TUESDAY, NOVEMBEW6,1962 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TR TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 6, 196~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE lndiansA bandon Key Position MEETS DEMANDS: Adenauer Mlaintains Coalition End tr * * * * * * * Committee Demands to All Nuclear . Committee' Not To Grant Peace Prize OSLO ()-Norwegian authori-t ties decided yesterday to skipt awarding the Nobel Peace Prize for 1962.- They regarded the world situa- tion as too unsettled to confer thet honor on anyone this year, in-t formed sources said. By order of the Nobel Commit- tee of the Norwegian StortingI (parliament), the prize money was reserved until 1963. Nobel prizes in other categories this year were each worth $49,656. Recipients of all these-in physics, chemistry, medicine and litera- ture-have already been chosen by Swedish agencies in Stockholm. This is the 14th time since the Nobel prizes were set up in 1901 from a $9 million trust fund of Al- bert B. Nobel, the Swedish inven- tor of dynamite, that the peace award has been passed. However, the 1962 prize may yet be presented belatedly to some- body or some organization. Albert John Luthuli, a Negro resistance leader of South Africa, was named a year late for the 1960 award at the same time the 1961 prize was awarded posthumously to Dag Hammarskjold, the United Nations secretary-general who died in an African plane crash. Following custom, the Norweg- Ian committee gave no reason in its brief announcement of the de- cision not to make the award. Many of the previous abstentions occurred in times of crisis, includ- ing three years of World War I and five years of World War II. Nobel's will provided that the peace prize should go to the person or organization doing "most or best to further brotherhood among the peoples, to abolish or cut down standing armies and to create or further the work of peace con- gresses." World News Roundup By The Associated Press CAPE CANAVERAL - The A-3 model of the Polaris submarine missile suffered its fourth setback in as many test flights yesterday when one of the advanced rockets exploded high above the Atlantic * * * LINCOLN - Evidence strongly indicates a direct relation between Sabin oral vaccine and several par- alytic polio cases in Nebraska, a Public Health Service team report- ed yesterday. The report said the investigation revealed nine persons developed an illness "comparable with acute poliomylitis" between seven and 22 days after taking Type III of the Salk vaccine. * * * TUNIS-Twenty African nations walked out of a United Nations Food and Agricultural Organiza- tion meeting yesterday to protest the participation of South Africa, whose racial policies they disap- prove. * * NATCHEZ -Engineers brought up the last of four huge tanks of deadly chlorine from the bottom of the Mississippi River, ending the threat to downriver Missis- sippi. NEW YORK-In brisk pre-elec- tion day trading, the stock market rung up another sharp gain. The Dow-Jones Industrial Average was tip 5, 30 railroads up 5.90, 15 utili- ties up 1.53 and 65 stocks up 1.77. NEED FACTORS: U.S. Announces Details Of New Aid Formula w WASHINGTON (P)-The United States is aiming for a more selec- tive aid program by setting up qualifications for countries which wish to receive United States economic aid in the future. This was announced Saturday by Frank M. Coffin, deputy ad- ministrator of the United States Agency for International Development (AID) in connection with a two-day planning session of AID execu- tives at Camp David, the presidential retreat in the Catoctin moun- tains of Maryland. The principles of the program, to be applied first in fiscal year 1964, are almost identical with those advocated by ,Chester A. Bow- les, President John F. Kennedy's special adviser, in a memorandum to administration leaders. The .<; . "t, memorandum suggested that only :::::::::>' should receive economic aid un- :