Dulles Wins First Hand In International Poker Game (See Page 2) Y L S Afrrgzr DaiI4u ° oO 0 a Latest Deadline in the State FAIR VOL. LXVII, No. 28S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JULY 24, 1956 FOUR PAGES' FOUR PAGES TWO APPROACHES: Egypt's Tactics Draw Comment By MARY ANN THOMAS Two University professors have viewed consequences of United States withdrawal of offer of aid to Egypt for construction of the Aswan Dam from different angles. Although the issue is not yet settled, Prof. N. Marbury Efimenco of the political science department believes the withdrawal means that Gamal Abdul Nasser's attempt to coerce the West into offering better terms has failed. Prof. William D. Schorger of the Near Eastern Studies depart- ment does not believe that the United States gained any advantage by the maneuver. Prof. Efimenco said the United States objected to the propaganda maneuver on Nasser's part bidding for more favorable terms by 4 n ~nr the Wer1t nf4 rf arainst l India Rushes Earthquake Aid to Anjar B O M B A Y, India (A)-India rushed aid yesterday to the earth quake-stricken Kutch Peninsula where 109 persons were listed of ficially as dead and 800 more wer missing. More than 12,000 were lef h~omeless. Three hundred Indian troop moved into the devastated north west coastal town of Anjar. Th official casualty list said 102 of th known dead in the Saturday nigh quake were at Anjar, an import ant textile town of about 17,000. The soldiers set up temporary shQlters for the Anjar homeless. Doctors were flown from Bom S bay to Anjar. A section of th town occupied by makers of Sari and nutcrackers was destroyed 4 Sections were roped oft wher houses weakened by the quak were still collapsing. Aid operations were hamperec by fissures and landslides alonE Anjar's roads. Anjar took the brunt of th ;quake., But the shocks were felt fo 500 miles from Bombay to the Pak istan border. IkCe Confers With Latin Presidents PANAMA (A)-President Dwigh D. Eisenhower, saying he is feel- ing "better every day," talked sep- ierately with 11 presidents or presi- dents-elect of American republics yesterday. It was his busiest round of con- ferences since his June 9 intesti- nal operation. . Beaming and gay, President Ei- senhower was host to the Latir American leaders at the United States Embassy, He met wltA each for half an hour or less. President Eisenhower s t a y e d over for an extra day on his good will visit to Panama in order to hold intimate farewell conferences. He planned to leave by plane for Washington at 10 p.m. President Eisenhower told one of his guests, President-elect Harman files Zuazo of Bolivia, that "on this trip I have been improving every day. I've felt better every day." The Bolivian asked Presi- dent Eisenhower, who came here as a convalescent, about his health and got that reply. The President looked fit despite Sthe' fact he was up late Sunday at a reception for Panama Presi- dent Ricardo Arias and his wife. I' On Saturday he was overheard to remark: "I haven't much strength, but I keep going." The extra day here permitted President Eisenhower to have per- sonal talks with all of the 18 other Sleaders who joined Sunday in sign- ing the Declaration of Panama af- friing the Western Hemisphere's determination to stand firm against alien totalitarian forces. President Eisenhower then pro- posed creation of a commission on human problems to offer sugges- tions in economic, financial, social and technical fielas, including beneficial use of atomic energy for industry. Harpsichordist To Play Bach Russia. Two Major Objections "Our position," he commented, "is based on two major objections. First, we are not willing to en- dorse a fund of $1.3 billion. So if Russia is willing to invest that amount, Egypt will have to make a deal with Moscow." "Then if Russia doesn't go through with its offer and Nasser turns to the West again," he con- tinued, "it is pretty clear that any United States aid will be tied with political considerations." "The United States might re- quire that Egypt drop some of its trade with the Communist bloc," he explained. "The United States does not like Egypt tied to the Communist bloc, particularly in long-term deals." But it is committments such as this that Prof. Schorger says Nas- ser has been trying to avoid. Different Approach Approaching the issue from a different angle, he said, "Of course the Egyptians were using the Red offer to gain support from the United States, and Nasser pre- ferred American aid to that from Russia." "Our policy has been to suggest aid from time to time," he ex- plained, "but such suggestions were rarely followed up without military committments. Nasser wanted to jockey the United States into giving aid without requiring con- cessions." Prof. Schorger indicated that American policy worked in Turkey but "will not work in the recenti mandated countries. Egyptians Afraid "This is Egypt's first indepen-I dent government in over 500 years," he said, "and Egyptians are afraid of something like the con- trol Great Britain had over themc in recent years." When United States policy is identified with British policy to-t ward Egypt, he asked, "How canI Nasser say he is a friend of the United States? He would be throwni out of office."1 As to what Egypt will cdo next, the two men agree that Egypt is not likely to turn to Russia.) HOusE Bill GivenI Little Hope In Senate South Fights Bitterly To Prevent Passage WASHINGTON 0(P)-The House yesterday passed the civil rights bill and supporters started efforts to stave off apparently certain death for the measure in the Sen- ate. The.House vote was 279-126. Sen. Lester Hill (D-Ala) pre- siding when the bill was brought over from the House, promptly re- ferred it without objection to the Judiciary Committee, whose chair- man is Sen. James Eastland (D- Miss) an ardent foe of such leg- islation. The bill, which would give the attorney general more legal weap- ons to deal with infringement of voting and other rights, is sup- ported by most Northern Demo- crats and Republicans. But the Southerners have fought it with every parliamentary maneuver in the books. The final attempt of House Southerners yesterday, a motion by Rep. R. H. Poff (R-Va) to kill the bill by recommitting it to commit- tee, failed 275-131. Immediately after the House passed the bill on a roll call vote, Rep. K. B. Keating (R-NY), one of its authors, said he was lining up support for an attempt to pre- vent adjournment of Congress un- less the Senate acts on the meas- ure. Keating began his efforts among the 168 Republicans who voted for passage of the bill. The Republi- can leadership did not immediate- ly take any public position. Twenty-four Republicans voted against the bill, while the Demo- crats were nearly evenly divided -111 for and 102 against. "Saints' Slated To Open Run Tomorrow "The WaywardS aint," a study of Irish priests and their relation- ships with religion and daily life in Ireland, will be presented as the third play on the speech depart- ment's summer playbill. It begins a four-day run to- morrow at 8 p.m. at the Lydia Mendelssohn theater. Director of the play is Prof. Jack E. Bender of the speech de- partment. Scenery is by Edward Andreasen and costumes by Mar- jorie Smith. Cast members include James Young, Grad., as Canon McCooney, John Szucs, '57, as Bishop of Oriel, Martha Wilson, Grad., in the role of Miss Killicat and Ann Berlin, '58, playing Maura. Marvin Diskin, Spec., will be cast as Peadar the Puck and David Lloyd, Grad., will play Baron Nich- ols de Balbus. Sandra Bader, '58, will play Sa- bena, and Judith Dingman, '59, is cast as Serena. * * * Eisenhower Disapproves Bid to Nominate Herter Two Claim Sgt. McKeon Hit Them PARRIS ISLAND, S. C. t/P -- Two fledgling Marines testified yesterday S. Sgt. Mathew C. McKeon slapped them in angry exasperation just before leading their platoon on the April 8 death march. One of them, Pfc. Gerald C. Langone Jr. of New Hyde Park, N. Y. said McKeon also challenged him to a fistfight but that he did not accept the dare. But both the young Marines said McKeon's slaps were light and produced no pain. And both defended him as a top-notch trainer of recruits at this 5,000- acre base. Summoned Before March Langone, 20 years old, said he was summoned to McKeon's room just before the Marine drill instructor marched 74 members of Platoon 71 into Ribbon Creek where 6 of them drowned. "Sgt. McKeon and I had a little argument," Langone testified. "When Sgt. McKeon opened the door he told me to come in swing- ing. I said 'No, sir.' Then Sgt. McKeon pushed me in the face one time, then gave me a very light slap the next time." Earlier, in a day of "goofing off" by members of Platoon 71, Lan- gone said McKeon had told him: "If you don't get squared away you're liable to go into combat and come back in a pine coffin. Then all your friends can mourn over you." Langone, as a recruit section leader in the platoon, was sup- posed to exercise a program of discipline as outlined by the drill insrtuctor. Private Also Slapped Earlier, strapping 19-year-old Pvt. John M. Maloof said he also was summoned to McKeon's room and slapped. Maloof displayed no rancor over the incident. In terms suggestive of a direct appeal for forgiveness from his former sergeant, Maloof testified: "We all felt we let hifi down. He did everything for us and he got a knife in his back." McKeon is being tried by a seven - man court - martial on charges of manslaughter, oppres- sion of recruits and drinking - but not drunkenness - on duty. If convicted, he can be dishonor- ably discharged and imprisoned up to six years. Maloof told the platoon's reac- tion when ordered to march into the Ribbon Creek marshes. '- ISteel Strike Discussions To Resume N E W Y O R K (A)-President David McDonald of the United Steelworkers arrived last night to start new talks aimed at settling the' industry's 23-day strike, but he declined to express optimism. "Let's put it this way, McDon- ald told newsmen at LaGuardia Field. "Please God, that this visit to New York will be more fruitful than the last." McDonald said the discussions will start at 2:30 p.m. today. Con- tract talks in Pittsburgh last week brought no results. McDonald came here in re- sponse to a telephone call from the industry's top negotiator, John A. Stephen of U.S. Steel. McDonald said he had no idea whether the steel companies had a "new offer" to make to the union today, and that if there is a new offer he could not spec- ulate on what it might be. The company move for new talks was said to have taken Mc- Donald by surprise. There was speculation in Pittsburgh that the companies might be prepared either to revise their basic pro- posals or to modify it within the framework of the five-year pact they say is necessary for industry "stability." The union rejected that term as too long and disputed manage- ment's claim the proposal would give workers 1723 cents hourly gain in the first year; 14 cents hourly was the union estimate, and USW leaders said this was "too little." Basically, those were the oppos- ing positions when the old con- tract expired at midnight June 30, and 650,000 USW members went on strike. Spreading effects of the stoppage have now idled more than 100,000 other workers in al- lied industries. To Discuss Soviet Policy Soviet military policy in Europe and the Near East will be the topic of the fifth inter-departmental seminar in Russian studies at 8 p.m. today in West Conference Room, Rackham Building. Colonel William R. Kentner, Chief Army Advisor, Operations Research Office, Washington, D. C., will address the round-table discussion which is open to the public. Stassen Asks Replacement Of Nixon OI's Civil Rights Legislation * * * Proposal Shakes Republican Party; Resignation Asked "WASHINGTON (A') - President Dwight D. Eisenhower yesterday stripped any White House ap- proval from a suggestion that Vice-President Nixon be replaced as his running mate this fall. The suggestion was advanced by the President's special assist- ant on disarmament, Harold E. Stassen, who proposed that Gov. Christian A. Herter of Massachu- setts be given the vice presidential nomination in place of Nixon. Stassen's proposal, which ex- ploded like a bombshell in the pre-convention Republican calm brought a statement from Eisen- hower's press secretary in Panama that the President had told Stassen it was "obvious that he could not make such a statement as a mem- ber of the President's official fam- ily." Demand Stassen Resignation It also brought a demand from a score of Republican Congress members that Stassen resign his Cabinet level job. Stassen said he had "no inten- tion" of resigning despite a White - House disclaimer of his move en- dorsing Gov. Christian Herter of Massachusetts for vice president. Stassen viewed the critical com- ment that he erupted in some quarters as "a flurry of criticism" which he expected. He added however that he was certain this would die down and that "the Republican party will realize I did them a favor" in openly endorsing Herter as a vice presidential candidate. -Daily-Harding Wilson PROF. IRA DEA. REID-"Slaves laughed, not always because they were oppressed, but because they needed to keep alive." Sociologist Reid Discusses 'Negro Festivals, Frolics' By ADELAIDE WILEY After graduating from Morehouse College for Negro men with a degree in English and one in economics, Prof. Ira DeA. Reid, almost incongruously, went into social work. He stayed there ten years, through the depression, and "Then I began asking myself, Is this worthwhile? Is this what I want to be doing when I'm 50?" he remarked before giving his lecture, eighth in the Universtiy's series, "Patterns of American Culture: Contribu- tions of the Negro," So, Prof. Reid discussed his questions with his wife, ended up in Columbia University getting a doctorate in sociology - "I'm not (with a stress on 'not') interested in social reform," he smiled broadly, World News Roundup By The Associated Press MOSCOW () -- Marshal S. I. Rudenko, Soviet air force chief of staff, said yesterday the Soviet air force has been ordered not to shoot on sight foreign planes in- truding into Soviet air space. But he told reporters that the United States will be responsible for any future incidents resulting from flights by American planes over Soviet territory. Russia charged July 10 that U.S. twin-engine, medium bombers from West Germany haad flown over Russian territory east of Po- land on July 4, 5, and 9. The United States denied the charges. "Our pilots have instructions not to shoot, in order to avoid in- cidents," Rudenko said. "You know what our present policy is. It is to avoid heightening interna- tional tensions." * * * BALTIMORE -P} - Dr. Milton S. Eisenhower, yesterday was elected eighth president of Johns Hopkins University. Carlyle Barton, president of the Hopkins Board of Trustees, said Eisenhower's acceptance of the in- vitation was received following a special meeting of the trustees Collegium Musicum Sings Madrigals 1 1 c r. a t L F t F t is a F t. v r f4 'N extracting a cigarette from his{ blue coat pocket. 'Benefiting Mankind' "If some student came in my of- fice," the Haverford College in- structor commented, "and said he wanted to work with people be- cause he was interested in bene- fitting mankind, I'd send him over to religion. Only we don't have a school for that at Haverford." He added: "It takes more than a good heart, to reconstruct a world, you know. " Prof. Reid divides his teaching time with a twelve-year-old daughter. She will not follow her father's work "if she can help it. "he other day she wanted some black patent leather shoes - with heels. I told her I'd have to take it out of her allowance. She gave it up Always Speeches' "You know," he observed, "it's amazing how much more practice girls get at being women, than boys at being men. For instance, my daughter with these shoes. And she says she wants to marry a man who doesn't always go away to make speeches." With that, Prof. Reid left the Union and lemonade for Angell Hall to give his lecture, "Negro Festivals and Frolics." Starting with, "Why are we in- terested in this sort of subject?" Prof. Reid explained that al- though evidence of Negro festivals is unscientific, unorganized, there are records in such places as Brooks County, Ga., specifying that Negro slaves had two-weeks' vacations' between Christmas and New Year's, Fromethat, Prof. Reid asked, "Did slaves play?" He went on to examine "the se-I ,in ^f l c rq -srnf. ofA = _ Monkey business HAMBURG, Germany ( P)-- Monkeys were all over the place in Hamburg yesterday. A zookeeper neglected to lock a. cage. Forty-five r h e s u s monkeys romped joyously to freedom. One housewife walked into her dining room and found a monkey sitting at the table eat- ing french fried potatoes. Another woman looked on mournfully as a m o n k e y grabbed a favorite pillow, climbed to the roof and meth- odically took the pillow apart.. Z o o m a n Emil Roehrmann said the zoo would pay for the damages. Epidemic Hits 38 Students In Ypsilanti By The Associated Press YPSILANTI-Thirty-eight East- ern Michigan College students were hospitalized today by high fevers, diahrrea and vomiting. Dr. Olga Sirola, chief of the College Health Service, said: "At this stage we don't know whether, the illness is contagious, but we are taking the necessary precau- tionary steps. That's all we know at this time." Dr. Sirola said the 37 women and one man stricken were housed in four dormitories on the campus. They were taken to YnVilanti' Speaks As Individual Stassen emphasized anew he was speaking "as an individual" and that it "was my conclusion alone to say what I said today." The former Minnesota governor, however, said, "the public should await the President's own words" as to whom his choice for a run- ning mate is. The Republican National .Com- mittee, Stassen asserted, "as far as I know" has not conducted any poll of the kind he and his group sponsored. "That is part of their responsi- bility," he said, "rather than try- ing to foreclose an analysis of the situation." Hagerty Comments President Eisenhower's press sec- retary, James C. Hagerty, issued this two sentence statement after consulting with the President about the Stassen proposal, made at a Washington news conference: "Mr. Stassen did inform the President on Friday of his decision to make such a statement and also to inform the vice president of it before issuing it. "The President pointed out to Mr. Stassen that while he had every right as an individual to make any statement he so desired, it was also equally obvious that he could not make such a state- ment as a member of the Presi- dent's official family." While Stassen had told the news conference he was not acting "as a personal representative" of the President, he denied he was a "renegade" from the Eisenhower team or that his statement would endanger his job. He said he intended to work for Herter's nomination "in loyalty to President Eisenhower." After Hagerty's statement, Stas- ) t Y $ k i