Election Poll Shows Faculty Members Favor Stevenson Tu o to One By EDWARD GERULDSEN University faculty members pre-' fer Adlai E. Stevenson for Presi- dent by a margin of nearly 2-1, a Daily survey indicates. Of the 331 respondents in the survey, 207 or 62.5 per cent named Stevenson as their choice for the presidency, while 116, or 35.3 per cent favored President Dwight D. Eisenhower. Only two said they were as yet undecided or had no preference. Students Like Ike In a survey of student political opinion made by The Daily earlyj in October, the situation was re- versed. Among the students, Presi- dent Eisenhower proved to be the favorite by the same 2-1 ma- jority. The faculty survey was con- ducted by means of post cards distributed to each of the schools and colleges on the main campus, On the card, each faculty member was asked to specify his school or college, department, general party affiliation, and presidential choice. Of the more than 1,000 cards distributed, 331 were returned. These were broken down accord- ing to school or college, depart- ment, party affiliation and Presi- dential choice. Only 45.3 Per Cent Dems Although 62.5 per cent (207) of the respondents came out for Stevenson, only 45.3 per cent (147) called themselves Democrats. Of the remaining 60 who chose Ste- venson, 56 were Independents planning to vote Democratic and four were Republicans who crossed vote for Ike, while six percent of party lines. Of the 118 (35.3 per sent) respondents who lined up behind President Eisenhower, 80. or 25.7 per cent of the total, listed them- selves as Republicans. Thirty-three declared themselves Independents, and three were Democrats who bolted the party. Of the total of 90 Independents, 58 backed Stevenson, 33 liked Ike, and the remaining one was un- decided. Party Line Crossers The percentage of respondents on each side who expressed an affiliation with one party, yet planned to vote for the other party's candidate, favored the Democrats. Only two per cent of the declared Democrats would the affirmed Republicans planned to vote for Stevenson. Broken down into schools, the heaviest score for Stevenson came from the literary college. Of 213 respondents, 167, or almost 80 per cent favor Adlai, 42, or, about 20 per cent like Ike, and the re- mainder affiliate themselves with a number of minority factions or are undecided, Among the latter, there is on Christian Democrat backing Eugenio Pacelli, one Soc- ialist, backing Enoch A. Holtwick, one undecided Independent, and one Republican who refused to favor either candidate. Med School Goes Adlal Next to lit school, the medical school proved to be harboring the highest percentage of Adlai fans. Of 29 who returned the cards. 69 drews and the State's Rights1 per cent were behind him The Party. remaining 31 per cent like Ike. Unfortunately, all the schools The School of Natural Resources and colleges on campus are not wasn't far behind. There were only included in this tabulation. Some 14 respondents, but eight of them, were not reached in time for the or 57 per cent, were Stevenson responses to be received, and in boosters, the remainder backing the cases of some others, there President Eisenhower. were too few respondents to make The business administration any individual tabulation signifi- school was evenly split. Five of 10 cant. respondents liked Ike. five were Student-Faculty Comparison for Adlal. When a comparison is made be- Engine School Likes Ike tween this faculty poll and, the' The engineering school was the October student survey, broken source of President Eisenhower's down into schools, Adlal Steven- greatest support. Out of a total son comes out this way: (Faculty of 37 votes, the President received poll figures first) Literature, Sci- 32, which amounts to 89 per cent. ence and the Arts, 80 per cent-43 The remaining five were split un- per cent; School of Medicine, 69 evenly, with four going to Steven- per cent-11 per cent; Business Ad-j I son and one to T. Coleman An- ministration, 50 per cent-12.5 per cent: and Engineering, 11 per The geology department alone cent-30 per cent. gave President Eisenhower a ma- On splitting the College of Lit-Ijority erature, Science and the Arts into its departments, the following There were a number of ilespon- lineup is obtained: ses' which are difficult to tabulate The sociology department alone wtih the rest. One respondent in was unanimous in its endorse- the business administration school ment of Stevenson. There were listed himself as a Communist, 21 respondents, all for Adlai. favoring Vice. President Richard Stevenson Rooters M. Nixon for the Presidency. The others fall into place be- Another listed his party affilia- hind Stevenson this way: English- tion as "faculty" and his presi- 97.5 per cent; political science-94 dential choice as Harlan H. Hat- per cent; economics-93 per cent; cher, University president. Still mathematics-85.6 per cent; ro- another, in the .economics depart- mance languages-85 per cent; ment, said he preferred the parties speech-79 per cent; zoology-69 with "wimmin and liquor", and in per cent; history-68 per cent; answer to the question of presi- physics-62.5 per cent; chemistry- dential choice, declared he did 50 per cent; and geology-25 per "not seek the office, but if drafted, cent. will accept my country's call." Union Meeting Reveals Emotional Nationalism See Page 4 Y it it au ~ait& CE CW DTY, LITTLE MIANGE Latest Deadline in the State w VOL. LXVII, No. 41 Russians Attack Hungary Capital Premier Nagy Appeals for Help; Security Council Meets Today By The Associated Press The Hungarian News Agency MTI sent an urgent teletype mes- sage to the Associated Press office in Vienna early today saying: "Russian gangsters have betrayed us, they are opening fire on all of Budapest." The Canadian Press reported Budapest radio, heard in Toronto late last night, said Russian troops had attacked the Hungarian army in Budapest. It said Hungarian Premier Imre Nagy was reported to have appealed to the world for help.. The UN Security Council went into special session shortly before 3 a.m. EST to take up the new Soviet attacks in Hungary. Requests for a special session was made by US Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., within less than an hour after nows dis- ---patches told of widespread at- tacks by Soviet forces throughout Professors Hungary. The MIT statement said, "The Russian troops suddenly attacked Budapest and the whole country. V iew .. They have opened fire on every- a body in Hungary, .It iii a general ,.Prosperity hudrdtankcatake "During the past hours a few (EDITORS NOTE: This is the fith pest and Dunafoldvar. There Is a in a series of articles of faculty heavy fight with the Russians for member comment on issues in the possession of the key positions of current campaign. This article dis- the bridge. cusses the issue of prosperity.) s I stay open and continued with By PETER ECKSTEIN the news.. .We shall inform the While University professors in world about everything," the tele- economics and business admini- type operator in Budapest said. stration agree that the nation has "Please inform Europe and the enjoyed great prosperity in the Austrian government." I past four years, they do not at- The operator added that MTI tribute the Administration a ma- itself was under heavy Russian jor role in that prosperity. fire. It went on: They also would extend this "James Kadar, party secretary, judgment to the Truman Admini- George Marosan and Sandor stration. Disagreement enters in Ronai formed a new government only the question of how large a and they started to aniihilate the role government actually should counterrevolution. play in maintaining prosperity. "They are on the Russian side. Jerome Snyder, instructor in the Previously, Premier Imre Nagy's business administration school, government announced Soviet and described economic activity as Hungarian military leaders have "fantastically high" made an "encouraging stat" to- He added, "you can't push em- ward arranging withdrawal of all ployment any higher--except in Soviet military forces from Hun- a few pockets" without causing gary. inflation. Prof. J. Phillip Wernette of the business administration school Fo r D7 C r said, "it's the businessmen, entre- preneurs, engineers and scientists] -and educators if you will-whoR deserve the real credit" for cur- rent prosperity. Prof. Stephen Rousseas of the l R cover economics department described government econmoic policies WASHINGTON ( -In an emer- since the war-under both Demo- gency operation on Secretary of cratic and Republican Admini- State John Foster Dulles, surgeons strations-as "stumbling through. yesterday removed a perforated If we take the various crises we've section of his large intestine. had since the war, the reasons He was reported to have emerged we haven't had a depression have from the operation "in good condi- been largely fortuitous." tion" While Prof. Rousseas argues Lincoln White, the State Depart- that our government may not be ment's press officer said a team able to prevent a depression at of four doctors performed the present-though it would be able two and one-half hour surgery at to eventually overcome one-Prof. the Army's Walter Reed Hospital Wernette advocates a "keep your Nearly five hours after Secretary shirt on" policy toward business Dulles left the operating room, a conditions, and argues that he State Department spokesman re- and other observers were predict- ported in a second bulletin that ing steady economic .growth ever "in the immediate postoperative since the end of World War I. period" his condition is "good" Prof. Rousseas, on the other and that he is now "fully con- hand, criticized recent statements scious" and has talked with his by members of the Eisenhower wife and doctors. Administration "overemphasizing The next medical bulletin on the idea of a balanced budget." Dulles' condition will be released He said that while the Admini- tomorrow at 3 p.m., EST, White stration acted "properly" by cut- said. ting taxes in the recession of Dulles at first had been thought 1953-54 and that '"i un fn k . o" - .. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1956 EIGHT PAGES .S I e 4 _ Bulletin UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. OP) -Israeli Ambassador A b b a Eban said last night his govern- ment had authorized him to announce that it would accept the UN cease fire if Egypt would do so. Eban made no mention of the General Assembly's de- mand that the attacking forces withdraw Ifrom Egyptian terri- tory. oild News Roundup BlY Tht Associated Press GREET SOVIET VISITORS UU'Students Stage Demonstrations By JAMES ELSMAN, Jr. Russian officials visiting the a University last night were told to . "Go Where Joe Went" by a plac- ard-waving crowd of 30 refugee ' students. i 11 1SPRINGHILL, Nova Scotia -I More than half of the 113 men trapped in a coal mine explosion since Thursday struggled out of their tomb alive yesterday. These 59 survivors brought with them hope that almost all would be saved. That is, all except one miner-Charles Burton, the first man to reach sunlight. He said he thought about 40 were dead , deep in the rock-filled shafts. More optimistic mine officials and 'work- ers disputed his estimate. * * * ANDALUSIA, Ala. - A Negro farm worker, who was hauled from a Florida jail almost a week ago' by a band of white men, was found' alive and in "good condition" at Andalusia yesterday. The Negro allegedly called "Hel- lo there, baby" to a white school teacher at Wildwood, Fla. A physician said Jesse Woods, 39 years old, had superficial wounds of the back, apparently from a beating with a leather strap. He had been missing from the Wildwood Jail since Sunday. * * * - CHICAGO - Adlai E. Stevenson said last night that President Dwight D. Eisenhower "now lacks the energy for full-time work at' the world's toughest job." And he, asked whether this nation wanted Vice-President Richard M. Nixon as its commander-in-chief. Diplomat Quits After Protest Of Suez Attack LONDON (A)-Anthony Nutting has resigned as Britain's minister of state for foreign affairs in pro- test against the British-French at- tack on Egypt. The 36-year-old diplomat, who .two years ago signed the British- Egyptian treaty to end British occupation of the Suez Canal zone, announced his resignation in a letter made public today by Prime Minister Anthony Eden. Nutting has been a steadily ris- ing star in the British diplomatic service. He told Prime Minister Eden he had been in growing disagreement for some time with certain aspects of British Middle East policies. 'here was no boisterousness. Here to observe American elec- tions, the three Russians were sur- rounded in a corridor of the Union by the orderly group of Latvians, Lithuanians, and Ukranians who _ merely glared and presented their painted placards reading-"Wipe yP' the Blood off Your Hands before - Coming Here" and "Latvia Bleeds Under the USSR." 'U' Officials Embarrassed I University officials were obvl- cusly embarrassed. State Depart- ment representatives smiled, one saying, "Why not? This is a free country. The more power to them." Prof. James K. Pollock, chair- man of the political science de- partment and supervisor of the .. Soviet officials' stay here, said he had "no comment." It was Prof. Pollock who provid-v ed the most humorous remark of' the evening. After sneaking. the Russian officials in the west door -Daily-Charles Curtiss of West Quad to avoid the demon- WELCOME?-Demonstrators stand In the Union with signs ready strators collected in front of the for the arrival of Russian guests of the University. Union, he came face to face with the refugees in a basement corri- the bus circled around to the west tion was better organized than the dor of the Union. They had heard door of the Quad. Denver one.. of his flanking movement. Upon The Soviet visitors are M. '. A refugee who was eavesdrop- seeing them, a flushed Prof. Pol- Rubenstein, doctor of economic ping outside the room door of Ru- lack said "These are the people nces at the Soviet Academy of benstein, where the Russians were Sliatu sky TallieS SFianal Minutes Second Half Rally Trips Hawkeyes; Record Crowd Fills Iowa Stadium By STEVE HEILPERN Special to The Daily IOWA CITY, Iowa - Mike Shatusky; Michigan's third-string right halfback, came from the furthest limits of oblivion to score two second-half touchdowns and lead the determined Wolverines tg a breathtaking 17-14 win over frustrated Iowa. Shatusky bucked over from the two-yard line with 1:06 minutes remaining in the contest to send an all-time record crowd of 58,13' home misty-eyed. The homecoming throng here also saw their team lose for the first time this year . . . and the distance ,from Iowa city to Pasadena is now a'? II i we wanted to avoid." Early Attempt Fails# These same refugees earlier had failed to contact the Russians at Willow Run Airport when their 7:45 p.m. plane arrived. They fol- lowed a caravan to the Union-a dignitary-loaded University bus followed by seven cars of 'deter- mined refugees. When the bus reached the Union, the University Patrol informed Prof. Pollock of the planned demonstration and Sciences; L. N. Solovyev, a deputy of the Supreme Soviet, and V. L. Kudrvavtsec, 'reporter from Iz- vestia. In Deriver, two days ago the Russians were met by a similar but much more outspoken demonstra- tion. Then they commented, "We don't treat guests like this in our country." State Department men labeled' the placards, "good signs" and noted that last night's demonstra- Helping Out beseiged, translated their com- ments into English. "They want the University, officials to stop it," he translated, "and they Just can't understand how a demonstration can be spontaneous and free and why the police can't breakit up." Why did the refufee students do it? "They are murderers," said one with a choked voice, "and we are showing them that they can't pull 'the wool over our eyes." 'Do You Realize . "Do you realize right now these criminals are shooting students like us in Hungary?" added an- other. "We aren't doing this for our- selves," said the most articulate of the group, "this is for our dead friends-our mothers and fathers and brothers and sisters whom the Russians have murdered or sent to Siberia. When the Russians refused to budge from their rooms to attend a scheduled meeting because the demonstrators had lined the path to the meeting room, Marvin Nie- huss, Vice-President and Dean of Faculties at the University, per- suaded the 30 refugees to wait outside the Union. All thirty cooperated, but vowed they would return this morning. Noted Pianist To Perform Noted French pianist Roberta Casadesus will appear in a concert at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at Hill Auditorium. The composer and musician will narform a nroaram of Schumann little longer. Four Straight For Forest Evashevski, Iowa's grid coach, it marked the fourth straight heartbreaking defeat at the hands of his alma mater. Eva- shevski, who had his team at a fever pitch for Michigan, threw everything he had against the visi- tors, but the Wolverines were magnificent in the do-or-die moments. The victory squared Michigan's Conference record at two and two, while the Hawkeyes fell from first to a third place tie with Michigan State with a three and one mark. It was almost unbelievable. A script writer couldn't have done much better. The fourth straight year that Iowa had scored two touchdowns b e f o r e Michigan scored one. The third straight year that the Wolverines winning drive was led by quarterback Jim- my Maddock. The fourth -straight year that Michigan won. And Evashevski is still mumblipg to himself, The Wolverines, badly maimed, playing without the services (ex- cept for three and one-half min- utes) of star back Terry Barr and fighting agaihst a team that was with vigor that could almost make peaked for the game, fought back See MADDOCK, Page 6 Canada Asks UN Forces In Middle East UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (P) - Canada called on the UN emer- gency Assembly last night to authorize Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold to draw plans with- in 48 hours for an emergency in-' ternational UN force to police the war-torn Middle East. U.S. Chief Delegate Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., immediately endorsed the proposal dramatically put be- fore the Assembly by Canada's Foreign Secretary Lester B. Pear- son. Lodge asked the Assembly to give the Canadian resolution pri- ority over two U.S. proposals he had made for a long-range settle- Report Alles Set for Leap~ Into Egypt' LONDON ()-The fateful .leap of British and French forces into Egypt appeared ever more immi- nent today. Appeals from the UN for a softer course were brushed aside and the die was cast for force by Britain and- France. Egyptian reports circulated by roundabout means claimed the British and French tried to land on the Suez Canal yesterday but were repulsed, with losses, by shore guns. Egypt said enemy troop carriers were sunk and captured. The British and French denied any such losses. The final statements through midnight from the British and French said their warplanes still were preparing the way for their land forces to kick off jhe offen- sive. In Washington, the Egyptian Embassy released a statement from Cairo, saying: "We are at war with Britain and France." This apparently was intended to counter British-French refer- ences to the fighting as "a' police action." Massing of Syrian, Iraqi and Jordanian troops in Jordan posed the threat of a second front on Israel's eastern border.' The Israelis said on the western front their advance patrols had reached the Suez Canal. The main Israeli forces were reported about nine, miles from the waterway and moving 'freely, throughout the Sinai Peninsula, where fighting has stopped. - An Israeli spokesman said thou- sands of prisoners had been taken but most Egyptian officers had fled, leaving their units to be captured in Sinai. Prime Minister Anthony Eden told the nation in a TV address that Britain and France had acted to prevent a greater conflict in the Middle East. I tI .I