Ads mimmmmmmmm* ji 0 IT, 1(1 an I43a i4! EDITOR'S NOTE See Page 4 r ex f. PARTLY CLOUDY Latest Deadline in the State VOL.LXI, No. 5-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JULY 1, 1951 SIX PAGES British Send Ship To Persian Gulf Iranian Spokesman Protests Action; Claims Threat to Iran from West TEHRAN, Iran-(P)-Britain headed at least one more frigate toward the Persian Gulf yesterday and sent a tank landing ship to x Join the cruiser Mauritius off the refinery port of Abadan. An Iranian spokesman prqtested bitterly that Britain is building up her land and air power as well in bases threatening Iran from the west. * * * *, THIS WAS DENIED at the Defense Ministry in London. A British spokesman said "there have been no recent movements." The Iranian spokesman, Hussein Maki, told newsmen at Abadan that if the British try to take possession of a single inch No Wiord on UN Peace of Iranian territory in the quar- rel over Iran's oil nationaliza- tion law, "the first shot fired will signal the start of World War III. Maki is secretary- general of Premier Mohammed Mossadegh's Popular Front gov- ernment. He declared two British war- ships have appeared at the mouth of the Shatt-El-Arab, a frontier river between Iran and Iraq, to back up the 8,000-ton Mauritius, which has Abadan under its guns. "A BRITISH troop carrier has entered the Shatt-El-Arab and gone up the river past Abadan," Maki said. "It is loaded with British troops and carried tanks. We also have learned the British h now have 150 planes in the area of Basra, Habbaniya, Shuabi, and Kuwait. He announced the Iranian government "has protested firm- ly to Iraq against its territory being used as a base for a threat against Iran." Abadan, site of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company's huge refinery, is only a few miles from the Iraq border. "If they are trying to create a third World War, I will tell you flatly that Britain would be de- stroyed in such a war long before persia. If they are just trying to threaten us, Iran is not frightened by bluffs." s * As. Fifty Killed In Western Plane Crash FORT COLLINS, Colo-(R)-A United Air Lines Mainliner smash- ed into Crystal Mountain early yesterday, killing all 50 aboard, including seven children. The State Patrol reported a search party reached the scene just before dark tonight and said there "is no sign of life." Dean Conger, Denver Post pho- tographer who flew over the still smouldering wreckage, said the debris looked "like somebody toss- ed a bag of peanuts over the hillside." He said there were no signs of life. * * * GUIDED BY State Patrol Chief Gilbert R. Carrel in a radio-equip- ped plane, search parties converg- ed on the area, 18 miles west of Fort Collins and 12 miles north of Estes Park at the gateway to Rocky Mountain National Park. The plane, flight 610 out of San Francisco, was hunted nearly 11 hours before it was spotted. The plane .was one of the first to take to the air after the United Pilots' strike ended Friday. It was en route from San Francisco to Chicago by way of Salt Lake City and Den. ver. The plane debris was scattered over 150 yards at an altitude of around 8,600 feet. Six aboard the liner were offi- cials of the Rural Electrification Administration, including George W. Haggard of Washington, D.C., REA deputy administrator. The men had been attending a staff conference in Salt Lake City and were en route to Denver for another meeting. Daily Tryouts Tryouts for The Daily will meet at 4 p.m. Tuesday in the Student Publications Building for a lecture on night desk pro- cedure. They are asked to bring their style books. Factory List Prices Fixed By OPS Act Move Follows New Curb Law WASHINGTON-()-Balked by Congress from rolling back prices during July, the Office of Price Stabilization tonight froze manu- facturers prices of a wide range of goods at today's figures. It acted a few hours after Presi- dent Truman had signed into law a stopgap bill extending for 31 days-but curbing-his power to control prices, wages, rents and credit. THE PRESIDENT'S signature was affixed just eight hours be- fore his control powers were due to expire altogether, at midnight. Truman issued no statement yesterday, but he plainly didn't like the bill-because, among other things, it bans any price rollbacks or new price ceilings during July, and his administra- tion had planned to order price cuts running far in excess of $2,000,000,000. The goods on which manufac- turers prices were frozen tonight included cotton textiles, shoes, ap- parel. Many household appliances and machinery. * * * OPS HAD PLANNED to put these articles under a new type of control which, in most cases would have become effective to- morrow. Their ceiling prices would have been based on pre-Korean levels, plus certain cost increases since that time. This OPS, said, would have forced some reductions in prices, although in other cases it would have permitted increases. Since rollbacks are banned, OPS said it had decided on "an indefin- ite freeze" at June 30 levels of goods which would have been af- fected by what is technically known as the "general manufac- turers order" and companion reg- ulations. Michael V. DiSalle, OPS Ad- ministrator, issued a statement expressing hope Congress would let these regulations go into effect later. Feudin', Fussin Laid to Crowds WASHINGTON-(P)-No wonder there's so much feudin' and fussin' in your nation's capital. The place is overcrowded. Burst- ing at the seams, in fact. People get in each other's way, step on each other's toes. The Census Bureau came up with the telltale figures, showing Washington is far and away more congested than any of the 48 states. Thailand Premier Returns to Power By The Associated Press Premier Pisulsonggram of Thailand has been released by the rebels of his country and is back in charge of the government, the United States State Department was advised last night. The Department said it had been advised by the United States Embassy at Bangkok that the Premier was released unconditionally. FIGHTING which broke out after the Premier had been seized was reported dying down and was expected to end soon, the Depart- ment was advised. There were no additional details in the brief message from the Embassy. Earlier yesterday, rebel sailors and marines fought a bloody and apparently losing battle with artillery and machine- guns in Bangkok's streets against soldiers, police and airmen COURTROOM SCENE-Archbishop Joszef Groesz (left), head of the Roman Catholic Church in Hungary, and Ferenc Vecer, a Paulican monk, are shown standing at a microphone in a Buda- pest courtroom during their trial on charges of plotting to over- throw Hungary's Communist government. VACATION BOUND: Provost Adams Bids 'U' Farewell after Six Years Provost James P. Adams took final leave of the University yes- terday to embark on an extended vacation. Announcing that he had no plans for the future beyond the vacation, Dr. Adams prepared to leave in the new automobile pre- sented to him by a group of facul- ty frinds and associates. x a:, BEFORE coming to the Univer- sity in 1945, Dr. Adams served on the faculty of H Brown University as an instructor, and then succes- sively as professor, dean and vice- president over a 24 year period. NATIONALIST extremists have threatened in the past that any British use of force would lead to intervention by Soviet Russia, un- der a 1921 treaty between Moscow and Tehran. Britain, however, contends that her military moves are solely to protect British techni- clans working in Iran for the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company and British property rights. Britain opened her case for an injunction before the World Court at the Hague yesterday and declared in a note to Tehran the crisis arises solely from the Iran- ian government's attitude on the 4 j seizure of AIOC installations. Attorney General Sir Frank Soskice urged the international court of justice at The Hague to order temporary enjoining meas- ures against Iran. Four chairs set aside for representatives of Prem- ier Mohammed Mossadegh's Na- tionalist Iranian government remained empty. Iran holds the dispute is not within the court's Sjurisdiction. (A dispatch from Basra said it is believed the British military command has about 300 fighters and bombers, 2,000 parachute troops and 4,000 other soldiers at nearby bases which could be brought into action in a matter of minutes.) Two Iranian frigates are stand- ing watch, one near the Mauritius at Abadan and the other down the river. A YR's National Confab Ends BOSTON - (P) - The biennial Convention of the Young Repub- licans National Federation wound up last night with a final round of speech-making and election of officers for the coming two years. Herbert Warburton, 35-year-old lawyer from Wilmington, Del., won election as national chairman for the next two years succeeding John Tope, of Detroit. Mrs. Carol Arth of hRedlands, 4 Calif., was easily elected national co-chairman because of the Fed- 11 OFFICIALS WARY: Arrest of Shah's Brother Strikes Familiar Chord Willow Rental Office Starts Eviction Move "Most people in the area just can't believe that the demolition of Willow Village will take place, but the truth of the matter is that on Monday the Village rental of- fice will stop filling vacancies des- pite an active waiting list of 300 families," Marvin Tableman, pres- ident of the Willow RunResident Council said yesterday. Commenting on the eviction or- der that calls for demolition of the largest temporary housing project built in the last war, Tableman pointed out that the initial steps in vacating the 3,000 unit project must begin by law today. By July 1, next year, all 12,000 residents must be out of the proj- ect. "WITH THE AREA already overcrowded and ne w defense plants building, it just seems in- credible that what is happening can happen," Tableman stated. Tableman is leading a group of Willow Village residents in an effort to have the project ruled exempt from the National Hous- ing Act of 1950 which calls for its destruction one year from today. One clause of the law calls for the exemption of projects that make up more than 30 per cent of the population of the municipality of which they are a part. Willow Village is not in any "municipality," but covers a 16 mile area that lies in two town- ships in eastern Washtenaw Coun- ty. The combined populations of the townships is less than half of the Village's 12,500. Walter L. Frankhouser, general housing manager of the Village, has asked for "clarification" of the order from Washington in an ef- fort to see if Willow Village could somehow be included in the "mu- nicipality" exemption. - * * * HE HAS RECEIVED no answer +n an 4-.. mA .,imf by 1 n. nrflno . His responsibilities here were concerned primarily with super- vising the academic faculty and with handling budget matters. During his administration en- rollment rose from approximately 9,000 students to the post-war peak of almost 22,000. As an economist by academic specialty, Dr. Adams served as an arbiter of numerous labor-man- agement disputes. I* CONSIDERED as a possible successor to President Ruthven, Dr. Adams removed himself from candidacy by submitting his resig- nation to the Board of Regents in SMay,1950. Announcement of the resigna- tion was not .made public until April of this year, and the Regents finally accepted- it on June 15. Hailing from Carson City, Mich., Dr. Adams is 56 years old. World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Attorney Gen- eral McGrath' asked Congress yes- terday to strengthen the law re- quiring union officials to take a non-Communist oath in order to get recognition by the National Labor Relations Board. *a * * WASHINGTON - The House Armed Services Committee yester- day authorized the Army to start work on $714,381,000 worth of mi- litary construction in the United States after trimming $275,309,000 off the program. HONOLULU - Adm. Forrest P. Sherman said yesterday that regardless of whether it's peace or war in Korea, the United States must continue to build up its military might. WASHINGTON-Congress pass- ed and sent to President Truman last night an emergency money bill permitting the Federal Gov- ernment to go on operating in July. loyal to their kidnaped Premier.C The battle apparently was part of an old army-navy feud and had nothing to do with East-West ten- sion over Communism. IT STARTED Friday with the fantastic daylight capture of the anti-Communist Premier by a raiding party of sailors who car- ried him off from the United States dredger Manhattan just after it had been presented to the Government and annointed by Buddhist priests. The kidnaping was accomplished before dazed diplomats, army officers and po- lice could lift a finger. In the ensuing battle four shells ripped through the Unit- ed States embassy, which was in a no man's land. A bullet lodged in the wall just over the head of United States Charge D'Affaires William T. Turner, as he telephoned the Associated Press correspondent here. (Turner reported to the State Department at Washington late Friday that navy officers tried to negotiate a cease-fire, but marines refused to obey cease-fire orders. Ship Strike Delays Arrival Of Students. Many foreign students have not yet registered for the Summer Ses- sion because they have been de- layed in arriving, presumably due to the recent shipping strike, Robert Klinger, assistant counselor to foreign students disclosed last night at the International Cen- ter's reception at the Rackham Building. "Additional students are still trickling in at the rate of four or five a day," he explained. A SPECIAL guest at the recep- tion attended by more than 200 faculty members and students, many dressed in their native cos- tumes, was Dean of Women Deb- orah Bacon who has been actively working with a group of women students interested in forming an international house for women which would operate on a basis similar to that of Nelson Inter- national House for men. "I doubt the wisdom of starting such a venture without a reserve fund of at least 5000 dollars," Dean Bacon stated. "The women have no funds at all to back them and would be forced to go along on a term-to-term basis, facing possi- ble failure if any difficulty or spe- cial expense should arise," she said. "I would certainly like to see an international house for women on this campus," she added. "It's hard to say who would derive the most benefit from such a group- the foreign students or the Ameri- cans. What we need is an 'angel' to back us," Dean Bacon concluded. Party Hits .Peron Curbs On Freedom BUENOS AIRES-MIP)-The Ra- dical Party yesterday cha ted President Juan D. Peron with wip- ing out freedom of the press and of speech. The former majority party said it would be returned to power "by popular -will once the country is set free from the regime of op- pression and hatred." THE RADICAL Party was the largest in Argentine until Peron's election in 1946. It issued the anti- Peron manifesto on the 100th An- niversary of the overthrow of Dic- tator Juan'Manuel Rosas in 1851. The statment was the strong- est blast against the Peron gov- ernment in many months. Sev- eral Radical Party leaders have served Jail sentences for speak- ing disrespectfully of the Presi- dent. The Radicals said they are com- mitted to the reestablishment in Argentina of "conditions of free- dom, democracy and decency that the nation requires." It said that in its fight to return to power, it would not accept alli- ances with other political groups and would oppose Russian-led Communism. The manifesto charged Peron with "inciting to hatred and the extermination of his enemies by asking his supporters to be ready with ropes and baling wire to hang the honest men who do not sub- mit." Hunt Closes In on Irwin FLEMINGTON, N.J.-(P)-Hun- dreds of armed men ringed a 25- square-mile area of farrrs and woodland last night in a grim manhunt for Warren Lee Irwin -wanted for murder, kidnap and rape. Heavy patrols of State Police and FBI men guarded all high- ways and back roads in the rural area where Irwin was believed trapped. All cars were stopped and searched at intersections through the night as the search was inten- sified. Police checked isolated farm houses to make sure Irwin hadn't holed up for a last ditch, shoot-it-out stand. The scar-faced, 27-year-old gunman abandoned Carolyn Bar- ker, 17-year-old high school girl, yesterday afternoon and took to the woods. Some state troopers said there was a strong possibility Irwin could slip through the dragnet Offer Battlefront Reports Only Minor Action Truce Proposals Revealed by U.S. TOKYO - ()- The Reds near midnight still ignored the United Nations offer for armistice talks in the Korean war-an offer extend- ed more than 35 hours ago. Broadcasts from Peiping and Pyongyang, the Chinese and Kor- ean Communist capitals, carried only the usual propaganda. The Pyongyang Radio became inaud- ible at 5:15 p.m. yesterday. And, by 8 p.m. yesterday no reply had been heard from Peip- ing. GEN. MATTHEW B. Ridgway's message to the Red Field Com- mand proposing armistice talks was being repeated in Korean, Chinese and other languages. He invited the Reds to a meeting aboard the Danish hospital ship Jutlandia in Wonsan Harbor on Korea's northeast coast. The battlefront lull length- ened. Two Red platoons made exploratory jabs at Allied lines on the East-Central front, northeast of Inje, but withdrew under brisk small arms fire. A minor action continued at one outpost at daybreak yesterday. To the west of that sector, the Chinese made light attacks in the Kumhwa area late Saturday night and early Sunday. The small- scale assault interrupted a virtual unofficial cease-fire. Hitherto fighting has been the heaviest in the Kumhwa area on the central front, some 20 mles north of Parallel 38. * * * BOTH SIDES exchanged mor- tar and artillery fire, but it was relatively light. Allied air attacks continued. One bombing raid was aimed at Pyongyang's air field. Allied air patrols spotted an estimated 1,900 vehicles moving in various directions behind Communist lines in North Korea, More than 900 were moving south toward the front and about 400 were moving north, a pooled field dispatch said. In the South Korean port of Pusan, the 8,457-ton Jutlandia was ready to leave on two-hour notice for Wonsan, 80 mies north of the 38th Parallel. ARMISTICE terms which the United States, in consultation with United Nations Allies, would like to see established in Korea are understood to have been com- municated to Gen. Ridgway. Following substantially the provisions of an eight point cease fire plan laid down by a United Nations committed last December, the terms are under- stood to call for creation of a buffer zone. This would be roughly along the line of the present battle positions, in the general area of the 38th Par- allel but cutting across rather than precisely following it. Beyond this, reliable informants said the United States would like to get agreement with the Com- munists to: (1) Halt all fighting throughout the peninsula. (2) Stop reinforcements on both sides. (3) Get access to all Korea for a commission to prevent truce violations. (4) Exchange prisoners of war one-for-one. (5) Make provision for admin- istration of the buffer zone. (2) Provide for the security of forces and care of refugees as necessary. The terms are still under con- sultation between the United States government, which exer- cises the UN command in Korea with Gen. Ridgway as its agent, and the 15 other governments which also have forces fighting there. Thus they are regarded by officials here as tentative propo- sals subject to revision. Changes mi-"ht as he desirable, it was By JOHN MAYHEW Associated Press Writer So far, the arrest of Iranian prince 'Mahmoud Pahlavi on a traffic violation count; has been a routine affair. But local offi- cials are donning kid gloves in memory of a 16-year-old incident in Elkton, Md. For Elkton was the scene of a similar incident Nov. 27, 1935, involving the Iranian minister that erupted into international dis- harmony and the severing of dip- lomatic relations between the United States and Iran. *a *a * "I DON'T believe there's any possibility of such an occurrence here," said Washtenaw County Prosecutor Douglas K. Reading. "However, I recognize the fact that international aspects have to be considered." Reading said he was undecided about his course of action against cident that finally involved Mary- land's Governor Nice and U.S. Secretary of State Cordell Hull. THAT INCIDENT revolved around Iranian minister Ghaffar Khan Djalal, who was arrested by constable Clayton Ellison and town officer Jacob Biddle. There was a scuffle and the minister was handcuffed. When the minister's identity was established, he was released, but it was too late to avoid difficulty. Despite Gov. Nice's apology in answer to an Iranian demand and the discharge of the two policemen, the Iranian govern- ment refused to be mollified. March 30, 1936, the Iranian government informed the U.S. State Department that it was clos- ing its diplomatic and consular offices in this country in protest against the treatment given an Iranian subject in the American ROBINSON CRUSOE LIFE OVER: SWorld War II Ends for 19 Japanese GUAM-(P)-World War II end- ed nearly six years late yesterday for a motley band of 19 Japanese holdouts. They meekly surrendered their rifles on tiny Anatahan Island- their isolated Western Pacific home for seven years. Carrying a pet cat, they clambered aboard a U. S. Navy tug on the first stage Japan was licked would they be- lieve it. The 19 holdouts were as healthy as they had been stubborn. They had lived well on fish, wild pork, fresh fruit and vegetables on Ana- tahan, in the Marianas 70 miles north of Saipan. They were the last of 21 who oav. un The first wa sthe wn.- 1944, when his fishing craft, the Kaiho Maru, was sunk by U. S. attack. A feud-marred community life began. Island rule included trials. There was one sentence for murder. court death . i The one woman on Anatahan,I