INDUSTRY GRANTS CREATE PROBLEMS See Page 4 Y *fr i.a Latest Deadline in the State ~aitl p 0i CLOUDY, SNOW VOL LXVII, No. 81 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1957 EIGHT PAGES Dulles Urges Middle East Plan Support, Warns of Disastrous Consequences of Veto WASHINGTON ()-Secretary of State John Foster Dulles said yesterday the consequences would I be "quite disastrous"' if Congress should not go along with President DvWight D. Eisenhower's proposals for averting aggression in the Middle East. Sec. Dulles made the statement during four hours of testimony before the House Foreign Affairs Committee, as it opened hearings on President Eisenhower's request for advance authority to use United States military forces if necessary to block Communist ag- gression. Approve Quickly The secretary said Congress can do its utmost "for peace and free- 4 'm" opnly by quickly approving tesident Eisenhower's program for the Middle East. As if in response, Chairman T.S. Gordon (D-Ill) of the committee announced a speedup. He pre- dicted floor action in the House in two weeks. Se. Dulles testified before a jam-packed hearing yesterday. Today the doors will be closed when hereturns for further tes- timony along with Ad. Arthurf W. Radford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. . Acheson to Talk Rep. Gordon said former Secre- tary of State Dean Acheson would testify Thursday. He added that former President Harry Truman declined an invi- tation to testify because of the illness of his wife and former President Herbert Hoover, not in the best of health himself, also 1 passed up an invitation. In another Middle East devel- opment yesterday, the White House announced that King Saud of Saudi Arabia will come to Washington as a guest of the gov- ernment from Jan. 3o through Feb. 1. Discuss Problems During his visit, the White House said, the monarch and President Eisenhower are ex- pected to discuss fViddle Eastern problems "of mutual interest." Sec. Dulles' appearance launched congressional consideration of a proposed resolution he said would: 1) "Make unmistakeably clear" to Russia and the world the United States is determined to help Middle East nations stay free. Provide Aid 2) Provide broad economic aid I to those countries, at a rate ofI 200 million dollars a year.I 3) Authorize military assistance programs to those interested. t 4) Let the President decideI whether to use United States troops against open military ag-t gression by any Communist-con- trolled nation, provided the vic-.. tim requested United States help.i East Germany Gains Control Over Troops MOSCOW OP)-The East Ger- man government yesterday wone an agreement on the control oft Russian garrison forces similar to that given Poland over Sovietf troops in that country, East Ger-, man newsmen reported. The East Berlin radio said Ru,- sia had pledged its troops sta- tioned within East Germany will refrain from interfering in Eastr German internal affairs. However, officials studying the text in Berlin said the radio mayr have jumped the gun on an agree- ment perhaps reached only in principle. Earl Attlee Seeks Extension Of Unity in Commonwealth i I Jail Student Senators Maneuverii In Assault On 'U' Coed To Reject Filibuster; ig By ALLAN STILLWAGON Earl Attlee last night warned nrim t ho rnnpeo vpev By JAMES JiLSMAN against te angers of excessive fragmentism" brought about by Charles Castrop, '59, a 24-year- new-found self-determination. old pre-medical student, was Speaking for the first time in charged yesterday with felonious his January tour of the United assault in connection with the States and Canada, the former Sunday morning beating of Vir- British prime minister termed the ginia Large, '57N. British Commonwealth one of the Castrop, a Korean veteran, di- "bridges to unite east and west." vorcee, and father of one child, "The United States has succeed- told Ann Arbor Police Sgt. Claude ed to a great deal of the respon- Damron he couldn't remember sibility carried by Great Britain in what he had done between 12:30 the last century," Attlee told a a.m. and 5:30 a.m. Sunday. Hill Auditorium audience, "and Miss Large was attacked at 4 she will meet many of the same a.m. in her third-floor Couzens problems faced in the past. Hall room. Sgt. Damron, said Castrop had been drinking, but "spoke coher-I Offer New -Daily--John Hirtzel EARL ATTLEE-The Former British Prime-Minister reviews the "Eisenhower Doctrine" for newsmen at yesterday's press conference in the Union. A ttee Praises U.S. Plan In Middle East ituation By PETER ECKSTEIN Britain's Earl Attlee yesterday praised the new Administration program for the Middle East but said it should have been proposed sooner. He called the "Eisenhower Doctrine", which would include an offer to protect any Middle Eastern nation against Communist ag- gression, a "very useful assuiption of responsibility in an area where it was needed." But he said the international stiuation would have been "much better if it had come earlier," adding the hope that it hadn't come "too late." Truman, Eisenhower Doctrines Compared Answering newsmen's questions in' the third-floor- conference rodm of the Union, the former SCHOLARSHIPS:prime minister said he regarded jPresident Dwight D. Eisenhower's - rogram "an extension" of the "Truman Doctrine" of the early postwar years calling for aid to Awarded Greece and Turkey. Earl Attlee, who retired as La- -I ) bor Party leader last year and {j G rants was elevated by Queen Elizabeth G Itothe House of Lords, sat com- fortably, smoking a pipe and By CAROL PRINS tersely responding to questions. + University Scholarship Cam- Although he said he would not University mScholarshipnCom- mittee yesterday approved English .criticize my own government Language Institute grants to four outside my own country," he did Hungarian students. venture that "whatever steps" The Institute grants, which will were to be taken to meet the Suez take effect next semester, will pre- crisis "should have been coordin- pare the Hungarians for probable ated with the UN," enrollment in the University in But he refused to describe the the fall semester. Anglo-French invasion of Egypt James M. Davis, International as a return to a policy of imper- Center director, explained no def- ialism. inite committment 'for academic Favors Internationalization aid could be offered to the Hun- Attlee said he would favor in- garians since University admission ternationalization of both the policy requires proficiency in the Suez and the Panama Canals and English language. that he agreed with former Pres- Offer Extended ident Harry Truman's suggestion In addition to the scholarship to that effect during the 1945 grants, definite maintenance of- Potsdam conference. fers have been extended to the The Russians failed to go along, Hungarian students. however, he recalled. Herman Jacobs, director of Hill- Asked about United States re- el, has extended maintenance aid sponse to the Hungarian rebellion, to Imre Tahi, who is presently he encircled his head with smoke studying at Bard University, New and replied, "I don't know what York, and Tamas Sebestyan, a more you could have done." former student at the Technical Attlee, who visited Communist Reviewing the history of Great Britain's role as an imperialist power, the Socialist leader declared that the old British Empire died immediately after the Boer war. "The age when the subordinate nations were merely exploited by the dominant power passed away," he said. "Powers of the Empire' were held in trusteeship, where a care for the governed replaced the, former rich man's concern for his lands. "And sooner or later, where you have no government," he con- tinued, "there will be a demand for it." British Changes Attlee summed up the changes within the British sphere as the demand of people for self-govern- ment, followed by recognition of the justice of those demands by the dominant power. "This latter recognition explains why the change from Empire to Commonwealth took place without bloodshed," he said. "Demands reasonably made, are reasonably met" are the key solu- tions to major world problems, he insisted. The spirit of tolerance and co- operation on which the Common- wealth runs was offered as one to be cultivated in the United' Nations. Patience, Care The establishmen of democracy requires "infinite patience; infinite care," Attlee admonished. "We, must not force a culture, or a system of government on peopleI who do not want it. "We do not serve a people by! making it politically free, if we do not at the same time make it, economically sound. "When the hand of the imperi- alist power is completely removed all kinds of old rivalries and dif- ferences come about," he recalled. Disputes Surfaced In the new self-governing India established by the Attlee regime in 1947, disputes between "Hindu and Moslem, Brahman and non- Brahman, and between the various castes" quickly came to. the sur- face. "And we must not forget," the Labor leader added, "the extreme delicacy of the situation in Cy- prus, where there exists a majority of Greeks, speaking Greek, along- side a large minority of Turks. "Manv nation are on the road Puncture Wounds President of her senior nursing class, Miss Large suffered four puncture lacerations but was re- leased from University Hospital yesterday. She told police the attacker was Castrop and is still "very posi- tive" about the identification. Castrop, whom the 21-year-old Miss Large described as "egotisti- cal and moody," had asked her out four times when both worked at the Neuropsychiatric Insti- tute, but she refused each time. Described as a "quiet guy" by others living on the same floor in Chicago House, West Quad, Cas- trop is -now awaiting a Jan. 17 ar- raignment with bail set at $2,000. Two Witnesses Sgt. Damron reports witnesses, besides Miss Large, include an ambulance driver and a Couzens Hall maintenance man. The University Hospital ambu- lance driver allegedly was ap- proached by a man fitting Cas- trop's description and asked about entrance to an underground steam tunnel. The maintenance man saw. someone run from the dormitory at 4 a.m. Miss Large told The Daily she saw the assailant's face only in1 ently when he was questioned at 6 a.m." --Da UP AND IN - George Lee. big gun of Michigan up to sink two of his 20 points in last night's 70 Cagers Offset Late ,S- To Edge Spartans, 71 By JIM BAAD Special to The Daily EAST LANSING-Michigan's basketball team,1 than it has all season, built up a second half lead a to barely edge a fighting Michigan State squad7 Field House last night, It marked Michigan's second clash with a Con and its first win. Screaming Fans Watch Loss Over 11,000 screaming, partisan fans watchedt up within one point as the clock ticked away only of disappointment as a last des-- - Re solution ;eCivil Rights, ,y.CtLegislation In balance Three Resolutions Offer New Methods Of Imposing Cloture WASHINGTON (I)-New moves to curb filibusters and pave the' way for civil rights legislation were started in the Senate yes- terday. Sen. Paul Douglas (D-Ill) and Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore) intro- duced a resolution providing that debate on any legislation could be cut off by a constitutional ma- jority of 49 votes after the legis- lation has been under discussion for 15 calendar days. Sen. Douglas described the reso- lution as "a necessary first step aiy-John Hirtzel before we can hope for the pas- sage of meaningful civil rights -S attack, go legislation." I'_-69 winl. Talking to Death Under Senate rules now, any senator can usually block a vote urge, on a bill by engaging in a fil- buster, that is, literally talking it 0-69 :to death. The rules require -a two-thirds senators, to impose cloture or de- bate limitation. It has proved almost impossible looking smoother to get 64 senators to agree to clo- ture. nd then held on The Douglas-Morse resolution 70-69 at Jenison would allow two-thirds of the sen- ators present and yoting to limit ference opponent the debate any time during the first 15 days a bill is before the Senate. their team creep Majority Rules to heave a sigh A majority of 49 senators would be able to impose cloture after that time. Sundays and holidays are not Sen. Morse introduced a second F1J@ iesolution which would allow the Senate to impose cloture by a ma- jority vote at any time. Once im- posed, this cloture rule would all- Probe low 96 hours debate, an hour for each senator. Still a third resolution is being grand jury inves- prepared by Sen. William Know red yesterday in- land (R-Calif), the Republican bribery and uffi- leader. ithe city of Flint. This would allow the imposition ambling is among of cloture at any time on the vote of two-thirds of the senators y inquiry, tenta- present. rt Thursday, was Genesee CountyU . ch on petition of l.S. roposes c u t o r Jerome tion will cap a UN Inquiry be by the Fli rit nt into its own In Hungary VIRGINIA LARGE . . . attacked in her room her room, illuminated "by moon-, light and streetlight". Sgt. Dam- ron said she had also seen Cas- trop's face in the lighted corri- dor. viuy LU1 U - V 1GLVt to democracy, Attlee observed, physician, last saw Miss Large a but somherein ollscRoycets ars week ago Friday when they an others in bullock carts." worked together.She said, "He -- treated me very coldly then." ' Polie R e ort'U' Investigating Police R eport Police and University adminis- trators are investigating the as- Rash of ' hefts sailant's method of entrance- to the dormitory. Leonard A. Schaadt, Residence Ann Arbor Police Department Halls business manager, thinks it yesterday reported a rash of stolen possible he may have entered bicycles over the past weekend. Couzens through the underground Nine bicycles have been re- steam tunnel but added, "this ported stolen since last Friday on would require a master key." the University campus, according Schaadt said alldoors of the to police. tunnel network were checked to- Several bicycles were reported day as a precaution against fu- stolen from in front of the Union. ture entrance. He, said students Several others were reported taken have entered the tunnels in the from around the girl dormitories. pasta Police urge all bicycle owners A felonious assault conviction to keep their vehicles locked when in Michigan carries a maximum not in use. penalty of five years in prison. perate melee of jumping men and wild shots under State's basket was halted by the final horn. They were one point short of a tie, one basket short of victory. The State five had fought a valiant battle, but they started too late. Michigan's fight, on the other hand, had come earlier, and in time. The Wolverines came out of the locker room to start the second half five points behind, 40-35. The Blue team had played an excellent ball game up to the middle of the first stanza, and then appeared to fall apart. Sharp, Deadly Sharp passing and deadly shoot- ing hand turned to sloppy ball- handling and a sudden loss of in- timate contact with the basket. In the second half. however, 1 they were again a team. After three minutes they had chopped the Spartans' advantage and in ten minutes they were enjoying a nine point lead, 59-50. See SPARTANS, Page 6 Council Begins North Campus, Saiary Plans Ann Arbor City Council yester- day passed several resolutions de- claring the necessity of sewage and water supply construction in the North Campus area. City Council authorized City Ad-. ministrato'r Guy Larcom to pre- pare plans and estimate costs for construction of a North Campus water reservoir,spumping station and trunk sewers. Larcom estimated the Univer- sity's share in the costs of the pro- s jects at approximately $650,000. 1 i FLINT (/P)-A tigation was orde to reported police cial corruption in Protection of g; the allegations. The grand jur tively set to sta ordered by the circuit court ben County Pros e O'Rourke. The investiga' months-long pro Police.Departme affairs. Grand Begine Soviet Agrees The Soviet government also agreed to give East Germany sub- stantial economic and trade as- sistance. Both sides pledged to work for: Soviet disarmament proposals and j for a four-power conference on, limiting troops in both East and# West Germany. A formal communique, outlining agreements which technical com- mittees will work out in detail! later, was signed yesterday- in a tlmm, rlin narrMnnv At, . t hetlnc ' (' jl I' 4 I' I I' I University of Budapest. The Rev. Fr. John F. Bradley of the Newman Club offered room and board finances to Antal Sze- merey, a 19-year-old former stV- dent at Hungary's Gymnasium. Father Bradley also offered1 maintenance in a Catholic women's residence to two Hungar- ian women students. Three More Grants Niklas Torok. the fourth recip- ient of the English Language In- stitute grant, is living in Ann Ar- bor with a former Hungarian ref- ugee.; The Scholarship Committee also authorized three more grants to the Institute for second semester which will be financed by special1 Administration funds set aside by' University President Harlan Hat- cher for aid to Hungarians. Eight scholarships were also authorized for the fall semester. I {}1 { ! i I China several years ago, expressed the view that it was able to for- mulate-policy independent of the Russians. And "I should think" American recognition of theiri government would encourage the Chinese Communists 'to take aE more independent stand. 'Patronizing' Tone While the Peiping governmentj See ATTLEE, Page 2 There have been reports of brib- ery of both police and public officials. Followed Arrest Action for the grand jury inves- tigation followed shortly upon the arrest and arraignment of two men-one a former Democratic state.central committee member- on charges of conspiracy to bribe police. Jacob M. Waldo, vice-president of a Flint real estate and insur- ance agency and former Demo- cratic committee member, and James Biaggo Barraco were ac- cused of making payoffs to protect gambling. Both Waldo and Barraco were arraigned in municipalecourt. Petition Granted Both were freed on bond by Judge John W. Baker for a hear- ing later this month. Waldo's bond was set at $2,000 and that of Bar- raco at $5,000. Prosecutor O'Rourke's petition for a grand jury was granted at a conference with him by the three Genessee County judges -- Paul V. Gadola, Philip Elliott and Stephen J. Roth. Farm Bills UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. VP)- The U'nited States announced yes- terday it is proposing the creation of a special five-nation committee of the United Nations General As- sembly to investigate the Hungar- ian situation. This announcement was made by a delegation spokesman short- ly after UN Secretary General Dag. Hamitarskjold published a report to the Assembly advocating the formation of a temporary com-' mittee to undertake such. an a- vestigation. The Russian reaction to this type of committee was quick and definite. A Soviet source said "Nyet" (no), added it would not help solve the Hunga'rian problem and made it clear the committee never would be permitted to get into Hungary. The United States spokesman said the delegation is discussing with other delegations details of a proposed resolution establishing the committee. .S. Rejects Aid to Kadar . INOCULATIONS URGED: Polio Danger High in Young Adults. By WILLIAM HANEY The flu outbreak in Ann Arbor Dickinson. The diminishing rate A request from the University Tg g o b in 1943 was "indicative of the of polio cases was due in part, he that parking meters be installed attacked more by polio every ear. cases in which flu can affect up said, to wide-spread vaccination. on the east side of Fletcher near attackdImorebyIpoloIever year1 to 20 per cent of the residents of Throughout the entire country Health Service was granted by the In 1943 a flu outbreak hit 15 an area," Dr. Albert Hennessy, only five victims of paralytic polio Council. toh19perscent of University of assistant professor of epidemiol- I had received three shots of Salk Fifteen meters will be installed 'Michiganstudentsogysi nnlio rvaccine.r nrikinsonn sail in what is now a nn-narking znne 3 .... . _ ..-__.._. .I