Japanese Students EXCHANGE ACCUSATIONS OVER SUMMIT: ith Tokyo Police Force .. 1 [url Bricks t Officers 1 Outburst RELEASED AFTER QUESTIONING Detain American Coed in Hungary (EDITOR'S NOTE: Harvey Mol- etch is studying this semester in "But don't worry, you will like no sleep for 40 hours, she was I Vienna. Last semester he was a life in Hungary . . p e r h a p s back to the original guard pC embyr of fhDaEy.)rmonths, maybe years, probably and this time safely crossed t By HARVEY MOLOTCo ayour) whole life. But you will meet world's most heavily guarde Special to The Daily a nice Hungarian and get married border into neutral Austria. Protest Kishi.Regime, U.S.-Japanese Pact TOKYO ()-Nearly 1,000 left- wing university students battled steel-helmeted police yesterday in another violent' demonstration against Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi's government and the United States - Japanese security paet. The students, growing more ag- gressive in their outbursts, hurled bricks and stones into the ranks of an estimated 3,000 officers.out-! side Kishi's barricaded official residence. Club-wielding officers broke up the crowd 40 minutes later. Au- thorities said 88 police were in- jured, 14 seriously, and about 40 students were hurt. Join Groups Many of the students later joined various leftwing groups in snakedance demonstrations through the streets, of Tokyo. Chanting anti-government slogans and singing the Communist In- ternationale, the youths were de- manding dissolution of parliament and ,the immediate resignation of Kishi and his pro-West cabinet. But Kishi reiterated his deter- mination to remain in office and keep parliament in session until the security pact becomes law. The treaty- was rammed through the lower house in a stormy mid- night session last Friday. It now awaits ratification by the upper house. If the chamber does not act, it goes into effect 30 days after lower house ratification (June 19). Not In Residence VIENNA-"How much will your parents be willing to pay for your release," a uniformed Hungarian boarder official asked threaten- ingly. The response was a silent look of disbelief as Miss Patricia Crot- ty, an American student studying in Vienna, began a four hour grilling behind the Iron Curtain. For Patty Crotty, an innocent weekend sojourn to Budapest with some friends had turned into something of a nightmare. First Tour On May 14, just one week after travel to Hungary had been open- ed to Americans for the first time since the 1956 revolution, the St. Marys of Notre Dame junior de- parted on her first tour of a Com- munist country. Things went relatively smooth- ly at the border and continued in a normal fashion during her two day stay in the Hungarian capi- tal. "It was fascinating to exchange views with the Communists," noted Miss Crotty. "But they speak with such sincerity, .such earnestness. It can only be de- scribed as pathetic." Passport Kept But the fascination turned to suspicion when Miss Crotty was not returned her passport by the hotel clerk as is the European custom. (Throughout Europe, a foreign guest must relinquish his passport upon registering at a hotel.) "I asked the hotelman for my passport and all he could say was that it had never come back from the political police," the student added. "Of course I was worried so I checked with our tour guide (gov- ernment employed) who told me to be at ease because he was sure that his colleague would have it at the border." No Passport But at about midnight when the bus got to the border there was no colleague and no passport. After a great deal of confusion the bus crossed into Austria and Patricia Crotty was being held in Communist Hungary against her will. "From that moment on I was always surrounded by armed guards," the student told The Daily. "They sent up flares and soon a new procession of soldiers came to the guard post and start- ed questioning me. "Then they put me into the back of a truck with several guards and I was taken to a military police station." Refuse Call Miss Crotty requested that she be able to call the American em- bassy and was refused permission. "When they started questioning me, I thought they were kidding," the co-ed continued. "But I was soon sure that they weren't." "What did you do with your- passport?" an officer cajoled. "What are you trying to do?" he queried in his broken English. "You gave your passport to someone . . . Who? . . . You want to get a beautiful blonde across the border in the fall, don't you," the "interviewer" continued. I Kishi was not in his official residence during the demonstra- tion, the second in four days by the Zengakuren National Student Federation in its campaign against the government. The Prime Minister at the time was in conference with officials of -his IAberal - Democratic party over the. storm created by the 10- year treaty, which commits the United States to defend Japan and provides for United States bases here. The opposition Socialists said they planned to call' at the United States embassy today and offic- ially demand that P r e s i d e n t Dwight D. Eisenhower call off his scheduled visit to Japan next. month. Most Japanese newspapers, while not necessarily opposed to the pact, feel its ratification should not have been hurried. Israeli Forces Captujre Nazi War Criminal JERUSALEM, Israeli Sector (W) -Adolf Eichmann, the most wanted Nazi war criminal still at large, has been captured and will stand trial in Israel, Premier David Ben-Gurion announced yes- terday. Ben-Gurion charged in the Knesset (Parliament) that Eich- mann and other Nazi leaders were responsible for "the Extermina- tion of six million Jews of Eu- rope:" The premier told the startled Knesset-which had no previous inkling the long manhunt was over-that Eichmann-now 54- had recently been seized by Israel security forces. "Adolf Eichmann is already un- der arrest in Israel," Ben-Gurion said, "and will shortly be placed on trial in Israel under terms of Israel's law for the trial of Nazis and their collaborators." The premier gave no details of the arrest of the man who was a top aide of Heinrich Himmler, boss-df the dread Nazi secret po- lice or Gestapo. 0 1 K If' Ike Prepares Radio-TVTalk WASHINGTON (M) - President Dwight D. Eisenhower yesterday set tomorrow night as the time for his report to the people on the collapse of the summit conference. In apparent preparation for a major effort, he called an unusual meeting of the National Security Council, his top level strategy board, for today at 9 a.m. EDT. Eisenhower is expected to give his reasons for the failure of the. big power meeting at Paris. 0--...... ci~~ ~jM~AX~3~@0J ~oy C9 +t ' Aft gns C, NNW WORRIED? EXAM TIME is Outline Time Use our condensed I i I I 1l II - --