Y r tgan Latest Deadline in the State 4 att CLOUDY, COOLER VOL. LXVII, No. 30 ANN ARBORS MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1956 SIX PAGES Hatcher Says 'U' Needs Selectivit Warsaw Uproar By JAMES ELSMAN University President H arl1a n Hatcher yesterday observed that the University must necessarily exercise more "selectivity." Addressing 400 faculty and staff members at Rackham Hall, Hat- cher noted that 47% of the state's high school graduates will seek further education next year and admitted this would strain the ex- isting facilities of the University and the other eight state colleges. Branch School Expansion He revealed that the state was now thinking mostly in terms of expanding Junior and community college facilities, with limited ex- pansion facilities at established institutions to buck the enroll- ment surge. He did not mention future plans for the University's > branch school program. In his annual "State of the Uni- versity" message he offered this advice to the Russell Commission now studying the needs of state- wide higher education, "I hope they will consider that education is more than a person standing be- fore 25 or 30 students and trying to put something across." "The University will use its in- fluence to carry education beyond a mass process," he added. 'Reasonable Proportion of Housing' As to how increased enrollments here had put the squeeze on ex- isting housing facilities, the Uni- versity President said, "We are trying to keep a reasonable pro- portion of housing open to stu- dents, considering our financial means and present costs.'' Next fall, 1800 more students are expected on campus he revealed. In response to a faculty ques- tion,' President Hatcher, answered that the University was progress- fying "but not as fast as we would like" in improving faculty salaries. To another question President Hatcher replied, "Because the State is now supporting Wayne Univer- sity, this should never mean that other state institutions should be supported less." Stars To Act In Selections' Of Steinbeck * Featured as the wsecond pre- sentation of the Lecture Series this year "The Best of 'Steinbeck" will take place at 8:30 pm. to- Morrow in Hill Auditorium. Acting in the adaptation of some of Steinbeck's works will be Constance Bennett, Tod An- drews, Robert Strauss, and Frank McHugh. The stars, acting in a pre- Broadway production of the Steinbeck works, will read from such notable writings as "Can- nery Row," the "Grapes of Wrath," and "Of Mice and Men." Also included on the program are dramatizations from "Tortilla Flat" and "The Pastures of Heav- en." Steinbeck has achieved a high place in contemporary American literature during the past 25 years. In one of the prefaces to his books Steinbeck notes that the "play-novelette" which com- bines many corms is easy to read and to dramatize by simply "lift- ing out the dialogue." In adapting the works of Stein- beck, Reginald Lawrence declares such a presentation is an oppor- tunity to "bring back alive" some of the people and great moments you remember from between the covers of Steinbeck's books. Druid's Tap' Khrushchev, -Daily-Leonard Cyr PRESIDENT HATCHER ... State of the 'U' .Local Youth Tills Self A 15 year old Ann Arbor youth committed suicide last night in Washtenaw County Juvenile Home. James Lillard hanged himself with the hem of a bedsheet in his room in the Home. Dr. Edwin C. Ganzhorn, county coroner, said Lillard died of a broken neck. He had been cut down and re- ceived artificial respiration and oxygen, but was soon pronounced dead. W a s h t e n a w County Probate Judge John W. Conlin reported Lillard was brought to the home by Ann Arbor Police yesterday aft- ernoon as a probation violator. Conlin said Lillard was "all right during supper hour, but when he was placed in his room after sup- per he started knocking things around and broke a panel in his door." Prior to the early evening sui- cide, Harold Neilson, director of the home, removed Lillard's chair and clothing so that he could not harm himself. Conlin said "I can't see where anyone was negligent in any matter." World News Roundup AHMAN, Jordan-Jordan has elected a pro-Egyptian Parlia- ment, and Egypt immediately acted yesterday to consolidate its victory. National Socialists, who call President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt the "symbol of Arab awak- ening," won a quarter of the seats in Jordan's 40-man lower house. At least four extreme leftists of the National bloc, four followers of the former Grand Mufti Haj Amin .Husseini of Jerusalem, two Arab Resurrection party mem- bers,and several independents are also solidly in the pro-Egyptian camp to guarantee a majority for the orientation of this country's policy toward Cairo. The National Bloc delegation is the largest Communist-line repre- sentation in any Arab country. * * * EN ROUTE IN MICHIGAN - Vice President Richard M. Nixon said yesterday the Republicans made their "big break-through" last week in their campaign vic- tory drive and that the final two weeks will be devoted to the "big mopup." Ike To Have Pre-Election Examination WASHINGTON (P)-President Dwight D. Eisenhower will enter Walter Reed Army Hospital Sat- urday afternoon for the complete physical examination he said he would undergo before the Nov. 6 election. The White House announced the results of the "head-to-toe" check- up by an eight-man medical team will be made public not later than next Monday. It was at a news conference Aug. 8 that the President said he plan- ned a pre-election test of his health. If it shows him unfit for a second term, he said at that time, he will go before the people and tell them. James C. Hagerty, the White House press secretary, said Presi- dent Eisenhower's health is "fine" right now. It developed yesterday that the President maydincrease his speak- ing schedule during the last two weeks of the campaign, making several more major appearances outside Washington. Hagerty said the White House had received a number of calls yesterday about a rumor that the President had suffered another "digestive upset." Hagerty made light of the rumor, commenting: "If he's ill, he's been doing an awful lot of work." President Eisenhower is expect- ed to leave Walter Reed Sunday afternoon or evening, after a stay of about 24 hours. He will be examined there by a medical staff including Dr. Paul Dudley White, the Boston heart specialist who treated him a year ago; and Maj. Gen. Leonard D. Heaton, commandant of the hos- pital, who performed the operation for ileitis on the President June 9. Reporters asked Hagerty to ar- range for a news conference with the doctors at the conclusion of their examination and after the issuance of their report. Hagerty said he did not know whether this would be possible. President Eisenhower's last com- plete physical checkup was on May 12. It indicated he was in excellent shape, but it was followed within a month by the intestinal upset which turned out to be a severe inflammation of the ileum-the lower part of the small intestine- which required emergency surgery in June. The President spent the follow- ing four weeks at Walter Reed. Panel Discussion "Nov. 6 . . . Who and Why," will be the topic of a panel dis- cussion at 8 p.m. tonight in Room 3A of the Union. Prof. Angus Campbell, Director of the Survey Research Center and Prof. Warren Miller of the Political science department will speak, according to Ed Vander- velde of the Young Republicans, sponsors of the panel. SHARES RESENTMENT: Adlai Tags Ike Reply 'Unfortunate' Move CHICAGO (A)-Adlai Stevenson said yesterday he shares President Dwight D. Eisenhower's "resentment at the manner and timing of Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin's H-bomb message. But, he said, he thought the President's reply "is unfortunate." Stevenson said the United States should explore Bulganin's pro- posals: "immediately and all the way." At the same time, the Democratic presidential nominee said this is not the first time Russian leaders have interested themselves in the 1956 election. He said they have made it plain their candidate is President Eisenhower. Stevenson issued a statement commenting on his opponent's sharp rejection of Bulganin's latest proposal that H-bomb tests be yTopple Polish Cohorts Independence Plan C usARSAW R> - Polish Communist sources reported Warsaw's political upheaval threatens to topple Nikita S. Khrushchev from his Communist leadership in the Soviet Union. And more shakeups, hitting at Moscow domination, are in prospect in Warsaw to bring the government in line with the party's new "in- dependent" course. Parliament to Open Poland's Seim - Parliament - opens today and will remain in session until Nov. 20. The government shakeups-possibly including the removal of Konstantin Rokossovsky as defense minister-may be announced through the Parliament' French Trap Rebel Chiefs ALGIERS (A')-The French trapped five top Algerian rebel chiefs in flight over the Mediter- ranean Sea yesterday and had their French pilot deliver them into custody at the Algiers Military Airport. The pilot duped them into be- lieving they were landing on friendly soil. Among them was the fugitive Ahmed Ben Bella, who has been directing the 22-month-old anti- French rebellion from sanctuary provided by the regime of Presi- dent Gamal Nasser in Cairo. The leaders, dressed in Western clothing, were en route from Ra- bat, Morocco, to Tunis for meet- ings with the leaders of newly independent Morocco and Tunisa on independenee for all North Africa. They had intended to skirt French Algeria but because of the French ruse fell easily into cus- tody. Their arrest on hostile French territory while en route between two friendly countries threatened to embroil the whole Mediterran- ean area from the Atlantic to east of Suez. There were these rapid fire de- velopments: Tunisia formally protested to France. French Premier Mollet called his Cabinet into special night session. Morocco's Sultan, visiting in Tunis, was awakened to hear of the Algerian leaders' interception. Their capture may have a pro- found effect on the future of the Algerian nationalist rebellion and repercussions reaching to the At- lantic and to the already deeply troubled Middle East. It also may have marked effect on relations the French had hoped to maintain on a friendly basis with Morocco and Tunisia after their recent emergence from French colonial rule. The French high official said a diary found on one of the captured Algerian leader confirmed that of- ficial circles in Cairo were en- gaged in the anti-French cam- paign, and that Libya was a base and a staging point for action against France in North Africa. >halted by international agreement. Stevenson has urged the same thing. He spoke out on the eve of de- parting for New York on a coast- to-coast tour intended to bring his campaign to what his staff mem- bers called a "driving finish." Wait Until Today In Washington, Press Secretary James C. Hagerty was asked yes- terday for White House comment on the Stevenson statement. Hagerty advised newsmen to wait. until today, when the President's promised report of hydrogen bomb. tests will be issued. "I share fully President Eisen- hower's resentment at the manner and timing of Premier Bulganin's interference in the political affairs of the United States," Stevenson said. But he added that "the real issue is not Mr. Bulganin's manners or Russian views about American pol- itics," but what can be done "to save the world from hydrogen disaster." "Viewed from the standpoint, not of politics, but of peace, I think the President's reply-to Bulganin -is unfortunate," the candidate asserted. He continued : "There are two possibilities. One is that the Bulganin offer that Russia will stop testing hydrogen bombs is made for propaganda purposes only and with a complete lack of good faith. If that is true, it should be exposed for all the world to see. Opportunity to Move "The other possibility is that the Russian offer, ill-timed as it is, reflects an opportunity to move ahead now toward a stop to the further explosion of hydrogen bombs. "In either event, there seems to be only one course to follow. That is to pursue this opening immedi- ately and all the way. I think we should do whatever is necessary either to close this vital matter here and now, or to expose Mr. Bulganin's insincerity to the world." Stevenson's press secretary, Clayton Fritchey, gave newsmen some newspaper and magazine clippings to support Stevenson's statement that Bulganin expressed hope last year at the Geneva con- ference that President Eisenhower would run for re-election, and that "more recently other Russian lead- ers have said they favored Eisen- hower for president." WLADYSLAW GOMULKA . . . new party chief Pole Group UresHelp WASHINGTON (A)-A group of 10 Polish-American leaders urged the Eisenhower Administration yesterday to offer food and tech- nical aid to the Polish government to encourage a drive for inde- pendence from Moscow. The group laid this appeal be- fore Secretary of State John Foster Dulles during a 45-minute meeting at the department. Afterward, Charles Rozmarek of Chicago, acting as spokesman, said they also appealed for the United States to "press immedia- tely before the United Nations" for complete withdrawal of Soviet troops from Poland. Rozmarek, who is president of the Polish-American Congress, re- ported Dulles was "very sympa- thetic" toward the suggestions. Swinton Dies In Indonesia Prof. Roy S. Swinton of the en- gineering college died of a heart attack Saturday in Jakarata, In- donesia. Serving as a member of the University faculty 40 years, Prof. Swinton was a survivor of three years in a Japanese prison camp during World War II. He was in Indonesia as a mem- ber of a University of Kentucky team working on the reorganiza- tion of the University of Indo- nesia and had arrvied there only a few days before his death. Prof. Swinton served on the faculty of the University of the Philippines in 1940, advising on the installation of a new mech- anics and hydraulics laboratory. He was also in charge of con- struction foundations of the Lin- coln Memorial, and helped lay out the plans for the Arlington National Cemetery in Washing- ton. Prof. Swinton was 70 years old at the time of his death. ,s Advocates Roosevelt and Truman started in the field of civil rights," Powell told the audience, "that Eisen- lower didn't finish." He credited the President with ending segre- gation in veteran's hospitals, in Navy shipyards and Army base schools in the South. He 'also praised the appoint- ment of Negroes to "front door" White House posts, commenting that previously Negroes were em- ployed in the White House only as servants and messengers. End of Segregation But he reserved heaviest praise for ending "the cesspool of Amer- ican democracy," segregation in in a few days. Rokossovsky, Polish-born Soviet marshal, was installed by Stalin in the Warsaw post. Like the resounding shakeup in the Polish party which gave the reins' to tough, anti-Stalinist Wladyslaw Gomulka, the govern- ment reshuffle will have echoes in Moscow. The Kremlin reaction may already be taking shape. Warsaw informants within the IUnited Workers Communist party offered this analysis of the effects in Moscow of the Warsaw revolt: 'The Three M's' A triumvirate of the "three M's" -Deputy Premiers V. M. Molotov, A. I. Mikoyan and Ge'orgi Malen- kov-have joined in a move, to eject Khrushchev as first secretary boss of the Soviet party. The three are said to regard him as bungling, over-impetuous and loose-tongued, and to fear such tendencies could bring disaster on the Soviet world position and the Communist cause. The violence of Khrushchev's denunciation of Stalin at the 20th Soviet party congress in February is believed to have speeded up the movement toward independence from Moscow which erupted in Poland in the past week and which threatens now to break out in Hungary. Broader Opposition If the three "M's" are lined in a common purpose, it would indi- cate the opposition to Khrushchev in Moscow cuts across lines of political thinking inside the party and thus is a broader opposition than was previously supposed. Whatever the reaction in the Kremlin, the idea of independence from Moscow seemed extremely popular in Warsaw. Demonstra- tions of support for Gomulka, once jailed as a Titoist and traitor to Moscow, hailed the 51-year-old leader's policy of "socialism with freedom." 'March With the Nation' Students paraded through War- scaw with banners reading: "Polish-Soviet relations must be based on equality!" "Our soldiers will march with the nation!" The latter indicated the feeling prevalent that, so far as Moscow was concerned, the rank and file of the army was unreliable, though it is commanded by a Soviet mar- shal. Rokossovsky - sent into Poland in 1949 by Stalin to be defense minister just as Gomulka and his group were being pushed aside- was ejected from the ruling Polish party Politburo Sunday night. In the shakeup, Gomulka was surrounded by a nine-member Politburo of men favoring his de- mand for independence from Soviet political controls, though all were pledged to continued Com- munist government. Intended Pressure Gomulka became first secretary of the party, the key post, after a three-day meeting of the central committee marked by a sudden visit by Khrushchev and other top leaders of the Soviet party hier- archy intent on exerting pressure to keep pro-Soviet Communists in places of power in Poland. But the Communist reaction in Warsaw to an expression of sym- pathy from President Dwight D. Eisenhower seemed cool. The offi- cial party paper, Trybuna Ludu, said: No New Orientation "If anybody is naive enough to Editor Says Italian Reds In Stalemate By VERNON NAHRGANG The Editor of the British publi- cation "The 'World Today" said yesterday the Communist Party in Italy has been unable to gain further power in spite of its size' and promises of greater land re- form. Speaking at the fall meeting of the Political Science Round Table, Muriel Grindrod examined the political situation in Italy since the end of World War II. In answer to a question about recent events in Poland, Mrs. Grindrod said the Italian people would be "watching with interest" any falling-out within the Com- munist Party in other countries. Most powerful of the numerous Italian parties, Mrs. Grindrod ex- plained, is the center group, led by the Christian Democrats and controlling half of the total votes. Also powerful is the left wing, led by the Communists and one of the Socialist Parties, controlling a third of the votes. Holding the final sixth of the votes is the minor right wing, led by the Monarchist Party and the Fascists. "This struggle between the ex- tremes," Mrs. Grindrod said,, epit- omizes the history of Italy since the war." A major problem Italy had to cope with, she said, was the div- ision of the country between north and south. The Communist Party, she main- tained, was clever in taking its beliefs into the south. "They saw their great opportunity. Among the peasants Communists had a clear way." Mrs. Grindrod told how the Cen- ter parties, in power, attacked the 'PRISONER OF PALACE GUARD:' 'Powell Says Adlai Avoids Civil Right From the Stronghenge circle Aided by the witches cauldron Mystic plans were brewed in, darkness. Many twigs were examined Many rocks were overturned Subjected to heat from blazing torches Observed by men of knowledge and magic. Those decayed, were burned and- destroyed. Finally from the murky grove From the cave where Fingal per- x c c }{ r c s 1 a i ROCK SPRINGS, Wyo. - Sen. Estes Kefauver said yesterday the Democrats assume the political risk, "whatever the risk may be," of going along with the Russians or any other atomic power on ending H-bomb testing. His statement was made to newsmen after he charged Presi- dent Dwight D. Eisenhower with giving a "stubborn, peevish re- sponse" to Soviet Premier Niko- lai Bulganin's offer to negotiate a halt to nuclear bomb testing. Students To Debate Four University graduate stu- By PETER ECKSTEIN Rep. Adam Clayton Powell, Harlem Democrat, told a Willow Village audience Sunday that Ad- lai Stevenson "is the prisoner of a palace guard consisting of East- land of Mississippi, Talmadge of Georgia and Long of Louisiana." Powell, who is backing Presi- dent Dwight D. Eisenhower for re-election, told a largely Negro audience that he had unsuccess- fully tried to see Stevenson seven times before the Oct. 11 White House conference which culmin- ated in his endorsement of the President. "Q-yavrn wan't ino tn Ms of men from New York, New Hampshire and Massachusetts. As he leaned against a table,I arms crossed and legs folded, Powell refused to let his constant gum chewing interfere with a steady flow of heated words. The crowd of nearly one-hundred, many of whom had waited more than two hours as the Congress- man's plane was delayed by fog, cheered enthusiastically at al- most every sentence. Powell maintained he doesn't "intend to be anything other than a Democrat" and emphasized his point by endorsing Gov. G. Men-- nen Williams for "a mighty fine record in the field of civil rights." which refuse to integrate - Pow- ell said he would introduce a school bill of his own with the provisions of the amendment in- corporated. In discussing his bill at Willow Village, Powell described the Pres- ident's reaction: "He looked on it with favor and it is being stu- died now by his staff. You should have seen the look on his face. I can't quote him, but you wait and see what happens when the bill is introduced." Predicts Negro Shift Powell predicted a large swing toward the President among Ne- gro voters, who have been pre- ponderantly Democratic in re- -Daily-John Hirtzel MURIEL GRINDROD ...speaks on Italy south's problems with land reform and advance against unemploy- ment. Large estates, she explained, were divided up and doled out by lottery to those persons who had no means of subsistence. Further- more, technicians were brought from the north .and housing pro. jects have been started. Five Billion Dollars WASHINGTON - The govern- ment reported yesterday that all types of U.S. foreign aid, includ- ing military supplies and services, exceeded five billion dollars in the fiscal year ending last June 30. It was 280 million dollars, or 6 per cent, greater than in the pre- vious fiscal year. The rise was the