. C14C Lit Dait WENDY OWEN See Page 2 c3 E FAIR AND WARMER Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXI, No. 12-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1951 FOUR PA U W Ys 1 Rampaging Rivers Flood Plain States Crews Work to Evacuate Victims TOPEKA, Kan.,-(IP)-Emergen- ey squads were feverishly evacuat- ing another 10,000 persons in this state capital last night as gigantic floods ravaged eastern Kansas, bringing death to at least 12 per- sons and dealing misery and suf- fering to thousands. This hurried exodus, when corn- pleted, will make about 20,000 per- sons moved out of their homes in this city of almost 100,000 popu- lation.' The air rescue service in Wash- ington said all available aircraft are being rushed to Topeka to aid in the rescue of flood victims. THE SERVICE said an emer- gency base has been set up at Forbes Air Force Base near To- peka' Amphibious aircraft, as well as helicopters and large cargo ships being sent to the scene. Amphibious planes of the air rescue service from Westover Air Force Base, Mass., Lowry Base, Denver; March Base, Calif., and Ellington Base near Houston, Texas, have been sent and more are going tomorrow. The Strategic Air Command has diverted large cargo ships, to transport air rescue service helicopters from various points. The amphibians are being sent to Kansas loaded with emergency rations, medical equipment, and other emergency supplies request- ed by Strategic Air Command and the Red Cross. Ten of the uood deaths were in Kansas, two in Kansas City, Mo. In addition two other persons were killed by lightning at Port Leonard Wood, Mo., which was not affected by floods. While Missouri was plagued by flood troubles, Kansas was hard- est hit., Torrents already were pouring through many of the state's prin- cipal cities, and Wichita, the Y largest, was warned its turn was to come last night. t t THE KANSAS RIVER, the Neo- sho, the Cottonwoood, the Marais Des Cygnes, the Verdigris and the Smoky Hill all were creating hav- oc, and the weather bureau said the Little Arkansas would be out of its banks by morning flooding part of Wichita's north riverside residential district. Hardest hit were the cities along the Kansas River, including Topeka, the state capital; Law- rense, home of the state university, and Manhattan. Salina, Abilene, Ottawa, Marion, Strong City, Flor- ence, Beloit and other central and eastern Kansas cities were in al- most as bad shape. The Chicago-Los Angeles de- luxe coach train, El Capitan, has been stranded at Cedar Point, Kan., for more than 30 hours by the flooding Cottonwood River. Another train, the Rock Island's Golden State Limited bound from Los Angeles to Chicago was de- toured hundreds of miles arond the flood area, from Dalhart, Tex., to Colorado Springs and onto the main line from Colorado to Chi- cago only to be stopped dead at Goodland, Kans., by a track i' washout. Truce Talks May Resume C"? Woods Refuses Rent Control Lift By BARNES CONNABLE Ann Arbor councilmen stuck to their guns last night as news of Federal Housing Expediter Tighe Woods' refusal to decontrol rents here arrived from Washington. Earlier, the City Council had passed a resolution recommending rent decontrol to Woods. Whether or not the move was binding has developed into a controversy. * * * * ALDERMAN RUSSELL A. SMITH, chairman of the Council's special committee on rent controls, said he was "not surprised" by Woods' rejection of the Council's resolution and called a recent survey by federal investigators of rent levels here "inadequate." "It would be virtually impossible for the surveyors in -a short # period of time to take into ac- PAUL Downie,,'52, poses calm- ly reading poetry, on Friday the 13th, with a black cat, spilled salt and under a stepladder pro- viding a comparatively peaceful finale to a hectic afternoon. "Whoever said that black cats don't bring bad luck?," a Daily reporter said as she returned from a visit to the Humane Society to procure a black cat for this photo- graph. On her return trip the -Daily-Robert Lewis cat sprang from the back seat of her father's new car and caused her to swerve suddenly, overturn- ing the car into a ditch. The car and the reporter es- caped unharmed and it was sill wandering around the Daily Edi- torial room as the paper went to press this morning-rather, the cat is-the reporter has gone home to break the news to Papa. Pair Ousted From State Department WASf-INGTON-(')-The State Department announced last night it has suspended two high officials pending hearings on security charges. The officials--both career diplo- mats-are: John Paton Davies, Jr., 43, a member of Secretary Acheson's top level policy planning staff and a veteran of many years service in i hna=i haig a ee e 'U' CONFERENCE: Moody Seeks Support For Economic Controls By DAVE THOMAS 1 DailsManagingEditor for July 23 before the department's Michigan freshman Democratic Senator Blair Moody made a yboard. thumping appeal for public support for the Administration's economic Oliver Edmund Clubb, 50, Direc- controls program in a speech last night delivered before the Univer- far o a eice of manears sity's fourth annual Conference on Aging. fairs, also a veter-an of many years .rCoservice in China. His hearing has Concluding a short talk on the problems of our aging population, been set for July 31. the square-jawed former newspaperman declared that he agreed with. Defense Mobilizer Charles E. Wilson that July, 1951, will be recorded as one of the most crucial months in American history. THE DEPARTMENT said in a * ,* , statement the suspension action "MR. WILSON was not refer- ring only to the outcome of the Korean cease-fire talks," Moody asserted. The threat of inflation is every bit as.great a danger to our free way of life as the Red's military force, he added. "We are facing a decision which will test the judgement and fiber of the American people; as it has not been tested in years," Moody said. Strong controls are now nec- essary to protect the enterprise system which made America the greatest country in the world, he emphasized. "No one likes con- trols, but at a time when we are finding it necessary to divert civil- ian production into defense pro- duction, a strong set of regu- lations is needed to hold prices down." * * "A CANNY, unscrupulous force is trying to turn our free world into a slave world," he said, and Americans "can't afford to relax and go to the ball game every time things begin to look a little better." You can't sit down at the con- ference table with a bully and bargain if you are flabby, he told his audience. He said that it was necessary for us to change the Communist's plan of world con- quest and that the only way to do this short of war was to make our- selves -so strong that it will be- come perfectly clear to the 13 men in the Kremlin that to attack us would be personal and national suicide. He emphasized that Americans must be prepared to spend from 38 billions to 50 billions dollars a year for the next two years in order to rearm. "If the law of supply and demand means any- thing, this situation will cause a disastrous inflation followed by a depression unless we instigate strong controls." * In an interview, Moody attacked "die-hard reactionary inflation- ists" who through advocating the abolition of controls are acting to destroy the enterprise system which made America great and made them wealthy. "A period of booming inflation, followed by a disastrous deflation would drive our country into the very socialis- tic, controlled society which these \.# was mandatory under the law and does not Indicate that a person is guilty of misconduct or is a se- .....curity risk.'' World News Roundup SENECA, Ill.-Three and pos- sibly four men were reported killed last night in an explosion in the DuPont powder plant near Seneca. ,* * * WASHINGTON - President Truman yesterday asked for a prompt seven per cent general pay raise for 2,000,000 govern- ment workers but a Senate'com- mittee went him one better and okayed increases averaging 8.4 per cent and totalling some half a billion dollars. * * * TEHRAN-Premier Mohammed Mossadegh, moved yesterday to raise money for Iran's depleted treasury while awaiting the arriv- al of W. Averell Harriman to dis- SEN. BLAIR MOODY * * * physical medicine and rehabili- tation in various communities throughout the country." In rehabilitation deficiencies, he continued, prepare the patient physically, mentally, socially and vocationally for the fullest porsible life compatable with his abilities and disabilities. Outlining the growth of phys- ical medicine and rehabilitation, he pointed out that there are 16 times as many training positions open in the three centers in the U. S. today than there were 11 years ago. However, there are additional thousands of medical and non-medical personnel still needed. The key to proper rehabilitation of disabled persons is the provision of proper motivation, Dr. Krusen said. The secret of care of a pa- tient is care "for" a patient. The conference -will end today with a luncheon at 12:30 p.m. in the Union, which will be devoted to summary reports and a talk by Clark Tibbits, former head of the University's Institute for Human Adjustment and now chairman of the Federal Security Agency's Committee on Aging and Geria- trics. * * 4 The nature of the security charges against the two men was not explained. State Department press officer Michael McDermott said the de- partment has had no intention of announcing the suspension ac- tions, but did so because word had circulated in town yesterday about the incidents. It was therefore decided to make a statement, he said. The statement began by saying the State Department "confirmed yesterday" the two suspensions and "made it known" that the actions had been taken on June 27 "as the result of recommendations by the department's loyalty secur- ity board that hearings be held by the board on both cases. THE GOVERNMENT'S loyalty program was begun in March, 1947, by order of President Tru- man. It provided for a check up on the loyalty of all government employees. Last April, Mr. Truman ordered a tightening up of standards. He directed then that the standard for removal from office "shall be that, on all the evidence, thete is a reasonable doubt as to the loyal- ty of the person involved to the government of the United States." Previously, there had to be, for dismissal, a finding of "reasonable grounds" for belief the person was disloyal. Truman Hits Controls Delay WASHINGTON-(A')-President Truman said yesterday Congress will have to take the responsibility if it fails to pass a strong economic controls law to combat inflation. Hitting out at the trend on Capi- tol Hill to deny him the controls powers he. asked, Mr. Truman told his news conference he has made all the appeals he thinks necessary on the subject. A little grimly, he said that when count all of the factors in the issue, especially since I am i- formed they did not investigate the living area outside the city limits," Ald. Smith said. However, he felt that part of the Council's resolution had re- quired Woods to decontrol rents and asserted that a new vote would not have to be taken. ON THE OTHER side of the led- ger, Ald. Arthur W. Bromage, lone Republican of the trio which vot- ed against the Council's move, re- affirmed that he has "not seen conclusive evidence that would jus- tify decontrol. I voted in good con- scieAce before and I'm still in the same position. Aid. Bromage, a professor in the political science department, said the Ann Arbor resolution was unique in that it gave Woods "voluntary" authority to remove the controls and also contained an apparently binding clause. Under the decontrol law, city councils may recommend that the Housing Expeditor end rent lids, reserving the power to reinstate them. As an alternative, the muni- cipal bodies may require lifting of controls with no reimposition pov- er given to the Expediter. The Ann Arbor Council passed a double-barreled proposal by an 11- 3 vote June 14 which contained both alternatives. ALD. SMITH, a professor in the law school, justified the move as a "safeguard." "In the first place, we desired rent decontrol, but, secondly, we wished to reserve the power to reinstate controls in case conditions warranted them in the future. He said Wood's action was pre- sumably based upon the voluntary rather than the "local option" part of the resolution. "Woods' refusal was perhaps'made on the assump- tion that the Council might change its mind," he added. However, indications last night were that the 11 Republican majority still swamped the two Democratic councilmen and Ad. Bromage. Inasmuch as the Council's reso- lution reportedly has no precedent, a dispute rages as to whether a new vote will have to be taken on the local option section. Ald. Smith felt that unless the Council with- draws its "request," Woods is ob- ligated to remove the controls. .THE WASHINGTON report came from a spokesman for Woods who said the Council would be notified today it cannot decontrol rents. Woods' offc said the results of the government survey last week found "housing needshave not been met in Ann Arbor" and dictated the decision. The letter to the Councilis expected to in- clude a detailed report of the survey. The decision to take the survey was criticized by the Council last month as "unnecessary." Mayor William E. Brown, Jr., said at that time that a short survey could not adequately measure Ann Arbor's housing needs. The Council's resolution was blasted after its passage by Wilson H. White, chairman of the Wash- tenaw Rent Advisory Board, be- cause it embraced both alterna- tives. White claimed the Council failed to vote directly on the is- sue. Cinema Guild Slates Coniedv CHICAGO-(1P) - Steel-helmet- ed National Guardsmen-rushed in by trucks-used rifle butts last night to drive back a mob that smashed into police lines guarding an apartment building in subur- ban Cicero where a Negro family has rented a flat. Several persons were reported injured in the clash. The- guardsmen were ordered into Cicero late yesterday by Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson to prevent riot- ing in the apartment area. A Cicero policeman was serious- ly injured Wednesday when struck by a brick. Many windows in the 20-apart- Judge Releases Red Leaders NEW YORK - () - Judge Learned Hand yesterday freed 15 second string Communist leaders from jail, reinstating the bail post- ed forsthem by he Civil Rights Congress. It was a stunning blow to he government. Only yesterday, Federal Judge Sylvester J. Ryan put the Reds back behind bars by revoking the bail and outlawing the congress as a bondsman in the future. U. S. Attorney Irving H. Saypol called Judge Hand's reversal of Judge Ryan "an outrageous thing." But Judge Hand shut him up in a hurry, snapping: "My order is what I say. If Judge Ryan chooses to ignore it, that's something else. I have made my order. I don't care to hear any more." EX-DAILY STAFFER: ment building have been smashed and furniture dumped out of the windows. * * * THE GUARDSMEN arrived at the apartment soon after the mob rushed police lines. Cicero policemen and sheriff's police had used clubs to hold back the crowd. The guardsmen leaped from their trucks and reinforced the police lines and slowly forced back the crowd. Lt. Jack Johnson of the sher- iff's police estimated a crowd of 4,000 had gathered when the guardsmen arrived. The crowds have demonstrated for three nights in an effort to prevent a Negro family from mov- ing into the suburb, ** ~ VANDALS BROKE into several apartments in the 20-apartment building Wednesday. Windows were smashed and police used tear gas to drive back repeated efforts of some mob members to break through their lines. Sheriff Babb told the Governor yesterday that Harvey . Clark, Jr., 29, a Negro bus driver for the Chicago Transit Authority has abandoned at *least temporarily, his plan to move into the apart- ment. His furniture was moved in Tuesday night. However, Clark's I a w y e r, George C. Leighton said the bus driver had not changed his mind about moving in. Other tenants in the building have moved out temporarily. Some have stored their furniture in the basement. There are no Negroes living in Cicero, a community of 70,000. BEFORE HALT-Vice Admiral C. Turner Joy, senior Allied cease- fire negotiator, preceded by Col. Andrew J. Kinney, U. S. Air Force, walks from the meeting building in Kaesong after the first session of cease-fire talks. The truce conference was broken off because Reds refused to allow allied newsmen in Kaesong. Latest reports indicate that correspondents have been told to be ready for rip to the meeting area within an hour's notice. Race Riot Erupts In Chicago Suburb Rosemary Owen Dies In University Hospital Rosemary Owen, '51, former Daily Junior Editor, died yester- day in the University's Simpson Memorial Institute after a three- month illness. Miss Owen, known on campus as "Wendy" was a member of The Daily staff for two years. Previ- ously she had been Sales Manager of the Gargoyle and Secretary of the Gilbert and Sullivan Society. Miss Owen was affiliated with Chi Omega sorority; Wvyern jun- ior honorary society and Mortar- board senior honorary. She received her degree from the Journalists Alerted for Trip to Area UN Asks Recall Of Armed Men BULLETIN SEOUL, Korea - (-A')-Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway today told the Communists if they refused to make the Kaesong area an unarmed neutral zone 641 pro- pose the conference site be moved." By The Associated Press ABOARD THE PEACE TRAIN, Twenty Allied correspondents to- day were told to be ready to go, to the Kaesong Korean War cease- fire talks within one hour's notice. United Nation's delegates to the conference stood by awaiting an answer from the Communists on the delegates' demand that the newsmen be admitted to Ka song. IN THE MEANTIME the Army radio broadcast a message from Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway In Korea to Korean Red Gen. Nam 1 accusing the Communists of de- laying and blocking armistice talks.° The- allied supreme comman- der said the United Nations delegation is prepared to resume , the negotiations in good faith. Ridgway's message, read' over the air by Brig. Gen. Frank Allen, Public Information Officer, pro- posed that Kaesong and the road leading to it from the south be cleared of all armed personnel and also a circular area five miles in radius from Kaesong. Communist armed guards have stood along the Munsan-Kaesong road when the United Nations delegation has moved down it. RIDGWAY'S MESSAGE said that radio telephone communica- tions would, be kept open for the Communist reply but if the Reds wanted to send a liaison officer with the reply he would be af- forded safe passage. Talks were broken off yesterday by the United Nations when the Communist armed guards refused passage to a truck containing 20 Allied correspondents nine miles from Kaesong. The correspond- ents were enroute to the cease fire talk area under the sponsorship' of the U.N. delegation but they were not to attend the meeting. * THE CHINESE REDS had ac- cused the allies of using "bluff and. -pressure tactics" and questioned their good faith in the dispute over the newsmen. However, a broadcast in Eng- lish from Peiping referred to "temporary suspension" of the talks, possibly signifying that the Reds expected resumption. The Red attitude was presented in the form of a news report of a. Chinese correspondent in Pyong- yang, Korean Red capital. The broadcast blamed suspen-j sion of the talks on failure of the allied delegation to arrive, and said this was because "The Ameri- cans have arbitrarily sent in 20 newsmen in addition to the regula; delegation." * * * Allied Troops ForgeAhead U. S. EIGHTH ARMY HEAD- QUARTERS, Korea - (A) -Com- munists used every weapon at their disposal yesterday in an effort to halt advancing United Nations forces southeast of Kumsong, Red base on the east-central front. Allied troops attacking enemy po- sitions there were lightly engaged at first, but soon met bitter resist- ance. The battle raged on several hours later. Two Allied patrols in the former iron triangle on the west-central front were fir~d on by Chinese Control Suffers Program Setback WASHINGTON - OP)-- T h e House yesterday dealt two more t ;.. " I 11