Eisenhower-Nehru Talks Underline Red China Issue See Page 4 Yl r e 1Mwr 4:Iait~ CLOUDY, COLDER Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXVII, No. 73 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1956 FOR DEARBORN BRANCH: SIX PAGES Anglo-French Forces Attacked Guerrillas Kill French Legionnaire While Boarding Ship Going Home PORT SAID, Egypt OP ) - Guerrillas swung back to the attack on departing British-French forces in Port Said yesterday, killing a French Foreign Legionnaire as he boarded ship. Legionnaires rushed back ashore from a tank landing ship, flushed out a sniper hideaway and arrested three guerrillas. The legionnaire was the first of the French forces killed this way. The sniper's rifle shot broke a calm prevailing after a weekend of bloodshed touched off by the ambush slaying of a British officer. British tanks and troops attacked the Arab slum quarter, a guerrilla refuge. Protect Embarkation The day had been so calm that British soldiers spent most of the 'U' Branch Eli.... ....a . .. Considered he.co-... Promisin University President Harlan Hatcher yesterday called the "co- ... operative" educational-vocational I. program to be initiated at the !. - newly-announced Dearborn branch "a promising means of attack upon the current shortage of trained . manpower." ness~ ~ a admnisraional He said the "practical and real- -... istic work experience provided in t co-operative education" will enable T# 'A students engineering and busi- ness administration "to put their academic training to productive use sooner than would 4e the case in a conventional program." ...' Another advantage for the vo- ยง cational-educational p r o g r a m, Hatcher contended in his state ment on yesterday's $6,500,000 and 210' acre Ford grant, would be added student income, providing "the opportunity of college educa- - tion to students who would other- wise be unable to afford it." TWO-HUNDRED TEN ACRE GRANT Map shows area In Dearborn, Michigan in which the Grant Largest Gift to School Grant Includes 210 Acre Tract; 'U' Regents Tentatively Accept By JAMES ELSMAN and PETER ECKSTEIN Special to The Daily DEARBORN-Ford Motor Company and Ford Motor Company Fund yesterday gave the University $6,500,000 and 210 acres of land to build a senior college branch for nearly 3,000 students here. University President Harlan Hatcher said he understood the gift package to be the largest ever made to an educational institution by a company. Contingent upon the State Legislature's willingness to appropri- ate money for the yearly opera-O time helping the United Nations p City Voters 10 Consider Bond Issues By ALLAN STILLWAGON The Ann Arbor City Council last night voted unanimously to place six capital improvement bond is- sue proposals totaling $3,795,000 on the Feb. 18 municipal ballot. These six proposals are part of a larger capital improvements pro- gram boasting projected totals of $12,400,000 on a six-year basis and approximately $9,700,000 on a three-year financing basis. The balance of the program is expected to be financed from other revenue sources such as parking, or utility incomes and would not affect individual property taxes. Most Important Problem Mayor William E. Brown Jr. called passage of the resolution placing the question on the ballot "one of the most important prob- lems passed on by the the Coun- cil since I've been mayor. Largest of the projected bond- ing propositions calls for the is- suance of not more than $1,895,- 000 worth of general obligation bonds for the construction and equipment of a new city hall. The appropriation would include funds for the purchase of land, although no particular site has been discus- sed as yet. The present city hall-police headquarters has been the object of controversy for several years, having been partially remodeled several times to make room for the expanded city administration. The five other proposals include plans for an outdoor swimming pool at Veterans Memorial Park -requiring $300,000, expansion of parks and recreation facilities- $500,000, additional storm sewers -$600,000, sanitary land fill and refuse disposal-$300,000 and con- struction of a new fire station- $200,000. SFA Conference The council also heard a report from Councilman Russell Burns concerning the Union's Student- Faculty-Administration conference attended by Burns and City Ad- ministrator Guy C. Larcom Jr. As a result of the conference Burns asked council members to "think about" ways in which outside fi- nancial interests could be persuad- ed to develop taxable housing for University married students. Burns said he had not fully un- derstood the seriousness of the married students' housing problem until he attended the conference. Positions Open For Board Petitioning for three vacant olice force protect the embarkation 4 of 384 Italian residents fleeing Port Said. The Italians left behind about 1,000 of their countrymen who are defying threats of vengeance from guerrillas. The underground bands accuse the Italians of collaborat- ing with the invading armies. The Italians are heading back to Italy aboard the SS Argentina. The operation was completed without a sign of trouble. The UN police detachment in Port Said drew a pat on the back from Lt. Gen. Sir Hugh Stockwell, commander of the British-French task force. Twenty-Seven Killed Stockwell told newsmen 27 Egyptian men were killed and an undetermined number wounded in the moonlight battle set off be- tween British troops and Egyptian guerrillas by the ambush slaying of a British major on patrol late Saturday night. The major was described as the only British cas- ualty. A few hours after the battle ended, at 2:30 a.m., Sunday, the British withdrew to a narrow, wire-guarded strip on the water- front. They came out yesterday to ring a four-block area around Italy's white consulate building while British trucks moved the Italians to the quay. Norwegian and Dan- ish soldiers of the UN police force formed an' outer barrier. Then the British returned to their water- front strip. From various sources came indi- cations the British and their French allies, garrisoned in the Port Fuad area across the harbor, will board their waiting ships to- morrow or Thursday and leave Port Said in the hands of UN and Egyptian authorities. Good Location He added, there is an "excep- tionally favorable opportunity" in Dearborn for the development of "co-operative"hprograms because the city is "the hub, of a highly populated area with large numbers of people whose jobs call for col- lege training." Dearborn, he said, has been the "largest population density in Michigan without a four-year college." The junior college in Dearborn, Henry Ford Community College, has already done work in the co- operative field. President Hatcher praised the "generous gifts" of the Ford Motor Company and its fund for helping to meet "a major national prob- lem," a shortage of "college trained manpower to supply the' needs of the increasingly complex technol- ogy and an expanding economy." No better example, he added, "could be found of an industrial corporation meeting its social re- sponsibilities." Need for Increase Turning to the general needs ofl American education, P r e s i d e n t Hatcher said "the colleges and universities of the nation will need to increase their physical plants and other facilities by at least 50 per cent within the next five to 10 years." He went on to describe the Uni- versity's program to "meet most effectively its share of the respon- sibilities in providing enlarged edu- cational opportunities which are demanded by the state's growing population and expanding econ- Iomy." Ford Motor Company and its fund donated 210 acres (shaded areas) for the building of a Univer- sity branch. The donated land includes Fair Lane, Henry Ford's onetime estate and home. World News Roundup By The Associated Press Polish Teto .. . WARSAW, Poland - Poland won veto power last night over the use of Soviet troops in this country. A five point agreement sealed with two top Soviet officials also makes Red army men and their families subject to Polish law when they are away from military bases. The agreement means Russian. troops will not be shifted around the country without prior ap- proval of the Polish government. Austrian Border Trip... VIENNA - Worried Austrian and American security officials yesterday canceled a trip to Aus- tria's Iron Curtain border planned by United States Vice-President Richard M. Nixon. Nixon is due here tomorrow for a look at the problem of Hungar- ian refugees. More than 65,000 have been sent to homes in other lands, 70,000 are still in Austria, and they are still arriving at the rate of 1,500 a day. *- * * Gasoline Rationing . . LONDON - Britain's first day of "Suez" gasoline rationing left some city streets as deserted, as a village lane yesterday. It brought strange turn-of-the- century vehicles out of hiding. Thousands of Britons left their cars in garages and turned to crowded public transport systems to get to work. Private motorists obviously were saving their basic ration coupons -good for sufficient gasoline to travel 200 miles a month - for their most essential journeys. HUNGARIAN ISSUE: U.S. Challenges, Russia To Admit UN Observers WASHINGTON (R') -- The State Department challenged Russia yesterday to allow United Nations observers inside Iungary to de- termine the truth of Soviet charges that the Hungarian revolt was "stimulated from the outside." Press officer Lincoln White said the Hungarian government "is obviously under control pf the Soviet Union" and that with a UN inspection "the answer to who stimulated whom would become very evident." Another development yesterday was a blunt Russian rejection of an American protest against massed Soviet tanks "threatening NTr helpless Hungarian civilians" out- Iketiienru Si~ vre uu~e ~~ue i il side the United States legation in Budapest. Refuses to Withdraw The U. S. government refused to withdraw its protest. Russian Charge d'Affaires Ser- gei R. Striganov had a sharp' in- terview with Deputy Undersecre- tary of State Robert Murphy. Striganov told reporters he had "resolutely declined" to accept a vigorous American protest made 10 days ago against the action of Soviet tanks in the Hungarian capital. The American note, he said, is "an unjustified attempt to inter- fere with relations between Rus- sia and "the Hungarian People's Republic." Renews Contention In turning down the protest, Striganov renewed Russia's con- tention that the Hungarian rebel- lion was "stimulated from the out- side." Soviet troops have entered Hungary to help "establish order," he said, in response to an appeal from Hungary, an ally under the Warsaw Pact. White ridiculed the accusation that outside forces had stirred up the Hungarian rebellion, which has been boiling for six weeks. Talk Be gins GEITYSBURG, Pa. ()-Presi- dent Dwight D. Eisenhower and Prime Minister Jawaharial Nehru of India sat down yesterday in rural seclusion and weighed to- gether the problems of a tense, uneasy world. Suez, Hungary, Red China, mil- itary alliances, foreign aid - all these and others were likely top- ics for the two chiefs of state in the isolation of the President's country mansion. But details of the specific sub- jects they discussed, and any meeting of minds or lack of it, may become known only with the lapse of time., Presidential Press Secretary James C. Hagerty labeled the Eis- enhower-Nehru conversations "en- tirely personal." He all but ruled out the possibility of any com- munique setting out. A 4 p.m. briefing for reporters by Hagerty and K. B. Tandan, press secretary at the Indian Em- bassy, merely produced word that President Eisenhower had told them he and Nehru had been "dis- cussing many things in the inter- national field." tion of the Dearborn Center, Uni- versity Regents tentatively ac- cepted the offer. Meet Graduate Need John Bugas, Ford vice-presi- dent, said the University initiated "formal thought" about the Dear- born Center and Ford Motor Com- pany's role after studying means for meeting the need for more college-trained graduates in spe-t cialized fields.- President Hatcher said the Cen-I ter, located 40 miles east of Annc Arbor, will be in operation by the fall of 1959. Expected initial en-c rollment will be slightly more thant 2,000. He reported the Center will1 work in close cooperation with thea local junior college, Henry Ford< Community College, by providing1 a third and fourth year branch1 program.1 Initially four-fifths of the stu- dent body will be enrolled in what3 President Hatcher labeled "co- operative education", a programI which features three months of classroom instruction followed by three months of practical work in neighboring industry.r i Estimate Enrollment 7 University administrators esti- mate the 1962 enrollment of 2,770 will break down this way: 1024 in undergraduate engineering, 600 in literature, science and the arts, 496 in undergraduate business ad- ministration, 364 in graduate en- gineering, and 286 in graduate business administration. Upon graduation, students will have no obligation to the Ford Motor Co. There is no stipulation in the gift that the curriculum continue to emphasize "cooperative educa- tion," President Hatcher reported., University Vice-President and Dean of Faculties Marvin L. Nie-; huss estimated the Legislature would have to appropriate "abouti $1000" per student per year, but that this would not mean an extra outlay "because the State will have to provide for these students somehow." 'U' Administers Flint Branch The University now administers a senior branch at Flint, but the facilities there are owned by the local board of education. At Dear- born, the State will own the pro- perty and building. In addition to classrooms, lab- oratories and shops, the Dearborn Center would lave a library, lec- ture rooms, faculty offices and student service facilities. Fair Lane estate, part of the 210 acre tract includes the Ford mansion, built in 1915 at a cost of $1,032,000. Educational Responsibility Commenting on the University's proposal to establish the Center, Henry Ford II, Ford president, said it offered the Ford Motor Co. a means for "expressing positive- ly our belief in industry's respon- sibility to education". Ford added he believed a prece- dent was being established by which "other American companies may contribute materially to Anti-Iraqi Nationalists Demonstrate AMMAN, Jordan M)-Arab na- tions staged paralyzing general strikes yesterday against Premier Nuri Said of Iraq and his policy of standing by the Baghdad Pact. A 24-hour strike tied up this capital and several other Jordan towns. Syria followed suit with a day- long shutdown of press, businesses and public enterprises. Police threw a heavy guard around the Iraqi legation in Damascus but an In- terior Ministry spokesman said there was no violence. A similar strike for two hours in Cairo stopped street cars and buses and closed law courts and most of the business district of the Egyptian capital. The indignation of Arab Nation- alists at what they call Nuri Said's "pro-British" and "imperalistic" policies was heightened by his two- hour broadcast from Baghdad Sunday night. The iron-willed 68-year-old Pre- mier declared Iraq will stand firm- ly with other members of the Baghdad Pact against communism in the Middle East. Iraq is the only Arab state that joined the pact. Strikes and demonstrations took place in Nablus, Hebron, Irbid and Jordan-occupied old Jerusalem. The strike and demonstration was in response to a call by the Pan-Arab Peoples Conference in Damascus, Syria, an organization of political parties in eight Arab countries. The organization p r o t e s t e d against what it said were "severe measures adopted by Nuri Said's government against the Iraqi people, who struggled for freedom from imperialistic pacts." No vio- lence was reported either in Jor- dan or Egypt. In his broadcast Sunday night, Nuri Said declared Communists were chiefly responsible for a cam- paign of "insults, fabrications and inventions" against Iraq. He said they were trying to create panic in -Iraq by stirring up disturbances, throwing bombs and organizing "networks for assassinations," Band Carols Cheer Dorms The studious silence of New berry and Barbour dormitories was suddenly interrupted last night by a burst of Christmas car- ols from the AFROTO Band. Strains of "Silent Night" floated up from the group standing in the unappropriate drizzling rain to create confusion in the dorms. Women in various evening at- tire flew down the halls and win- dows banged open as heads be- decked in pincurls popped out. The band responded to its ap- nreciative nudien-e with th livly Flu Innoculation Program Disappointing, Beckett Saysj By MARCIA THOMAS Though the polio innoculation program has been doing very well, the results of the flu program have been disappointing, according to Dr. Morley Beckett, Director of Health Service. An estimated 2700 polio shots have been given to University students since the beginning of the school year, with between 1200 to 1500 more innoculations expected. For this same period, only a few more than 100 influenza shots,; have been given. "We think the response to the polio shots is excellent," Dr. Bac- kett said, "but we would like to see an increase in the' number of flu shots." "Any student of the University can come in during regular clinic hours to have these shots," he continued. Dr. Beckett explained it is not necessary to see a doctor. Stu- dents only need their medical cards to see the nurse in the out- na - - -"Irsnarnfir STUDIES LECTURE BYLAWS: SGC Group Discusses Rules Concerning Speakers By VERNON NAHRGANG Two months ago Student Gov- ernment Council set up a com- mittee to study the Committee on University Lectures and Regents' bylaws governing outside speakers on campus. At present the committee has discussed possible revisions in the a,,et,,. commiteeand baws eand attempt they want to changes in the rulings." makeI Some question about the lecture regulations had been raised in October when Young Republicans were denied rights to broadcast or record in any way a speech by former New York Governor Tom Dewey at Hill Auditorium. R.PgP- ,o,- aw, a imp. of Main work of the SGC com- mittee since its creation has been to mail the questionnaires to other schools. Although numerous re- plies have already been received, Sawyer said the responses are "still coming in." Sawyer plans to compile the questionnaire answers during the next two weeks. sible revisions of the Regents'. bylaws. The SGC lecture study com- mittee has also been concerned with obtaining faculty opinion and viewpoints on the issue. Matter of Principle "We want to see what support we can get," Sawyer explained. "We want to see what steps we