Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday. March 23. 1962 Peronists Protest Argentine Elections BUENOS AIRES — (UPI) — Supporters of ousted ex-President Juan D. Peron began a general strike today in protest against President Arturo Frondizi's action in nullifying their victories in last Sunday's elections. In Madrid ex-President Peron last night laughed off reports that his supporters would turn to Russia for help if the U.S. government continued its alleged support of President Arturo Frondizi. Reports from the provinces said garrisons in some places had been alerted for possible trouble, but an armed forces announcement said there had been no notable disorders anywhere in the country. The 66-year-old refugee denied that his aides had charged the Pentagon with interference in Argentine affairs and had threatened to ask Russia for help. BE INDICATED WITHOUT explanation that Soviet agents had tried to get in touch with him here, but said he and his friends refused to talk to them. "The United States should understand that Argentines are grown-up people," he said. "They don't need nurses or tutors, either American or Russian." Feron, who had stuck close to his home here for the past three weeks following developments in the campaign for the elections in which his supporters were victorious in 11 Argentine provinces, spent the day yesterday in the mountains. Reports of military unrest in up- country Argentina and of Peronist demonstrations in Buenos Aires Province were dismissed as "false alarms" by defense minister Justo P. Villar, in Buenos Aires. AN EX-ARMY OFFICER identified only as "Col. Favio," who turned up at the official radio station with the intention of broadcasting a "communique" reporting an "army uprising" was arrested on orders from the war ministry. Late-running buses, trains and subways in Buenos Aires operated as usual, and movie crowds were as large as on any other early morning. FREE PIZZA DELIVERY ANY PLACE In LAWRENCE The strike was expected to cripple operations later today in the industrial suburbs which are regarded as Peronist strongholds, but make little impression on central Buenos Aires First editions of morning newspapers appeared on schedule. A week of political crisis did not diminish the enthusiasm with which street crowds in Buenos Aires welcomed Britain's Prince Philip on his arrival here yesterday. THE SOCIALIST AND independen ent unions to which most employees of service industries belong were not supporting the strike. A "White House" announcement issued late yesterday said Frondizi expects to have a new government ready to be sworn in Monday. Frondizi is trying to form a military-civilian coalition cabinet, demanded by Argentina's military leaders as their price for allowing him to continue as President. Colored Pavement for Highway NEW YORK — (UPI) — Illinois highway officials plan to test stretches of red, yellow and off-white asphalt paving. The colored surfaces are supposed to eliminate pavement glare, extend headlight vision and warn of dangerous intersections. Peter Allen, national secretary of the Student Peace Union, will discuss the "Washington Peace Demonstration" at the Minority Opinion Forum at 4 p.m. today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Coffee will be served. Peace Demonstration To Be Forum Topic The U.S. Secretary was more emphatic than ever before in declaring that President Kennedy would never accept a test ban without international inspection U.S. Halts Search For Air Victims test ban at this time had virtually vanished, he was offering Russia a last-ditch chance to sign a foolproof agreement and thus win suspension of the proposed new U.S. series. CLARK AIR FORCE BASE, Philippines — (UPI) — The United States today called off a massive but futile search for a flying Tiger Line transport plane that disappeared eight days ago with 107 persons aboard. Maj. Gen. Theodore R. Milton, commander of the 13th Air Force at Clark, said the search had been ended with "no trace" found of the airliner or its passengers and crew. The Secretary said the United States could never again afford to risk free world security by accepting an unpoliced moratorium or agreement such as the one Russia shattered last fall with its massive series of blasts. Aboard the plane were 93 U.S. Army Rangers, three Vietnamese soldiers and 11 crewmen. The fourengine Super Constellation disappeared March 15 on a six-hour flight from Guam to Manila. The flight was headed for South Vietnam. The search comprised one of the largest air and sea hunts in the history of the Pacific. It covered more than 200,000 square miles of open sea. Planes in the seach fife 153 missions totaling 1,150 flight hours. U.S., Russia Clash In Test Ban Talks GENEVA — (UPI) — Secretary of State Dean Rusk today accused Russia of paralyzing the test ban talks in apparent preparation for more atmospheric nuclear blasts to satisfy "military needs." Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko lashed back with a charge that the American test series scheduled to begin next month in the Pacific constituted an act of "aggression." He said it would set back efforts to halt the nuclear arms race. The comparative calm prevailing thus far at the 17-nation general disarmament conference was shattered abruptly when the foreign ministers of the two nuclear giants took the floor to exchange sharp charges of bad faith. A People-to-People industrial tour for international students will be conducted during the spring vacation. Rusk spoke first, appealing to Russia to reverse its stand before the United States was forced to begin its new tests. But he acknowledged he saw "no hope." Buses will leave the Kansas Union, 1 p.m., April 2. International students will tour the Kansas City stockade and return shortly. $20 Gromyko denied the existence of a moratorium last fall and said Russian tests were in reaction to an attack by Russia. Rusk said, that while hope for a "This is a risk to national and international security which the United States cannot and will not take," Rusk said. Reservations for the tour may be made at the P-t-P office, in Room 113 of the Kansas Union, or in the office of the International student adviser, 228 Strong. Industrial Tour Planned by P-T-P Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers "Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!" says Julius (Cookie) Quintus, ace javelin man and B.M.A.C. (Big Man Around Coliseum). "A Tareyton would even make Mars mellow," says Cookie. "Tareyton's a rara avis among cigarettes. It's one filter cigarette that really delivers de gustibus. 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