incumbent Democrats who were having trouble determining a consistent stand on the slavery issue. Under Abraham Lincoln the Republicans were triumphantly carried into office in 1860 to begin a 24 year term of presidential power, broken only by the close election of Democrat Grover Cleveland in 1884. Ironically, in its early days the Party's strongest newspaper back- ing came from the Utopian Socialist Horace Greely and his "Tribune." Karl Marx was first known to "Tribune" readers as the paper's chief European correspondent. However, the party was primarily composed of the strong American middle-class of farmers and tradespeople. * * * * AFTER LINCOLN'S DEATH the party was taken over by a group of opinionated, vindictive congressmen who hated the South and intended to make it pay for the Civil War. When President Andrew Johnson, who succeeded Lincoln, tried to carry through Lincoln's rather humanitarian reconstruction program, they attempted to im- peach him, but failed in their effort by one vote. Eventually Johnson's term ran out and in 1868 the GOP won easily with the Civil War hero Ulysses S. Grant, who was returned again in 1872. Grant's two terms, marked by railroad finance frauds and stock-market scandals, came to be known as a low ebb in American political morality. Grant's hopes for a third term were frustrated by the nomination of Rutherford B. Hayes in 1876. Hayes' election was one of the most bitter ever waged, and he won it by a one vote margin only after the House of Representatives had granted him 20 contested electoral college votes. A period of extremely close political balance came in the eighties and nineties, and a series of political swings sent Democrat Grover Cleveland into the White House in 1884, Republican Benjamin Harri- son in 1888, Cleveland back again in 1892 and Republican McKinley in 1896. * * * * FROM THE 1896 ELECTION to 1912, the GOP once again held sway over the country although its inherent conservatism was tem- pered by Teddy Roosevelt's liberalism. Roosevelt took over after McKinley's assasination in 1901 and was elected on his own in 1904. In 1908, TR retired to hunt big game and left William Howard Taft in the White House. Teddy was not pleased by Taft's drift to extreme conservatism and returned in 1912 to try and seize the nomination. However, Taft had gained control over the Na- tional Committee in a manner comparable to his son's in the current campaign and he railroaded his nomination by seating over 200 of his own contested delegatese. TR ragingly formed the "Bull-Moose" Party and got more popu- lar votes than Taft, but their feud split the party and Woodrow Wilson won on the Democratic ticket. Wilson won again in 1916. With the cry of "Back to Normalcy" the Republicans caught the imagination of a war-weary nation in 1920 and elected Warren G. Harding. The subsequent 12 years of "normalcy" saw a national scandal in the Harding regime, election of the puritanical Coolidge in 1924 and the unimaginative Hoover in 1928 and a huge financial fire- works in 1929 which started the Great Depression. Today the GOP, out of office for 20 years, is getting hungry for the glory and patronage which goes with the presidential job. Some observers suggest that a loss in the fall election may mean the end of the party as a powerful force in American politics. The battle now is whether the "old-guard" or the younger faction will lead the group to glorious victory or ignominious defeat. This week will tell the tale, and perhaps foretell the demise of the Grand Old Party. Registration Tomorrow is the last day vot- ers may register for the Aug- ust 5 state primary, according to City Clerk Fred J. Looker. Voters can sign up from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. tomorrow inthe City Clerk's office in the City Hall. Besides state candidates, the August 5 ballot will include two city charter amendments. Cir- cuit Judge James R. Breakey will decide tomorrow whether the controversial amusement tax proposal will be on the bal- lot for the second time. Ann Arbor attorneys are at- tempting to dismiss the But- terfield Theaters, Inc., request for an injunction to prevent a vote on the tax proposal, which was defeated April 7. Row Stops Adj ourn-ment' Of Congress WASHINGTON- (P) - A hot Senate row over a mite House- opposed curb on spending for atomic weapons expansion held up adjournment of Congress last night. The Senate rejected the House- passed restriction and sent a 10 billion dollar supplemental ap- propriation bill back to confer- ence for a third time. Congress also took action on the following bills: 1. They completed action on a bill hiking social security in- surance and public assistance payments by about 540 million dollars a year. 2. They authorized more than two billion dollars' worth of mili- tary construction throughout the world next year after slicing 629 million from Presidential requests. 3. They completed action on a compromise bill guaranteeing that prices of six basic farm crops will be supported by the government at 90 per cent of parity during 1953 and 1954. 4. They wrapped up a 10 bil- lion dollar catch-all bill, provid- ing funds for foreign aid, expan- sion of the atomic energy weapons program, 5. They passed a 667 million dollar civil functions measure, to pay for scores of river, harbor and flood control projects. Secret Truce Talk Held, Adjourned MUNSAN, Sunday, July 6 --(P) -Allied and Communist truce negotiators held a 33-minute sec- ret session in Panmunjom today, then adjourned until tomorrow. Today's meeting was the third since the Allies agreed to off-the- record talks in hopes some agree- ment could be reached with the Reds on the question of prisoner exchange. 2000 Attend Prog ess ive Convention Dubois Attacks U.S. 'War Drive Editor's Note: David R. Luce, Grad., is a local delegate to the convention of the Progressive Party. By DAVID R. LUCE Special To The Daily CHICAGO-Two thousand Pro- gressive party delegates in a heat- struck Chicago auditorium yester- day made peace the central plank in the Progressives' platform. Michigan sent 125 delegates to the convention, including eight delegates, plus four observers, from the Ann Arbor area and the University. The delegates arrived Friday to hear Dr. W. E. Dubois, historian and writer, deliver a key- note address which attacked the current "war drive" as the pro- duct of deliberate misinformation and colonial imperialism, and put forward a program of expanded social security. YESTERDAY'S session, chaired by former Congressman Vito Mar- cantonio of New York, took up the task of drafting a platform. This was the chief business of the convention as local Progressive Party caucuses and the National Committee had already agreed on running Vincent Hallinan, West Coast lawyer, and Charlotta Bass, editor of a California newspaper, as candidates for President and Vice-President respectively. ,,. . (Candidates have been named prior to the convention in order to meet the requirements for getting the Progressive Party on the ballot in certain states.) The Progressives' platform made peace the central issue and de- clared that unqualified support for the Negro people's demand for full equality now, and the de- fense of the civil, liberties of all Americans, were essential parts of this fight for peace. * * * A VETERAN just returned from Korea asserted that "the men who are doing the fighting want no part of this war." The platform demanded an end to the war with "no ifs, ands, or buts." Specific resolutions supported the cause of the steelworkers and organized labor, and detailed a program for ensuring security and full employ- ment. Later in the afternoon the convention officially nominated Hallinan and Bass as the Pro- gressive Party's candidates. Upon Vincent Hallinan's nom- ination the convention hall be- came a flood of cheering banner- waving delegates; only the police- men in the auditorium stood aloof from the general enthusiasm. Mrs. Hallinan delivered the ac- ceptance speech for her husband. Hallinan is currently in jail on contempt-of-court charges result- ing from his defense of Harry Bridges in the latter's recent trial. Both Determined To Get GOP Nod Senator's Total Reaches 550; General Claims 427 Delegates By The Associated Press Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower and Sen. Robert A. Taft stormed into Chicago yesterday for their toe-to-toe struggle for the GOP Presidential nomination. The General ripped off a promise that "I will never give up" in the battle for the nomination in the Republican National Convention that opens tomorrow. The Ohio Senator pledged that he will go "all-out" himself for the big prize. * * ** BUT RANK AND FILE delegates who swarmed into town with the main combatants were wondering openly whether the bitterness -geneated in the Taft-Eisenhower _ 1.fl ldA ndn er chanes for I1 -Daily-Bruce Knoll ON TO CHICAGO: Local GOP Convention delegate Joseph C. Hooper and Mrs. Hooper board a train for Chicago and the Con- gress Hotel, where Michigan delegates will be accommodated dur- ing the whirlwind convention week. , * , '4 Hooper Sees Michigai Support for Eisenhower By VIRGINIA VOSS Michigan's 46-man Republican delegation has shown a definite leaning towards Eisenhower during the past two weeks, according to Joseph C. Hooper, Ann Arbor's sole delegate to the GOP Convention. Hooper based his statement on recent reports that several of the 32 uninstructed delegates intend to vote for Eisenhower because popu- lar support seems to lie with him. Prior to recent developments, Hooper said all indications were that the Michigan delegation was "evenly divided." - * *' * * A LOCAL ATTORNEY on his first trip to a National Convention, Hooper is one of the few com- Ana Pauker Discharged ByKremlin VIENNA, Austria-(R)--Rom- anian Foreign Minister Ana Pau- ker, the international darling of Communism and one of Stalin's former friends, has been shoved from her office in a tightening Soviet stranglehold over the Black Sea nation. Her ouster was formally an- nounced by Communist news agencies yesterday. Western dip- lomatic reports from Bucharest said the fact that she is a Jewess was a major factor in the inter- nal cut-throat rivalry for power that led to her purging. A Russian-indoctrinated offi- cial who formerly was Romanian ambassador to Moscow, was given her job to make sure Romania is kept under the Kremlin's heel. mitted Michigan delegates. His vote is pledged to Eisenhower. In the prediction line, Hooper feels that the GOP nomination will be made on the third bal- lot. "The first ballot won't make any definite disclosure," he said, "and the second would show the comparative strength of the fa- vorite son movements and the uninstructed vote." Because both Taft and Eisen- hower have more than 400 dele- gates, Hooper predicted there will be no possibility of a "dark-horse" candidate. "THE REPUBLICAN party is fortunate in having two capable candidates," Hooper commented, "If either one is nominated, the party is sure to come back into power." Hooper indicated that Ann Ar- bor interest in this week's conven- tion was high, judging from cor- respondence, phone calls and per- sonal comments he has received. He said he noticed at county and state conventions that women's groups and younger voters were taking an increasing interest in choosing delegates. U' Faculty Favors Ike Over Ta ft (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first of two articles on a Daily, poll on which faculty members were asked to indicate their Presidential nomi- nation choices. The following article shows Republican Presidential nom- ination preferences. The results of the Democratic nomination survey will be published July 20, prior to the Demo- cratic Convention.) University faculty members give Eisenhower a five to one edge over Taft for the Republican nomina- tion, according to a Daily poll completed yesterday. Of 179 summer session faculty members who fille out question- naires, more than 100 indicated Eisenhower was their choice for the GOP nomination. The Senator from Ohio, despite his substantial, delegate margin over Eisenhower, got 23 votes. Only one of the other GOP no- mination possibilities - Gov. Earl Warren of California - got a size- able showing, indicating that the faculty sees slim chance for a "dark horse" nominee. * * * . ALTHOUGH ONLY a third of the faculty responded, The Daily survey polled a representative sec- tion of the campus teaching staff. Schools and colleges covered were: the literary college, the engineering school, ths College of Architecture and Design, the public health school, the School of Music, the medical school, the School of Education, and ROTC. Answers to a party preference question indicated that faculty members on campus are over- whelmingly 'Republican. About 52 per cent showed GOP membership, while Democrats and indepen- dents picked up just under 20 per cent each. Approximately 7 per cent were undecided. , Dabbe Wou eiuig ~1lt; victory in November. Here and there, however, there was talk of efforts to restore some sort of harmony within the warring GOP. Arthur Sum- merfield, National Committee- man from Michigan, said in fact, that he and Gov. John S. Fine of Pennsylvania have been working in that direction. And Gov. Earl Warren of Cali- fornia, an outside contender for the Presidential nomination, rode in from the coast declaring him- self more interested in Republican harmony than in anything else. Another hopeful, former Gover- nor Harold E. Stassen of Minne- sota, wasn't so sure of his chances either. But he told a reporter he thinks both Eisenhower and taft may "fall short" of the nomina- tion on early ballots, leaving the way open for their supporters to flock to him. ON CONVENTION eve, the dele- gate scoreboard stood as follows Taft 530. Eisenhower 425. Others 131. Uncommitted 120. Included in the Taft total are the contested delegates awarded to Taft by the Republican Nation- al Committee in four days of hard- fought hearings run off this week. Taft won most of the disputes. * * * IN OTHER Chicago develop- ments yesterday, the following events stood out: 1. The Republican National Committee proposed new party rules designed to keep everyone except "legal and qualified" party members out of state and district conventions in future Presidential years. The recommendation followed closely the arguments by back- ers of Sen. Robert A. Taft in the bitter dispute this year.over the Texas delegation. 2. A proposed national defense platform plank stressing greatly increased air power today threat ened efforts of the Taft and Eisen- hower forces to reach agreement on a "harmony" stand on foreign relations. 3. Republicans from Dixieland are getting set for a possible fight on their party's convention, floor over a proposed Civil Rights plank promising federal efforts to end racial discrimination. 4. Michigan's 46 delegates to the convention were summoned yes- terday to a caucus this morning which will lead to the first test of strength between Eisenhower and Taft supporters in the state First Gothic Film To Be Presented Opening its second consecutive summer season, the Gothic Film Society will present a German sound film "Kameradschaft" at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Rackham Am- phitheatre, Memberships to the six-film _ I Late Scores AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit 5, St. Louis 0 Cleveland 3, Chicago 2 Washington 4, Boston 3 NATIONAL LEAGUE Brooklyn 5, Boston 3 St. Louis 5, Pittsburgh 0. 'U' Student Killed In Auto Accident William P. Snowball, '54PbH., was killed yesterday morning when his car rammed a tree on US-23, a quarter-mile west of Fen- ton. State Police said that Snowball, who lives in Flint, had been driv- ing alone in his car about 5:20 CHICAGO THREE-RING SPECTACLE BEGIN? Pre-Convention Excitement Shakes Windy City * * * * (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is an account of the Republican Convention as former Gargoyle editor, Peg Nimz, '53, sees it. Miss Nimz is a present mem- ber of the Board in Control of Student Publications.) By PEG NIMZ Special To The Daily Walked into Conrad Hilton Hotel about 1:30 p.m. on the fifth. Pushed past a maze of hot sweaty specimen of Republican human- ity and into the middle of an Eisenhower brass band which was run- ning around playing "Hail to the Victors." Impressed. *; * *; * THE LOBBY WAS a large mass of Taft supporters listening to or- gan music. Conservative. Fourteen elevators going up and down all the time. Everything very orderly. Like a high school fire drill. Uncovered a young Taft supporter sporting a Taft visor, a gi- gantic Taft button and various and assorted paraphernalia adver- tising the great man. Promptly talked him into handing said at- tachments over to me and hotfooted it up to Eisenhower head- By MIKE WOLFF Special To The Daily CHICAGOr - Pre-Republican convention excitement reached a fever pitch yesterday afternoon as Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower and his party arrived by special train to the cheers of nearly 5,000 enthus- iastic supporters at Chicago's Northwestern Station. With Sen. Taft and California's Gov. Earl Warren scheduled to arrive last night, the big convention city hotels were jam-packed with delegates. Sight-seers and throngs of banner-waving backers of the chief contenders and possible dark horses. NATIONAL Republican convention headquarters at the Conrad- Hilton hotel was the scene of colorful parades and songfests by cheering Taft, Ike and Stassen- enthusiasts. Throughout the day the demonstrators surged through the lobby waving pictures of Stassen, "Win with Warren" umbrellas and color photographs of Gen. Eisenhower. Supnorters of the various candidates circulated through the "~, ; ..~w '~