= eG Wee oi all Wihenccuy} - FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1956 VANCOUVER, B.C, B. 2 Authorised as second class mail by lO¢ the Post Office Department, Ottawa What are the real Ssues in Hungary ? SEE PAGE 10 RRA 8 hth is Port Said today, the flimsy home: of its peop Nhe bardment. Corpses of men, women and children Medi, ets were carried away in Coca-Cola truc Me Shey’ WSPaperman, °Wing British troops giving candy to Per-Olovy Anderso 0. Right Arab countries, in a statement issued from. their conference at Beirut, Lebanon, on Thursday this week, warned Britain, France and Israel that they would support Egypt with military force unless invasion forces were with- drawn from Egypt “immediately and unconditionally.” New Hungarian gov't faces hig problems as revolt aftermath The eight countries — Iraq, Jordan, Syria, Leb- anon,. Saudi Arabia, Ye men, Sudan and Libya — said they would invoke Article 41 of the UN Charter, defining legitimate self-de- fense and Article 2 of the Ar- ab Collective Security Pact, holding that “any attack against-an Arab country will be considered an attack against all Arab countries.” Through its embassy in Moscow, the Nasser govern- ment made it clear on Thurs- day this week that it will only ask for Soviet volunteers to be allowed to leave for Egypt if invading British, French and Israeli forces are not withdrawn promptly from the Egyptian territory they have seized. The Egyptian demand is that British, French and Israeli invasion forces with- draw immediately, that the United Nations force take up Continued on Page 9 See WITHDRAWAL le shattered by bombing and naval buried in these ruins or cut down ks. This photo was smuggled out by a It affords a sharp contrast to official pic- Egyptian children. PRAGUE The new Hungarian government headed by Premier Janos Kadar this week was tackling the massive problems which are the aftermath of the defeated counter-revolu- tion. Not only is the Kadar government beset with: the immediate difficulties of restoring services and getting the country’s industry back into production, it faces the greater problem of removing the causes of the discontent and bitterness among the peo- ple. Three weeks of fighting, in which counter - revolutionary groups wrecked and destroy- ed state property, have left Budapest a battered city. Many buildings, such as the national museum, were delib- erately set afire. Plant machin- ery was wrecked. Streetcars were overturned and tracks torn up. The breakdown of es- sential services and the result- ing food shortages has added to the miseries of the people. In a broadcast over Buda- pest Radio last weekend, Ka- dar reported that Budapest was lagging behind the prov- inces in returning to normal life, “Yn the provinces life is re- turning to normal,” he said. “Railways, mines, schools and offices have already started functioning again in many places. “But Budapest is lagging be- hind in the restoration of law and order. “In the district of Komaron, for instance, where _ rebel groups went from Budapest and where there was some fighting, order has been re- stored completely. “The same cannot be said of Budapest. Groups hiding in cellars come out at night and form gangs.” Kadar said the supply sit- Continued on back page See AFTERMATH Columbia to supply city? Two Vancouver: aldermen, Halford Wilson and Earle Ad- ams, reported this week they had received assurance from Premier W. A. C. Bennett that Vancouver’s future power needs would be supplied by developmpent of the Colum- bia River. The two aldermen this week appeared before the cabinet in Victoria to present the find- ings of a special committee set up by Vancouver City Coun- cil last summer. The commit- tee, in a study of the city’s in- dustrial development and growth, concluded that 5,000,- 000 kilowatts of power would be needed by 1980. Adams reported Premier Bennett had assured them that no power from Columbia de- velopment would be export- ed, that additional power would be obtained from down- stream benefits, and that this power would be available for Vancouver and other areas requiring it. “Our fears have been com- pletely allayed,” Wilson de- clared. PEACE HINGES ON EVACUAT