Y £jir 3n :4Iait1 EDITOR'S NOTE See Page 2 Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXI, No. 15-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 1951 PARTLY CLOUDY FOUR PAGES Ask Franco For Loan of Naval Bases b Sherman Seeks Spain's Terms MADRID - (A) -- U.S. Admiral Forrest P. Sherman has asked Generalissimo Franco what he would want in return for United States use of Spanish air and na- val bases, reliable informants re- ported yesterday. The sources said the American Chief of Naval Operations asked Franco at their two-hour meeting Monday for the right to use four naval bases and three to five air bases. AMERICAN sources said the talks were "evploratory"-mean- ing that Sherman is feeling out the Spanish asking price. Franco's price is likely to come high. He wants the means +" for improving Spain's poor high- ways and railroads, dollars to get materials and machinery for industry, modern planes for his airforce and heavy equipment for his army. . The United States is likely to find Franco's asking price too f high. The bargaining will then begin. No official confirmation of this outline of the Sherman-Franco tks could be obtained yesterday from either Spanish officials or the American embassy. However, usually well-informed sources said Sherman told Franco the United States . wants naval bases at Cadiz, northwest of Gib- ralter; Cartagena on the Mediter- ranean coast; Ferrol on the Bay of Biscay north of Portugal; and Santa Ciruz De Tenerife in the Canary Islands; and airfields at Barcelona, Madrid, Seville and possibly Valencia and Lugo, south- east of Ferrol. He is said to have told El Cau- dillo that the United States was ready to put these bases into condition to handle American warships ahd planes, Franco was reported by high- level sources last week to have told his cabinet that a far-reaching government reorganization must be carried out to cooperate with the West against Communism. His plans were reported to include greater press freedom and other measures to make his regime less objectionable to democracies. Price Drops To Be Upheld By McGrath WASHINGTON -(P)- Attorney General McGrath yesterday hreatened criminal prosecution for anyone attempting to force cutrate merchants to raise their prices. He said he intends to take prompt action under the anti- trust laws against producers, wholesale distributors or retailers using coercion or pressure to pre- vent free price competition. IN A FORMAL statement, Mc- Grath appealed to the public to report any such instance of which they have knowledge to the near- est FBI office or the Justice De- nartment's Anti-Trust Division. The announcement disclosed- that the Department is already investigating a wide variety of alleged attempts by commercial interests to get around the su- preme court's decision of last may on so-called "fair trade" contracts. The High Court's May decision knocked the props out from under the "Fair Trade" laws in about 45 states. Under these laws all retailers were required to sell pro- ducts at not less than a fixed min- imum price set by the manufac- turer, whether or not they had signed a "fair trade" agreement with the manufacturer. Draft Lecture Slated Today The outlook for employment and the draft, two big problems facing June and August graduates, will be discussed in the Counseling and Rent Decontrol Df initely Set Local rent controls entered upon their last few days of existence after a last ditch fight to save them failed in the City Council. After a short discussion, the Council Monday night voted, 11-2 to defeat a motion by Democratic Alderman James E. Green to retain rental curbs. Republican Ald. Arthur W. Bromage joined Green in voting for the motion. THE COUNCIL action means that Federal rent control lids will expire on Saturday in accordance with the Council's demand that Douglas Hits Truman on Nominations WASHINGTON-(P) -- Senator Paul Douglas (D, Ill.) yesterday challenged President Truman's de- cision to go over the Senator's head in nominating two Federal judges. Douglas asked the Chicago and Cook County Bar Associations to take a poll to decide which two men are better qualified-the Sen- ator's candidates or the men the President nominated. * * * THE CONFLICT arose from Truman's July 13 nomination of Judge Cornelius J. Harrington and Municipal Judge Joseph Drucker to fill two new posts in the Fed- eral District Court for northern Illinois. This was nearly six months after Douglas, acting according to what he called "time honored practice," had recommended the appointment of William H. King, Jr., and Judge Benjamin P. Ep- stein. Douglas complained that the President did not consult him on the judgeships. Congressional insiders inter- preted the President's appoint- ments as another indication of a growing coolness between him and the Illinois Senator. They attributed the !apparent widening rift between the two to Douglas' critical attitude toward some Administration policies. For one thing, the Illinois Sena- tor has plugged away for cuts in Federal spending although some of the proposed cuts pinched at Administration programs. S* . THERE HAVE been reports that Douglas may become a contender for the Democratic Presidential nomination in 1952 if Truman does not run. Douglas has denied he seeks the nomiation but the talk per- sists. Truman was on an air inspec- tion trip of the Kansas-Missouri flood area and there was no im- mediate comment from the White House on Douglas's statement yes- terday. The Senate, which confirms judgeship nominations by a ma- jorityi vote, is not expected to act on the Illinois candidates for sev- eral days. Douglas said he had "no desire to become engaged in a struggle with the President for whom I have the kindliest feelings and who is bearing a heavy load." O Federal housing Expediter Tighe Woods decontrol local rents under the "local option" clause of the present Federal rent law. Woods had previously rejected a request by the Council that he decontrol rents "voluntarily," thus giving him the option of re- imposing controls should the ren- tal situation get out of hand. Woods said that results of a sur- vey by his office indicated that the demand for rental housing had not been adequately met. In refusing to rescind its "local option" request Monday night, the Council moved to establish a "watchdog" committee to check rental complaints after the decon- trol order goes into effect. The Council ordinance commit- tee also was asked to report in a new law that will require owners of rental units (not including rooms) to file reports with the city clerk showing rentals prior to de- control and any increases made from time to time. * * * COUNCIL President Cecil O. Creal named seven aldermen to serve on the "watchdog" commit- tee. They are: Ald. Russell A. Smith, chairman; and Alds. George Sallade, Clare Fenn, James Green, Arthur Bromage, A. D. Moore and John Dobson. In the short lived discussion which prqeded the affirmative decontrol vote, Ald. Green declared that Woods' refusal to lift con- trols was a "common sense" ap- proach and one ,which the Coun- cil should follow until they have proof that the city's housing needs have been met. Ald# Smith, chairman of the committee which recommended to the Council that rents be de- controlled, replied that the Woods survey was invalid be- cause it surveyed only housing within the city limits. Smith also complained about a "three pronged attack"' by The Daily. He said that accusations that his committee in first asking Woods to deconrol "voluntarily" was "attempting to pass the buck" were unfounded. There was no buck passing at- tempt at all, he asserted. "We were merely trying to get decon- trol with the right of reimposi- tion." The Council's refusal to rescind its previous action insures the re- moval of rent controls from the city. The housing expediter said late last week in a letter to Mayor William E. Brown, ir., that, unless the Council rescinded or modified its earlier resolution, rents will be decontrolled in Ann Arbor as of Saturday, July 21. The action will leave Ann Ar- bor township as the only section of Washtenaw County in which rents are still controlled. House Votes TO Continue Price Drops Truman Wins Controls Battle WASHINGTON - (P) - The House yesterday voted to sustain the present rollback on live beef prices and to permit, a 10 per cent cut in the price of all other farm products selling above parity. The vote was 207 to 123. IN A SUDDEN surge of strength, Administration forces rammed through a compromise to that ef- fect and also beat down three ma- jor attempts to curb price roll- backs in the bitter house fight over controls. The compromise is still sub- ject to a final vote when the controls bill is completed. With a few exceptions-notably beef-most farm products are now selling below parity. Parity is the government-fixed formula for giv- ing farmers a fair return for their products in relation to the things they buy. * * *R AFTER THE four major votes, the House went on to reject an Administration request for author- ity to license businesses. The vote was 127 to 27. The chamber next turned down an amendment by Rep. Talle (R-Iowa) to give the Sec- retary of Agriculture a veto over ceiling prices imposed on farm prices by the Office of Price Stabilization. The count was 87 to 61. The big vote on price rollbacks came as a dramatic last-ditch vic- tory for Administration forces who had been severely buffeted in pre- liminary tests before the show- down yesterday. It was also a partial victory for Price Director Michael V. DiSalle, who has argued that the 10 per cent rollback on beef cattle prices is the heart of the entire stabilization program. However, the compromise bars DiSalle from carrying out two fur- ther beef price rollbacks of 4% per cent each which he had or- dered to go into effect on Aug. 1 and Oct. 1. * THE ADMINISTRATION picked up unexpected strength from city Republicans - as distinguished from farm state Republicans - and from some southern Demo- crats in the vote for the com- promise. A Dixie-GOP coalition which rad ridden roughshod over Ad- ministration forces in earlier clashes suddenly broke ranks when It came to the showdown. The compromise does not affect rollbacks, present or future, on non-farm products. In this re- spect, it .does not alter the roll- back on auto prices put into effect by the Administration last Jan- uary. World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The National Production Authority yesterday dropped its three-month rubber- saving ban on spare tires. * * * BRUSSELS, Belgium-Twenty- year-old Baudouin became the bachelor king of the Belgians and the African Congo yesterday in a solemn oath-taking before Parlia- ment. DISASTER REIGNS-A series of explosions which has accom- panied the catastrophic prairie floods demolished this section in Kansas City. Yesterday, President Truman flew over the area and got his first glimpse of the wide-spread destruction. * ,.4 * Truman Visits Disaster; Aid Increase Refused _._ t« KANSAS CITY, Mo.-(')-Presi- dent Truman made an aerial tour' of the vast flood area from St. Louis to western Kansas and into eastern Oklahoma yesterday and declared the disaster was "one of the worst this country has ever suffered from water." In a statement before he took off again for Washington at 7:57 p.m. (CST), Mr. Truman said fed- eral officials are "expecting to work together to see if we can al- Break Urged Unless Reds Liberate Oatis WASHINGTON - (P) - Senator Monroney (D-Okla.) urged last night that the United States break off diplomatic and economic rela- tions with Communist Czechoslo- vakia unless that country frees As- sociated Press correspondent Wil- liam N. Oatis within 90 days. Monroney made the proposal as demands multiplied in both Houses of Congress for this country to halt trade with Czechoslovakia until Oatil is liberated from prison. * * * THE OKLAHOMA Senator in- troduced a resolution calling for a complete break in relations and de- claring: "Persecution by the Gov- ernment of Czechoslovakia of an American citizen is deplored by the people of the United States and throughout the free world." Earlier, Senator O'Conor (D.- Md.) introduced a resolution to bar all foreign Communist news- men-ineluding Russia's-from the United States. O'Conor proposed as well that the Government "make suitable re- presentation to the United Nations for consideration of the Oatis case by that body." Rep. Beamer (R.-Ind.) urged the Government to ban all imports of goods from Czechoslovakia in re- prisal for Oatis' imprisonment. Sixth Peace Session Held; Red Troop Buildu oted leviate suffering and put the com- munity back on its feet again." MAJ. GEN. Lewis A. Pick, chief of Army engineers, briefed the President on the awful destruction during his flight west of here. Defense Mobilization Chief Charles E. Wilson, who flew here with Mr.-Truman, said the Pres- ident has ordered "an organiza- tional setup that we hope is go- ing to enable us to cope with the situation." General Pick said, "These floods need not have occurred. We have got to impound these flood waters up in the upper reaches of the basins. It can be done." He told the President the flood would be the costliest in history and dam- age would top $75,000,000. BUT AT Lincoln, Neb., yester- day, A. E. McClymonds, Regional Director for the Soil Conservation Service, estimated Kansas agricul- tural losses, alone, would run up to $500,000,000. If this estimate is borne out, the overall flood dam- age might eclipse General Pick's figures. As the President made his flight the major affected areas were just beginning to dig out of the muck and wreckage left by the torrents and the fire that has burned seven blocks in Kan- sas City since Friday noon. As his plane paused at Grand- view Airport on the outbound por- tion of his trip the President, who had just flown over the lower Missouri, commented: "The flood is terrible-awful. It's the worst thing I have ever seen." Just before the President left Washington the Senate Appropria- tions Committee voted to hold the bill to the original $15,000,000. Senator Saltonsall (R, Mass.) said the action was unanimous. How- ever, he said this did not mean radditional funds might not be voted later. He said the Commit- tee felt that it would be more sensible to wait for complete data on needs and then take whatever action might be necessary. Twin Hal McRAE, Ga.-(P)-Two burg- laries in the same store at the same time came to light yester- day. Joe Copland, 18 years old, and Willie Copland, 17 years old, were arrested after McBride's General Store was broken into the night of June 6. Officer H. M. Spurlin said they helped trace the goods they admitted taking. Other, articles were missing but they denied taking anything else. They might have, they said, but they heard some one on the other side of the store and ran. The mystery cleared today, Spurlin said, with the arrest of Jesse Williard Stephens, 38 years old. He was in the other side of the store the night of June 6. All three are in jail on burg- lary charges. Red Leaders Jailed Again;* Lack Bonds NEW YORK-(iP)-Thirteen in- again, out-again second string Communist leaders were jailed again yesterday for lack of proper bonds. Also ordered back to jail was their millionaire financial angel, Frederick Vanderbilt Field. * * * FIELD'S $10,000 bond was re- voked for his refusal to reveal where the Civil Rights Congress gets all its bail money for Com- munists. He is p6trustee of the Congress' bail fund. Similar bail for two other trustees of the fund also was re- voked for the same reason. They a r e mystery writer Dashiel Hammett and W. Alphaeus Hun- ton. They had been entitled to bail but stayed in jail because they couldn't furnish it. After the 13 Communists were locked up, two came up with bail and were released, leaving 11 still behind bars. As of now, the other Reds can gain their freedom by posting sat- isfactory bail from some source other than the Civil Rights Con- gress. But the three trustees are denied bail from any source. IN ALL, four federal judges figured in the day's complicated proceedings. The cases have shut- tled back and forth between dis- trict and appeals courts for two weeks. For the 13 Reds, it was their third trip to jail during a legal merry-go-round that led to the outlawing, of t h e i r original bondsman, the Civil rights con- gress. Federal Judge Sylvester J. Ryan Monday outlawed the Civil Rights Congress as bondsman for 14 of the indicted Communist second team. He revoked their bonds and gave them until noon yesterday to dig up fresh bail money. Originally, 21 second string Communist leaders were indicted on charges of conspiring to teach and advocate the violent over- throw of the U. S. government. Four never were found. The 17 in custody spent a few days in jail before the original bonds were posted. JudgekRyan revoked this bail last week and the 15 spent two nights in jail. Then Appeals Judge Learned Hand overruled Ryan and told him to finish his bond hearing before revoking the bail. This decision freed the 15. Allies Probe Communists Behind Lines New Drive Seen If Talks Cease SEOUL, Korea-(A')-Allied and Red cease-fire negotiators met this morning for their sixth session in Kaesong-while United Nations thrces kept a wary eye on a Com- munist troop buildup Northeast of the conference site. The U. S. Eighth Army dis- closed that while yesterday's fifth session was in progress Allied tanks and soldiers drove inside Red lines northeast of Kaesong. The probing forces punched hard at Red troop concentrations near the Kaesong five-mile neutral zone. IMass flights of Allied fighter- bombers earlier blasted Commun- ist supply centers and arteries in North Korea. THE ALLIED negotiators, who were confronted by the Reds with one "new point" yesterday, went. by road to this morning's session. It opened promptly at 10 a.m. (7 p.m., Tuesday, Ann Arbor time) and recessed 55 minutes later un- til 1 p.m. Although there has been no official reports other than that the first five meetings were con. genial with "some progress" made,, it is generally believed that the question of withdraw of U.N. troops from Korea fe holding up agreement on an agenda. The Chinese-Korean Red 400,- 000-man army is arrayed across the Korean front and back of it to the Manchurian front er. It is reported poised to strike if the talks break down. Communist ne- gotiators and repeated Red broad- casts have made it clear they want to discuss the withdrawal of "all foreign troops" from Korea. THE U.N. representatives, head- ed by Vice Adm. C. Turner Joy, were believed to consider this political and out of their realm. The possibility of increasing the size of both delegations, once the agenda has been set, was voiced unofficially yesterday. AP Correspondent Nathan Pb lowetzky reported from the Allied advance camp near Kaesong that inclusion of Lt. Gen. James A. Van Fleeet on the delegation was a "possibility." His Deputy Chief of Staff, Maj. Gen. Henry Hodes, is one of the five Allied represen- tatives. A spokesman at Van Fleet's Headquarters was non-committal on the question. He said that if U.N. leaders thought it necessary to have a bigger representation "they undoubtedly will add a few more people." Gen. Peng Teh-Huai, command- er of the Chinese "Volunteer Peo- ple's Army" is not taking part in the cease-fire talks. Gunman Slays Paper Official In Automobile CHICAGO - () - A $25,000 a year paper company official was slain by assassins yesterday and police sought to determine if his death was linked to the unsolved killing of a wealthy fiber com- pany executive three years ago. Victim of a gunman wearing a vivid green sport shirt was Charles Crane, 37 years old, sales manager for the Thomas Paper Stock Com- pany. In 1949, he was a defend- ant in the second largest income BARRISTERS UNEMBARRASSED: Law School A lums Hold Various Posts in world Supreme Court Justices, cattle ranchers, ministers, florists, ma- chinists .. . These are some of the occupa- tions reported by alumni of the Law School in the second edition of the school's alumni directory just off the press. In the 99 years since the Law School first opened its doors, 14,- 643 graduates have receivedtheir diplomas and of that number, 7,- 536 are still living, scattered among each of the 48 states and 19 foreign countries. DESPITE THE wide range of occupations reported by alumni answering the directory question- naires, however, most of them are using their legal training directly in earning their livings. More than 66 percent of the alumni re, ported that they were occupied with general law practice. Eight of the nine justices of the Michigan Supreme Court a r e graduates of the Law School and three U. S. Senators and seven Representatives hold University law degrees. In the field of education, 11 alumni are deans of law schools around t h ecountry, including Dean E. Blythe Stason, dean of the Universiy Law School. Eight- nine others are professors of law at various institutions. Four governors of the State, in- cluding Gov. G. Mennen Williams are graduates of the Law School and three Associate Justices of the U. S. Supreme Court have been alumni, the most recent being the late Frank Murphy. Other alumni have made names for themselves in the business world and in he armed services. WASHINGTON-Secretary of Labor Maurice Tobin yesterday urged the labor movement to "concentrate its energy and strength" on organizing the na- tion's 15,000,000 white collar workers. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.-Yu- goslavia told the United Nations yesterday that the growing threat of Russian and Soviet satellite ag- gression against it prevents the Yugoslavs from furnishing troops now to any international UN army. WASHINGTON-Two days of World War III would match the $2,000,000,00d'&cost of a year's foreign aid that would go far to head off such a conflict, Paul G. Hoffman told Congress yester- PROFESSOR LAVES ASSERTS: Political Literacy Can Prevent War- Universal "political literacy" will make war impossible as wellI HE DEFINED "political literacy" as the ability to understand one's "Americans tend to be political- ly illiterate, he said. "becanse we