GEORGE HUMPHREY AND THE BUDGET Y L Sir it 1au Patit CLOUDY, LIGHT RAIN See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXVII, No.891 . ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1957a SIX PAGES Rifa'i Asks Withdrawal Of Israelis Afro-Asian Leader Calls for Sanctions UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (A') - -* The leader .of the Asian-African group called yesterday for effec- tive measures, including ,, sanc- tions, to force Israel to withdraw finally and totally from Egypt. Ambassador Abdul Monem Rifa'i, of Jordan, president of the 27-nation group for February, told newsmen he had expressed to Sec- Sretary General Dag Hammar- sk iold at a 40-minute conference k the "deep. concern" of the group over Israel's defiant stand. Report Asked Rifa'i said he asked Hammar- skjold for a report and for a meet- ing of the General Assembly by Tuesday to consider what next to do. The Assembly last Saturday asked Israel for the sixth time . to get out of Egypt and requested Hammarskjold to report at the appropriate time. Some members of the group, es- pecially the Arab countries, are pushing for such sanctions as complete economic, financial and military restrictions on Israel. Nations Consulted Others are studying more mod- erate steps. While the. Unitd States and ; other leading delegations here consulted on the next move in the worsening situation, word came from Tel Aviv that Israel ?s stand- Walter Eytan, directo: general ofthe Foreign MVinaistry~, said to newsmen in Tel Aviv trat the For- eign Ministry has reached a "dead- ock" in negotiations with Ham- .. arskjold. No Confirmation Eytan said Israel does not even have confirmation that Hammar- skiold relayed the questions to Egypt. He said Israel is anxious to get out of Sharm el Sheikh, at the mouth of the Gulf of Aqaba, but only after receiving adequate guarantees that Israeli shipping interests will not be impaired by Egypt.y The other point of crisis in this , deadlock is the Gaza Strip, where Israelis appear to be digging in to stay. Conununists To Convene, Debate Policy NEW YORK (P)--American Communists will go into a four- day convention at New York today in a showdown struggle on future policy. The question is whether the party will adopt what some party members call "an American road to socialism" or stand fast to the traditional Marxist-Leninist line handed down by the Kremlin. The 3QU delegates representing some 25,000 members will convene in the Chateau Gardens, a Lower East Side hall that rents space for meetings and dances. The Daily Worker, Communist newspaper, said the hall was chosen only after 60 other places had rebuffed party attempts to find convention space. The convention, the party's 16th, will be its first since 1950. The seven-year lapse came while a number of the party leaders were n prison on Smith Act charges of teaching and adi ocating violent overthrow of the government. In an unprecedented move, the party's National Committee pro- posed this week that a group of non - Communists interested in civil liberties, peace and church movements be invited to attend the convention. They will be admitted, however, only if the delegates vote approv- al of the idea. Collaboration Verdict U held WAShINGTON (/P--Conviction of Army Lt. Col. Harry Fleming 1 for collaborating with the enemy while a prisoner of war in Korea was upheld Friday by the United Ike, Saud Make Air Base Deal Pledge To Oppose Use of Force In Middle East; End Consultations WASHINGTON (')-President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Saudi Arabia's King Ibn Saud completed announcement of a long-heralded air base-for-arms deal Yesterday with a pledge to oppose any use of force in the Middle East. Those were the salient points in a joint communique summing up talks which started Jan. 30. Report Issued After Last Meeting The comnmunique, about 600 words long, was issued after President Eisenhower had flown to Thomasville, Ga., and King Saud had gone to WilliamIs Research Asks $8 MVillion Hospital at f GOP REGENTS: candidates Unopposed F'or Board By DIANE LABAKAS Special To The Daily DETROIT-Present incumbent Alfred D. Connable, of Ann Arbor, and Ethel Jocelyn Watt are run- ning unopposed for the two Uni- versity Board of Regents posi- tions at the Republican state con- vention in Detroit. K. T. Keller, chairman of the Chrysler Corp. Board, and Frank Gorman of Detroit who was to oppose Mrs. Watt, have dropped out of the race. Five candidates will be battling for the Republican state chair-. manship post tomorrow at De- troit's new convention hall. Vie For Lead At midnight yesterday Larry Lindemer of Lansing, and J. Ad- dington Wagner, of Battle Creek, were vying for the lead. Bothclaim to be increasing in strength and were confident of victory on the convention floor. Dark horse Veny Reynolds, of ,Allegan, was claiming 300 votes, Matt Buder, of Genesee, 200 votes and Norman Stockmeyer, vice- chairman of Wayne County, 100 votes. Votes needed to win are 775. Expected Drop All with the exception of Stock- meyer intended to wait for a show- down on the convention floor hop- ing for an opportunity to break a supposed deadlock between Wag- ner and Lindemer. Stockmeyer is expected to drop from the race early this morning. He does not know to whom he will give his votes. Reynolds is expecting to claim some of Lindemer's strength in the case of a possible deadlock. Olivet Local Will Initiate Sherman Wu OLIVET, Mich t(1}-A Chinese student, depledged by a fraternity at Northwestern University where he attends classes, will be initi- ated tomorrow into another fra- ternity at this college town. Sherman Wu, son of the former Formosan Gov. K. C. Wu, will be made an honorary member of Oi- vet College's Kappa Signma Alpha, a local fraternity. Its membership. is mixed raci- ally, and its president, Coumb~s Burton, is a Negro. Once Pledged Wu was pledged last fall by the Psi Upsilon chapter at North- western because, Chapter Presi- dent Jack Lagenschulte said, "we thought he would be an asset." Later, Lagenschulte said at least seven prospective "pledges" de- clined to join the fraternity be- cause Wu had accepted Lagen- schulte asked Wu to resign and the 9-year-old oriental withdrew There are three fraternities on the Ohivet campus, all. of them local, but none with racial dis- crimination practices. No Clause There is no racial discrimina- tion clause in the national charter of Psi Upsilon either. At the time of his resignain from Psi Upsilon, Wu said, " do not think it represents the feeling of Northwestern as a whole." The Northwestern faculty issued a statement calling the'action "de- plorable because it is comnietelv 'Blair House following a final 95- minute meeting at the White "Housebetween the twohheads of state. The 55-year-old King flies out of Washington today aboard the Columbine III, the same plane President Eisenhower took Friday to Thomasville. The communique applauded "the atmosphere of cordiality" in which President Eisenhower and King Saud, together with aides, held their consultations. Boosts Leader Their announcement incorpor- ated a boost for King Saud as a Middle East leader, a bow in the direction of the "Bandung princi- ples" and applause for President Eisenhower's Middle East resolu- tion. But the core of the announce- ment was the agreement on the Dhahran air base and military assistance. Consider Provisions This agreement has been an open secret for a week. Under it, the United States Air Force will continue using the Dhantran air- field for five more years, and Saudi Arabia will get "military equip- ment, services and training." Further, President Fisenhower agreed to "consider the provision of economic facilities." WASHINGTON (/P) - Employ- ment took a sharp tumble in Jan- uary, dropping by 1,660,000 from the December level while jobless- ness rose seasonally by 461,000. The monthly report by Secre- tary of Labor James Mitchell and Secretary of Commerce Sinclair Weeks described the drop in the number of jobholders as a "sea- sonal downtrend," but it was the largest January decline since the recession year 1949. At 62,890,000, employment stood almost exactly at the level of Jan- uary a year ago. The month was the first since' March 1955 in which employment failed to show an increase. "In spite of the sizaoie reduction in January, nonfarm employment was the highest ever recorded for the month," Weeks and Mitchell said. RUMORS DENIED: PalaceB.randsStores OfRoal Rit F alse LONDON (A')-Rumors printed in the United States of discord between Queen Elizabeth II and her husband brought denials yester- day from Buckingham Palace. Richard Colville, press secretary, was asked about a dispatch to the Baltimore Sun by its London correspondent reporting that cafe society folk were "talking openly of a rift" between the royal couple. Rift Denied Between Queen, Duke Colville replied, "It is quite untrue tht there is any rift between the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh." The Sun's correspondent, Joan Graham, said in her dispatch: "The whisper started last summer. It was then hinted by the know-it-alls that the Duke of Edinburgh had more than a passing interest in an unnamed woman -" -Daily-Charles Curtiss HUNGARIANS ARRIVE-Rev. Henry Yoder (left) of the local Lutheran church welcomes three Hungarian students arriving at the University for studies. Hungarian Student Rebels Struggle with Registration By CAROL PRINS A group of young Hungarian student rebels gathered in Rackham Amphitheatre for registration in the English Language Institute yes- terday. The men, attired in sport coats and ties, and the two young women were struggling through the maze of railroad tickets and IBM cards in the process of becoming a part of University life. Hungarians Will Try Again' A young medical intern who is hoping to earn a medical degree at the University said it would be Hungarian people attempt another ' revolution." He explained that following the failure of the revolution, many Hungarians were exasperated be- cause the free world refused to send aid. The medical student, who pre-! ferred not to be named for fear of endangering the lives of his fam-. ily still living in Hungary, ex-' plained that he began studying. medicine in 1947 at the University of Budapest. Had to Leave "I had to leave the country after. the revolution, since the Russians . would search first for members of; the higher classes," he explained. Speaking fairly fluent English, a young chemical engineer ex- plained that the first sign of the" revolt in the small University town of Veszprem was the marching in+ the streets by students carrying" "Russians, Go Home" signs. The engineer, who also prefer- red not to be named, was study-. ing in Beszprem when the Buda-+ pest riots began. "Postal service and radio broadcasts had been cut See HUNGARIANS, Page 2 + "only a matter of time until the OilIndustry Preobe Asked WASHINGTON VP)--The Justice Department stepped into the con- troversy over° higher oil and ga +o- line prices yesterday, obtaining an order for a grand jury investiga- tion of the industry. United States District Judge Albert V. Bryan, sitting in nearby Alexandria, Va., directed that a special grand jury be convened there March 4. He acted on motion of attorneys for the Justice Department's Anti- trust Division, who asked for an inquiry covering individuals and companies engaged in "the pro- duction, refining and sale of oil." Assistant Attorney General Vic- tor R. Hansen, in charge of the Antitrust Division, said the gov- ernment has no control over oil prices themselves. Crude oil prices were boosted 35 cents a barrel last month. and was meeting her regularly in the private apartment of Baron, the court photographer who died of heart trouble at the age of 46 last fall." - Fuel Added The story said fuel was added to the talk when it wcas planned for Baron to go with the Duke on a four-month, round-the-world tour, and that some gossips thought Edinburgh was being sent away "to cool down." It added that "the rumors are now percolating down to the Brit- ish masses" though nothing had appeared in the British press. Rumors circulated that all was not perfect in the marriage of the 31-year-old Queen and the Duke. Gossip Grew Gossip about friction between the couple gained currency when the Duke's equerry, Michael Park- er, resigned unexpectedly last Monday. Parker quit after his wife dis- closed that she and her 36-year- old husband had been separated for several months. The palace, with the prestige and dignity of the monarchy at stake, apparently felt it could not be linked in any way with a man who might soon be in the divorce courts. Five Petition Judy Martin, '59, Nelson Sher- burne, '59, and Ron Shorr, '58- BAd, have taken out petitions for the vacant seat on Student Gov- ernmentCouncil created by the announced resignation of Presi- dent Bill Adams, Grad. This brings to five the number of petitions taken out. All-campus petitions are still available in Rm. 1020, Administration Bldg., and must be returned by noon Feb. 18. leers' Hopes Injured, 7-3, By Gophers Special To The Daily MINNEAPOLIS, Minn.-Michi- gan suffered a severe setback on the comeback trail here last night as it-absorbed a 7-3 shellacking at the hands of a fired up Minne- sota six in a Western Intercolle- giate Hockey League game. After moving to a one-goal ad- vantage early in the first period, the Wolverines saw the Gophers pound seven straight shots past their overworked goalie Ross Childs before they could retaliate. But by then it mattered little what they did. Displaying sloppy hockey around both .nets, Mic~igan was completely overwhelmed bythe victory-starved Gophers, winners of only three WIHL games this season, and twice the victims of Michigan State last weekend. Penalties played a major role in the outcome. Johnny Mariuc- ci's alert sextet scored four times while the Wolverines were short- handed to only one goal for Michi- gan when Minnesota was a man short. There were 10 penalties called, Michigan getting six of them. The Wolverine goal getters were See PENALTIES, Page 3 Eisenhower, Macmillan MIayConfer WASHINGTON 1P) - President Dwight D. Eisenhower probably will fly to Bermuda about March 21 for a conference with British Prime Minister Harold Macmil- lan, according to plans now being worked out between Washington and London. Prior to the Bermuda trip the President probably will hold a round of talks in Washington with Premier Guy Mollet of France. These talks will be the first top- level conferences held among the Western Allies since their wide- open break last fall following the British-French attack on Egypt, Leaders Interested Ever since that time British and French leaders have been inter- ested in meeting with the Presi- dent in an effort to restore Allied unity. President Eisenhower has de- Ilayed meeting their requests be- cause ofmwhat UnitedrStates f- ficials have described as a desire to consolidate the good will which the United States gained among Asian and Mideastern countries by denouncing the British-French attack.! Would Meet Heads These same officials have said, however, that eventually the Pres- ident would meet with the gov- ernment chiefs of Britain and France. For several weeks negotiations on arrangements for the talks have been under way. Center Will Develo Aids For Disabled New Medical, Music, Educatioi, Physics Buildings Also Asked By PETER ECKSTEIN Gov. G. Mennen Williams yes- terday asked the legislature to appropriate $100,000 planning money for an $8,000,000, Univer- sity-operated chronic illness and old age hospital in Ann Arbor. University Vice-President Wil- liam Stirton said the hospital, which would house medical, re- habilitation, testing, research and teaching facilities, is intended as a "pilot program" to pioneer the way for the treatment of Michi- gan's 250,000 chronically ill. Henadded that three sites- all near University Hospital - were being considered for the new, multi-purpose building. State Institution Stirton said the project was not included in the University's capi- tal outlays request because'it will essentially be a state institution "conveyed to the University for operation" Other specific capital outlay re- quests made by Gov. Williams in- clude $1,000,000 to begin a new music school building on North Campus, $70,000 to plan a second $7,000,000 unit of the Medical Science Building being built near University Hospital, $40,000 to plan a new education school build- ing on North Campus, and $120,-. 1000 to complete pns fox_ a phy- sics and astronomy building. Total Request The governor's total capital out- lay request was $9,822,600, an in- crease of $1,632,600 over last year's legislative appropriation. The new chronic illness hospi- tal, while suggested in previous gubernatorial messages, had nev- er been formally proposed for Ann Arbor, according to Dr. Roger Nelson, associate director of Uni- versity Hospital and chairman of the 11-member committee which formulated plans for the new pro- ject. He said the hospital idea grew from an original University' re- quest fora 32-bed rehabilitation center on the ninth floor of Uni- versity Hospital. Funds Utilized While the ninth-floor center will be attempted as a prelude, state officials suggested that, fed- eral funds available for use with the chronically ill might be more fully utilized in a large scale een- ter. While Dr. Nelson said the 200- bed structure would "hardly make a dent" in the immediate prob- lem of caring for the disabled, he contended that the training of personnel, research and teaching projects, and the example of the hospital as a many-pronged at- tack on the problems of the aged and disabled would make a great contribution to the health needs of the state. Franco Seeks End to Unrest MADRID, Spain (/P')-Po lice thumped demonstrating students' heads yesterday while the Spanish i Cabinet sought a solution of grow- ing difficulties which have caused threhigh cost of living boycotts within a month. The Cabinet met through the day with Francisco Franco at his Prado Palace just outside Madrid. Sources close to the government said the wave of unrest through- out the country was at the head of the agenda. While the ministers met, the capital's police broke up a' dem- onstration of university students. They used rubber truncheons. It was the second such conflict in GIVES PUBLIC LECTURE: "PG.i' . ..r svvvw ..,r ivvv v .v . v v.v vvs vv By DONNA HANSON Some day, 20 or 30 years from now, Luigi Dallapiccola will be as well-known as composer Bela Bartok, Prof. Ross Finney of the music department prophesized. The Italian composer came to Ann Arbor yesterday on Prof. Finney's invitation to give a public lecture on how he came to write his composition, "Song of Captivity." , Dallapiccola, a relatively short man with an exceeding amount of vitality and energy that "percolates" from him, says he has heard few works by contemporary American composers so far. "I've been having teeth trouble here," he explained, "and every time there has been a concert, I have been at the dentists'. But with what little I have heard," he continued, "I have been favorably impressed." Dallapiccola's Best-Known Works He has composed for stage works, the best-known of which are the operas "Night Flight." "The Prisoner" and a religious play en- titled "Job." Although Dallapiccola's works are little known in Ameri- co, Prof. Finney said the Italian is a 'highly regarded composer in Europe. "Muy operas are regularly performed in West Germany," Dallap- iccola said. "It is the only country that really loves operas any more." Currently Dallapiccola is teaching classes of composition, or- chestra and chamber music at Queen's College in New York. "You know," he said in heavily accented English, "It is very difficult to teach in another language. After one week my students decided toI compose a dictionary of my mistakes. Students' Little-Known Work "But then after another week they renounced the idea." The man grinned a little and continued, "I don't know whether they gave up because I learned too much English or because is was too much of a task. Anyway, it won't be printed."