rAGE FOUR THE MCHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7. 1"RB WAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY 0 CEASE-FIRE: British, French Forces Gain Suez Canal Control UN Seeks To Organize Peace Police Force for Middle East HOPELESS FIGHT: Hungarians Still Battling Russian Tanks, Troops (Continued from Page 1) 103-mile canal. The time was 2 a.m. in Egypt, 7 a.m. yesterday EST. Egypt announced it would ac- cept the United Nations request{ for a cease-fire if all foreign troops withdraw from Egyptian soil and if other conditions are met. The British and French asked the UN to confirm that a pro-! jected international police force, to be made up under UN auspices from the troops of several nations, can be set up soon to patrol a Suez buffer zone. Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold replied this could be done. It remains to be seen just how the zone can be set up since Israel will not want to withdraw from the Sinai territory it has captured. North Half The capture of Ismailia gave British and French forces the northern half of the waterway after two days of battle. Port Said, the northern termi- nal, was overrun yesterday. The French said the cease-fire was possible because the British and French have achieved their main objective of restoring the canal to international control. The next step is to turn control of the waterway over to a UN police force now being organized swiftly. Radio Interupted Cairo radio interrupted a pro- gram to read the UN announce- ment that Britain and France agreed to a cease-fire. Then the radio announcement laid down these conditions of ac- ceptance previously insisted upon' by Egypt: 1) The cease-fire must be im- mediate. 2) All foreign troops must be' withdrawn from Egypt. w3) Combatant forces must with- draw behind the 1948-49 armistice lines. 4) There must be no outside help to combatants. 5) Free safety of p a s s a g e through the Suez Canal must be assured. Agree To Pull Out Britain and France announced they would be willing to pull out once UN police forces can take control in the canal zone. Israel has announced it agrees to a cease-fire. It has said nothing about giving up any of the Sinai Peninsula wrested from Egypt last week. Egypt gave indications of fight- ing on, apparently in the belief that all its conditions will not be met. Cairo dispatches said total mo- bilization was proceeding. The Egyptian capital was tak- ing on the appearance of an armed camp. W o r k m e n dug trenches and gun emplacements. In Paris, a Cabinet spokesman said France will reply with full force if attacked after the cease- fire. I4' (Continued from Page 1) (Continued from Page 1) up an advisory committee empow- ered to convene the Assembly again whenever questions of "ur- gency and importance" arose on the functioning of the police or- ganization. Sponsors of the resolution were Argentina, Burma, Ceylon, Den- mark, Ecuador, Ethiopia and Swe- den. Countries on the committee would be Brazil, Canada, Colom- bia, India, Iran, Norway and Pak- istan. The Assembly was called to meet at 9:30 p.m. last night on request of the Asian-African group of delegations. Later the meeting was postponed to 10:30 a.m. to- day. The UN apparently will have little trouble recruiting a police force. Eight countries were quick in announcing their readiness to con- tribute. They were Canada, New Zealand, Colombia, Denmark, Nor- way, Pakistan, Sweden and Fin- land. India Agrees Conditionally India, a leading power in the Asian-African group, agreed to contribute forces on one condi- tion, Indian sources said. The con- dition is that the force would not be a military occupation force and would not remain in permanent possession of the Suez Canal. Others are expected to be added as the peace momentum of the force grows. UN officials expressed the hope the police patrol can be on the spot within a short time, perhaps in two or three days. At least they Would like the UN Com- mand, under Maj. Gen. E. L. M. Burns of Canada, to set up head- quarters in the area at the earliest possible moment. Worried About Russia As these developments occurred, diplomats expressed deep worry about the Russian threat to inter- vene in the Middle East in force. The cease-fire agreement appeared to ease the situation somewhat but this did not allay the apprehension that the Russians might try some other way to exert a stronger in- fluence in the troubled zone. Secretary General Dag Ham- marskjold, speaking calmly but with deep emotion, read to a hur- riedly summoned news conference a letter from Britain's Sir Pierson Dixon announcing the joint deci- sion of the British and French. His hand shook slightly as he read the document. He made a brief state- ment and correspondents bolted for the door. He reminded the reporters that Egypt and Israel already had ac- cepted an unconditional cease-fire. He said he was convinced that if the Assembly accepted the pro- posals he has made regarding the international police force "the force will be competent to secure and supervise the attainment of the objectives" set out by the As- sembly Nov. 2. Cites Objectives These objectives were listed as the cease-fire and a halting of the movement of military forces and arms into the area, withdrawal of Israeli forces behind the 1949 armistice lines, a halt on raids from Egypt across the armistice lines into Israel, and the taking of effective steps to reopen the Suez Canal and restore secure freedom of navigation, Regarding the withdrawal of Is- raeli forces, Israel accepted the cease-fire but indicated clearly it will hold the territory it has cap- tured in the Sinai desert and the Gaza Strip until a general peace settlement is made. The police force is being recruit- ed from the small powers. No offi- cers or men are being accepted from the United States, Britain, France, Soviet Union or National- ist China. In his final report to the Assem- bly on the force, Hammarskjold said it does not have military ob- jectives. Diplomats interpreted this to mean it would not be used to force Israel back into the old armistice lines. The UN hopes to resort to appeals and moral force on that point. Gerard Jaquet, Secretary of State for Information, told news- men after a Cabinet meeting: "We will stay until the United Nations' international force has been formed." Everything would be done, he added, to get the canal working again. A French military spokesman said Egyptian ground forces along the canal were destroyed or scat- tered, 95 per cent of the Egyptian air force was wiped out and the Egyptian navy seriously damaged. A British-French headquarters communique from Cyprus said' both Port Said and neighboring Port Fuad were firmly in Allied hands.. 'Russia Offers Sympathy, Aid To Egyptians MOSCOW (P)-The Soviet Union and Russians individually offered sympathy and volunteer fighting help to egypt yesterday on the festive eve of the Bolshevik Revo- lution anniversary. Communist party secretary Nikhail Suslov, in the 39th anni- versary keynote address, demand- ed penalties - called sanctions -- against Britain, France and Israel. In parallel nonofficial moves in the mounting Kremlin campaign on behalf of Egypt: 1) A number of men identified by the Egyptian Embassy as So- viet reserve officers applied for service as volunteers with Egyp- tian forces. 2) Soviet crowds demonstrated' for a second day in front of the British, French and Israeli diplo- matic missions. They violated British diplomatic immunity by surging into the embassy com- pound. Since Soviet citizens cannot leave the Soviet Union without of- ficial assignment and permission, it appeared the volunteers were officially inspired by the Soviet government. Demonstrations such as those described are carried out only under tolerance. WELCOME COEDS! It's Haircutting and Hairstyling time. Ask Upperclasswomen About Us. No Appointments Needed. The Dascola Barbers Near Michigan Theater uneven fight continued in Buda- pest and other parts of Hungary. An unimpeachable diplomatic source said yesterday he had re- ceived information from Buda- pest that the rebellion there against Soviet domination was in progress yesterday. He reported fighting in several parts of the city. Radio Pecs in southern Hun- gary, now in the hands of the Russians, broadcast another ap- peal late yesterday for assistance of the populace in disarming the rebels. The Pecs Russian commander said that Russian guns would be turned on any house from which the rebels were shooting. He asked the inhabitants to take guns away from the rebels "to avoid further damage to housing." RFE Broadcast Radio Free Europe reported al broadcast from Rakoczy radio, a rebel transmitter, in southwest Hungary, which said: "The Russians demand that we lay down our arms. We won't do it and if it is ,necessary, we will fight to our last drop of blood." Trustworthy information reach- ing Vienna yesterday said Russian troops fired on the Yugoslav lega- tion in Budapest, killing a young diplomat. Several members of the legation staff were reported wounded. A convoy of 28 automobiles brought 36 persons to the Austrian border at Nickelsdorf late yester- day. They had left Budapest at 8:30 a.m. Sunday. Workers, Correspondents The party includeI mostly Red Cross nurses and welfare workers. One Austrian newspaper corres- pondent, Peter Eder, and two Ger- man radio reporters of the Sued- deutsche Rundfank, Peter Schier- Griebowski and Kurt Gewissen, were in the party. Eder said he heard that deposed Premier Imre Nagy already had been in jail for two hours when his appeal for help was broadcast to the UN and the world. As the convoy moved westward from Budapest during the day, Russian tanks were stationed at every bridge. There was no fight- ing along the main highway, Eder said. The Russians behaved "wildly," he said, and their tanks complete- ly blocked off the Parliament building where the Nagy govern- ment, which demanded independ- ence and neutrality for Hungary, was installed. Russians Searched Eder said the Russians searched all members of the party thor- oughly, going through their lug- gage, and confiscated all films, The Russian soldiers called the Austrians "swine," Eder said, and acused him of going to Budapest to write about "alleged Commu- nist bloodshed." Eder said that when the convoy arrvied at Komarom near the Czech border, on a detour from the main highway to Vienna, Rus- sian troops fired over their heads. Later they were permitted to pro- ceed to Gyoer, but there the Rus- sians held them 36 hours without food or heat, Eder said. Gyoer is a border town northwest of Buda- pest which was a sort of rebel headquarters at the outbreak of the revolt. Austrian security authorities said that two Russian army offi- cers appeared at the frontier to- day, turned over a list of names of Hungarian refugees in Austria and demanded they be returned to Hungary. The Austrians turned down the request on the spot. U.S. Denounces Soviet Accusation (Continued from Page 1) States and operating from Austria had supported the Hungarian an- ti-Communist revolt. Press Officer Lincoln White said such accusations were made "in attempting to justify the Russian government's indefensible actions in Hungary." The blunt State Department an- swer yesterday appeared to be a warning to Russia not even to con- sider any retaliation against Aus- tria for allegedly permitting such American action. 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