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C., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1946—THIRTY PAGES. ★* 5 CENTS .... . .. . . ••• -■ ■ ■-■■■■ ■ . ... ___ Paris Overrides Yugoslav Bolt On Italian Pact Belgrade, Refusing to Sign and Quit Istria, May Lose All Benefits By the Associated Press PARIS, Sept. 28.—A Peace Conference commission adopted today an American proposal to bar Yugoslavia from the priv ileges of a signatory to the Ital ian treaty if she persisted in her announced refusal to sign the pact. The Italian Political and Terri torial Commission adopted the “French line” as the boundary be tween Italy and Yugoslavia, and Marshal Tito's delegation promptly announced Yugoslavia would “not sign the peace treaty with Italy nor withdraw her army from Northwest ern Istria.” A Yugoslav proposal to turn the whole boundary question back to the Foreign Ministers was voted down, and the United States quickly pro posed the new' amendment, stating that the terms of the treaty should “not benefit any state mentioned in tne preamble as Allied and associ ated powers unless such state be comes a signatory of the treaty.” U. S. Proposal Assailed. A Yugoslav delegate vigorously attacked the American proposal as "a threat and an attempt to intimi date Yugoslavia.” ‘Jugoslavia has shown by its four years of fighting it will not yield to any intimidation,” the delegate said. Yugoslavia has announced a claim (?? $1,300,000,000 reparations from Italy. Adoption of the American pro posal, if upheld later by the plenary session and the Foreign Ministers’ Council, could bar the Yugoslavs from pressing this claim. Russia and the Slavic countries voted solidly against the American amendment, W'hich W'as adopted, 11 to 8. Soviet Delegate Andrei Y. Vishinsky assailed it as a "violation of the Big Four agreement” to sup port agreed portions of draft treaties. Mr. Vishinsky charged there were “some other hidden aims” behind the proposal. He said it was un necessary and that he would ’ pro test” its adoption, but he did not elaborate on this statement. ' Vishinsky, Connally Clash. The formal Yugoslav declaration' which prompted the amendment came after a debate between Mr.! Vishinsky and Senator Connally.! Mr. Vishinsky supported Yugoslavia's demand that any preliminary de cisions of the Foreign Ministers’ Council must have Yugoslav ap proval. Senator Connally, who later told a reporter he believed Yugoslavia eventually would sign, told the dele gates the Yugoslav attitude was "undemocratic.” Voting for the amendment were' the United States, Australia, Bel-1 “See CONFERENCE. Page A-37) Panair Plane Carrying 25 Reported in Brazil Crash By th« Associated Press RIO DE JANEIRO Sept. 28 — Officials of the City of Barbacena said today that a plane believed to1 be a Panair passenger craft carry- j ingf25 persons had crashed in thej village of Auto Rio Doce, in the! State of Minas Geraes. "Forests surrounding the scene are ablaze,” the official said., A rescue party was dispatched. Panair, a subsidiary of Pan Amer ican Airways, said that it had had nd contact for 14 hours with a plane w'hich left Bello Horizonte, Minas Geraes. at 4 p.m. yesterday and was; scheduled to arrive in Rio del Jarf’iro at 5:30 p.m. Bello Horizonte Is about 250 miles north of here.1 Officials of the airline said 21 passengers, including eight women, and four crewmen were aboard the plane. New Outbreak Marks Strike in Hollywood { By Avcociot*d Pr«st HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 28—A state of emergency, proclaimed by the sheriff as the aftermath of two! days of sporadic rioting at movie studios, failed today to halt further outbreaks as picketing in an AFL jurisdictional dispute entered its j third day. Two cars were overturned at the entry gates of Metro-Goldwyn Mayer studios in renewed trouble between nonstriking film workers and Conference of Studio Unions members, made idle by what they call a lockout, but what producers call a strike. No one was hurt and no one arrested in the new clash, which occurred as workers reported for the day shift. Sheriff Eugene Biscailuz called In about 150 additional special deputies to police the gates of the major film studios, which are being picketed by the Conference of Studio Unions in their jurisdictional dispute with the rival International Alliance of The atrical Stage Employes. Both are AFL groups. A fierce melee, in which about 200 persons engaged, broke out yester-; day at the M-G-M gates. It! required half an hour for Culver City police and sheriff 's deputies to1 quell the rioting, in which pickets smashed automobile windows, ripped out ignition wires and tried to upset several cars. Twenty-three pickets were arrested. Warner Brothers obtained a court order limiting gate pickets to eight,; and workers dispersed. M-G-M shortly afterward obtained a similar order. The dispute, recurrence of one which led to a 34-week strike last year, arose from refusal of CSU workmen to handle sets which they claim had been built by IAT6E members. * Pittsburgh Mayor Wins Prestige Despite Loss of First Round Political Significance in Showdown Battle With New Union Boss By Herman F. Schoden Star Staff Correspondent PITTSBURGH. Sept. 28.—When the red-hot Pittsburgh power strike is sifted down to coals, you’ll always find Mayor David Leo Lawrence and Labor Leader George L. Mueller out front. Mayor Lawrence is a Democrat who finds Pittsburgh's strong labor vote comforting. Yet he completely confounded the critics bv sponsoring an antistrike''injunction. Mr. Mueller is the spokesman for 3,500 Duquesne Light Co. employes whose strike has Inconvenienced 1,500.000 Al legheny and Beaver County resi dents. Thrown in jail for daring to strike in face of the injunction, he emerged 25 hours later smiling. The injunction was lifted, con tempt charges against nine other strike leaders were dismissed—and the strike went on. Underlying the physical effects of a smoggv Pittsburgh pitched into semidarkness is the political significance of Mayor Lawrence's showdown with a not-drv-behind the-ears union boss. Georff Mueller. National Democratic Commit- Mayor Lawrence. ; teeman Lawrence, close friend of Senator Guffey and foe of antistrike legislation, daringly invoked an untested injunction scheme in the hotbed 'of laborism and with the November elections in the offing. He said the people were bigger than any group they composed, and he meant it with all sincerity. But the group—a sprinkling of 3,500— burgeoned into clamorous thousands as the Steel City Industrial Union Council's 200.000 joined with some AFL factions in demanding dissolu tion of the injunction. These CIO and AFL combines did not care about Mr. Mueller or his independent union. But the specter of an injunction hanging over the right to strike sent them to the Mayor with the threat of a sym pathy strike that would make the Duquesne walkout infantile by com parison. Thus Mr. Lawrence lost round one of his fight to stave off a strike by untried methods, but he mended his fences with the Democrats and won new friends who admired his pluck. And Pittsburgh or the Nation Eisenhower, Jackson Rule Selves Out as London Ambassador Army Chief Won't Accept Any Political Office, He Says in Germany ly the Associated Press FRANKFURT, Sept. 28—Gen. Eisenhower said today there was “no possibility of my ever being: connected with any political | office.” He made the comment in spiking rumors that he might become Ambassador to Great Britain. The United States Army Chief of Staff was asked at a news confer ence about reports that he might succeed Ambassador W. Averell Harriman. His terse statement was his only comment. Gen. Eisenhower praised as “marvelous'1 the accomplishments of the American Army of occupation in Germany. “The United States Army has never undertaken a more difficult task than this one it has in Central Europe and never has it done a bet ter job,” he said. “The job is stag gering. but the performance has been marvelous. The results ought to make any people proud." Gen. Eisenhower had arrived in Germany today for a first-hand check on occupation forces. He will go to Luxembourg tomor row morning to lay a wreath on the grave of Gen. George S. Patton, United States Army headquarters said last night. Jackson Wont 'Desert' Supreme Court Duties NUERNBERG, Sept. 28 UP>.—Jus tice Robert H. Jackson said today he had "no intention of deserting the duties I assumed in going on the Supreme Court for any other public past.” Mr. Jackson, center last June of a controversy in which he ques tioned certain Supreme Court ac tions by Justice Black, said he would ._ Hope ! for resumption of streetcar j service here waned today when | the Executive Board of the Motormen’s Union recom mended that operators refuse to corss picket lines of strik ing power union workers. Mayor David L. Lawrence dis closed that he had been given assurance that the power supply of the struck Duquesne Light Co. would last at least j over Sunday. By th* Associated Press PITTSBURGH. Sept. 28—Op eration of Pittsburgh’s streetcars was completely halted early this morning for the second time within 48 hours as a result of picketing by members of a strik ing power union. Headquarters of the AFL-Amal gamated Association of Street Elec tric Railway and Motor Coach Em i ployes said efforts to operate the cars, which had maintained partial I service through the early hours of jthe night, were abandoned after I pickets surrounded all 12 car barns I of the Pittsburgh Railways Co. A spokesman for the union said a mass meeting of all members had been called for this morning at which the union would be asked to decide whether to pass through the picket lines of the Independent As sociation of Employes of the Duquesne Light Co. The meeting was delayed for a while because members were slow in arriving and there was no indication what time it would be concluded. Bus drivers also were represented at the discussion. Meanwhile, all streetcar trans portation was at a halt, and bus service W’as partly disrupted. Disregard Warning. Members of the independent union, in picketing the barns, dis regarded a warning issued last night by the AFL-Pittsburgh Central Labor Union which said it would “not tolerate any interference" of streetcars and buses operated by members of its affiliates. Meanwhile, another session of the apparently stalemated wage contract negotiations between the Duquesne Light Co. and the independent union was scheduled for this after noon, with a mass meeting of the union called for 7:30 p.m. tonight to vote on “any offer the company may make.” The power union has given no reason for halting the streetcars but apparently it acted from one of two reasons possibly both: (1) Current for the cars is supplied by j the Duquesne Light Co. and i2» | both Duquesne Light and Pittsburgh! Railways are subsidiaries of the Philadelphia Co. Didn't Seek Protection. A spokesman for the railways i company said police protection has' not been asked. He said the AFL: motormen made no effort to cross; the^independent union's picket lines