SGC AND STUDENT INTEREST See Page 4 i I 14C S ir4bgIAA-jk Daiijp1 I PARTLY CLOUDY, COOL Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXVII, No. 48 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1956 SIX PAGES UN Troops Begin Move Into Egypt Plan To Police Area Agreed To By Nasser LONDON WP)-The United Na- tion police force flies into Egypt - today from Italy on a momentous mission as peace keeper for the ever troubled Middle East. The airlift begins at noon CST from the Capodichino staging base near Naples for the 1,300-mile hop over the Mediterranean to Cairo. The Swissair liners chartered for the lift will' put the first contin- gents down at the International Airport near suburban Heliopolis -n idafternoon. UN Secretary General Dag Ham- marskjold and the Egyptian radio announced Egypt had agreed on all points for the entry of this first international police force. Nasser Agrees Agreement came after President Gamel Abdel Nasser and Foreign Minister Mahmoud Fawzi met yes- terday in Cairo with Maj. Gen. E. L. M. Burns, the Canadian who will command the force. The initial group entering Egypt is composed of fewer than 200 young Colombians, Danes and Nor- wegians. Behind them will come Ham- marskjold, who disclosed in New York that he is going to oversee the operation. He is due in Cairo Thursday. Ultimately 10,000 soldiers may enter Egypt to police the peace. The United States Air Force is flying them to Italy and Swissair1 is taking them the rest of the way. The Egyptian Middle East News Agency said five points of agree- ment had been reached with Ham- marksjold. Designed to make certain the UN police force does not infringe on Egypt's sovereignty, the points are expected to cause some last-min- ute trouble. Five-Point Agreement The points listed are; 1. The international force will have no duties in Port Said and the canal zone after the with- drawal of British and French forces, who must comply with a UN cease-fire resolution and quit Egypt at once. 2. The work of the force will be confined to the demarcation line between Israel and Egypt as estab- lished in 1949 after the Palestine war. The force remains only so long as Egypt approves. 3. Egypt must consent to the participation of each country in the international force. ° 4. Egypt must consent to the places where the force will be sta- tioned. 5. If the Egyptian government withdraws its agreement, the in- ternational police force must quit Egyptian soil immediately. Trouble may come over points one and two. That probably is a major reason for Hammarskjold's flying visit to Cairo. As for the first point, Britain and France have announced they reserved the right to say when their forces will withdraw in favor of the UN police. Cairo sources noted the first' point also means Egypt will regain sole control of the canal once the British and French leave and the UN force moves out to the 1949 armistice demarcation line d Britain and France undoubtedly Awill object to this. The British and French an- nounced last week that their at- tack in the canal zone had achiev- ed their prime objective-return of the 103-mile waterway to inter- national control. Cairo quarters also expected trouble from the second point be- cause it indicates Egypt expects, Israel to quit not only Sinai Penin- sula but the Gaza Strip. A SENIOR EDITORIAL: Deserve SGC Election Of the fourteen candidates for election to Student Gov- erment Council today and tomorrow, webelieve that five definitely deserve election. Based on their experience, stands on key issues, and dem- onstrated leadership capacities, Maynard Goldman, and in- cumbents Joe Collins, Ron Shorr, Janet Neary, and Janet Winkelhaus are well qualified to represent the student body of this University. All of these candidates have shown perceptive thought on SGC's functions and responsibilities. They have given care- ful consideration to some of the basic issues and problems fac. ing the University today. Mr.-Goldman would bring to the Council sorely needed administrative experience. Mr. Collins displays a comprehen- sive grasp of the purpose and goals of SGC. Mr. Shorr has shown an energetic and thoughtful approach to the workings of SGC. Miss Neary, presently Vice-President of SGC, would con- tribute from her breadth of experience in the area of inter. national, national, and University student affairs. Miss Win- kelhaus, a relative newcomer to SGC, is widely experienced in the Administrative Wing of SGC. We ask student voters to give serious consideration to these candidates who, in our estimation, are excellently equipped to serve on Student Government Council. Finally, we ask that student voters give serious consider- ation to the records and stands of all the candidates so as to cast an informed and meaningful ballot. --THE SENIOR EDITORS Red Troops End Bid For Freedom Russia Uses 200,000 Man Army- Communications With Hungary Out VIENNA (m)-Russian troops yesterday methodically stamped out remaining sparks of the freedom rebellion which flamed so brightly in Hungary for nearly three weeks. The Russian troops, estimated at 200,000 carried out their grim task in almost total silence. The little satellite, which almost threw off the Soviet yoke, was still cut off from normal communication with the rest of the world. Radio Budapest broadcast the news as usual yesterday, but there was little information about the hunt for rebel leaders or the armed Be~ SexU PREFERS UN: Ike fBl ren SGC Posts Voting To Be )Cks Big Three* Gathering WASHINGTON (MP}The United States was reported yesterday to have advised Britain and Frahce it opposes any quick Big Three sum- mit conference to deal with the Middle East and Hungarian crises. President Dwight D. Eisenhower and his top aiaes, informants said, believe any such meeting should be delayed until the United Nations Assembly has had further oppor- tunity to tackle these two urgent problems.I Murray Snyder, assistant White House press secretary, said there are "no plans at the moment" for any Big Three conference. Snyder was commenting on London re- ports that President Eisenhower had agreed in principle with British Prime Minister Anthony Eden and French Premier Guy, Mollet to such a meeting. Administration leaders were also reported to have told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee yes- terday that any movement of Rus- sian "volunteers" into Egypt should be handled through the United Nations. A Democratic member of the committee who declined to be quoted by name said Acting Secre- tary of State Herber Hoover Jr. was asked whether this country contemplated sending in troops if Russia attempted to move "-0,000 or 20,000 volunteers" into Egypt. The senator said Hoover replied, "That would be a matter for the UN." In a statement a week ago. President Eisenhower indicated this would be the American posi- tion in such a case. The President met for 50 min- utes with Secretary of State John Foster Dulles who is recovering inI Walter Reed Army Hospital from an intestinal cancer operation. President Eisenhower and Dulles were understood to have reviewed a wide range of foreign policy prob- lems including the White House attitude toward Big Three and Big Four meetings. A few hours earlier, this attitude was reported to have been con- veyed in a message delivered in. Paris to French Premier Mollet, who is regarded as strongly in favor of an immediate Big Three meeting, President Eisenhower was re- ported even more opposed to the idea of a Big Four summit con- ference in the near future-despite Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin's announced readiness to attend such a session. -Daily-Stephni ISSUES AND CANDIDATES-Four members of the electorate study the statement of SGC c before casting their ballots. Polls remain open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and tomorrow. The man predicts a cloudy and cold reception for the first of the two days of balloting. Ivy Priest Will 'Speak At Hill And Ivy Baker Priest, treasurer of the United' States, will speak to- day at 8:30 p.m. in Hill auditor- ium. One of the most colorful mem- bers of the administration, Mrs. Priest has combined careers which resistance which apparently con- tinued in some places. Still Control Roads The station did acknowledge that armed groups still controlled some of the roads around Tatabnaya, i small mining town west of Buda- pest. It was silent about the rebel strongholds in the industrial cen-I ter of Csepel Island, Dunapentele and in Budapest itself. There was no report of develop- ments from the meeting Sunday of the Russian-imposed premier Janos Kadar, with his predeces- sor, Imre Nagy, the strange Com- munist who at the height of the rebellion called for independence, free elections, neutrality, and the complete withdrawal of Russian troops from Hungary. This could only be taken to mean that Kadarhad been unable to win Nagy's support for his pro- gram of the oldtime rigged elec- tions, subservience to Moscow and one-party rule. Program Draws Support Nagy's program, while it did not meet the most extreme demands in the nation, had drawn enough support by the time the Russians struck Nov. 4 to make his a prime political asset in any Communist government in the present situa- tion. NEED THIRD SHOT: Batches of Salk Vaccine May Differ in Potency ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. ()-Some batches of Salk vaccine may be stronger than others in creating protection against polio, Chicago scientists said yesterday. They said this makes it all the more important that children take their third or booster shots. The third shot of what might be a weaker vaccine apparently creates good protection in most children. A small-scale study indicating possible variations in potency of vaccine from four different manufacturers was reported to the Am- erican Public Health Assn., by Howard J. Shaughnessy, Ph.D.; Rich- ard A. Morrissey, Ruth E. Church, M. D., and John L. Neal of the Illinois State Department of Pub-i lic Health, Chicago.j The potency of single lots of vaccine from each manufacturer was studied on small groups of children in four different areas of Illinois. Blood tests were made before and after a series of two shots to measure how well the shots cre- ated protective antibodies against polio virus. Except for children getting one particular lot of vaccine, the anti- bodies were below the level gen- erally expected, the health team said in a formal report at the opening of the APHA's 84th annu- al meeting. Some children might have pro- duced more antibodies because' they had already been exposed naturally to the virus, and thus had some antibodies to begin with. But this probably didn't account for all the observed differences in the effectiveness of the vaccines studied, the scientists said. A third dose gave a good boost- er effect in most youngsters who hadn't responded well to two prior shots of the very same vaccine, they added. Technicians in tDemand WASHINGTON (P) - Football and fraternities popped up yester- day as surprise factors in the na- tion's shortage of technicians. Technicians are those labora- tory assistants, draftsmen, elec- tronic equipment men and the like who are vitally needed to do the spade work for engineers and scientists, You might think that one good way to get more technicians would be to give them the prestige of training on the university campus, in close connection with the col- lege of engineering. Some universities have tried that, but college officials attend- ing the convention of the Ameri- can Assn. of Land-Grant colleges and State Universities report it hasn't worked out. Why? Because student techni- cians tend to be rated as second class campus citizens; World N 'Roundi By The Associated MELBOURNE - A g petuous Hungarians ha the Communist Hungar the entrance of Olym yesterday, cut out thet emblem with a pocket raised a homemade7 banner with ringing "Down with Communis "Long live free Hungar This action set off an pestuous day in this O climaxed when a che quet-tossing crowd of 2,000 gathered at Ess port to greet a plane athletes and team off: pleting the Hungarian * * * SPRINGFIELD, Ohi Lewis B. Hershey, dire selective service system terday that "it may ve that America's nextN necessitate drafting me sified as 4F. Hershey said civil def ers "almost certainly" drafted if America wer GENEVA -- ReneI ternational Red Cross delegate in Budapest yesterday the firstI convoy that crossed th Hungarian border Sun ing has arrived safely i garian capital. His telephone conver the first between headq Budapest since Nov. 4.I Hungarian Communis ment agreed to distribu and medical supplies1 Cross supervision. WASHINGTON - Dwight D. Eisenhowe Thanksgiving proclam terday counseling Am "be grateful that the f of freedom in our n2 stronger with each pa giving hope to fettered1 In setting aside Thu 22 as a day of national ing, the President call zens to pray this year' the spirit of Thanksgiv as supplicants for God to the end that we may course of righteousness Cabinet Men~ Operated on United States Postm eral Arthur Summerf: went minor surgery att sity Hospital yesterday of an esophagcal obstr Doctors .report that 1; Today;, Filled SBallot Boxes To Be Open Ndine Hours Fourteen Will Try For Council Places In Two Day Vote By TAMMY MORRISON University students will go to the polls today and tomorrow to n select seven Student Government Council members. The weatherman is predicting cold, cloudy skies but no rain. Six- teen ballot boxes located through- out the main campus area will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and tomorrow. Out of 19 students who origin- ally took out petitions, 14 SGC hopefuls will vie for five full-year terms and two half-year terms in e Roumeli the two day balloting. andidates Candidates are Bob Creal, '58 weather- BAd, Scott Chrysler, '59E, Janet Neary, '58, Maynard Goldman, '59, Ron Shorr, '58BAd, Al Lubowitz, '57, Jerry DeMaagd, '58, Joe Brown, '58, James Wheeling, '57, Janet Winkelhaus, '57, Joe Collins, e w '58, John Wrona, '57, Mal Cum- ming, '58BAd and Peter Cart- wright, '59. Record Turnout Hoped Elections Director Tom Vanden Press Bosch, '58E, is hoping for a record rou of im- turnout, but added, "Il be really auled down happy if we can hit about 7,000." rian flag at A record was set last fall, when pic Village 7,120 votes were cast, despite pour- Communist ing rain. Cokuniand About 1,000 students will man. ntiend the booths during the two-day Nationalist voting period. Arrangements are cries of being made to take ballots to t flag" and students in Health Service. iother tem- Climax of Campaigning l cit Elections will climax two weeks eypgicibouy of campaigning for the candidates. more than uring those two weeks, they have endon Air- attended open houses at almost load of 91 every housing unit on campus, icials com- giving their platforms and views delegation on issues SGC faces at the present. Posters, leaflets and matches were among their campaign gimmicks. c-Lt. Gen. Two pages in Sunday's Daily were ,ctor of the devoted to candidates' discussion , said yes- of SGC's functions, the Sigma ry well be" Kappa issue, the Lecture Commit- war would tee, Residence Harls financing n now clas- and how far the Council should delve into Academic problems at fense work- the University. would be Brown is a member of the e attacked. Marching Band and has been active in the Union Opera and Bovey, In- MUSKET. Cartwright is on SGC's committee Public Relations Committee. Gold- , reported man is a member of SGC's Co- Red Cross ordinating and Counseling Com- e Austrian- mittee and has been active in day morn- Lloyd House and West Quad gov- n the Hun- ernment and in Inter-House Coun- cil., rsation was Chrysler is SGC orientation dir- uarters and ector and chairman of the Free He said the University of Berlin Committee. t govern- C u m m i n g Is Inter-Fraternity tion of food Council treasurer. Collins is SGC under Red treasurer and former president of Scott House. Creal is a fraternity house officer and a member of the President Young Republicans Club. Shorr is r issued a associate chairman of SGC's Pub- aation yes- lic Relations Committee and a nericans to member of the Campus Affairs foundations Committee. cation grow Candidate Backgrounds ssing year, Miss Neary, SGC vice-president, peoples.. ." was also chairman of the National rsday, Nov. and International Affairs Com- thanksgiv- mittee and is at present Michigan led on citi- Region Chairman of the National not only in Student Association and a member ing but also of NSA's National Executive Com- 's guidance, mittee. Lubowitz, a transfer from y follow the Flint Community College, was as- s. sistant editor of the newspaper and a member of the Racial Relations Board there. Wheeling is in var- n oer sity track and cross-country. H Wrona, former SGC Public Re- G ere lations chairma nand treasurer of Sigma Chi, resigned from the naster-Gen- Council recently. Miss Winkel- ield under- haus, an SGC incumbent, is also the Univer- Administrative Wing coordinator. for removal DeMaagd is a Daily Day Editor uction. and Tau Kappa Epsilon house of- the obstruc- ficer. 1i. and ithre p Votes will be contedf0 at A+ An Nagy and other members of his NAA CP Meeting shortlived government were re-' ported in refuge at the Yugoslav The National Association for the Embassy in Budapest yesterday, Advancement for Colored People Western reporters who tried to will hold a meeting at 7:30 p.m. interview Nagy there were kept today in Rm. 3B of the Union, away by Russian guards. according to Gurney Pearsall, '57. IVY BAKER PRIEST ...to speak tonight encompass the nation's bankbooks, a prize-winning iris garden, and the raising of three children. Her present position, which causes her name to be placed on all United States currency, was grant- ed by President Dwight D. Eisen- hower shortly after his election in 1952. Mrs. Priest had served as head of women's activities while serv- ing on the Republican national, Committee. Previous to her com- INVESTIGA TION FINDS: Labor Youth League Disappears Here (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first of six articies arising from a year- iong investigation of the Labor Youth League at the University. The inves- tigation was begun when writer Dy- gert was city editor of The Daily in 1955-56) By JAMES DYGERT Israel has announced it intends mittee experience, the guardian of to stay in the 23-mile-long Gaza the Great Seal held every office Strip that fell quickly to IsraeliN in the Utah Republican party forces two weeks ago, which was open to a woman. Politics came as a logical calling, since Clara Baker, the treasurer's Nine Tpe moth imrsseal of te ven i 1 apued mteipesdalothsvnaker children to baby-sitting and running errands in order that local F' omen could participate in Re-t For InWr V publican activities, Later, the assumption of re- Singing "In and out the halls sponsibility became a part.of her: we wander . . ." Senior Society, everyday life when her father died independent women's honorary, and left the Utah State University yesterday tapped nine new mem- freshman as the sole support *of U-W student newspaper, an- nounced that the LYL there had "completely and permanently dis- solved," having failed to register as a student organization by the Oct. 1 deadline. The U-W LYL was the only stu- dent LYL chapter in the country This is an obituary. recognized as a bona fide student For all practical purposes, the group. Labor Youth League at the Uni- The downfall of the Ann Arbor versity is dead. LYL has not been nearly as no- Long a target of subversive ac- ticeable, because it was never rec- tivities' investigators and a center ognized by and never sought rec- of controversy on this campus, the ognition from the University. local LYL is no longer active and Yet, it may have seemed dead is dying throughout the United to University students because States. there has been little surface acti- It is currently reported that the vity in the last couple of years. Communist Party of America is Also, LYL has been without an of- I io rn., i Arin c..nrtf.t5,- finial ' , r c....... -- - - ,w_ ; varying in size from 12 ot 30 at the apartment of a graduate stu- dent who seemed to be the local leader, and a few die-hard LYL members were active in other stu- dent organizations which are com- pletely above-board. Despite the activity, it was ap- parent that the group was disin- tegrating. Last spring, it at- tempted to organize a Marxist study group, bringing for the pur- pose of instruction such notables as the departed Mike Sharpe and LYL State Chairman Bolza Bax- ter, both of whom were then op- erating from Detroit. Attendance at the study group's meeting might be described as dis- couraging. At the first one, mod- received the promised study out- line. The reasons given by the Uni- versity of Wisconsin LYL for its dissolution were "the nature of the LYL in the context of present conditions," its "semi-legal sta- tus" because of being on the at- torney-general's list of subversive organizations (a status which "created a situation where issues were-and still are-more easily won through the established recog- nized organizations than through independent left-wing action"), and the membership's decision that there was no real necessity or urgency to continue. At the University, the reasons are in part dissimilar because Ann bers for their leadership and ser- the remaining six children. # I I ,I ;I