SOPHOMORITIS 1Mw 43 lU ~~Ia4 O 00 'N See Page 2 Latest Deadline in the State FAR, WARM lu LXV, No. 36S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1955 FOUR PAGES Gov. Harriman Listed as Candidate 11 * * * * * * Knight, J3{ibiecoff Say Best Choice Stevenson Must Want Renomination; Won't Be Drafted Again: Shivers CHICAGO (P)- A Republican and a Democratic governor listed Gov. Averell Harriman of New York yesterday as in a strong strategic position to bid next year for the Democratic presidential nomination. Gov. Goodwin Knight, California Republican, said he believes President Dwight D. Eisenhower will run again and win in 1956. But he said he thinks Gov. Harriman would give President Eisenhower the strongest opposition of any Democrat because he has "demonstrated he is a vote getter in the biggest state in the union.' Gov. Abraham Ribicoff, Connecticut Democrat, said that on the basis of Gov. Harriman's statements on public issues and the actions of his political associates "I would say that Harriman is a ite Speak In News Conference IDemocrats fTh1. *u nv n~arn rc f'rnmnnnnvi+ a SOUTH KORE S RISE GAl ST I SP(I Americans Not Hurt By Rocks BUICK NAVIDZADEH ..« deportation delayed Navidzadeh Given lix-Montl Delay Immigration Service Asks Student Seek To Clear Up Charges In Iran By JIM DYGERT A six months' delay in the deportation action against Buick vidzadeh, graduate student in the Law School, has been granted the United States Immigration and Naturalization Service, it was nounced yesterday. Very happy over the decision, Navidzadeh yesterda-y expressed s thanks "to my friends who helped me. This has been all the. sult of their efforts." He was referring especitally to Prof. Beauford J. George, Jr., and of. William W. Bishop, Jr., both of the Law School, who have * been acting as his attorneys and -iue Lwo governors ironu ppubie sides of the country spoke in news conferences as first governors be- gan arriving here for their 47th annual conference. Preliminaries get under way to- day and business sessions tomor- row. Here in the home state of Adlai Stevenson, the 1952 Democratic presidential candidate, Gov. Knight predicted that if Stevenson repeats as a nominee he will lose Califor- nia by as large a margin or a bigger one than three years ago. With evident reference to'the position of Gov. Allan Shivers of Texas, Gov. Knight said Stevenson "doesn't have the capacity to at- tract the Southern bloc as Gov. Harriman might." To Oppose Renomination Gov. Shivers, an Eisenhower Democrat in 1952, told reporters Sunday_ he will oppose renomina- tion for Stevenson and won't sup- port him if Stevenson gets the party nod. Gov. Ribicoff said Stevenson "won't be drafted again.' If he wants the nomination, he must come out and say so." Gov. Harriman has said he is for Stevenson. Gov. Ribicoff said he didn't thing Gov. Harriman would try for the nomination if Steven- son does. Gov. Ribicoff and num- erous other Democratic governors -there are 27 of them-expect to be chatting with Stevenson during the course of the governors con- ference. The result may be a better understanding of Steven- risoners agreement till Issue' GENEVA .1) - The United States and Red China failed yes- terday in a fourth attempt to agree on release of 40 Americans in China but a Communist source said "some progress was made." This informant said the 2%/ hour secret meeting of American ambassador U. Alexis Johnson and Red China's envoy, Wang Ping- nan, was conducted in "a friendly atmosphere." The report came from a source close to the Chinese delegation. It lacked any confirmation from ei- ther Johnson or Wang, who have kept secret the progress of their negotiations since the first meet- ing Aug. 1. Issue Statement They issued a statement yes- terday saying they intended to remain silent, unless there is mu- tual agreement to make a public report. The statement said their talks have been confined so far to an exchange of views on return of civilians of their two countries. The Chinese last week delivered a list of approximately 80 Ameri- cans 'now living on the China mainland. The United States seeks the release of 40 it says are either under arrest or re- fused exit permits. Ask for List In return, the unofficial Com- munist source said, the Chinese asked for a list of Chinese nation- als in the United States, and pro- posed a third country-India - to represent their interests in mat- ters of repatriation. This was branded. a "sinister' maneuver" by the Chinese Nation- alist government, which contended it would mean recognition that Peiping, rather than the Formosa government, has legal claim to these Chinese. The talks are in recess until tomorrow. 'Connie' Nears Critical Point MIAMI, Fla. 03) - Hurricane Connie, still packing winds of 1351 miles an hour near the center, veered northward in the open At- lantic yesterday, easing a threat who announced the decision yes- terday. The United States has been try- ing to deport the law student to Iran after the Iranian government cancelled his student passport more than a year ago.. 'Decided VictOry' The six month delay is a "very decided victory for him," Prof. Bishop said. "It indicates the gov- ernment officials accepted his contention that his life and liberty would be in danger if he returned to Iran." According to Prof. Bishop, the United States government has granted the delay because Navid- zadeh's life would be in danger if deported, and will probably con- tinue the delay if his life would still be in danger in Iran at the end of six months. The Immigration and Naturali- zation Service has suggested that Navidzadeh seek to clear up the charges against him in Iran. The law student has claimed he "wouldn't live three days" in Iran because of his "pro-American atti- tude." He said Iranian army offi- cers whose corruption he exposed while a magazine publisher in Iran are trying to frame him for con- spiracy against Iran. Bond Raised His case first came to the cam- pus' attention last November when it was learned that he. needed $1,000 to post bond to stay out of jail while deportation proceedings got under way. Several Ann Arbor residents raised the $1,000 for his bond. An Immigration and Naturali- zation Service order for his de- portation was received Dec. 15, after which Navidzadeh filed a petition for political asylum in this country. Final deportation hear- ings were later set for Febr. 17. At the hearings, held in Detroit, former Iranian government offi- cial N. Saifpour Fatemi testified in the law student's favor. First News from Hearings Yesterday's announcement was the first to come out of the Febru- ary hearings. The notice came from the regional offices in St. Paul. Navidzadeh, 30 years old, said he "appreciated the way justice I is going in this country. It is very encouraging," he said, con- trasting it with what he expected would happen to him if he return- ed to Iran. "It is this kind of thing that explains why the president of the United States is the leader of the world," he added. He plans to continue his law studies for the next six months. 3 Johnson Chides Win Says Harrmn NEW YORK (') - Democratic Gov. Averell Harriman said yes- terday the people are swinging away from the Republicans and will vote them out next year even if President Dwight D. Eisenhower heads the GOP ticket. He conceded that President Ei- senhower is popular, but said this popularity could not stand the test of a campaign. Gov. Harriman, frequently men- tioned as a possible 1956 Demo- cratic candidate for President, was asked in a radio interview on MBS Reporters' Roundup whether the Democrats can win next year. One-Word Reply He gave a one-wordyreply - "yes"-and then expanded: "There has been an extraordi- nary swing away from the Re- publican Party, a disillusionment in the last two years. "All the elections showed that -nine states-the governors were changed-Democrats were elected to Congress, it is now Democratic. Cannot Disassociate Himself "It's true that the President is popular. Somehow he has been able to disassociate himself with his associates, and with the ac- tions and policies of the Republi- can party and the division that exists in it. "But when it comes to a cam- paign, it's impossible for a candi- date to divorce himself from his associates and a President to di- vorce himself from what has been done by his administration and the failures of the people that are around him, so that will be made clear, and I am satisfied that this trend away from the Republican party will be followed through in 1956 and the President will have to take the responsibility and the people are swinging away from the party and therefore will swing away from the leader of that party." Asked whether he would try for the Democratic nomination, Gov. Harriman repeated that he is for Adlai Stevenson. - GENEVA (A)-- The 72-nation atoms-for-peace conference open- ed yesterday on the note that atomic heating and eletrical pow- er must be developed widely to cope with diminishing supplies of major conventional fuels. Dr. Homi J. Bhabha, president of the United Nations-sponsored parley and director of India's atomic energy project, declared "it is probable that, at the rate at which the world consumption of energy is increasing," the recover- able world reserves of coal, oil, gas and oil shale "will be exhausted in under a centur*" He predicted a method will be found "within the next two de- cadeS" of harnessing the atomic fusion process-the same one used in the fearsome H-bomb-for man's beneficial use. It was the first statement by a high atomic official of any coun- try putting any kind of a timetable on possibilities of taming the H- bomb reaction. Chairman Lewis L. Strauss of the United Nations Atomic Energy Commission promised newsmen yesterday he would comment on Bhabha's statement later this week. son's intention, decision which ates have said until fall. DEMONSTRATES TORTURE - Col. John Arnold, Jr., at a press conference in Tokyo, illustrates one method of torture used on him by the Chinese Reds, "They had one gadget, a one-piece thing that went around the wrist and held the hands so you could not move them. When they closed them it closed off the circulation. I was put in that many times - the longest 96 hours. There was a great deal of pain . . . " Another crew member, Maj. William H. Baumer, Lewisburg, Pa., is in back- ground. 72 NATIONS ATTEND:, Atoms-for-Peace Conference Opens if not the actual Stevenson associ- will be withheld Bow Wow NEW YORK (9) - A friendly fox terrier named "Baby" was mugged yesterday by police in rogues' gallery. It was the first time anyone could recall having photo- graphed an animal to help iden- tify a supected criminal. The dog was picked up along with a man, arrested on a mor- als charge. Police said seven complaints had been received recently of children being molested by a man who had a small black and white dog with him. Centennial Exhi. orNews Roundup By The Associated Press Midwest Polio Cases Down .. . CHICAGO - The number of polio cases in 10 Midwest states dropped about one-quarter in the first seven months of this year compared with the same period last year. But in one of the 10 - Wisconsin - the number of -cases more than doubled, figures released by the United States Public Health Service showed yesterday. And the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis said the number of cases in Wisconsin has continued to climb alarmingly since July 31. The foundation said it has rushed gamma globulin, iron lungs and other equipment to two polio "hot spots" in Wisconsin to help meet the outbreak. Pope Well .. btion ROME - Pope Pius XII is in such good health that his personal physician is going on vacation for the first time since the pontiff collapsed last December. :«": ;:r.:: ::.};>:; . Loyalty Petition . . WASHINGTON - A petition professing Chinese-American loy- alty to the United States and ada- mant refusal to return to Com- munist China has been posted for signatures in Washington's China- town. Joseph Chiang said the purpose of the petition is to show that Chinese people living here are loyal and grateful to the United States and "under no consideration" I would return to Communist China, despite recent Red entreaties. In another development yester- day, Strauss disclosed that heavy water would be available at a cut-rate for use in research react- ors by Americans and by friendly nations having bi-lateral agree- ments with the United States for cooperation in the civil uses of atomic energy. Strauss reported this in answer to a reporter's question while am- plifying on an announcement made simultaneously in Washington and Geneva. The announcement said the AEC had placedi a value of $25 a gram on enriched uranium leased for research reactors and sale prices of $40 per 1,000 grams for normal uranium and $28 a pound for heavy water usable in such re- actors. Heavy water, the AEC said, is used at a .moderator, or auxiliary to the fission process, and also as a coolant in certain types of re- actors. An AEC spokesman told a re- porter he didn't recall offhand what the world market price of heavy water is, but that "at some time in the past it was as high as $100 a pound." 'Gallagher A 1ccused NEW YORK (/)-Sgt. James C. Gallagher was dramatically point- ed out yesterday as t he torture slayer of a sick fellow American in a Red Chinese prisoner of war camp. His accuser, Sgt. Q. C. Lloyd W. Pate, said he was fulfilling a wartime vow as he pointed a f ore- finger at 'the 23-year-old Brooklyn defendant and told a court mar- tial: "That's the man." The unidentified murder vic- tim was beaten, hung on a hook and finally cast into below zero weather to die March 7, 1951. He is one of three prisoners Galla- gher is accused of slaying. "I made a promise to that kid and myself," said Pate, of Au- justa, Ga., "that if God would permit me to -come home alive, I would see that man was paid for, I would see to it that that man who had killed would be brought to justice." Besides 'the lahvinas. iGlher Red Truce Men Seen As Source SEOUL ()-Seven more Amer Ican soldiers were injured today-- none seriously -_in new violence stemming from President Syng- man Rhee's "get out" ultimatum to the half - Communist Neutral Nations Supervisory Commission. This brought the total of Amer. ican soldiers injured since Satur- c ay to 22 - none. seriously thun far. A U.S. Army spokesman said 300 Korean demonstrators storm.. causeway leading to Wolmi-Do, in ed a barricade set up on the Inchon Harbor,. shortly after mid- night this morning. The atmosphere was tense In South Korea. The demonstrations showed no sign of abating and fresh trouble could breakoutat any time. The United States 8th. Army officely denied Korean charges that three-some reports said fi*- Korean war yeteranis were bay eted Saturday at Pusan, Korea's southeast port. Tear Gas Charge i Korean National Police, never- theless, sent the United Nations Command an angry protest They charged United States soldiers used both tear gas and bayonets against Korean demonstrators. Police said three other Koreans were struck by rocks and injured slightly when United States sol- diers drove them off as they tried to approach a truce team's com- pound at Seoul's port of Inchon. The compound is on an island and the Koreans tried to reach it- in boats. In Kunsan, on Korea's west coast, five demonstrators crawled over the fence around the truce -team's compound and were chased out by United States soldiers. The United States commander at Kun- san base reportedly asked for ren- forcements. Pick Up Demonstrator Korean police picked up one demonstrator at Kunsan who was carrying a grenade. They quoted him as saying he intended to kill the Communists in the compound. About 1,200 Koreans marched at Taegu and about 1,000 demon- strated at Kangnung, another pot of entry on the east coast. There was a general feeling among United States officials that the demonstrations could be halt- ed with one word from President Syngman Rhee, who has told the truce teams to get out by Satur- day. Navy Sets Up Special Board For Laney WASHINGTON M)-The Nav3 yesterday set up a special boarc of officers to consider the case o a 21-year-old honor graduate o the United States Merchant Ma rine Academy who was denied commission because his mother 1 admittedly a former Communist Secretary of the Navy Thoma: said the seaman, Eugene Landy of Bellmar, N.J., will be given a See PICTURE, Page 4 opportunity to appear personall before the board.. Sec. Thomas said "he will bi aiven a fair and imartial hearini Come Again, :.-::- :::: ;r. .-.. . - - : _ .-:::. .: ......... _::: :.:: :...... ..4".: .: 7G...._ .. - ..... 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