PAGE RIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MARCH 13, 1955 PAG! EIGHT TIlE 1~IICHIGAN IJAILY SUNDAY, MARCH 13, 1955 TWO PROBLEMS FOR UN: Gaza Fighting Spotlights' Egypt-Israel Troubles I 0111 r j ' E N U. 7's UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. W) - The Gaza fighting has spotlighted a big problem for the UN: how to keep peace . on the Egypt-Israel border. The refugee riots that followed spotlighted another: how to man- age eight to nine hundred thou- sand Arab refugees from Palestine who want to go home and can't. The second problem strains the resources of humanity and the re- cent desert happenings in and around Gaza show that the UN, after 6% years of trying, still isn't near getting it licked. Gaza is the old Mediterranean city where the Bible says Samson, history's most famous Jewish strongman, brought down the tem- ple of his Philistine captors. The city stands in a 6-by-30-mile coastal strip held by Egypt. In the so-called Gaza strip-- formerly a part of Palestine, now held by Egypt-the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine refu- gees has four camps for Arabs. They are the people who fled in the 1948 Arab-Jewish war from neighborhoods inside what now is Israel. Gaza Refugees UNRWA, in its last report as of mid-1954, counted 212,600 such refugees in the Gaza strip; 207,034 of them receive relief rations. They are among a total of 887,000 Pal- estine Arabs now living in Egypt,. Lebanon, Syria and Jordan on the Israeli perimeter. Near Gaza last week, Israeli and Egyptian troops clashed. The Egyptians said they lost 39 killed. They said the Israelis had at- tacked them without provocation. The Israelis claimed they lost 8 dead. They charged the Egyptians hit first, in Israel. The case is be.y fore the Security Council. Next day, hundreds of. the refugees ri- oted. ' Demonstrations were still going on at the weekend. The refugees stoned UN truce headquarters in Gaza, tore down a UN flag, burned UN vehicles. They also burned UN food warehouses, destroying their own provisions. It would seem they had much to thank the UN for. Since the Pal- estine war, it had fed them. Only last month, it had finished moving them all from tents into concrete huts. Together with the Egyptian government, the UN was studying the idea of moving 50,000 of them to a better spot just east of the Suez Canal. A recent report said this study "gives every indication that the unusual project is feasible." The plan is to tap the Ismailia Canal, which runs from the Nile to the Suez, and carry its fresh water through a siphon tube of 15-foot bore under the Suez Canal to ir- rigate 52,000 acres on the oppo- site bank. There, at the northwest end of the Sinai Peninsula, the refugees could raise tomatoes, beans, pea- nuts, melons, oranges, dates, man- gos, meat and eggs to sell to canal passengers and in the markets of Egypt and the Middle East oil centers. They could be self-sup- 'porting. UNRWA has earned 30 million dollars for the project. The refugees had all this from the UN. Why did they riot against it? Somebody suggested Communist agents stirred them up. Maj. Gen. Abdullah Rifaat, Egyptian governor of Gaza, doubt- ed this. Cites Reasons 1. They felt Egyptian forces, limited by the 1949 Egypt-Israel armistice were not strong enough to defend them. Similar riots, though not so destructive, occur- red after 20 Arabs were killed in a stealthy night attack on a refu- gee camp in the strip Aug. 28, 1953. 2. The UN had created Israel but now did nothing "to stop Is- raeli aggression" except pass res- olutions. The UN General Assem- bly, before the British quit Pal- estine in 1948' approved a plan to partition the country between Arabs and Jews, but most observ- ers agree Jewish arms actually created the Jewish state. 3. The refugees had endured six, years of idleness. and "only want to return to Palestine." So their demonstrations were directed, among other. things, agaist the elaborate and expensive plan for their resettlement. In spite of assurances to the contrary from Egypt and UNRWA, they were said to fear that if they moved to new farms, they would hurt their claims to the land they once lived on in Palestine. That land is now in the hands of the Israeli government. The Arab governments, champions..of the refugees, say they should be allowed to go back to it. Israel says she can't afford to let them come back because they would be prime security risks. J E T L E S S O N --The Shah of Iran in cockpit of "The Hunter," Britain's latest supersonic fighter, gets pointers from Major H. N. Tanner, of Los Angeles, " an "exchange pilot." C I A N T W I N D M I L L - A crewman is dwarfed by the tail rotor and stabilizer assembly of 40-passenger Air Force U-16 Piasecki helicopter in Philadelphia. Side open at left is air intake for one of 30,000-pound craft's two powerful engines. CAUSE OF CANCER?' California Lab Centers Studies on Virus Secrets S P A C E S T A R - Italian actress Gina Lollobrigida holds "Space Girl of 1954" award of Foresign Press Club in Rome for press space she garnered in foreign publications. WITHOUT SEAL OF APPROVAL,- A sea elephant roars as it is branded during a French mission study of migratory habits of animal life at Kerguelen Islands, between Australiaand South.Africa. Dr. Andre Migot applies iron as Chaplain Maurice Menu holds subject. WINTHROP H. SMITH, head of the world's largest brokerage firm, tells senators in Washing- ton, D.C., he doubts the sen- ate investigation had anything to do with a three-billion-dol- lar break in the stock market earlier in the week. He testified before senating banking com- mittee. BERKETEY, Calif. (A)-The vi- rus is king in a laboratory here where scientists seek answers to its tantalizing .iecrets. Viruses cause a host of diseases -human, animal and plant. This winter, as in many others, one va- riety has put hundreds of chil- dren and adults to bed for from 24 hours to several weeks, suffer- ing from what once was just called flu. To humans, viruses also bring polio, the common cold, measles, smallpox,. other diseases. The virus causing one disease dif- fers from that causing another. Was a virus the beginning of life? Is a virus the cause of cancer? How does a Airus carry out its fantastic sabotage of living cells, making the cell manufacture up to hundreds of new viruses? Can viruses be created artificial- ly by science? Can they be tamed, altered to make them harmless, free of their old sting of disease? And can viruses be produced-- intentionally -- which would do many good things for you, even perhaps protect you from radia- tion dangers of A-bomb or H-bomb fall-out? Research Laboratory These are the kinds of questions being asked and possibilities being considered in the research of the virus laboratory at the University of California. The laboratory is directed by Dr. Wendell M. Stan- ley, winner of a Nobel Prize for brilliant work on the nature of viruses. _A virus works by invading a particular kind of cell-the polio virus for example strikes nerve cells. Viruses cannot reproduce or duplicate themselves except inside their favorite target type of cell. But once inside, they commandeer the machinery of the cell, forcing it to produce many new viruses. The damage they do inside the cell brings the symptoms of sickness. But viruses, all far tinier than bacteria, are not all bad. Some are useful, One, known as bacterio- phage, destroys a type of bacteria found in the intestines. In the virus laboratory, "our em- phasis is on, the virus itself, not thoe cicAon eov wim,_ rcnn,1can nrt v- search teams are determining the chemical differences b e t w e e n strains. -It appears that the dif- ference can be in just one amino acid or protein brick out of which viruses are made, Dr. Stanley said. Laboratory researchers are chip- ping away at viruses, taking them apart bit by bit to learn what all the different part sare. This opens the possibility of ultimately syn- thesizing viruses, making them ar- tificially. And by new techniques, scien- tists now can study what happens between one single virus particle and one single living cell. They' hope to trace exactly what hap- pens to the intricate machinery of the cell when a virus takes control. Is a virus akin to or is it a gene, the chemical unit of heredity? In some ways, they act like genes. First Living Organisms There is reason to suspect that viruses were the first living or- ganisms on earth, coming from some spontaneous organization of protein material which was capa- ble of reproducing itself. At tines viruses behave like living things. But they also can be crystallized like salt without losing their abili- ty later to spring to life and re- produce. Some viruses are known to cause certain types of cancers in mice, chickens and rabbits. Are human cancers due to some yet unrecog- nized virus? Time will tell. Time and the skills of scientists working on projects such as those here. The assault on virus problems takes teamwork of physicists, chemists, physicians, p 1 a n t pathologists, bacteriologists, botanists. The lab- oratory has 30 researchers with advanced degrees, some 50 techni- cians, and six positions for visit- ing foreign scientists. There is no doubt that viruses exert profound influences on liv- ing cells. To Dr. Stanley, that raises the intriguing possibility of developing viruses which would do helpful, healthful things to liv- ing things, from human to plant. Protection a g a i n s t radiation damage or sickness could be one T U R N - A B O U T - Film star Yvonne DeCarlo, most of the time a subject, gets behind a camera to photograph Princess Margaret in Nassau, Bahamas, during latter's Caribbean tour. 4 A ICEMAN IN AFGHANISTAN --.An Afghan coolie carries a block of ice cut from a frozen paddy field near Kabul to a storehouse for use in summer when weather gets hot4 S U R P R I S E - A passerby gapes at suit of aluminum-which it's claimed can withstand 2.300-degree centigrade heat - worn by man enroute to display it at London equipment exhibit t I 1 .. .. . !..n8v. .>: ii:::." .. .-.... rrt..vl . _. :a.: :svm a:.t ' .,.: 5; .;:}}iiii..::::::v: i