Y LwF4b 743 i1 DRAMA SEASON See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State FARTLY CLOUDY, WARM VOL. LXI, No. 143 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, APRIL 29, 1951 EIGHT PA . __ Elliott, Miller Named REDS S, SH TO H RI ER ~To Top Daily Positions *, * * * * * I, DRI E TO RD SEOU Iran House Votes To Socialize Oil (4' CHUCK ELLIOTT BOB MILLER . Managing Editor .. .. Business Manager I ROBERT KEITH LEONARD GREENBAUM ..City Editor ... Editorial Director Chuck Elliott, '52, was appointed;During the past year, he served asO Managing Editor of The Daily last a night editor, and was a member night by the Board in Control of of Sphinx, junior extra-curricular Student Publications. honorary society. At the same time, the Board an- liller, who is 21 years old, nounced The Daily's new Business plans to enter into the field of Manager: Robert R. Miller, '52E, industrial engineering upon of Flint, Michigan. Both will as- graduation. He is a member of sume their duties in the 1951-52 the E)ngineering Honor Council. school year. Also announced was the appoint- s * * ment of Robert Keith, '52, as City ELLIOTT, a 20 year old English Editor for next year. Keith, a 19 major, hails from Ypsilanti, Mich. year old resident nf Rochester. f NO CHANGE HERE: a'LWt V1Li 14A71UG11y Vl lYV1~L1GgUGlp i Clocks Jump as Daylight SavingTime Makes Debut VERNON EMERSON ... Feature Editor. S . . . Mich., is a political science major. He is also a member of Sphinx. * . . THE NEW Editorial Director will be L9onard Greenbaum, '52, from Boston. Greenbaum is a 20 year old English major. Next year's Feature Editor will be Vernon Emerson, '52, whose hometown is Detroit. The 21 year old Emerson is a political science major. He is an affiliate of Phi Kappa Tau fraternity and also a member of Sphinx. The Board also named three As- sociateEditors: Rich Thomas, '52, of Detroit; Ron Watts, '52, of Alto, Mich.; and Robert Vaughn, '52, of Ann Arbor. THOMAS, a 20 year old English major, is a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity and Phi Eta Sig- ma, freshman scholastic, honorary society.r Watts, 20 years old, is a mem- ber of Acacia fraternity and also of Sphinx. He is an American- Area major. Vaughn, the other Associate Edi- tor, is a 24 year old speech major. OTHER top appointments on the business staff included: Charles E. Cuson, '52BAd, of Monroe, Mich., to the position of Advertising Manager. The 20 year old Cuson is affiliated with Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. Sally Fish, '52BAd, of Wheeling, W. Va., was named Finance Man- ager. Miss Fish, 20 years old, is a member of Chi Omega sorority. See DAILY, Page 3 TEHRAN, Iran--(P)-The lower hourse of Iran's parliament voted unanimously last night for imme- diate seizure of the British-owned Anglo-Iranian Oil Companiy. The lawmakers also called on the Shah to assign Mohammed Mossadegh, 76, the leader of the nationalization drive, to the va- cant premiership. But the Shah appeared to have other plans. * * * . THE $500,000,000 Anglo-Iranian Student Dies, Four Injured In Accident Eric Castelino, Grad.. business administration student from Ban- galore, India, was killed instantly early yesterday in a car accident which injured four other Univer- sity students, one seriously. The 20-year-old foreign student, son of the retired magistrate of Bangalore, died shortly after a fraternity post-initiation drinking party in a taVern near Portage Lake. The mishap took place on the Dexter-Pinckney Rd. as the car, driven by Leland Stenton, '51BAd, was returning to Ann Ar- bor. *k * * THE AUTOMOBILE crashed in- to a roadside tree on a sharp curve in the three-lane highway often referred to as "Death Valley." Cas- telino met sudden death in the back seat. Stenton was released after questioning yesterday by As- sistant Prosecutor John Devine and sheriff's deputies. He said he had loft control of the car as it rounded the curve. He also' told officers he had drunk some beer at the party but not enough to affect his driving. Stenton later admitted to Uni- versity officials he did not have a student driving permit. However, no action was reported pending against him. ONLY SERIOUS INJURY in the wreck was suffered by James Ver- rette, '53BAd who was taken to St. Joseph's Mercy Hospital with face and neck cuts. Hospital offi- cials reported last night Verrette's condition was "fair." Minor injuries were sustained by Stenton, Charles Silk, 'BAd, and James Monaghan, Grad. All weretreated at the University Health Service. Castelino, a graduate of Madras University in India, was initiated into Alpha Kappa Psi, professional business fraternity, Friday night shortly before his death. World News Roundup By The Associated Press SYDNEY, Australia - Prime Minister Menzies' coalition gov- ernment returned to power in a general election yesterday, al- though the Labor opposition gained four seats in the House of Representatives, with four other seats still in doubt. NEW YORK-United States delegate Warren Austin yester- day warned United Nations members that the United States expects all nations to send troops to Korea in proportion to its means. WASHINGTON - The United States yesterday formally pro- posed arbitration of the long- drawn deadlock with Russia over a settlement f nthe $10.800.00,0_000 company, which has run the rich oil industry in Iran for 50 years, has been beset for a month by nationalist agitation and strikes, which it blamed on the Commun- ists. Less than six hours before the Mailis voted, the company an- nounced in London it had pro- tested against the parliamentary moves to take over British oil in- terests. The company repeated past offers to adjust in Iran's favor the trends of its conces- sion, dated to run until 1993. British foreign-office leaders were at their desks throughout the day, studying first-hand reports of the situation, and planned to be on duty today. A foreign-office spokesman said about 3,500 Brit- ons work for the company in Iran. The British plan to send war- ships-now within 48 sailing hours away from key Iranian ports-to protect British lives and property if their safety is threatened. THE MAJLIS acted in secret session in recommending that Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi name the anti-British Mossadegh to the premiership vacated Friday night by the pro-western Hussein Ala under pressure of the oil crisis and threats of widespread demon- strations on May Day.,. The Majlis then voted in open session to give the oil nationali- zation proposal a rating of "tri- ple urgency." In a matter of hours, it approved the seizure. The Senate, which has indicated before it fully shares the Mailis' sentiments, is to act next. Vogeler Free, Claims Reds Used Coercion VIENNA, Austria-(RP)-Robert Vogeler, pale and shaken from 17 months in the hands of Hungary's Communist police, got his bartered release yesterday and stammered mental and physical coercion at- tended his confession to being an American spy. "I think there was some truth in my testimony, which I read last night for the first time," he told a news conference. "But I think un- der the law any testimony obtained by mental or physical pressure is not legal and is coerced." The 39-year-old assistant vice president of International Tele- phone and Telegraph Company was brought this morning to the Austrian border at Nickelsdorf, where he was met by an American legation car. Shortly afterward, the Hungari- an and United States governments announced that the young busi- nessman had been released on these conditions: 1. The Hungarian consulates in New York and Cleveland, O., closed following Vogeler's arrest Nov. 18, 1949, will be allowed to re- open. 2. The United States also will rescind its ban on American travel- ers to Hungary. WASHINGTON - ?P) - Harold Stassen proposed yesterday Presi- dent Truman invite Gen. Douglas MacArthur to the White House for a "reconciliation" conference, but Stassen got no immediate reply. Stassen, University of Pennsyl- vania president who ran for the Republican nomina'tion for Presi- dent in 1948, gave reporters copies of a letter to President Truman saying: "For the good of America please permit me to respectfully suggest a reconciliation be brought about be- tween you and Gen. MacArthur. If the disagreement runs its bitter course to the end, whatever the outcome may be, it can do no good for our country. "I therefore ask you with humili- ty that you consider extending an invitation to Gen. MacArthur to meet and confer with you." STASSEN delivered the letter personally to President Truman's aides at the White House. He also sent a telegram to MacArthur, who yesterday was receiving another triumphal greeting in New York, Tribe Triumphs The Maizigamua tribe whoop- ed and hollered its way to vic- tory in the third annual Frosh Weiekend competition which closed last night. The coed redskins, members of the Maize Team, scored 260 points, a full four points ahead of the Blue Team, as three Uni- versity Judges compared their "Make Mine Moccasins" dance in the League ballroom last night with the Blue effort Fri- day evening. telling of the proposal to the Presi- dent and adding: "I feel very deeply that for the good of America/a reconcili- ation should be brought about between you and the President." The White House had nothing to say beyond acknowledging the letter was delivered. President Tru- man has said previously if the general asked for an appointment he would get one. At Milwaukee Friday Mac- Arthur was said to take the stand he would regard an invitation to see President Truman as an order. However, a spokesman has said the general has no plans to see the President. Meat Prices To RollBack WASHINGTON-IIP)-The Gov- ernment yesterday announced a new beef price control program calling for almost a dime-a-pound rollback at the butcher shop by Oct. 1. The program provides for pro- gressively reduced ceilings for live cattle starti ' next month. Retail prices will remain about' the same\ for the tine being, al- though they will be placed under specific dollars-and-cents ceilings. But the announcement said they will be slashed from four to five cents a pound Aug. 1. and again by the same amount Oct. 1. The new ceilings, OPS said, will put beef prices by fall back to about where they were when the Korean war began. -Daily-Roger Reinke WARM WEATHER WORRIES-You can't beat the heat, bawls Greg Buck, Ypsilanti youngster, after he dropped his big, mushy; ice cream cone on the corner of North University and State Streets. But Greg had slopped himself up enough to be comfort- able in Ann Arbor's premature heat wave. Stassen AsksiTruman, MacArthur To Confer Communists Force Alied Withdrawalx Heavy Artillery Covers Retreat TOKYO - (P) -'Chinese Re yesterday reached the Han Riv northwest of Seoul and surge down the north bank in a bid break through into the apparent doomed Korean capital. The Allies, who earlier had pull their defense line back to with: four miles of Seoul, were mak an orderly retreat around thea wrecked city. One of the heaviest conenti tions of gunfire in the Korean w covered the withdrawal. Warshij off the west coast joined wi 105mm howitzers in blasting t advancing Reds. * * * THERE WAS every indicatic the 300,000-man Red force in t West intended to drive throu Seoul beforerhalting to regroup. 'They were heading 'toward s defense are 30 miles long draw tightly north of the city. Barbe wire and gun' emplacementi bolstered the line. Red forces in the center shows reluctance to follow up United Na tions troops presently abandonir Chunchon, 45 miles northeastD Seoul. "THERE WERE indications ti Chinese power drive was runnix out of gas,".AP correspondent Rol ert Eunson reported from .I Eighth Army headquarters;l Korea. Red casualties of 2,300 fo yesterday shot enemy losses pas1 45,000 for the offensive whici opened a week ago today. "Fresh troops will have to 1 brought up to take the place of t ragged and battered first wavei -the estimated half-a-million Ch nese troops now in Korea," Eunsc said. THE FRONT LINE forces wei into battle with eight days' supp of rice. The supply will be exhais ed by tomorrow. United Nations forces aban doned Uijongbu, 11 miles nort of Seoul, without a fight las night. Chinese columns were drivh down two main roads toward eoi One moved due south from Uon bu. A second rolled southeastwa. from Munsan, 21 miles- northwe of Seoul. REARGUARD allied elemeni stemmed the Communist advan until the main body of UN troo could move into their new defen lines north of the Han River. Reporting from the weste front, AP correspondent John Ra dolph said last night a short1 appeared to have set in after days of intense Chinese offensive Moody Seeks High Position WASHINGTON(JP)-Sen. Bi Moody (D-Mich.) has applied It the Vandenberg vacancy on t Senate Foreign Relations Commi tee and a few Democrats apparez ly think he ought to have it. Sen,. Moody, correspondent the Detroit News who was appoii ed this week afte the death( Sen. Arthur Vandenberg (1 Mich.), is the baby member of t. Senate in service. IN A ROUTINE WAY, he list committee assignments he wou like to have. He placed the forei relations group at the, top, ahea of his second place choice of t powerful appropriations comm tee. New senators usually wind ul By The Associated Press Clocks went ahead an hour in millions of American homes today as daylight saving time made its annual bow through nearly half the nation,. Roughly 65,000,000 persons lost an hour after midnight, while about 80,000,000 others ignored the time change. * * * A FEW LAGGARD communities will set their clocks up next month. As usual, there were pro- tests over the time change, es- pecially in farm areas. But they seemed fewer and sounded less shrill than at any time since the first World War. The lost hour is regained in most places Sept. 30, when the clocks will be moved back an hour for the fall and. winter months, Daylight saving is strongly sup- ported in large cities, where the factory hands and office workers gain an hour of daylight in the evening. This gives . them more time 'for golfing, picnicking and the like after the day's work is done. As a result, most of the heavily populated Eastern seaboard is on summer time. So are. populous California, Chicago, St. Louis and other big-city areas. MOST FARMERS have little use for last time. They argue that cows, pigs and chickens don't go by the clock but by the sun. The government's interest in It gets people up an hour earlier and to bed an hour earlier-in theory at least. That means a saving in fuel and electricity. States where daylight saving time took effect today include New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Rhode Is- land, Connecticut, New Hamp- shire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Delaware, Oregon, California, and Nevada. The District of Columbia also will switch. It also took effect in parts of New York, Virginia, Washington, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio, Alaba- ma, Kentucky, Indiana, New Mex- ico, Illinois, Maine, Maryland and West Virginia. NAKED NEGOTIATIONS: U' Educators Can't See 'Truman, Stalin in Nude MORE ABOUT DORMS: U' Has Safeguards Against Default. By BOB KEITH a By CAL SAMRA A recent suggestion that Presi- dent Truman and Premier Stalin shed their clothes and hold a nude peace conference was frowned up- on yesterday by several campus educators. The proposal had come from New Delhi, India, where the leader of 50,000 Naga (nude) Sect monks barrier and put both of them on the defensive." Prof. Heyns agreed that such a meeting wouldn't be conducive to peaceful communication. "It would probably generate a cool at- mosphere," he explained. In short, both considered the idea absurd. A SPECIALIST in international (Editor's Note: This is the third in a series of interpretive articles on the financial aspects of University dormitory housing.) One of the biggest worries for University dormitory administra- tors and bondholders alike is the retirement of construction bonds when they fall due. Once, in the blackest days of over and applied to the following year's operating costs. However, it is used to pay off bonds, as an added assurance to bondholders, according to University adminis- trators. In addition, as a. safeguard against default during any one year, the University is not re- quired to pay in full the normal amount of annual bond retire- at 100 per cent of the yearly debt service. Administrators say the retirement at 100 per cent instead of 85 per cent is what it means by "accelerated bond payment," a phrase which has often proved misleading. Several o t h e r safeguards against default can be found in the bond contracts. For one thing; the University must adopt I, i