JL WITNESS - Former President Hoover testifies before Senate Armed Service Committee. Senate to Consider North Atlantic Pact ADMINISTRATION Jeaders are confident that the Senate even tually will ratify the North Atlantic treaty but long debate is expected once it reaches the Senate floor. The first step will be pub lic hearings, conducted by the Foreign Relations Committee. These hearings will give opportunity to supporters and critics of the pact outside of Congress to express. their views. In forwarding the pact to the en- te. Mr. Truman aked its approval s "only one step although a long one on the road to peace." He stressed the theme that neither this country nor any other natun can achieve peace independently. Lone Road Ahead "No single action, no matter how significant, will achieve peace," said the President. "We must continue to work patiently and carefully, advanc ing with practical, realistic steps in the light of circumstances and events as they occur." Without referring directly to Rus sia, the President declared that peo ple of the North Atlantic countries have seen solemn agreements broken, rights of smU nations destroyed and people of email nations deprived of freedom by terror and oppression. "They are resolved," said Mr. Tru man, "that their nations shall not, one by one, suffer the same fate." Actually there is a broad base of Senate support for the treaty. Last June the Senate approved the Van denberg resolution which favored this country's participation of regional se curity pacts within the framework of the United Nations charter. Cms Is Military Aid Focus t the debate will be on the cost of military aid to European mem bers. There is widespread agreement thai the arms project is essential if the pactritself is to have any lasting effect. Critics say the arms aid will run to billions of dollars but some experts counter that actual military supplies will be limited to whatever the Amer ican chiefs of staff declare to be sur plus. In Short Awarded: By the Soviet Council of Ministers, Stalin prizes for 1948 to Georgi Latyshev for atomic research" and to Sergei Vernon for experimen tation with cosmic rays. Celebrated: By President Truman, kit fourth anniversary as Chief Ex ecutive, by lunching with the entire Senate and Democratic and Republi can leaders of the House. Reported: By Marshall Plan officials, that ha western Europe except for the- smashed Ruhr steH production during the last quarter of 1948 was six per cent higher than in any prewar year. Reeupe rating: Jaroi V. Forrestal, farmer Secretary of Defense, in Beth esda Naval Hospital, from nervous exhaustion caused by overwork. Sidelights Britons have been warned to be o ike Imkout for "bminy grits," eiace- ueder the new EC A appropria tion IS per cent a mil earn shipped t Europe must be milled inte meal or grits. The English just daa't eat corn, except far a few eccentrics who buy rostitiefc eeas ence or twice ia sum aacr. Ttae British climate ia too celd to raise ausck f H. "Grits aren't as bad aa they eeund," comforts. The Lmndon Datiy Jfetvfd. "Americans down aauth wee it an ariace af pat-ridge ar chips (potatoes)." In Cranfordv N. J., a feed merchant pat dewn a $1,000 sidewalk in front af his stare. The township council passed an ordinance banning, display an sidewalks stretching; from c'qrb to etore. The feed merchant was-the only one wtt aueh sidewalk. Next day, the Saercnial rented- an air drill, took up has stew $1,000 improvement. Now it's business as usual with a aJepiay of plants, eeeds and fertilizer outside the window. In Bteomfleld, N. J., a driver ex plained why he left the scene of an accident it was one man against four ladies, each six feet tall or over. The other car held four members of the Amazon Club, uhch starts its mem bership at the six foot level. (All RtflhtJ Rrrve4, AP f,t-iitures .V. Ha COLLEGE RIOT-Police quell a picket ing alleged anti-Semitism and racial discrimination by two faculty m Here is one student in a wild melee surrounded by detective and Ing alleged anti-Semitism and racial People Tito, Bold & Defiant For some time the United States has been quietly easing restrictions on trade with Yugoslavia. No change in policy has been publicly announced but some . scarce American equip ment and machin ery which is denied other eastern Euro pean countries has been shipped to Yugoslavia with government ap proval. More will follow later if Marshal Tito maintains his independence from Moscow. Included in the shipments have been scarce oil drilling equipment for which Tito is in dire need. Last weekend in a major policy speech, the Yugoslav premier charted his course. It would be a crime against his socialist state, he declared, not to trade with the west on a business basis. Boldly defiant, Tito accused former comrades in Russia and the Comin form of trying to liquidate him by stirring up civil war. He decried their efforts as anti-Marxist and anti-Leninist defamation. It was Tito's first major address since New Year's Eve and one of the few he has made since last June when the Cominfot-m expelled him and his party on charges of nationalism and pursuing -anti-Soviet policies. Tito, resplendent in a braided blue uniform, spoke for two hours and 12 minutes to 2.500 delegates at the Third Congress of the People's Front. He was greeted by chants of "Tito Hero," "Tito, Hero;." He stressed the independent theme, declaring that Yugoslavia was not sailing in imperialist waters but building Socialism successfully and with assurance. Delegates passed a resolution con demning: the "campaign of lies and slander" directed at Tito and the Yugoslav government by the Comin form. A complete departure from tradi tion was the absence of huge pictures of Stalin from the stage decorations. Stalin's pictures have been disappear ing since the break with the Com inform. FINANCE: Airlines in the Red In the National Interest Why have the airlines been losing money at a time when almost every one etse has been prosperous? The sjuesrian was posed by Sen. Edwin Jaansen (D-Cole), ; chairman of the Seaate Commerce Committee studying, taaaces and operations of 1C of the' nafiena largest commercial air carriers. ' The government handed over 53 million dollars in etfbeidies to thee linea last year to get them put of the red about double the goverament stipend they received in 1947. Northwest's wefs WtMcM of y. II In 0 lajored. Initial a severaJ-aaitllon-dollar Seattle. Olysapia and Taeaaaa. The Sales area feU the tresaor bai very little damage was reported. It eaaae Jast as an "earth - ; oiH waa neder discussion in the senate aad a few after the leeltnesnan delecatiaa had asaod for eaaer- tency powers far the corernar la event mi flood ar earth aaae Resorts at the weekend ladieated total damage might reach $15.Qet,6. The tremor's Intensity was recorded by srismaTraphft anly 1 degree lew thaa the 'qaake which malted U a hatf-eillioa dollar lot. Sum Francisco 4S years aca. 1 4 . line at New York's City College, protest- discrimination by two faculty members. police. ft:' TFCd WCE) f fob TAXES: The Dispute GEN. OMAR N. BRADLEY, the Army's chief of staff, theo rized to Congress recently that if tnere should be another war in volving the United States there would be three phases of actual combat. These, he said, would be: 1. Defense of the homeland and a retaliatory air blow to cripple the enemy's industry and morale. 2. Continued strategic air bombard ment from advance bases, with the Navy keeping the sea lanes open for supplies. 3. An all-out land assault where the final decision would be made. "It would be tragic for our nation," said Gen. Bradley, "if when they rang the bell for the third round, the Army had to answer, 'Wait for two years and we'll coma out swinging.' " That's the kind of argument every able armed forces chief makes at ap propriations hearings. It packs terrific weight with Congressional commit tees, eager to prune military budgets yet wary of slashing too deep. The Other Side There is another and disputed part to the picture. Former President Herbert Hoover sketched one side of it for the Senate Armed Forces Com mittee last week and it was rebutted next day by Army Secretary Kenneth Royall. Mr. Hoover said the annual military burden on taxpayers has grown so great that, coupled with other govern ment spending, it seriously imperils national economy. The former President said there was "staggering waste" in military spending and declared it was "almost impossible" for Congressional com mittees to find out what is being done with the defense dollar. He spoke from a report prepared by a "task force" of the Hoover Commis sion on Reorganization of the Execu- Quotes San. Warren G. Magnuson CD Wash) parrying questions about his rumored impending mar riage to actress June Millarde: "I have no comment to maka about my private life or the private life of a charming lady." FraaJdia D. Beeseveit, Jr., whose wife, the former Ethel du Pont, arrived in Reno' to estab lish residence for divorce: "I never discuss my private life in public." Joseph J. O'Conneti. Jr., chairman of the Civil Aeronautics Board, ad mitted that substantial government sad wM be needed to help some air Hoes became economically sound. "BMt," be told the committee, "neither CAB nor the Reconstruction Finance Corporation favors a general bailing out of financially distressed carriers." O'Coaaell said CAB and RFC are preStr much in agreement an poncy for airline finance. The CAB believes RFC might loan up to 100 per cent on the value of new eoumnient, but RFC holds it is not legally paosible to loan ra than 60 to T per cent of value. Earthquako earthsjaakc ba eat serves as IIM a. sa-, bitnag Caere were t known dead aa a of daaaare slwlndtad, aot there loss reaardless. mosUv ia PROTEST Andrei A. Gromyko western powers with setting Listening (left) are John Foster I 'fMi1ifi I; r M' Milian, Yankr, N.Y., Ntrold ilalfmon CONSTANT SAP tive Branch of the Federal Govern ment. The task force chairman, Ferdinand Eberstadt,. New York banker, placed the money needlessly spent each year for defense at roughly one and one-half billion dollars. Army Secretary Kenneth Royall testified next day that the Hoover report was "totally incorrect." He charged that the military estab lishment could have saved up to one billion dollars last year but for un workable provisions in the present unification law. There was no doubt, he said, that the nation was less able to deal with an emergency now than before the law was passed. Mr. Hoover accused the armed forces of "padding" accounts and cited th Pull 'Em All Out, Sir? British dentists are pulling teeth and Ailing cavities by the stop-watch. It's a test to determine how much time they spend treating each patient and why dentists, under the new So cialized Health Program, are earning such high salaries. The Ministry of Health ordered the experiment. Five hundred dentists working under the health program are doing the timing. Another 50 den tists in private practice are filling out the same records as a check. They were chosen at random. Minister of Health Aneurin Sevan's calculations on the costs of "free" dentistry were thrown completely out of whack by the fat paychecks col lected by dentists. Bevan immediately cut in half all gross payments over 4.800 pounds ($19,200) a year "because of the urgency of the situation." Bevan fixed the rates at $2 for an extraction, $4 for a simple filling, and & for a complicated lllbag. He figured dentists cetdd work 33 ckairside hours a week and, at these rates, earn a gross annual Income of '$13,200. Many dentists, however, apparently work much faster than Bevan calcu lated. There is nothing m the law to pre vent a dentiot frera worfcrng. day and night. Soma apparently do. War Not Easy to Discuss A Swiss government spokesman predicts it will be unlikely that the Soviet Union and its satellites will take part in drafting a new conven tion far the protection of civilians in any future war. The Swiss government, which called an international conference in Geneva for April 21 to revise the Ge neva War Conventions, said it has received rejections from Yugoslavia, Poland and Czechoslovakia. Forty-eight nations have acceptfd. inc luding ail the western powers and tlw Scardirivian countrit-s. i (right), Russian delegate to the U.N., up military bases in Italy's prewar Dulles of the U.S. and Britain's Hector on Military examples of gross inefficiency and waste. He said the Air Force wanted to build 910 family homes in Alaska at a cost of $58,350 per house. In its budget requests for 1950, the Army wants funds to modernize 102 tanks it doesn't have, at a cost of $100,000 each, he said. The report brought to light a $30, 000,000 clerical error in a National Guard appropriation request for 69 155-miIlimoter howitzers. The cost of the guns was quoted at $39,000,000 but later it was discovered the figure "3" had been added through a mis take in typing. Other instances of extravagance or needless requests for funds cited by the report included: ZIPPERS: The Open & Shut Case The customs court in Washington has ruled that a zipper is not a ma chine and. thereby hangs a tale with mechanical teeth. Customs agents had classified some imported zippers as mere imported metal instead of imported machines. It meant more tariff for the govern ment. The importer objected to paying the higher rate. It took two judges seven pages to wrap up their decision estab lishing what a zipper is by defining what it isn't. Strategic Stopping the Leaks The government is trying to check mate the stealthy shipment of stra tegic materials to countries behind the Iron Osrtain. Last week in Houston. Tea cus toms agents seiaed a $150,000 ship meat of carbon black that had made a mysterious roond-about trip from Texas to Mexico and back astestsibly est route to Rotterdam, Holland. Carbon black gives long-lasting eexhtiea to rubber used for tires or industrial purposes and- is one of the items on the government list of goods denied Soviet Russia. Further investieetions are under way in other parts of tbe country, deana with other materials. The Commerce Department's Office of International Trade (OIT) has re voked some licenses for export of cer tain goods to Marshall plan countries because of suspicions that they were to be moved on to the Soviet bloc. One recent instance includes a ship ment of a rubber-treating chemical to Switzerland, which OIT feared would wind up in Poland. The Economic Cooperation Admin istration, handling Marshall plan aid, often does purchase carbon black (no longer in short supply in this country) for the Dutch. EC A. however, had nothing to do with the confiscated shipment. 1 e iBHBMeaBaBaoMWBHeevqBjHttoHeweM VJ':''-'ir '. i -i - v' ' 1 J. : ' ' i - 1-21 ' i -,' - "''"11"-' rrrr charges BONNIE PRINCE CHARLIE Princess Elizabeth, who wilt be 23 : next Thursday, poses smiling with her son for the first in- formal pictures since his birth five and one-half months ago. colonies. McNeil. W Budgets Svweufi, ftwrToJo Evening Ntwl BECOMING UNBEARABLE Air Force plans to build 828 houses on Guam at a cost of $48,000 each and 7.880 houses in the continental United States at $18,000 each. Pomt-by-Point Attack Royall said the Hoover 'Commission received a letter last month pointing out 10 errors in the task force report but they never were corrected. Royall made a point-by-point at tack on the task force report. He said the 102 tanks had been shifted to the Marine Corps after budget requests had gone in. He said the task force had been informed in plenty of time about the now-classic $30,000,000 typist's error but had ignored these and other mistakes in its "scoops to the press." Machine Age Confusing? Well, take a short ride on a tricycle. The judges did. The importer's expert witness was a college professor of mechanical en gineering. Zippers certainly are ma chines, said the professor, just like children's tricycles. The court grabbed at the compari son. The wind-up was that tricycles may be "mechanical contrivances," but they're not machines because "energy or force is applied to the tri cycle, but is not utilized by it." From there on, it was pretty smooth coasting for the judges, especially alt er they got it down that "pulling the zipper tab in a longitudinal direction causes a transverse force to be exer cised on the slider." Footpower is to the tricycle what hand power is to the zipper, the judges ruled. They finished it off oh the sev enth and final page, breathing easy. "Energy or force is not applied by the ripper but rather energy or farce is applied to it by ha ad power. Neither is it true that energy or force is modi fled or utiHred by the zipper. . . . We are clearly of the opinion that zip pers are not machines." Dates r, AprH It Anniversary (4ft d) San Fran cisco Are. Taesday, April It Patriot's Day (Me. Maes.). Thursday, April 21 Passover, last day. Anniversary (51st), start of the Spanish -American War. San Jacinto Day (legal holi day in Texas). International conference to re vise war conventions opens in Geneva, Switzerland Saaday, April 24 Daylight Saving Time begins. World Fellowship Week starts. U S -Canada Good Will Week starts. i I r Death & A Childl A FRESHLY plowed field at San Marino, Calif., obliter ates the scene but not 'the mem ory of the death of Kathy Fiscus. For 53 hours last! weekend millions hoped and prayed- that 3-year-olti Kathy would be res cued alive from the abandoned well into which she had stumbled. ) I Volunteers, using expensive, well drilling outfits that ordinarily rent for $500 a day, worked round the; clock sinking shafts down to the 100-foot depth where the child's body was lodged. When they reached her, Kathy was dead. ; i Doctors said she had died within an hour or two after the fall. One said she might have lived if her knees had not been jammed against herl chest. Her jackknife position in1 the 1 4-inch well casing made breathing difficult. A preliminary autopsy report said suffocation was the cause of death,1 ine i;oiuns i;ase Something like this happened once before. In 1925 Floyd Collins was trapped in a Kentucky cave, and for days the story of attempts to (rescue him was on the front pages of every newspaper in America. But Collins was a grown man. Kathy was tiny and helpless. ! Newspapers in Stockholm, London and Melbourne, Australia, held presses for news of Kathy. Only behind the Iron Curtain was the story snubbed. The Czech news agency banned it as "purely sensational, without Signifi cance and without educational value." But across America, telephone switchboards at newspaper offices and radio stations were jammed with calls from the moment the child's plight became known. Chicago newspapers reported h brought raor calls than St any time since the end of the war. The story rated attention irt Con gress. Rep. Donald L. Jackson (It Calif) declared that only in things like the Kathy crisis do industry and labor find common cause. ; "Perhaps,' he said, "the words af the Scripture will prove true: 'A little child shall leajthem.' " . j Waves ol Feeliag Tbe Los Angeles Chamber of, Com merce set up an overall committee ta consolidate funds contributed to re ward the sandhogs and engineers who braved death in the vain rescue at tempt. Some will be recommended for Carnegie Hero Medals. i H. E. (Whitey) Blickensderfer, "foreman" of the volunteer rescue eauad. said. "We're net heroes. It was just a matter of simple humanity.' Archeology Heart of Gold j Tti wife of an Egyptian iemplo scribe "who lived 2,500 years ago was buried with a heart of gold, arclM elegists discovered last week, I Under the custom of the era, the heart and other vital organs were re moved from the body before burial. They were put in a jar and placed In a tomb with the coffin. These organs were replaced in the body by golden replicas. i !S !i The Memphis temple scribe, whoso tomb was discovered March 2t. was identified as Kaamrfeir, which means "beautiful personality.' , ! Ali Ayoug Bey. Xgyptianniwlster of education, watched archeoi agists dotkately Mft the lids sf the Lebanon cedar caskets in the rock-walled, taawhs tee feet beiow ground in the Sekkara cemetery, about IS I miles south of Cairo. t . I Several hours were eWeted to the opening of the first lour of It comae found in the tombs. As each waa opened, photographic experts of the U. S. Navy and Calre medical re search center took colored snevies end still pictures. f 1! As the lid was lifted from one cas ket, a gold leaf mask glittered in the glare of electric lighting. Jt was the coffin of a woman. The age-blackened J mummy had a covering v$r the breast carrying gold, red end yellow -inscribed characters. The remainder of the body was covered with a net of light blue and black small beads. ' Curiously, the archeologists found three mummies without coffins. Two of these were intact but the third had been crushed, probably by, a rockfajl. , 4