C' Polish Patriotism Spotlights New Cold War See Page 4 I , 5k4 iu ~aiti fit. c"x. Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXVII, No. 31 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1956 MOSTLY FAIR, COLDER SIX PAGES Cornell Sorority ,Becomes Local University President Concerned Over Sigma Kappa National's Act By RICHARD SNYDER Daly Editor Sigma Kappa's suspended Cornell chapter voted unanimously to become a local sorority late Monday. At the same time, Cornell President Deane W. Malott released a letter sent Oct. 3 to the sorority's national president, expressing the university's concern over Sigma Kappa's action following the pledging last spring of a Negro girl by the Alpha Zeta-chapter at Cornell. Alsd'released was a letter from the five-member National Council to the local reaffirming its suspension of the local. The Cornell chapter recently voted to suspend its charter with Sigma Kappa. The action taken Adlai Blasts Sec. Dulles In Speech NEW YORK (IP)-Adlai E. St venson accused the Eisenhowe administration yesterday of world wide failure in foreign policy an told a cheering crowd in Madiso Square Garden that Secretary o State John Foster Dulles has bee kept "in the ball game one brin too long." Stevenson urged all possible ai in helping Poland toward freedon His speech was resoundingly ap plauded by a crowd or around 1 000, which failed to fill the fame New York amphitheater. Stevenson, the Democratic pre idential candidate, assailed Se Dulles and Vice President Richar M. Nixon by name and his men tions of them were greeted b loud booing.I Under Sec. Dulles, tenure a Secretary of State, Stevenson sai American policy has been "blu dering vacillation," and has see the world turned into "a trailc gunpowder from Korea to Cy prus." And, said Stevenson, American will not trust the hydrogen bom a to Vice President Nixon despi "facelifting and hand laundering which he said has been admi istered to Nixon in the namec "public rehabilitation." In a major campaign speec Stevenson also said Presider Dwight D. Eisenhower seems t >p have adopted a "why bother me? approaclt to both foreign and d mestic problems. He also describe the present world situation as "press agent's peace." He said the Democrats "hav broken through the blanketc warm ,wet fog with which the ad ministration had planned t smother the country," and ha turned the campaign into a de bate on policies. Bennett Stars In Production of St~inbeck Today at 8:30 p.m. the Unive sity and Ann Arbor audience w have an opportunity to see the ne dramatic presentation "The Be of Steinbeck" before it opens o .+ Broadway. Leading the performance in th adaptation of some of the maj works of Steinbeck are Constan Bennett, Tod Andrews, Robe Strauss, and Frank McHugh. The program will open with recorded prologue by Steinbeck.: addition to an introduction fro "Cannery Row" and a dramat presentation by Miss Benne called "Women in Steinbeck," ti group of four stars will conce trate on scenes from the "Grap of Wrath," "Tortilla Flat," "T] Pastures of Heaven" and "Of Mi and Men." The "Two-A-Penny" scene fro the "Grapes of Wrath," Steinbec Pulitzer Prize winning book, the begging episode in the ca when the migrants from Oklahon to California attempt to get food In the next scene, "Danny a the Pirate" from "Tortilla Flat Andrews, McHugh and Strau enact the episode of two men wl e attempt to trick another man1 get his money. Monday will involve such considera- -ntions as a new name and ritual. No Reply Yet The Cornell President has as yet received no reply to his letter from the national. Stating that he defended the local chapter inits decision, Malott said in his letter that it was im- probable that Cornell would rein- state the national without assur- ances that the chapter and the university would not in the future e- be,"subjected to this sort of unex- r plainable action on the part of the - national officers of Sigma Kappa." id He stressed that the members of n Alpha Zeta "apparently violated of no' provision of their charter, nor n did their action appear in the ik slightest to transcend the good taste which we demand of our d students. n. "It seems entirely clear to all of - us why the action was taken." 8- The Oct. 3 letter was'prefaced by ed an explanation of why the univer- sity was concerned over the sus- s- pension. "When national organi- c. -zations determine the way in d which Cornell students shall live, - with whom they associate and un- y der what conditions, you inevitably come into an area of concern to as me as President of Cornell Uni- d versity." n- Reserves Rights n Malott said that while the Cor- of nell chapter desires to remain na- Y- tionally affiliated, "it does, how- ever, hold high its right to select is members of the basis of con- Lb geniality and merit. te "I support all local chapters of our fraternity system," he con- n tinued, "in seeking the right to of exercise their discretion in select- ing members." h, Hitting at the National Council's at refusal to offer any other reason to for the suspension other than "for the good of the sorority as a whole," the Cornell President said, "We have assumed that the fra- d ternities and sorities on our cam- pus are here to serve the best interests of the students of the o university. I- No Cooperation "This they cannot do if national o officers take action with no can- d sultation with us, and win no - opportunity for cooperatic a be- tween us." The Daily learned last night that a move might be made at this Tuesday's meeting f Cornell's Student Council to establish among all affiliated organizations the iight of free selection of mem- bers by the local chapters at Cornell. It is believed that plans toward this end are now being formulated ill by a group including the presidents of Panhel, the Interfraternity w Council and the Student Council st at Cornell, and the Editor-in-Chief of The Cornell Daily Sun. Ike Rejects Stevenson's Proposal Won't Suspend Nuclear Testing WASHINGTON .P) - President Dwight D. Eisenhower said yester- day that "in the light of postwar history the United States could not even dare" suspend H-bomb testing without a system of de- pendable international disarma- ment controls. In a massive report drafted by his military, foreign policy and atomic chiefs, the President cate- gorically rejected the proposal of Adlai E. Stevenson that his coun- try take the lead in seeking an agreement halting the tests of large nuclear weapons. Critical Issue "The critical issue is not a mat- ter of testing nuclear weapons- but of preventing their use in nu- clear war," President Eisenhoweri sid.1 Until pacts are made which firmly secure international trust and understanding, the President said, the country must make sure its weapons will command such respect as to "dissuade any other nation from the temptation of ag- gression." Prevent War' 'Thus do we develop weapons, not to wage war, but to prevent war," he said. "There is nothing in postwar history to justify the belief that we should - or that we could even dare - accept anything less than sound safeguards and con- trols for any disarmament ar- rangements. "I remain profoundly hopeful that - if we stay strong and steadfast - the reality of signi- ficant world disarmament will come to pass:" Sympathy Indisputable The President said that Russia's "sympathy with the idea of stop- ping H-bomb tests, is indisput- able." But its formula for this step toward disarmament is based on "simple voluntary agreements," he said, which allow for "no safe- guards, no control, no inspection." SGC To Hear 'Ban Report Joint Judiciary Council Cair-. man MikeMcNerney, '57L, will re- port on enforcement of new Uni- versity driving regulations at the Student Government C o u n c i l meeting, 7:30 p.m. today in the Union. According to McNerney, the re- port will cover cases Joint Judic has handled so far during the semester. He will answer all ques- tions except those concerning vio- lators' names. Joint Judic is adjudicating all cases of driving regulations viola- tion for a trial period ending in approximately a month. At that time, Joint Judic will make its recommendations on whether or not this system of adjudication should be continued. Also on the SGC agenda will be consideration of early registra- tion passes, Air Charter study committee, Cinema Guild and the Free University of Berlin. Hungarians Occupation, KIrushchev Freedom Po OK's New Polish heocy Military Force Removal Reported Khrushchev, Gomulka to Confer; Agreement Proclamation Expected WARSAW ()-Nikita Khrushchev has lifted the Soviet military pressure from rebellious Poland and accepted most of the new Polish socialism-with-freedom policy, reliable sources reported yesterday. The sources said Soviet troop concentrations built up in central Poland during the crisis are dispersing. A Russian naval squadron sighted off Poland's Baltic coast has withdrawn. Relations Improved An aufhoritative source said Polish-Soviet relations improved dramatically yesterday with a tel All Petitions Submitted For SGC Fifteen students turned in peti- tions by the close of Student Gov- ernment " Council petitioning yes- terday. They are Bob Creal, '58BAd, Scott Chrysler, '59E, Janet Neary, '58, Maynard Goldman, '59, Ronald Shorr, '58BAd, Alvin Leibowitz, '57, Jerry DeMaagd, '58, Joe Brown,' '58, James R. Wheeling, '57, Janet Winkelhaus, '57, Joe Collins, '58, John Wrona, '57, Mal Cumming' '58BAd, Peter Cartwright, '59 and Rodney Blackman, '57. Nineteen Petitions Nineteen students took out peti- tions. Those who failed to turn their petitions and 350 signatures1 in by the required deadline are Douglas Wright, '58, Nick Christo- pher, '59, Normal L. Miller, '57 and' H. Roger Netzer, '59. Miss Neary, vice-president, Col- lins, treasurer, Shorr and Miss Winkelhaus, Administrative Wing coordinator, are all incumbents. Former public relations chairman Wrona resigned last week because of scalping activities at the Michi- gan-Michigan State football game, but will run again. Chrysler is SGC1 Orientation Director. Blackman edited the 'M' handbok. Leibowitz, Wheeling, Miss Win- kelhaus, Blackman and Wrona are seniors. Leibowitz intends to re- turn to the University for graduate school. Seven Posts Five full year positions ana two half-year posts will be filled in the Nov. 13-14 campus-wide elec- tions. In campaigning, candidates will fill speaking engagements in resi- dence halls, fraternities and sorori- ties. On Nov. 11, The Daily will publish a special elections supple- ment listing each candidate's ac- tivities and platform. Protest . S.S.R. ephone call from the Kremlin to Wladyslaw Gomulka, new first sec- retary of the Polish Communist party. The caller was Soviet Communist party boss Nikita S. Khrushchev and he was making a complete climb-down, the informant said. He gave this version : ' Slight Reservation Khrushchev told Gomulka that with some slight reservations he accepted the new Polish Socialist policy. He apologized for an attack by Pravda, the Soviet Communist organ, on the Polish press. The Pravda attack was one cause of ill- feeling. Khrushchev said that Pravda within the next day or so will print a virtual retraction. Moscow Trip The source added that Gomulka and Premier Josef Cyrankiewicz will go to Moscow this week, prob- ably Friday. They will talk with the Soviet party Presidum-Polit- buro. " The discussions are expected to end with a joint declaration simi- lar to that with which Khrushchev patched up Moscow's quarrel with President Tito of Yugoslavia. The Soviet Communist boss ap- parently yielded in the face of bitter anti-Soviet demonstrations inside Poland and warnings from the Polish government that his policies might lead to a bloody up- rising. Riots Erupt In Algeria ALGIERS (P) - Killings, riots, general strikes and bitter Arab anger erupted across North Afri- ca yesterday. The widesparead violence. was the Arab reply to France's arrest of five masterminds of Algeria's nationalist rebellion through a dramatic aerial ruse Monday night. Three Frenchmen were killed in a clash at Meknes in Morocco. Street demonstrations broke out in Tunisia and Morocco. -Daily-Larry Carboneli CAMPAIGN TALK-Speaking on the November elections at the Young Republicans Club panel discussion are Prof. Warren Miller, Jack Piper (moderator) and Prof. Angus Campbell. Ijems Hit Ike Too Late For Voting Effect-Prof. By MICHAEL KRAFT Agreeing with his fellow panel member that elections are probab- ly won between campaigns, Prof. Warren Miller, of the political sci- ence department, said last night that the recent Democratic strategy of criticizing President Dwight D. Eisenhower personally is seemingly to late to effect the campaign. In a discussion of the election with Prof. Angus Campbell, direc- tor of the Survey Research Institute, Prof. Miller told a Young Re- publican gathering that also because of time, the Democrats have successfully developed hostility against Vice-President Richard M. Thousands Demonstrate In Budapest Police Fire Shots . At Crowds; Throngs Pull Down Red Star BUDAPEST, Hungary (-?)-Tens of thousands of demonstrating Hungarians pushed into Stalin Square yesterday shouting "Rus- kies, Russians go home" and "Down with Geroe" Hungary's Communist party chief. Secret police fired shots into a crowd, estimated at around 100,000 persons near Budapest's broad- casting station. One eyewitness said one man waskilled. Stalin Statue The crowd tried unsuccessfully to pull down a 26-foot statue of Stalin, then managed to haul down a huge Red star on top of a Trade Union Building facing the statue. Their demonstration came after Ernoe Geroe, successor to Matyas Rakosi as chief of the Hungarian Communist party, made a surprise broadcast calling lies any rumors that Hungary wants to loosen its ties with the Soviet Union. Democratization He promised "democratization" will continue in Hungary, adding that "numerous social and eco- nomic problems still hatre to be re- examined" especially in agricul- ture. Although he said collectivi- zation is "the only correct road," he pledged peasants would not be forced to join collective farms. One big Budapest demonstration was advertised as a gesture of "sympathy and solidarity" with the Poles, who ousted Stalinist- elements from Poland's Commun- ist party leadership Sunday. With demonstrators shouting for free elections and freedom of the press, the rally turned into a mass demand for a similar Hungarian "declaration of independence" from Moscow control. Government Reforms Before these outbursts developed, the Hungarian Communist party leadership had promised govern- ment reforms looking toward a "new leadership, democratically elected," but' begged the country to be patient. Budapest students warned several days ago they would stage street demonstrations unless the Com- munist government complied with- in 14 days with demands for more freedom and improved living con- ditions for the whole country. Nixon Slams Stevenson's H-Bomb Idea Nixon during the last four years. Campbell and Miller, who are campaigns and voters' reasons for their choices, stressed the im- portance of images voters develop about parties and candidates dur- ing the years. "Voters just tend to discount the attempt at new image making that's attempted during cam- paigns," Miller observed. After three and a half years of avoiding personal attacks on Ei- senhower, the Democrats don't .have time enough to sell the pic- ture showing him strongly at- tached to the Republican Party and its policies, Prof. Miller said. More Important The candidates and the party will be more important this elec- tion, Prof. Campbell predicted, after categorizing the electorate into four groups. The largest group, he said, is the "hard core" party follower. Also, there are the "candidate voters" the "issue voters", and the apathetic voters who have little interest but go to the polls be- cause of pressure, Prof. Campbell said. Campaigning efforts to win voters on issues were generally discounted by the two researchers. Two thirds of the voters make up their minds when the candidates are chosen at conventions, they said. Last Two Weeks However, approximately ten per cent of the electorate waits until the last two weeks before elec- tion before making a decision, Campbell said. The problem is finding out how they will divide, for in 1948 they divided two to one in favor of Truman and "slightly embar- rassed" the polsters, he recalled. TXc * A-tA.r conducting research into election Graduates Give Pros, Cons on UN, By DONNA HANSON The United Nations has. failed because "it has not fulfilled that which was laid down in its char- ter," Samin Khan, a Pakistanian graduate student, asserted in last night's UN week debate. Speaking for the affirmative side of the topic, "The United Na- tions is a Failure," Khan declared that the UN has been unable to do anything because it has no sanctions or powers. Cease-Fires Arranged "The Security Council has ar- ranged many cease-fires, but no SOMEBODY'LL GET WET: Taylor Gomberg Houses Plan for Tug-O'-War -----"*-q - k-w--"we - o--. By VERNON NAHRGANG Fifty of the weightier, more muscular residents of Taylor and Gomberg Houses are limbering up this week in preparation for next Saturday's "big pull." b The occasion is the second annual Gomberg-Taylor Tug-O'-War, one of the newer traditions belonging to campus homecoming activity. At 10 a.m. Saturday, the judges will give the signal and one of the 25-man teams will shortly thereafter be pulled into the waters of the L .:Huron River, peace agreements," Khan said. SOUTH BEND, Ind. (A')-Vice- "And the most important cease- President Richard M. Nixon said fires have been arranged outside last night Adlai E. Stevenson and 'of the United Nations." Russian Premier Nikolai Bulganin have made the same proposal for In refutation, Richard Bald, ending H-bomb tests-a proposal Grad, admitted that the UN "has Nixon said "would be playing right shortcomings and differences" but into the Communists' hands." they can be remedied, citing as an The Democratic nominee's sug- example the veto power in the Se- gestions with regard to ending the curity Council. draft and nuclear weapons tests, Bald claimed that the UN is Nixon said in a speech, show that valuable as a forum for discus- "a vote for Stevenson is a vote sion and for its widespread acti- for the weakness, indecision and vities in the socio-economic fields. inexperience which could lead to League Failure war." Nixon declared that Stevenson Calling to mind for the affir- should join "in support of the mative the failure of the League Eisenhower proposal for disarma- of Nations and its'resemblence to ment with inspection and against the UN, Michael Bentwich, Grad., the Bulganin proposals which con- of Israel, said both organizations the Bulganin proposals. were run by party politics and "If we were to agree to the economic strength rather than Stevenson plan for stopping nu- justice. l clear tests without insisting on an Rebuttal Speeches Eisenhower plan for inspection, i +bpi, ahA++1 enho t he wewould h nlaving right into.the 'No Sweat' for Gomberg Already, Gus Ginter, '57E, president of Gomberg; winner of last year's tug-o'-war, has prophesied that the event will be "no sweat" for his team. "They'll be too wet to sweat," was the reply of Taylor's President Richard Zern, '57. "Gomberg may be known for its athletic 'prowess'' but Taylor is famed for its social programs, and we're planning a major event-the Gomberg Swim Party." "Ridiculous," Ginter snorted. "We're a house of action, not of: words." -xi