SGC AND SIGMA KAPPA: A CLARIFICATION See Page 4 Y Latest Deadline in the State A43aii4 *0 FAIR, CONTINUED COOL VOL. LXVH, No.19 ANN'ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1956 SIX PAGES Dulies, Shepilov Split Over Suez Soviet Union Rejects International Supervision of Crucial Waterway UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP)-Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and Soviet Foreign Minister Dmitri Shepilov split sharply yes- terday over Dulles' call for a Suez settlement based on the principle of insulating the canal from national policies. The disagreement of the United States and the Soviet Union thus was thrust into the spotlight as the UN Security Council ended public debate and began secret talks in a desparate search for a Suez solu- tion. Y "The heart of the problem," Dulles said in a 26-minute speech to the council, "is acceptance of World News Roundup By The Associated Press VIENNA, Austria - Poland' Deputy Premier Hilary Minc fel from power yesterday as dismis sals stemming from the Pozna bread-and-freedom riots reache into high government levels. Radio Warsaw announced Min resigned both his deputy premie post and his membership in th Communist party Politburo "be cause of bad health." Until re cently Mine was regarded as Po land's top economist, responsibl for the country's first six-yea: plan. Earlier, the Warsaw radio sai four undersecretaries of state in the Polish Ministry for Machin Industry had been dismissed. Th dismissals brought to nearlya score the number of Polish gov ernment officials losing their post since the Poznan riots in June * * *. NAPLES, Italy - Gen. Alfred Gruenther said yesterday Sovie military capabilities "are increas- ing all the time, despite the smile: and cocktail parties of the Rus sians." In a news conference befor leaving for Paris, Gruenther sai "The No. 1 objective of Sovie policy is to secure the dismember- ment of NATO" * * * UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.--Th International Atoms - for - Peace Conference yesterday voted down a Soviet attempt to seat Red China i in a world atomic agency. The Soviet amendment would have allowed any nation to be- come a founding member of the agency by signing and ratifying the constitution within 90 days. * * * SAN FRANCISCO - Two sur- geons yesterday reported a graft- ing technique by which one square inch of borrowed skin can be made to cover 10 square inches of burns A split-thickness of healthy skin is mixed with salt solution, then whirled in a kitchen blender for 10 minutes. The skin separates into clumps of 10 to 100 cells and the liquid looks like buttermilk. This mixture is then sprayed or poured onto gauze, to remove the salt water, and the gauze is in- verted and placed over the de- nuded area. When the gauze is removed two weeks later, islets of skin have started growing. Within another week the whole area is covered with new skin. BOSTON-Eight men were sen- tenced to life in prison yesterday for the $1,219,000 robbery of the Brinks Inc. money transfer firm nearly seven years ago. Without a trace of emotion, the prisoners - all from Greater Bos- ton - heard Judge Felix Forte mete out the sentences in Superior Court. Five Campus Houses Looted- Five fraternity houses were rob- bed early Sunday morning accord- ing to Bill Cross, fraternity ad- the principle there- should be a sys- -4tem to insure that the canal can- not be used by any country as an instrument of its distinctly nation- al policy." Rejects Principle Talking to newsmen in the coun- cil lounge after Dulles spoke, Shepilov rejected this principle as a-cover for internationalizing s the canal. i He said any international group - created to run the canal would, in n the state of the world today, be d influenced by the politics of the countries on. the board. Further- c more, he said, the Soviet Union re- r jects international operation of the e canal. - Dulles expressed some condi- tional interest in a suggestion by Foreign Minister Mahmoud Fawzi e of Egypt for a group of reasonable r size to attempt to negotiate a set- tlement. d Shepilov Proposal, Dulles rejected, on the other e hand, a proposal by Shepilov that a group Qf six or eight members, e picked on the basis of proper bal- a ance, attempt such negotiations. - Speaking with sudden heat, Dul- les charged that Shepilov, by thus disregarding the users of the canal, wants to establish a committee "so d constituted that we can know in t advance that it can never agree," Shepilov replied to the newsmen s that Dulles was not "consistent" - in "sympathizing" with the Egyp- tian suggestion and criticizing his e idea. ' Two Senators eAttack Labor's Political Role I. WASHINGTON ()-Two Re- publican members of a Senate group keeping tabs on the current campaign clashed yesterday with AFL-CIO officials over the financ- ing of labor's role in politics. Testimony by Walter Reuther and another union leader was challenged by Sen. Carl T. Curtis (R-Neb.) and Sen. B. M. Gold- e water (R-Ariz.) at a public hear- ing of the Senate elections sub- committee. Reuther, president of the United Auto Workers and an AFL-CIO vice president, said all donations to candidate by the UAW and the AFL-CIO Committee on Political Education, COPE, come from "voluntary contributions of union members and other individuals." Such spending is not financed by "monies collected through reg- ular union dues or assessments," he said. Sen. Curtis long has contended that dues paid by union members l dre used for political activities "in violation of the law." He and Sen. Goldwater pressed this view in questioning Reuther r and James McDevitt, a codirector of COPE. McDevitttold the subcommittee that COPE has both a political education fund, which he said comes largely from union treas- uries, and a political campaign fund which he said comes exclu- sively from individual contribu- tions. Sens. Curtis and Goldwater ques- tioned the uses of the polit- ical education fund. They chal- lenged McDevitt's assertion that voter registration drives and the publication of a - COPE "Voters s Guide" fall in the category of po- litical education. 'U' Studies New House, Center Plan Would Accommodate A Thousand Students By DONNA HANSON A proposal for the construction of a new International Center which would include student hous- ing is being considered by the Uni- versity Administration. Proposed by James Davis, dir- ector of the International Center, the building would house one thousand students, bothforeign and American. The administration is hoping they can find some group to finance the housing unit, accord- ing to James A. Lewis, Vice-presi- dent of Student Affairs. Hasn't the Funds "The University hasn't the funds to finance it," Lewis added. Calling the project "purely a dream up to now," Lewis said the housing unit is still in ,the dis- cussion stage. "We are in the process of re- viewing what we waht contained in the building," he said. ,According to the building pro- posal, selected American graduate students (Y3 to %) and mature foreign students would be accom- odated in apartment and residence hall types of housing. A few suggested facilities to be included in the structure to serve the residents and student body are meeting rooms, social hall, lounge areas, a library, activities room, typing rooms and a dark room. Also included would be a cafe- teria and offices for International Center counseling, administrative and clerical staff members. Housing Unit Cost The cost of this unit has been roughly estimated at four and one- half million dollars. Commenting on his proposal, Davis said, "The main thing we want is the housing." "If we only get the housing unit, it will do a certain job, but doesn't help in our Center's problem with, the lack of space," he continued. Davis said if the proposal were accepted and the unit was built in town," it would be a multi-func- tioned thing. "It would serve people who live in it and the campus in general," he said. If, however, the structure were built on North Campus, Davis as- serted the building would be al- most exclusively housing because of its distance from campus. Correspondent To open r' Talk Series Nationally syndicated Washing- ton correspondent and news ana- lyst Marquis Childs will open the 103rd season of the University Lecture Series at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Aditorium. "The Road Ahead" will be the topic of the address by the award- winning journalist, known for his ON THE STUMP: Ike Lashes Dems; Adlai Attacks Ike SGC Study Committee To Make Sigma Kappa Rdeport, Suggest Action 4> -Daily-Larry Carbonelli SUEZ SEMINAR-Participants (I to r) Salah Tewfik, Andy Chaudhry, Edward Moss and Jean Paul Desparmet discussed issues concerning the Suez Canal controversy in Rackham Amphitheatre last night. Suez Question Debated By Foreign Officials By ARLINE LEWIS Egypt's primary reason for nationalizing the Suez Canal was the olk canal company's failure to make improvements, Salah Tewfik, cultural attache of the Egyptian Embassy said yesterday. Participating in a discussion on the Suez issue with French and British consuls, Tewfik said Egypt had always respected the free pasage of ships through the canal and would continue to do so in the future, He maintained the legality of nationalization on the theory that the Universal Suez Maritime Canal Company was recognizably Egyp- tian in nature and therefore in - the sphere of internal decisions. French counsul Jean-Paul Des- parmet referred to international occurrences happening as late as 1954 which seemed to indicate that Egypt had previously recognized the international nature of the canal. He questioned the Egyptian promise of keeping the canal open to all nations on the atmosphere of doubt caused by broken agree- ments. Edward Moss, British Consul in Detroit, contended that "for the West, the dispute was primarily a matter of international confidence. "The Western powers," he said, "do not trust Colonel - Nasser and do not dare to leave the vital Suez lifeline in his hands." Moss suggested that Egypt might have gotten what she wanted, with respect to nationalization, had she gonethrough normal diplomatic channels. Instead, the Englishman said, her move seemed calculated to humiliate and defy the Western powers, with Egypt in a heroic role. Continuing, Moss indicated that Egypt circumvented Western re- strictions on selling arms to Israel and Jurdan so that she could play the West and Soviets against each other. Tewfik denied this statement. "Our hand is extended to both East and West," he said. "We have not rid ourselves of British control yesterday in order to accept Soviet domination today." Referring to Western proposals for international control of the Suez, Tewfik said that such control would place the canal in an arena of world politics, thus endanger- ing its operation. The Egyptian censured Britain's threat to use force and the West's economic pressures as contrary to the United Nations Charter. Consul Moss explained that a good deal of the intense feeling over the canal issue resulted from its identification with the question of colonialism. "What disturbs us about Colonel Nasser and his associates, he said, "is the force of hatred which they are working up against the colonial' powers at a time when colonialism has very nearly passed into. his- tory." , Brooks Score 1-0 Triumph Over Yankees BROOKLYN E;)- Jackie Robin- son lined a single over leaping Enos Slaughter in the 10th inning yesterday to give Brooklyn's Clem Labine a 14 victory over the New York Yankees' Bob Turley and square the 1956 World Series at three games each. It was a tense battle all the way between Labine's sharp-breaking sinker and Turley's smoking fast ball until Robinson finally came through with the blow that assured the Dodger fans of a seventh game at Ebbets Field today. Gilliam had walked on four pitches after Labine popped out to open the home 10th. Pee Wee Reese dumped a surprise sacrifice bunt and barely was thrown out by Turley. Manager Casey Stengel's strategy called for an intentional walk to the dangerous Duke Snider, Tur- ley's eighth pass. Then Robinson came through with the bell-ringer. Brooklyn had only four hits off Turley, who had carried the string of shutout pitching to 18% con- secutive innings before he finally gave up a run. One of the hits was a short fly that Slaughter lost in the sun on Gilliam in the third. Another was a double by Labine in the eighth when Slaughter raced toward the left field corner and finally stopped short of the wall, the ball bouncing into the seats for a ground rule double. Time after time the Yankees threatened to get Labine but they never could get the base hit they needed. Slaughter said he thought he See KUCKS, Page 3 I SEATT'LE (J)-Adlai E. Steven- son said yesterday that "the undue delegation" of presidential respon- sibilities by the President "is haz- ardous at any time, let alone times such as these." He added that the present ad- ministration is "narrowly repre- sentative of a limited interest" and that the- Democrats will insist that problems be met by "an executive who assumes the full responsibil- ities" of his office. Have Not Told Truth The D e m o c r a t i c presidential nominee said in a speech at a po- litical rally that the Republican administration "has not told the truth" about the "crucial facts of history." "And I say whatever the reason that the undue delegation of re- sponsibility and authority by the President is hazardous at any time, let alone times such as these, and diminishes the office of the presi- dency." Stevenson pitched most of his talk on "the problems raised by the explo'sive power of nuclear energy." Met with Sneers He said his suggestion that the country start to find a way to stop the testing for hydrogen bombs had been met by the Presi- dent and other Republicans "only with sneers and astonishing dis- tortion of what I said, and with implications that even talking about this prejudices the nation's security." He said his proposal "reflects a. desire that I am sure is deep in the minds of all mankind." "I have- indicated my complete willingness to accept any better proposal for accomplishing the same purpose but I can't accept the apparent administration posi- tion that we are powerless to do anything to stop this headlong race for extinction." Turning to the development of the atoms for peace; Stevenson said he favored "the fullest coop- eration between government and private industry but not the ab- dication of public responsibility in' this field with the result that little progress will be made."' .NSA Executives End Tour of ' Two members of the National Student Association E x e c u t i v e Committee . will complete a two- day inspection tour of the Uni- versity today. Cliff Sheats, Executive Vice-, President from Wayne University and Ann Beckner, Educational Af- fairs Vice-President from Denison University are in Ann Arbor to look over facilities and make ar- rangements for. the 10th NSA Con- gress, to be held here in August. Both Sheats, former Michigan Region chairman, and Miss Beck- ner are on their way to an Am- erican Council on Education meet- ing in Chicago. PITTSBURGH (R) -President Dwight D. Eisenhower yesterday, accused the Democrats of "politi- cal irresponsibility at its worst" and credited his administration with a good record of "clear ac- complishments" toward enduring peace and prosperity. In a nationwide television-radio address at a campaign rally at Hunt Armory, President Eisen- hower swung hard again at his Democratic rival, Adlai E. Stev- enson, on many fronts. He launched a fresh attack on the Stevenson suggestion that H- bomb tests be halted and the mili- tary draft be ended, both under certain conditions. Without naming Stevenson but leaving no doubt as to his target, the President said: "They - the opposition - have urged stout military defense with greater reliance on modern weap- ons-but they advise stopping our atomic tests. "They have promised national security and a bold role in world affairs-while they urge us to start thinking about ending the military draft." Reject Proposals Again' rejecting those proposals, President Eisenhower added: "I, as your President and com- mander in. chief of the armed forces, cannot and will not make proposals contrary to national in- terests-nor offer you attractive prospects unjustified by world realities. # "I will not promise that winning a peace based on justice will be cheap and easy." The President went on to say that the draft is "a matter of the safety of our nation." "We need the manpower," he said. "We cannot pretend that rockets and bombs make brains and hands obsolete." Draft Needed He said, too, that the draft is needed "because our future mili- tary burden must not be borne en- tirely by veterans who have al- ready earned their nation's grati- tude," and "because we cannot encourage our allies in the world to shoulder arms while we throw ours to the ground." President Eisenhower's speech, his fourth major TV-radio address of his reelection campaign, was billed in advance by the White House as a reply to "some of the misstatements made * . . by the opposition." Eisenhower said that in the "political oratory" of the oppo- sition "we find a whole series of curious statements falsely imply- ing that this administration cares nothing for the man they rather patronizingly call "little fellow." Correction John Wrona, '57, is not president of business administration school1 as reported in yesterday's Daily. He was a candidate for president of lit school. Cornell Daily Sun Prints' Alum Memo Letter Says National' Had No Authority For Summer Action By TAMMY MORRISON A report and recommendations of the Sigma Kappa study com- mittee will be presented to Stu- dent Government Council tonight. The committee was set up two weeks ago to investigate and re- port on Sigma Kappa's position on this campus. Because two chap- ters, one at Cornell and one at Tufts, were suspended after they pledged Negro girls, national Sig- ma Kappa may be in violation of University requirements for recog- nition. SGC, which recognized the Uni- versity chapter of Sigma Kappa a year ago, may not recognize an organization which practices dis- crimination. Cornell Sun Story According to feports in the Cor- nell Daily Sun, nine alumnae of the Cornell Sigma Kappa chapter have sent a memorandum dated Sept. 25, to "all Sigma Kappa members - active and alumnae," charging that the National Council which suspended the two chapters was acting without proper auth- ority. The letter, reprinted in full, con- tends "that National Council has failed: "1) To provide counsel for the chapter (Alpha Zeta, Cornell) "2) To work with the dean of women to provide mature counsel for the chapter. "3) To provide a fair and open discussion of their own views and those - of the chapter before the delegates at the convention." Came After Convention The Council's action came after the sorority's biennial convention during the summer. There was no discussion of Alpha Zeta's action (pledging a Negro) at the conven- tion, the letter says. The memorandum also charges that the national president, Edna B. Dreyfus, made a secret visit to Mrs. Charles I. Sayles, a Cornell Sigma Kappa alumna, in an effort to persuade her to force the local chapter to reverse its pledging ac- tion. Revision in Constitution Calling for a revision in consti- tution, the memorandum says, "The decision to suspend these chapters by 'star chamber' pro- cedure leads us to the conclusion that any chapter is open to similar suspension." The letter further says, "This revision in constitution should pro- vide for more democratic partici- pation of 'its members through their representatives at conven- tion. It should also provide that any chapter, faced with suspen- sion, have a hearing, a just trial." At today's meeting, 7:30 p.m. in the Union, SGC will- also: 1) be asked to approve an inter- im Council position, left vacant when Sara Gullette, '58, appointed to the post two weeks ago, with- drew from the University last week because of mononucleosis. 2) hear a progress report from the Counseling Study Cpmmittee, set up by SGC last spring to in- vestigate University counseling services, and 3) hear a finance report and the proposed budget for 1956-57. Mantovani Concert Will Be Presented A program of light operatic works will be played by the Manto- i i 7 s l 1 TO BE TESTED IN 1957: New Polio Vaccine Uses Weak Virus MARQUIS CHILD S ... to speak today work on the St. Louis Post-Dis- By ROBERT S. BALL, JR. The oral vaccine announced by Dr. Albert Sabin of the University of Cincinnati is a combination of three strains of live virus, attenu- ated by genetic or chemical means, according to Dr. Gordon C. Brown- associate professor of epidemiology at the University. patch and for the numerous books he has written on economic, politi- R cal and international affairs. RE bd(Il tuIn1 lb able to innoculate humans with attenuated or weakened living vi- rus before the population can be expected to reach a satisfactory level of immunity." Dr. Enders compared the new vaccine to the anti-smallpox vac- cine, which also uses a living virus, attenuated by mutation. Dr. Brown suggested that an ob- j ection of others in the field of epi- demiology to the vaccine may be the possibility of its reverting to the virulent stage. Dr. Enders, re- sponding to this suggestion, said Dr. Sabin had also reported that the mass tests would be conducted next year in several foreign coun- tries in addition to the United States, although he "preferred not to say what the countries are". At the time of the historic an- nouncement of the success of his vaccine in April, 1955, a statement made by Dr. Jonas Salk at the University partially justifies the development of the Sabin vaccine. Vaccine Differences At that time he said that anti- body levels induced by natural ex- visor. G-C Childs received a Sigma Delta The five fraternities from which AU i oL1US Award in 1955 for "sustained in- personal belongings and money sight in national affairs, first- were taken are Delta Chi, PhiSt d Gr u hand reporting and effective writ- Gamma Delta, Trigon, Lambda ing." He is also recipient of the Chi Alpha ,Sigma Alpha Epsilon coveted "distinguished service in and Chi Phi. Student Government Council Ex- journalism" award of the Univer- 1! U 1.1111 ... 1, u u. e .1 Greater problems involving not simply the killing of the virus as in the Salk vaccine, but attenu- The Boston Symphony Orches- ating or weakening it, are atten- tra, Charles Munch conducting, dant to the sucpessful development will perform at 8:30 p.m. Monday, of the new oral vaccine, which Dr. I