4 Y t :43 a it'# EDITOR'S NOTE See Page 2 L. Latest Deadline in the State CLOUDY AND SHOWERS VOL. LXI, No. 19-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JULY 22, 1951 FOUR PAGES Arabs Seek Killer As Tension Mounts CAIRO - (R)-- Jordan's British-commanded Arab Legion aided police in rounding up more than 100 suspected oppositionists in old Jerusalem yesterday for questioning in the assassination of King Ab- dullah.a Authorities clamped stern measures against uprisings in both Jordan and Abdullah's Arab Palestine as a bitter fight loomed be- tween Abdullah's two eldest sons over which should succeed to the throne in the Hashemite Kingdom. A dispatch from Switzerland, where Crown Prince Tallal, 40 A years old, is vacationing after a reported nervous or mental break- Rising Mississippi Hits St. Louis; Flood Crest Equals Record Mark Conference Fight Looms. On Controls Senate, House Set For Legislation WASHINGTON -('p)- Friends and foes of the Truman economic controls program got set yesterday for another fight, in the Senate- House conference committee which will piece together the legislation to be submitted to the President. Five Senators and seven mem- bers of the House were named yes- terday to make up the committee, only hours after the House passed a bill extending wage, price and rent controls for a year. The bill makes many changes in the old law and withholds new powers Mr. Truman had asked. Senator Capehart (R-Ind.) predicted that out of the confer- ence will come a compromise bill "e tirely adequate to deal with inlation." The Indiana Republican may have been anticipating complaints from President Truman. The White House mid-year economic report goes to Congress tomorrow, and Mr. Truman may take some cracks at his opposition in an ac- companying message. Rep. Spence (D-Ky.) said he thinks "we can get out a workable' law" at the conference. He said the House bill he supported "was a mighty sick patient, stabbed se- verely by amendments which we were able to remove with roll call' votes." "Disappointed but relieved" was the attitude expressed in the Ad- ministration's Economic Stabiliz- ation offices, after the House ver- sion got through early yesterday. Economic Stabilizer Eric Johnston and his top aides appeared reliev- ed that the House rejected whats Johnston called "a few of thet worst inflationary pork barrel1 amendments." Still, Johnston said, "The con-1 sumers didn't get the breaks they deserved."t down, said he was furious over the regency awarded by the Jordan cabinet Friday to his 35-year-old brother Emir (Prince) Naif. THE DISPATCH to the weekly news magazine Akbar El Yom in Cairo reported hints among Tal- lal's entourage that he planned to return to Amman, the Jordan cap- ital, soon on a "surprise visit." Tallal is classed as violently anti-British; Waif is reported as friendly toward both Britain and the United States as his father was. Arab political circles feel that Tallal's return might set off a violent c h a i n reaction that would affect the whole uneasy Middle East and big power poli- tics as well. Since Tallal has three young sons behind him in normal suc- cession to the throne, Prince Naif. actually is fifth in line. The Arab news agency reported Prince Regent Naif presided yes- terday at his first meeting of the council of ministers in Amman. Anxious over its future hand in Jordan, Britain cancelled the home leave of Sir Alex Kirkbride and ordered him back from London to' his post as minister to Amman. He was a close friend of Abdullah for years and is expected to con- sult with Prince Naif. REPORTS FROM Amman said' police searched the Jerusalem home of the 21-year-old Moslem assassin and- found a large quan- tity of arms. The assassin was killed by Ab- dullah's bodyguards on a door- step of the Mosque of Omar where Abdullah died in old Jerusalem Friday. The Arab Legion troops, com- manded by British-born Gen. John Baggot Glubb Pasha and subsi- dized by the British government, joined police patrols to keep order in Amman. SL Guild Movie Will RunTonight Showings of the SL Cinema# Guild's film "Naked City" will be continued at '7:30 and 9:30 thise evening in the Architecture Audi-x torium. The schedule change was made this weekend due to the use of the auditorium for a recital on Friday evening. SANDBAG CHAIN-Volunteer sandbag crews strengthen a levee along the Mississippi as dikes are threatened by the rising flood crest, swollen by the rampaging Missouri, in the costliest flood in the nation's history. Major levees were expected to hold as the crest fell short of the expected level. Taft Says UN Action in Korea 'Has Accomplished Nothing' 'Franco Gets Aid Promiise ANNAPOLIS, Md.-(P) - Sena- ing aggression, nothing has been tor Taft last night called the Kor- accomplished." j ean war a useless war that has "The aggressor knows now In B ase D eal accomplished nothing toward pun- that he has everything to gain! ishing aggression. if he wins and nothing to lose if By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER "The net result of the whol he loses," Taft said. procedig," e sid,"is he ossWASHINGTON-(A}---Substan- proceeding," he said, "is the lOss Not only have the Chinese Com- tial economic and military aid is of 80,000 American casualties and munists captured half of Korea, the price which Generalissimo billions of dollars and the destruc- " tie said, but their aggression will tion of the very country which we be recognized and they will be per- undertook to defend." fectly safe.' "No bombs have been dropped TAFT, THE Republican policy on their country. No blockade has leader in the Senate, said current been enforced against them. The peace negotiations in Korea "will nationalist Chinese Army has been only postpone the ultimate dan- prevented from making any at- ger. tempt to invade South China or He added, however, in a speech build up a popular front in South prepared for a Maryland Republi- China, against Communism." can outing here that "undoubtedly Those were all steps urged by a stalemate peace at the 38th Par- General Douglas MacArthur. allel is better than a stalemate Taft said it was true that there war at the 38th Parallel." has been a loss of communist But he said that "as for punish- manpower in Korea bhe addedE that "manpower is ' cheap in China." j B oo ns s "For the first time, said Taft, "we have fought a useless and ex- Sr ensive war, with 80,000 American M ark C3. WLJ~~ity' casualties, a war begun without authority by President Truman on 'Bargain ahis own initiative." ________Taft said that Administration policies invited the Communist at- Banners and balloons will fill tack in Korea, that President Tru- Ann Arbor's streets on Wednesday man plunged the nation into war and Thursday this week as the there and "then we refused to annual Bargain Days will be in fight that war with the weapons full swing. at our command." i Julius Schaffer, chairman of the event and manager of Kline's De- 'WORLD'S NEWEST': Visiting Instructor Airs Problems of Berlin ' By RONNIE GOLDSTEIN < "Two main problems of the Free University of Berlip are the lack of buildings for the different de- partments and the social problems of the students," declared Heinz Lorenz, assistant director to the department of physical education at the Free University. Lorenz, who is also secretary of the newly reorganized German Olympic Society in Berlin, is at- tending classes at the University in a German leadership exchange program, sponsored by the State Department. * * * "STUDENTS AT the Free Uni- versity do not have a big campus life nor proper recreational facili- ties," said Lorenz who has drawn up plans for a tremendous $750,000 recreational project that is being held up for want of funds. The Free University of Berlin was established in 1948 as a re- sult of German students petition- ing the government of the west sector of Berlin because the Rus- sians made academic freedom im- possible in the eastern sector. Financial help was received from the West Berlin govern- ment, the American military government in Berlin, and later j 1 1 S ti a £{ # j S, ., 1 f£ t r 1Z :: 1 partment Store, reported that "they should be the biggest Bar-I gain Days yet. Flags and cross street banners are planned; free balloons will be given to children; and stores will feature special dis- plays." "Almost all Ideal merchants have been enthusiastically making ex- tra purchases, and there should be some tremendous bargains avail- able," he added. BETWEEN 30 AND 40 thousand people are expected to crowd the shopping area during the two day celebration. Because of the traf- fic problems this will create, the Chamber of Commerce, which jointly sponsors the event with the Ann Arbor Retail Merchants Ass., has asked all employes not to drive or park on downtown streets dur- ing business hours. Bargain Days were inaugurated in the twenties and became an an- nual event. They were suspended however, in the war years. Senate Pushes Housing Probe WASHINGTON - A() - Inves- tigating Senators yesterday asked officials of the armed services to testify in public Friday on what they are doing to remedy "rent gouging and substandard housing" for families of servicemen. Chairman Lyndon Johnson (D- Tex.) of the Senate preparedness subcommittee announced that "top officials of the defense department will be called to explain their plans to meet the situation." The watchdog defense group is- sued this week a detailed report charging that some servicemen's families near military posts have to live in squalid but high-priced housing. "Our subcommittee has exposed the sordid and bitter story of the tragic housing problem which faces the families of our men in the armed services," Johnson said in a statement. "It would be shameful if this thing were al- lowed to die without any further action. Franco has indicated he wants for American use of Spanish sea and air bases. The United States is prepared to pay the price. Responsible officials confirmed this today as new details were learned of the conference earlier this week between Franco and Ad- miral Forrest P. Sherman of the American Joint Chiefs of Staff. AT THE SAME time it became known that the State Department has instructed embassies abroad to emphasize to foreign govern- ments the sharp limitations of American - Spanish negotiations. The U.S. diplomats were told to bring out that the talks deal sole- ly with military arrangements and do not imply American approval of the Franco regime. The amount of American assist- ance which Franco will require has yet to be negotiated. In fact, the Spanish ruler did not specifically request aid in his meeting with Sherman. But the nature of his response to Admiral Sherman's in- quiries about military cooperation and American access to bases made it perfectly clear, in the view of high officials here, that is what he has in mind. Spain's economy has long beenI threadbare. Franco's army is re- garded by authorities here as so poorly equipped that it would be unable to make any effective showing-in modern warfare. The actual negotiation of terms of the military arrangement be- tween Washington and Madrid were not gone into by Franco and Sherman. What they did achieve, in the judgment of Washington authorities, was a paving of the way for successful negotiations. These will be carried on by spe- cial U.S. and Spanish missions al- though much of the groundwork has already been laid by American air, naval and military attaches, as well as by Ambassador Stanton Griffis at Madrid. According to reports fro'm Ma- drid which tight-lipped authorities here have not challenged, what the American high command wants es- sentially from Spain is the right to use naval bases at Cadiz, Carta- gena and Ferrol, plus Santa Cruz in the Canary Islands and air bases at Barcelona, Madrid, Seville and probably Valencia and Lugo. Harriman Voices Hope In 0OilCrisis TEHRAN, Iran - ()-- Averell Harriman, President Truman's en- voy, moved closer last night to his objective, that of getting the Iranians and British to renew talks on solving the oil crisis. "We've made some progress," said Allahayah Saleh, chairman of the Iranian Parliamentary Oil Board after a meeting with Har- riman. HARRIMAN who talked with British ambassador Sir Francis Shepherd this morning immediate- ly arranged for another meeting with the parliamentary board last night. Saleh's optimistic statement af- terward was the first apparent break in the deadlock since Harri- man came here a week ago today. Previously, the Iranians had agreed to re-enter negotiations with the British on nationaliza- tion of the billion dollar British- owned Anglo-Iranian Oil Com- pany. Their conditions, however, were that the British must begin with recognizing Iran's oil na- tionalization law to the letter. This was the point on which negotia- tions broke down last month. The British offered to accept the principle of nationalization, but have not gone so far as to accept the nationalization law as now written. The Iranians demanded 75 per cent of the oil profits since na- tionalization-plus the other 25 per cent to be set aside for eventual settlement for the company's claims for compensation. The Iranians rejected a British offer to pay $28,000,000 immed- iately an $8,400,000 a month pend- ing a final settlement, and to set up a joint-British-Iranian, operat- ing company. Saleh said he thought the re- sults of Harriman's mission would be "very clear soon." Acheson Will Deliver Talk In Motor City DETROIT-(;P)-The eyes of the world will focus on this-the cli- mactic week of Detroit's 250th Birthday Celebration. President Harry S. Truman and Secretary of State Dean Acheson head an imposing list of national and international figures who will assemble here for the big week in the summer long celebration of the Motor City's founding in 1701. Secretary of S t a t e Acheson arrives in Detroit Tuesday to deliver what State Department aides have heralded as a major "international affairs" speech at a banquet in honor of the founding of Detroit. President Truman will make a flying visit to the Motor City Sat- urday and is expected to address Detroit's "partygoers" from the steps of City Hall. Riff-Raff The four University behavior- ists on a raft are encountering more problems. Yesterday marked the third day of trouble for the experi- menters. As they docked their craft last night near Pitts- burgh's Point, where the Alle- gheny and Monogahela Rivers form the Ohio, the raft was lost in an eddy until a thoughtful motor boat owner towed it to shore. The raft has traveled only seven miles a day so far. The adventurers will have to speed up to reach their goal, New Or- leans, 1800 or 1900 miles away by Oct. 1. :38 Missing in Korea-Bound TransportA VANCOUVER, B.C. -()P)- A four-engined Korean airlift DC-4 transport plane vanished with 38 aboard along the rugged Alaska panhandle coast and may be send- ing distress signals, Canadian Pa- cific Airlines reported. The CPA said the signals were heard at Anchorage, Alaska, and Cranbrook, B.C. M THE OUTBOUND airlift plane left here Friday night. It was last heard from at 3:17 a.m. Sat- urday, Ann Arbor time, off Cape Spencer, about 80 miles due west of Juneau, Alaska. The CPA official said that "while there's no reason to believe these are legitimate distress signals" they had been heard periodically "in the last couple of hours" or since about 6 p.m., and were being investigated. The plane was heading for:An- chorage on the first leg of its trip to Tokyo. CPA, from whom the airlift plane was chartered, has a terminus at Cranbrook. "Foul weather" was reported over the area where the plane was swallowed up. Most of the 31 passengers were American military men. The crew of seven included two stewardesses. The big Canadian Pacific Air- lines plane was the first to meet disaster in the airlift's 87 (CQ) million miles of flying since the outbreak of the Korean War. RESCUE PLANES were poised for another of the northwest's great air searches when the wea- ther lifts. Ground fog and clouds blanketed the area between Juneau and Anchorage, Alaska, from the ground level to a height of 12,000 feet. The 17th U.S. Coast Guard dis- trict at Juneau, which is directing the hunt, said the cutters Citrus and Cahoone were scouring the icy mouth of the Gulf of Alaska north- ward from Cape Spencer. McChord Air Force base near Tacoma, Wash., the stateside ter- minus for American "great circle" airlift operations, said the DC-4 carried 23 U.S. Air Force, three U.S. Army and two Royal Canadi- an Navy men, three American civ- ilians and the crew. Water Level Said Highest In 107_Years Experts Think Peak Readhed ST. LOUIS - () -The mighty Mississippi swung a Sunday punch at St. Louis yesterday but it fell short of the haymaker that had been anticipated. However, the turbulent river levelled off at an apparent crest equalling its highest level at St. Louis in 107 years. At 6:30 p.m. (EST) the big river was at 40.3 feet, the same as the top mark of the 1947 flood. It had been at a virtual standstill for six hours. This was .2 of a foot under the stage anticipated earlier, but the government weather bureau said it expected the river to go no higher. IF THE MISSISSIPPI does go any nearer the all-time record of 41.39 set in 1844, no one will know about it until some time today. The building in which the offi- cial guages are located was locked and the weather bureau said no more readings would be taken to- night. An automatic device re- cords changes in the river level. The Mississippi was swollen by the rampaging Missouri which rolled across the state from Kan- sas City in one of the costliest floods in history. It lost some of its sting, how- ever, when it dumped into the Mississippi about 20 miles north of this city of 1,500,000. Perched on high ground in the arc of the river,gSt. Louis proper is out of danger and most resi- dents went calmly about their bus- iness yesterday. But along the waterfront area, the muddy water inched into nu- merous industrial installations as it did in 1947 when damage was estimated at $9,000,000. Maj. Gen. Lewis A. Pick, chief of the army engineers, reported in Washington that the, billion dollar flood has cost 41 lives in Kansas and Missouri. As the Mississippi reached a crest here, the city health depart- ment was taking steps to prevent contamination of the water sup- ply by sewage backed up by the flood waters. Downstream, sandbagging crews worked feverishly to bolster weak spots in the dikes. Major levees were expected to hold. UN Waits As Reds old K.ey To Parley Fate TOKYO-Moscow was believed ready today to attempt a new tack in the Korean truce nego- tiations as the Kaesong talks reached a critical stage of stalemate and postponement, ac- cording to the United Press. The next move is up to the Communists, said the UP dis- patch. The Chinese and North Koh ean delegations, granted a four-day adjournment, asked for safe con- duct back to Pyongyang for an ex- pected three-way talk with Pieping and Moscow. advance camp in Korea that the There was speculation at the UN talks would not be resumed there- that future negotiations would be carried out at high displomatic level. The United Nation's blunt "No" to this Red demand placed the is- sue of war or peace in Korea squarely in the hands of Commun- ism's highest leadership. Armv Budtel HEINZ LORENZ ...visits University should definitely include a history of modern education." He also thought that one of the major wrongs in physical education in- struction today is that too much emphasis is put on competition and not enough on participation. "In Berlin we have both intra- mural and intercollegiate sports, but not as much intercollegiate competition as American schools because of the immense cost of Started again in 1946, they have been steadily growing in magnitude ever since. Philip McCallum, secretary of the Chamber of Commerce, re- ports that "their fame has been spreading out of town recentlybdue to the success they have enjoyed in recent years, and they now draw shoppers into Ann Arbor from a thirty mile radius." Although those that come won't! find the bands and parades that used to be synonomous with bar- gain days in the twenties, they'll find plenty of shopping opportuni- ties, McCallum said. orldTNews POLICE STATE RULE REVIEWED: Power Hits Expediency in Franco Negotiations By BARNES CONNABLE Any U. S. negotiations with the Franco government for building military and economic strength in Spain must require the estab- lishment of some democratic prin- ciples in that country, Eugene B. Power, president of University Microfilms, said yesterday. site for air bases, but he assert- ed that military aspects should not be considered solely. "I am in favor of assistance be- cause the Spanish people need it," Power stated. "However, there must be a certainty that the peo- ple know the source of the aid and that the Spanish masses are ac- street," Power said. "Every mile of road is patrolled by soldiers." Power also attributed the com- plete subordination of the Span- ish people to lack of education. The average grade level reached by Spaniards is third grade, he said. "The Spanish1 are not accustom- hours a day, receives 80 cents a day.". On paper, labor legislation such as health and unemployment bene- fits is of the highest calibre, Power said. But he noted that the "inef- ficiency of the Spanish bureaucra- cy and the indifference of the peo- ple" defies enforcement of the ii