I "I'll - 11 omm" PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1951 U --I II MA'('E R Q0r rr 6 By JOSEPH ALSOP J1 W ASHINGTON - In the Washington in- (fluence game, the ace is the President of the United States. If you can play the ace, you win all the stakes on the table, which are likely to be a lot bigger than the penny ante R.F.C. loans we have lately heard so much about. And in the whole his- tory of the Truman administration, the-ace was most spectacularly played in the case of Pan American and American Overseas Airways. The case revolved around Pan Ameri- can's desire to purchase American Over- seas, with its valuable trans-Atlantic routes. The ase was considered long and nfervently by the Civil Aeronautics Board, amid many such indications of political pressure as revisions of Justice Depart- ment documents in Pan American's favor. In the end, in the spring of 1950, a ma- jority of the C.A.B. headed by the then- chairman, Joseph O'Connell, found against Pan American. The majority opinion at- tacked Pan American's plan as grossly mon- opolistic. A minority opinion, granting Pan American all it asked, was entered by .A.B. Vice-Chairman Oswald Ryan, whose ereap- pointment to the board had been secured the year before by Pan American's Wash- ington counsel, Louis A. Johnson. U rNDER CUSTOMARY procedure, the ma- jority opinion was then passed on to the Budget Bureau, for coordination with other interested departments before submission to the President. The C.A.B. majority was strongly supported by State and Post Of- fice. The permanent staff of Commerce followed suit, but was over-ruled by the secretary, Charles Sawyer. Justice, where the staff had also been over-ruled, and De- fense, then headed by none other than Louis Johnson, were officially neutral. But Under- Secretary of Defense Stephen Early joined Secretary of Commerce Sawyer in pleading the cause of Pan American at the White House. Even so, the first serious sign of trouble ahead came when C.A.B. Chairman O'Con- nell called on the President's special as- sistant, Dr. John R. Steelman. Steelman made a long speech against the C.A.B. de- cision. He argued that a finding against Pan American would "embarrass the Pres- ident," because Steelman's ex-colleague in the White House, Clark Clifford, had just become counsel for Pan American' s big rival, Trans-World Airlines. Actually, Clifford had taken no part what- ever in the case in hand, But Pan American had none the less not been alone in getting up its full head of political steam for this case. American Airlines, the parent company of American Overseas Airways, was extreme- ly anxious to sell its trans-Atlantic sub sidiary to Pan American for the handsome price offered. In such figures as Amon Carter and Silliman Evans, American Air- lines had its own valuable political cham- pions, and in the President's secretary, Matt Connelly, American had a useful friend in the White House. It Is haM to tell just Editorials piublished in The Michigan Daily are written by meners of The Daily staff and reresent the views of the writers only. BARNES CONNABLE: Night Editor whose head of politicalsteam played the largest part in the interesting events which follow. ON JUNE 12, 1950, CAB Chairman O'Con- nell also went to see the President. He explained that the big Pan American case was out of the way, andthat he wished to go into private practice. The President urged him to stay on, saying he could "rely" on him. O'Connell said he would not resign until the President had located a suitable s niccessor. O'Connell was pleased but not surprised therefore, on the afternoon of June 29, when the decision in the Pan American case was at length returned to the Civil Aeronautics Board from the White House. The decision bore the President's signa- ture of approval, with an approving letter from the President to boot. The delighted C.A.B. majority decided to hold the deci- sion for release to the press until the next morning, so that sufficient numbers of copies could be mimeographed. Meanwhile, as he later confessed to his C.A.B. col- leagues, Oswald Ryan, who had supported Pan American, hastily passed the ugly news by telephone to Dr. Steelman. After that, things began to happen. On the morning of June 30, the President's sec- retary and Steelman's ally, Matt Connelly, called C.A.B. Chairman O'Connell to request that the release of the decision be held up. Half an hour later, he telephoned again, to ask that the President's approving letter be returned to the White House. And a few minutes after that, he telephoned a third time, to request O'Connell to send back the decision itself, with its residential signa- ture. THESE EXTRAORDINARY proceedings were shortly explained, when Oswald Ry- an put in an appearance at the C.A.B. of- fices, and confessed that he had been meet- ing at the White House with the President, Steelman and Connelly. Almost on Ryan's heels, came a brand newv Presidential letter, enclosing the Pan American case decision with the President's signature rather clum- sily removed with ink eraser. In the new letter, the President directed the C.A.B. to approve Pan American's pur- chase of American Overseas. He tossed a dry cracker to T.W.A. by letting Pan American's rival fly into London. But he also directed the C.A.B. to let Pan American fly into Paris and Rome, which had never previously been suggested by anyone at all. For Pan American, this was gigantic victory snatched from the very jaws of total defeat. O'Connell thereupon sent the President an angry letter asking why he, as C.A.B. Chair- man, had not been consulted. The President wrote back that he had indeed sought to consult Chairman O'Connell, but that he had been unable to locate him on that fate- ful morning. This seemed very odd indeed, in view of Matt Connelly's three conversa- tions with O'Connell while Oswald Ryan and the President were actually closeted together. O'Connell wrote back, pointing out the od- dity. The President then summarily accept. ed O'Connell's resignation. And American Airlines got its price for its overseas branch, which had been certificated to insure Atlan- tic competition, while Pan American got all that it wanted and more than it had asked. (Copyright, 1951, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) WSSF TODAY A CAMPAIGN will begin on cam- pus that will give each of us a chance to contribute to the promotion of world peace in the years to come. The World Service Student Fund main- tains a program of aid from students to students throughout the world. The funds collected go into the hands of the WSSF international organization, collaborating with UNESCO, to help students in the na- tions of the world obtain food, clothing, living quarters, medical supplies, textbooks and anything else that will facilitate their living and studying. This direct aid to the youth of the world is vital to world peace and therefore vital to us for two main reasons: 1. Giving material help to students in such "borderline" countries as Pakistan, Burma, India, Lebanon and Egypt will do more to establish good will than all the prop- aganda. we and the Russians can send. This has been demonstrated by the many grate- ful letters of appreciation WSSF officials in Ann Arbor have received from students all over the world. These youthful students with whomswe are trying to establish bonds of friendship and understanding now, will be world lead- ers, along with us, the students of America, within a very few years. 2. If we can further the education of the peoples of the world, we can help to relieve the ignorance that is one of the leading causes of wars. It is the ignorant, illiterate people who accept the promises and follow the lead of totalitarian aggres- sors. For our sake as well as for those we are aiding, let's joingthe students in more than 800 American colleges and Universities in aiding the students of the world. Let's con- tribute generously to the World Student Service Fund. -Alan Luckoff Stop Signs LAST FEBRUARY, this writer request- ed editorially that the city investigate possibilities of erecting stop ~igns at three Ann Arbor corners. The corners were Maynard and Wil- liam, Tappan and Monroe, and Jefferson and Thompson. At the moment, the cross- ings are Just as wide open as they ever were. Yesterday morning there was a wreck on the first named corner. If you are interested, the details are printed on the front page of today's paper. They show rather clearly that the accident was due to confusion about the right of way. It's safe to say that the accident might have been prevented had stop signs been placed there. They probably will be, now. The city may be justified if wishing for good proof before they spend money, but this particular proof seems a bit grisly. There are other intersections in Ann Arbor which are just as dangerous. It still isn't too late for a little prevention. --Chuck Elliott It Seems to Menk By DON NUECHTERLEIN IN ONE RESPECT the Korean war has been of great value to this country because we have discovered, while there still is time, that our global strategy needs overhauling. Not so many months ago, before Korea, the public was hearing fantastic claims of what the Air Force could do to Russia in case of war. There were claims from some top brass that our planes could bomb Rus- sia into submission within thirty to sixty days. All the emphasis was on strategic bombing, almost none on air support for ground troops. Some of the Air Force peo- ple were of the impression that we no longer needed much army or navy. Air power could do the job itself. Then came Korea, and despite the inces- sant claims of success of bombing missions, supplies to communist armies have never been halted. When the bombing was too much during the day, Communist convoys moved by night. The bombers did ruin all the North Korean cities, but this does not seem to have hampered the fighting ability 'of Communist troops. But the bitterest lesson of the war has unfolded in the past few months as a result of increasing enemy air action. B-29 bombers have proved highly vulner- able to MIG jets, despite overwhelming fighter protection. There is now a growing feeling among top planners that the con- ventional bomber, and this includes the much-heralded B-36, is obsolete for mod- ern aerial warfare. If our bombers are not able to fly a few hundred miles to the Yalu river without be- ing shot up, what reason is there to believe that they could carry an atom bomb to Moscow or even to Manchuria? A second lesson we have learned is that the atom bomb might not be the absolute weapon we previously had thought. One Korean veteran who witnessed the last atom explosion in Nevada stated that he didn't think the bomb would prove effec- tive in Korea because of dispersal tactics used by Communist troops and because of the rugged terrain. Fortunately, we have developed atomic weapons which can be used on the battle- field-in support of troops, and it is hoped that the tactical use of atomic power will soon be achieved. But because cif the limi- tations of our bombers and limitations on the uge nf th atomic bomb. we may draw The Week's News .. 0IN RETROSPECT . . . /ette TO THE EDITOR The Daily welcomes communications from its readers on matters of general interest, and will publish all letters which are signed by the writer and in good taste. Letters exceeding 300 words in length, defamatory or libelous letters, and letters which for any reason are not in good taste will be condensed, edited or withheld from publication at the discretion of the editors. ba~loff-Daily-Bill Hampton ...and Karras takes the ". . . of course it ain't balofleft tackle . . ." television, but..." THE FIGHTING ILLINI yesterday gave the Wolverines a .repeat ,performance of their 7-0 victory of last year as they moved one step closer to Sunny California and the Rose Bowl. They just switched the; setting from snow-blanketed Ann Ar- bor, 1950, to snow-blanketed Champaign, 1951. But Michigan rooters cried, "Remember last year." Here in Ann Arbor, students had to be content with listening to the game over the radio, because of the NCAA television blackout. Local:::.y.. SL VICTORY-At 2 p.m. today, the doors of the General Library will swing open for the first time on Sunday in six long months. The University acted in response to pressure from the campus and the Student Legislature. "This constitutes a recognition of SL's ability to represent student opinion," jubilant .SL President Len Wilcox said. ON TRIAL--Curious old women crowded into Ann Arbor's court- house this week to absorb the brutal details of a mallet-killing. Three youths face a first degree m."der charge in the Sept. 16 death of Nurse Pauline E. Campbell. The trio listened glumly as their confes- sions were read to an elderly jury by prosecutor Douglas Reading. As the trial recessed yesterday noon, the state had only one more witness to put on the stand. BOO-Young witches and hobgoblins roamed unmolested through the city's dark streets one night last week yelling something about tricks and treats. One business-minded lad dressed in Halloween garb was reported to have made quite a haul in a door-to-door canvas of a men's dorm. ** *. * Legion of Decency.,. To the Editor: I TOO am a champion of free- dom, Mr. Samra, and so I agree that the minority should be able to prevent the majority from; seeing any movie it chooses to. But Mr. Samra youhave not suc- ceeded in convincing me tCat the minority, The Catholic Legion of Decency, has prevented anyone but the members of its own group from seeing the movies it con- demns as immoral. Assumptions and hearsay are very poor evi- dence to offer in any proof. In your editorial "Catholic Censor- ship" Elia Kazan was only "told" that picketing had occurred in Philadelphia. The movie studio only "feared" that "A Streetcar Named Desire" would be picketed. The picketing that did occur in one case was done by the Catholic War Veterans, an organization quite apart from the Legion of De- cency, and not representative of the entire population of Catholics. Therefore only the organization, and not the whole Catholic minor- ity, may be condemned for pre- venting the majority from seeing a film. Mr. Sama goes on to say that after picketing by the Catho- lics the New York License Com- missioner "promptly" o r d e r e d "The Miracle" banned. There have been many instances of the Le- gion banning a film and the New York Commissioner allowing it to be shown. A casual relationship is assumed to exist in this case with- out any justification. Just be- cause the two bannings are con- tiguous in time, is no reason to believe that the Legion influenced the License Commissioner. As Mr. Samra says : 'The Church has every right to classify films according to its judgment and in regard for the moral wel- fare of its adherents." Catholics, I believe, are the only people in- fluenced by the Catholic Legion of Decency, If the movie indus- try, in a mad grab for money, sees fit to change a film because a minority will not see. it then they are the censors of the majority, not the Catholic Legion of De- cency. --Judith Levine imposed doctrine of Lysenco Gene- tics. But this freedom of action mus have its limitations. One of these limitations con cerns the physical safety and per sonal rights of citizens of a de mocracy. Communications shoul not be allowed to seriously endan- ger these values. Another limita- tion is less easily designated. Ex pressions advocating conduct conh trary to standards of personal be havior (such as stealing) which ar commonly held by a great tajorit of therpeople should not be al lowed. But there is no valid reason - limit freedom of communicatio simply because the feelings, of one group may be hurt. There is no right to limit com munication simply because th idea being expressed is in opposi tion to the present opinions of th majority. And there is certainly no righ to suppress expression merely be cause less than a majority wan to suppress it. It may be perfectly valid for group of citizens to pledge them selves to avoid certain outlets a expression of which they'- disa prove. But if we profess that free doms have value, we ought not t casually interfere with comuni cations which provide the basis o any rational freedom. -Al Blumrosen 153L Rebels, Suh .,. To the Editor: THE CIVIL War is over. T Confederacy is dead. Yet t Stars and Bars, the symbol of sl very and disunity is being revive Have the valient heroes of th Grand Army of the Republic die in vain? Are we who live in country remade whole by thes brave men to allow their sacri- fices to be debased? Do these im mature individuals who displaj the Confederate flag expecthus loys al Unionists to allow their insidi. ous campaign to go unchecked? Of course the answer to4 a those questions is "No!" There. fore, I should like to form an hoc committee to discourage th foisting of slavery, rebellion, an( the Stars and Bas upon the fre and united American people. Ho1 do I go about it? -Charles Recker Away, Away... To the Editor: G L A Z I E R: A man who work with glass, G L A C I E R: A river of ice PLEASE GET away and keep away from the spelling Glazieu W*y for that road across the river It is now and has always beer Glacier Way. Just after the downtown papel begins to get it right is no tine foi you to be-n to get it wrong. -Norman Anning VITAL BLOOD-Wednesday and Thursday a steady stream of stu- dents climbed the long walk of a large brown house at 1443 Washtenaw, entered the living room and lay down on hospital cots to donate pints of urgently needed blood for UN troops in Korea. Two hundred and sixteen pints were collected at the Interfraternity Council-sponsored donation center. * * * * ,I ON THE Washington Merry-Go-Round WITH DREW PEARSON DOUBTS ABOUT IKE CONGRESSMAN Hugh Scott, Jr., Phila- delphia Republican, ran into significant grass-roots skepticism about Eisenhower's willingness to run when he sounded out leaders at the GOP regional meeting October 13 to 15 in Seattle. While Scott worked one hotel corridor, Dave Ingalls, Taft's manager, was drum- ming up delegates in the other. The West Coast leaders frankly told Scott: "sure we want Ike, and the worst way. But we've got to know whether he is running, and the only way you'll convince us is to hear it from him. We are not buying a pig in a poke. We're afraid we'll open the bag next June and find Tom Dewey in it, and people out our way don't want Dewey again." Scott, of course, was Dewey's chairman of the Republican national committee and his campaign manager. When Scott came back to Washington, he talked to Senators Jim Duff of Penn- sylvania and Frank Carlson of Kansas, both outspoken Eisenhower boosters. Re- sult is that both are working out means -of getting Ike's intentions on the record. NOTE-While it will be impossible for him to say anything while he is still in uniform, and while he cannot quit his important North Atlantic Pact job until Spring, a meeting of top Republicans-for-Eisenhower is in the works which will virtually announce his candidacy. FLYING BIRDMEN NEWSMEN INQUIRED at the Pentagon +he otheay no hna, o tnrv +ha+indi- Herewith are some more not-so-phony stories about amazing new developments in helicopters. 1. Helicopter experts now have a machine that can be folded in a crate eight feet long by two feet high, stowed inside a submarine, taken out on the high seas, and assembled on the sub's deck in less than an hour. The helicopter can then proceed on a scouting mission, thus enlarging the sub's range by hundreds of miles. 2. Another type helicopter is being de- veloped which will be carried inside medium tanks to serve as a scout for tank raids. 3. The small, flying birdman helicopter which can be strapped on the back of a soldier, has been made possible by jet propulsion. The controls are carried on the soldier's chest, and he can regulate the speed up to 50 miles an hour with an altitude of 5,000 feet. The helly can take him straight up even when carrying the added weight of a sub-machine gun or demolition charges. Each soldier wears a parachute in case of emergencies. The above are some more "Pearson phon- ies" the Navy may want to deny. BEHIND THE NEAR EAST IF THE ORIGIN of the Arab riots now flaming in Egypt, Iran and the Near East could be traced, the trail would probably lead to a bearded man in a red and white fez who boarded a plane in Paris in 1945 and fled to Egypt. He is the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, who was paid a cool quarter of a million dollars by Hitler and $150,000 by Musso- SORORITIES, TOO-As an IFC-SL committee began studyingt bias clauses in fraternity constitutions, Student Legislator Dave Brown charged that some sorority constitutions also harbored bias clauses. Panhel president Bev Clarke said that as far as she knew, the women's groups were clause-free. This jibed with information given to the1 Student Affairs Committee by ex-Panhel president Jane Topper last semester. At week's end Brown's "definite proof" was still under wraps.1 * * * * National .. . EXERCISE DESERT ROCK-More than a thousand scared sold-1 iers huddled nervously in holes dug in the sands of a Nevada desert Thursday to receive the baptism of nuclear fire. The Atomic Energy Commission, after experimenting with battleships and goats, began testing radiation effects on humans. Three seconds after the blast the doughboys were allowed to steal a peek at the violet cloud mush- rooming above them. The explosion, loudest of the current series, was felt 225 miles away in North Hollywood, Calif., where residents phoned police to report an earthquake. No soldiers were reported injured. The AEC did not reveal if the test was considered a success. * * * * STRICTLY MILITARY-Five-star General Dwight D. Eisenhower flew into Washington yesterday to confer with Captain Harry S. Tru- man, of Independence, Mo., on "purely military" matters. Capital observers speculated whether the President would ask the politically pregnant Ike if he is planning to give up his post as Supreme Allied Commander in Europe. * * * * CLOSED PORT-Twenty days ago, AFL longshoreman walked off the job in the world's largest port. At week's end they weren't back. Only ship passengers and vital military cargo stirred the quiet of the New York waterfront as losses from the record strike reached the billion dollar mark. * * * * International . . ROAD BLOCK-Right in the middle of the Korean peace road sat battered Kaesong. The Allies have asked for control of the town, which straddles the northern invasion route to Seoul, only 34 miles away. The Communists aren't interested in giving it up. Accordingly, both the talking and the fighting will continue this week. The rest of the cease-fire line was generally agreed upon by a sub- committee of the truce teams-a lazy s-shaped zone stretching across the peninsula near the 38th parallel. Meanwhile, cargo planes began flying anti-freeze and heavy cloth- ing to the men on the front as the first light snows marked the start of the second winter of the Korean war. * * * * REINFORCEMENTS-In the biggest air-lift since the Berlin Blockade, an entire brigade of British troops flew into the troubled Suez area to join 40,000 other Tommies. Earlier in the week Britain cut off overland oil flow to Egypt. The fiery Egyptian Nationalist, Minister of Interior Faouad Serag El Din, said.the embargo might lead to open war. Meanwhile, London hinted of an Anglo-Egyptian meeting in Paris aimed at settling the controversy peacefully. -Sid Klaus Censorship . . . To the Editor: THE DAILY'S letter column will probably be filled the next few days with writers delving into a problem unique to democracy as we know it: censorship. The critical question in this field for a democracy is, "Who is going to tell the citizen what he can see, read or hear?" In Germany under Hitler and in Russia today the answer is obvious. The telf im- posed political rulers of the State do all the deciding. But in a democracy, the answer is not so easy. Establishment of a censor, who is a human being after all, im- plies that this person or persons has the "right" set of standards, to which everyone must conform. When intelligent men can differ, is it not rather presumptuous for anyone to set himself up as guar- dian of all? It also implies that the people are not competent to choose for themselves. Practically speaking, censorship can be dangerous. It implies con- trol over communications which can limit the facts available to the people and thus twist common sense decisions into grotesque pat- terns. The power to control what men can know is tantamount to control over men. It has no place in a government which is supposed to function in the best interests of these men. In the field of ideas, it is felt that greater advantage to mankind derives from a free exchange than could be had by any policy of strangulation. Witness the Russian scientist, handcuffed to the state Sixty-Second Year Edited and managed by studentst the University of Michigan under t authority of the Board of Cobtrol Student Publications. Editorial Staff Chuck Elliott........Managing Edit. Bob Keith.............. .City Edit( Leonard Greenbaum, Editorial Oirectc Vern Emerson.........Feature Edit Rich Thomas ..........Associate Edit Ron Watts,...........Associate Edit Bob Vaughn ..........Associate Edit( Ted Papes..............Sports Editr George Flint ..:Associate Sports Edit Jim Parker ... Associate Sports Edit Jan James..........Women's Edit Jo Ketelhut, Associate Women's Edit Business Staff Bob Miller ..........Business Manag Gene Kuthy. Assoc. Business Manag Charles Cuson ... Advertising Manag Sally Fish...........Finance Manag Stu Ward.........Circulation Nianag Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusive entitled to the use for repulhicati or all news dispatches credited to it otherwise credited to this newspap4 All rights of republication of si ai matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at A Arbor. Michigan, as second-class ma matter. Subscription during regular scho year: by carrier, $6.00; by mail, $7.00. V Enterprising Censorship To the Editor: IF HOLLYWOOD can put its ideas of good and bad across to the public through freedom of movies, why cannot tlp Catholic Church use the method of peace- ful boycott and condemnation in an exercise of free speech and re- ligion to do the same. And if we win the customers to our way of thinking, isn't that a victory for our system of free enterprise? "The Outlaw" really suffered from the condemnation-even af- ter it was cut-didn't it? And it wasn't even a good movie-they tell me. Come now, Mr. Samra, are we really that strong? Bring back the Inquisition. Peter Rock * * * BARNABY That bld speC I ts nota spaC -tI shipA.Probab* I 'i'l get off a report to the astronomy'journals. I may call it "O'Malley's Comet"- Yes, I daresay that It doesn't look like a should make your comet, Mr. O'Malley- Fairy Godfather's discovery doubly ineeetrread_ And, gosh! its