FoUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 195? ______________________________________________________________________ U H . ... IME FOR A CHANGE? The Case for The GOP 1.F LED BY THEIR party head and chief jes- ter, Adlai Stevenson, the Democrats are conducting a campaign for re-election that .is designed to evade the charges brought against the Administration and to ridicule their opponents. Rather than face and re- buke accusations made against them, they have resorted to glib phrases and a mock- ing manner that avoids the seriousness of the times. Corruption is the most generally evaded issue. Investigations and revelations have shown the Justice, Interior, and Agricul- ture Departments and Internal Revenue Bureau to be infested with dishonest and incompetent men. Supreme Court Justice Tom Clark was given his present position when it became evident that the Attorney General's office was riddled with corruption while he was at the helm. His successor, J. Howard Mc- Grath stayed in office long enough to aid in concealing crime and corruption revolving around the Administration. Our present top law officer, James McGrannery, is continu- ing the policy of procrastination in weeding out venal influences. Tales of numerous kidkbacks and deals in. the Internal Revenue bureau are of such a volume that they have taken their place be- side the unfolding story of RFC loans, deep freezes, mink coats, and five percenters. The cases of dishonesty in government is appall- ing, and it is certain that they are only a small percentage of the shady deals that have taken place. Responsibility for the mess in Washington rests with the Ad- ministration and the Democratic party. j If Stevenson is elected, Americans may be sure that the same clique of influence- peddlers will be thrown in with him. The men who will be seeking favors for de- livering votes are those who hushed up the crooked voting in Kansas City, the ones who have had security from arrest while carrying op illegal operations for the past four years, and those who have enjoyed years of high living at Govern- mene expense. Even an honest man like Stevenson knows the power of political bosses-the iron hand rule of his poli- tical godfather Jack Arvey in Chicago. The Alger Hiss case is another instance of an Administration whitewash. President Truman labeled the case a red herring when Hiss was proved to have perjured himself before a Senate investigating committee. Truman, Secretary of State Acheson and Stevenson were all taken in by Hiss. Yet poor security risks continue to occupy key positions in the Democratic bureaucracy. Economically, increased taxation and the higher cost of living face the nation at every turn. The buying power of the dollar is at a new low. Inflation is running unchecked, and the Administration has yet to come up with a solution. In four years, we have had an Administration which does little more than hdnd out Labor Department statistics to the public each month. Our defense production has stalled, sputtered and gone nowhere since mo- bilization began. Government contracts are issued, but go-ahead signals and ma- terial allocations are delayed by a web of red tape. We are short of planes and ma- terials in Korea. Chicago, Detroit and Cleveland are defended from the air by less than two dozen jet planes stationed outside Detroit. Government duplication, inefficiency and waste has reached an all time high. Little concern is shown for the taxpayers' dol- lars by the entrenched bureaucratic heads in Washington. Meanwhile, the national debt climbs to heretofore unheard-of pro- portions. The nations economy almost suffered a complete breakdown during the summer due to the prolonged steel strike. As a solution the Administrationi tried to un-constitution- ally seize the industry. Coupled with a threat to draft railway workers a few years ago the seizure attempt reached a new low in solving labor problems. tY M j* ASIDE FROM the domestic angles, the Administration's bungling foreign pol- icy has resulted in the United States, once the strongest nation on earth, now bowing and cooing in all corners of the earth. It all started at Yalta, where East Germany, Poland, and the Balkans were sold out to the Soviets. As regards China, we followed two dif- ferent paths, at times supporting the Communists, at other times, the Nation- alists. Today, there are some 450,000 peo- ple in the Red camp. In 1949, Acheson announced publicly that Korea was outside our defense perimeter. The following year, the Communists took him to his word, and today we have over 180,000 casualties. The truce talks drag on while the Administration remains indeci- sive. Today, we have no definite program for the Middle East. Egypt and Iran simmer with signs of Communist activity, and the Reds continue to gain ideological ground in that crucial area. In Europe, the State Department admit- tedly notes mounting "anti-American" re- sentment-even after the flood of money which has gone over the Atlantic to sub- sidize the Continent. We have fair-weather European friends, but few real allies. The upshot of the past Administration is a state of low morale in the nation. The President and Administration are not respected, our strength is doubted, and our future is indeed bleak. The election of Eisenhower, on the other hand, will give the nation a tremendous moral boost. As a capable administrator, a man of international stature, Ike is well- qualified to lead the country back onto the road to financial stability and peace. -Eric Vetter BEHIND THE LINES * Panty Raids The Captivating Campaign - ... As Two Cartoonists View It By CAL SAMRA Daily Editorial Director THE CAMPUS panty raids which exploded throughout the country last year were amusing in some respects, but when a re- currence of them threatens to jeopardize the entire college deferment system, it's time to consider the matter in a more sober light. In retrospect, it didn't take long for public opinion, backed up by several news- papers and magazines, to yell for the bra- bound scalps of those responsible for the raids. Parents could put up with gold- fish swallowing, but when it got to the point when deferred collegiates were fri- vosly making off with unmentionables while their sons were dying in Korea, the paternal ire was aroused-perhaps justi- fiably. A flood of indignant letters came in to Congressmen, up for re-election, and it was quite reasonably suggested that the college student could also learn to play with a gun. The frightening angle was that the many were judge by the few, and every college student was identified as an irresponsible hedonist. It has now become virtually im- possible to convince the public that the college student is, generally speaking, a ser- ious-minded animal, not customarily given to serenading girls and then depriving them of their basic needs. It goes without saying that another chain of similar outbreaks is bound to cement this mistaken impression in the public mind; further, that Congress will hardly put up with another year of panty pilfering. The college deferment scheme could con- ceivably collapse under pressure, a possi- bility which isn't to be taken lightly. * * u NEAR EAST PROGRAMI AT A TIME when the Middle East looms as one of the most critical areas in the world, it is encouraging to note that the University's Near Eastern Studies depart- ment is continuing its program to cultivate a better understanding of the Arab world. The two Middle East Institutes spon- sored by the department during the last two summers were indeed highly educa- tional. Now, for the 1952-53 year, the de- partment has expanded its curricula to include courses in the economics, culture, literature, and politics of the Middle East. If and when such broad programs are inaugurated at other institutions, perhaps the day is not far off when Americans will regard the Middle East as a region posses- sing something more than harems, beys, pashas, and camel-dung patties. HOGWASH ON THE EVE of the big game, it would be unseemly not to accord due recognition to the well-trained brigade of farmers who intend to do a bit of milking down here this weekend. Michigan State's fine football team is des- tined to go places, according to some 20,- 000 astute sports writers, and they deserve a word of good luck. One wonders, however, whether MSC President John P. Hannah, who thoroughly denounced bowl games last year as chair- man of the College President's Conference investigating athletics "over-emphasis," will weep again this year if his team wins 9 straight and is still barred from the Rose Bowl. DORIS FLEESON: The Nixon Affair WASHINGTON - It may be questioned whether General Eisenhower really in- tended to turn Senator Nixon's explanations of the Nixon dowry into the ordeal by fire it became. A principle of some importance exists in the situation-the principle of whether any senator, no matter how noble, ought to accept private help from anyone, no matter how pure. In insisting that his running-mate must come clean, clean as a hound's tooth, the General perhaps did not foresee that, whatever his private opinions about the senator, it might be necessary to let him go. In such contingency, it would be useful to have the principle to fall back on; certainly it would be very much kinder to Nixon. But General Eisenhower did not prepare his retreat, at least not in any manner that could save the Senator embarrassment. Here, again, he has showed a lack of that instinc- tive political skill which any number of people were prepared to swear he possessed when he was a supreme commander of mili- tary forces. Aboard the Eisenhower train it is becom- ing known that the General realizes that he is making tactical mistakes. He now knows, for example, that he did not put a firm hand on his famous love-seat meeting with Senator Taft which Governor Stevenson is exploiting with telling effect. It was a propaganda mistake to let Taft march out with the same long statement he took in ,z Long-Distance Fishing ~K> ~ SUPPORT CC / x "GIMME THAT OLD SOFT SHOE" -------_ -__ ----- - ---- - - -f1 ON THE WASHINGTON ME 1 RY-GO-ROUND WITH DREW PEARSON Wanted: A YI Club OF THE THREE political clubs on campus -Young Democrats, Young Republi- cans, and Young Progressives-there is not a single organization which will present the mnbiased truth on any given issue. Political allegiance is justifiable, even desirable, and it is only natural that any organization dedicated to some specific cause will do everything in its power to promote that cause. But to the intelli- gent independent voter in search of the facts, one herd's narrow poppycock, no matter how vigorously it is espoused, can be as meaningless as another's. For example, the YD's might be trying to convince the student body that the moon is green, the YR's claiming that it is red, and the YP's asserting that it is blue. On closer examination, however, we might find that it is actually yellow. The campus needs another group of stu- dents who would organize to dig up facts rather than to push dogmatic party goals. Such an organization could undoubtedly be of value in clarifying campaign issues- claims and counter claims-as well as in aiding undecided voters decide which candi- date or party they will support. An organization such as this might eas- ily expose the distortion of truth which is the inevitable result of such common. party practices as concealing some facts while at the same time stressing others. Perhaps there is definite need for a YI Club, comprising young political indepen dents who will refuse to be taken in by po- litical noise but will examine the facts ob- jectively, and on this basis form their opin- ions. Perry Logan WASHINGTON-General Eisenhower's period of indecision regard- ing his vice-presidential running-mate was due largely to the fact that he was torn between a crossfire of advice from two groups of backers. One was the professional politicians who accompanied him on the train. These, led by GOP national chairman A-thur Summerfield, fought hard to keep Nixon on the ticket. With him were Senator Seaton of Nebraska, Congressman Hugh Scott of Philadelphia; while Milton Eisenhower, the General's brother, a non-professional, was emphatically in favor of dropping Nixon and General Wilton Persons, one of Ike's old military friends, was on the fence. But the enthusiastic amateurs who got on the train during its stops en route urged that Nixon be taken off. These were the leaders who had rounded up the big write-in votes for Eisenhower during the primaries, who sometimes had voted Democratic and who repre- sented the independent bloc which can swing an election. They felt that the General must give an example to the Nation, must show that he meant business right at the start by cleaning out any taint or even suspicion of corruption. They argued that if the Nixon "expense gifts" had been known at Chicago he would not have been nominated, and that if the General put action to words the election would be in the bag. - IN THE DARK -- ONE FACTOR which hampered Eisenhower's decision was the fact that his advisers kept the Nixon news from him for 18 hours. Though they got the first query on the New York Post story via the United Press on Thursday afternoon, they did not tell the General about, it until next morning. And since the General seldom reads the newspapers carefully, he did not learn the bad news-even though his advisers sat up until 3 a.m. at Omaha trying to decide what to do while the man chiefly concerned slept peacefully in the next car, blissfully ignor- ant that the worst political storm in fifty years of presidential campaigns was about to break over his head. Nixon, when reached by telephone, had some strong opinions. He asked that no action be taken until he could give a full statement, and he put some of his staff on the phone to tell of the big crowds he'd been getting. They indicated that the people around Eisenhower had buck fever. The thing to do, they urged, was to play down the story and proceed as if nothing had happened. - KANSAS CITY CONFERENCE - THAT NIGHT, at the Muehlebach Hotel in Harry Truman's home town, the General called a staff conference in "the little white house," the penthouse used by President Truman when he comes back to Missouri. Truman's picture had been removed, though the piano on which he sometimes plays the "Missouri Waltz" remained. At the meeting were chairman Summerfield, Gov. Adams, Milton Eisenhower, president of Penn State College; Jim Hagerty, press secretary; Senator Seaton, Maj. Gen. "Slick" Persons, Brig. Gen. Robert Cutler and Eisenhower himself. They decided to have the General make another statement, then wait for Nixon to explain all. It was also decided that the General himself should meet the press in an off-the-record conference and reiterate his determination for honesty in government. Next day this was done. In doing so, the General, by pure coincidence, used the same expression used by President Harding in defending some of his as- sociates-"clean as a hound's tooth." Meanwhile Senator Taft was really sore at the General for not backing Nixon at the start. Taft thought that Eisenhower's tight- rope walking was what made the Nixon affair a big headline and a big issue. - IKE'S IRK -- THE GENERAL meanwhile was irked not only at his own staff for not telling him of the Nixon "gifts" when the news first broke, but also sore at Nixon himself because he had shot off to the press with- out clearing with him. The General especially didn't like Nixon's first statement blaming "Communists and Crooks" for the newspaper stories. One voice which kept urging the General to drop Nixon was that of Bert Andrews, ace political writer for the New York Herald Tribune who originally introductd Nixon to Eisenhower. Andrews felt that Nixon's position had materially hurt the ticket and that the General would be sure of election if he showed he was against any suspicion of unethical conduct On the other hand, the General was boiling mad at chairman Summerfield for stating that Nixon would definitely remain on the ticket. Since Summerfield made the statement after Eisenhower had already said he was going to make up his mind only after Nixon told his story, he didn't like Summerfield's word to the contrary. When word of Summerfield's precipitous statement reached the General, he snapped: "Summerfield may be Renublican national chairman but he what did our handsome h ero o etter4 TO TH E 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 arenot in good taste will be condensed, edited or withheld from publication at the discretion of the editors. Young Sen. Nixon .. with the $18,000 donated him- ~ Sen Nix n... and why? To the Editor: -Leo D. Vichules JR ADIO HAS added another great Chapli to the long list of Old Mal n Perkins, Just Plain Bill and Back- To the Editor: stage Wife-Senator Nixon. The WHAT PROOF does Miss Voss hero, a ruddy faced young Califor- ("A Lovable Tramp Gets nian, spent a length of time (and Trampled," Michigan Daily, Sep- not one cent of the taxpayers' tember 24, 1952) have that stick- money-Hear! hear!) sketching in ing a subversive label on Charlie the usual background: the family Chaplin is "more than a little ri- grocery store, working his way diculous?" Even if Mr. Chaplin is through college, a "modest" war able to prove his good citizenship, record, the hardships of a young Miss Voss' logic, "that Chaplin's couple (Pat was born on Saint skilled cinematics are enough to Patrick's Day-she won't quit!), justify his being around," is not the cocker spaniel puppy and two sound. Don't you think the wel- mortgages (2-count them-2). fare of our country is more im- Missing were sweet violins in the portant than someone's '"skilled background-or did I hear Pat cinematics?" sob? Also missing, but not for long In Mr. Chaplin's particular case, I am sure, a sponsor-may I sug- this country has been more than gest Flub, the amazing new wash- good to him; he thus has an ob- day discovery, it does nothing. ligation to fulfill by being more This young chap-PROUD, I re- than a good citizen. If he can't peat, PROUD to be what he is- prove his good citizenship, then he will be an inspirational character has no right to return to his to stumbling young Americans. adopted homeland, no matter how Will he unearth another whole, skilled he has been and is in cine- live Communist? Will he gain the matics. vice presidency? These and other --Mitchell G. Drake questions can only be answered by careful attention to-Young Sen- "MAN shall be educated for war, ator Nixon. and woman for the recrea- O n e particularly interesting tion of the warrior; everything else question yet unanswered is-just is folly." [DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN1 1 t -Frriedrich Nietzsce (Continued from Page 21 CURRE MQvI At Hill Auditorium .. . ' MY MAN GODFREY, with Carole Lom- bard and William Powell; and VOLPONE, with Harry Bauer and Louis Jouvet. AS ITS FIRST offering of the year the Cinema Guild has chosen to present a Y double feature, a phenomenon usually to be found at the second-run downtown thea- ters; apparently that is where it belongs. Individually these two pictures are better than average, and certainly merit a come- back showing such as this. But coupled they provide a program of more than three hours, ' which is just too much for anything less than the most exceptional films. "My Man Godfrey" is the story of a rich, post-depression family which has much more than its share of crackpots. At a scavenger party one of the daughtres, Carole Lombard, manages to collect, and fall in love with, a "forgotten man," played by Wil- murderous renditions of "Dark Eyes" and agonized Weltschmerz sighings. The only stabilizing factor is the father, Eugene Pallette, whose patience seems endless. As a strict farcical comedy the movie rolls along nicely up until the very end, when the affair takes on a humanitarian aspect which threatens to wreck the whole effect. Only the best efforts of Miss Lombard pre- vent the film from leaving a bitter memory. "Volpone" is a French adaptation of the Ben Jonson play, which had as its goal the caricaturing of the scoundrels who ruined the Venetian republic in the sixteenth century. On celluloid the story becomes a hilarious character study. The ludicrous grovelings of the greedy men after Volpone's fortune are especially comic, and, in a way, revealing. Natur- ally, however, Vopone himself stands out as the most humorous. Sadly, because of the length of the pro- gram, I was not able to see the completion of the picture;. but if it is as funny as the Lectures University Lecture, auspices of the Departments of Physics and Aeronauti- cal Engineering. "Temperature grad- tence with centrifugal fluid field; theory of the the Hilsch tube." Dr. F. Schultz- Grunow, Professor of Aeronautical En- gineering. Technische Hochschule, Aach- en, German. Fri., Sept. 26, 4:15 p.m., 1300 Chemistry Building. University Lecture, auspices -of the Department of Near Eastern Studies. "The Desert versus the Sown." Carleton S. Coon, Curator of Ethnology and Pro- fessor of Anthropology, University of Pennsylvania. Fri., Sept. 26, 4:15 p m., Rackham Amphitheater. Academic Notices Law School Admission Test: Applica- tion blanks for the Nov. 15 administra- tion of the Law School Admission Test are now available at 110 Rackham Build- ing. Application blanks are due in Princeton, N.J., not later than Nov. 5, 1952. Philosophy 65. The list assigning stu- dents to the three discussion sections will be posted outside the Philosophy Dept. Office and Mr. Ziff's office. All sections will have a meeting this week. English 201 will meet in 1402 Mason Hall Mon., Wed., and Fri. at 9. Biological Chemistry Seminar - Fri.~ Sept. 26. 4 p.m., 319 West Medical Building. "Agene and Bleaching of White Flour-Methionine Sulfoximine." All interested are invited. Aero 190 (NE100). Elements of Nu- clear Engineering. Class will meet on Tues., Thurs., and Sat. at 11 in Room 2076 East Engineering. In case of con- flicts, see Prof. M. H. Nichols. Events Today A Generation tryout meeting for peo- ple interested in joining the Poetry, Fiction, Drama, Music, Dance,aBusi- ness, Art Staffs will be held at 4:30 p.m. in the Generation Office, Student Publications Building. Newman Club Mixer tonight from 8 to 12, Newman Club. Dancing, enter- tainment, and refreshments. All Catho- lic students and friends cordially invit- ed. School of Music Assembly Council Near East Club. Organisational meet* ing at 7 p.m. in the League. Carleton S. Coon will be the guest and will dis- cuss Near Eastern problems with stu- dents and all those interested. S.R.A. Coffee Hour, Lane Hall, 4:15- 5:30 p.m. All students invited. Hillel. Evening services followed by social hour, 7:45, Hillel House. Michigan Christian Fellowship. Im- portant meeting for all members and interested students, 7:30 p.m., Fireside Room, Lane Hall. Coming Events Hillel. Sabbath morning services, 9 a.m., Hillel House. Hillel. Day of Atonement services, Sun., 8 p.m., Mon. 10 a.m., Lydia Men- delssohn Theater. Newman Club. Free dunkers' hour after the victory on Sat., Newman Clubrooms, St. Mary's Chapel. All Cath- olic students, friends, and families are welcome. 01w Sixty-Third Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Crawford Young .....Managing Editor Cal Samra ..........Editorial Director Zander Hollander ......Feature Editor Sid Klaus .......Associate City Editor Harland Britz .........Associate Editor Donna Hendleman ....Associate Editor Ed Whipple.............Sports Editor John Jenks ... Associate Sports Editor Dick Sewell . . .Associate Sports Editor Lorraine Butler........Women's Editor Mary Jane Mills, Assoc. Women's Editor Business Staff Al Green ...........Business Manager Milt Goetz......Advertising Manager Diane Johnston ...Assoc. Business Mgr. Judy Loehnberg....Finance Manager Tom Treeger...Circulation Manager I