THE AUCAIGAil'i i Aiil)f FiiiDAY, 2, i:i RUARY 26, 1954 'IliE_3iFuiik4~A2~. ijAijA lJiiilJAY, k i~RUA1~ 26, 1954 The GOP And the Farm Dilemma EVERYONE KNOWS that the Republican Party .is divided in such a way that President Eisenhower must depend on the Democrats to enact his favorite legislation and that 1956 looks bleak for the GOP. The controversial farm question holds the most danger for Republican chances of keeping the throne. Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Ben- son has drawn up a farm program design- ed to remove the rigidity from farm prices and reduce government surpluses by pro- viding a sliding scale of farm subsidies. The farmers, however, with both eyes on the pocketbook, tend to favor retention of the present 90% parity. An interest group looking out for itself is not uncommon, but one that can swing an election, as the farm bloc demonstrated it can do, is. -The result is a dilemma for the Adminis- tration. If it effects Benson's proposed pro- gram of a sliding scale, it faces the prospect of the farmers deciding to vote Democratic. On the other hand, if the present system of farm subsidies is kept, to the farmers' de- light, the economy, which is now delicately considered in a recession, may suffer reper- cussions that would be equally inimical to Republican prestige. Economists have suggested that we are undergoing a period -of readjustment and that there is no danger of a serious, or even a semi-serious, depression. But if farm prices are not allowed to readjust and are kept rigid, distortion in the price scheme is in- troduced which could easily intensify the downward trend. Also, surpluses would con- tinue to pile up faster than the investment in new warehouses could offset anything. Consequently, the Republicans can lose either way.. What seems to be in the offing is con- tinuation of rigid farm prices which, al-' though possibly will do the economy no harm, can do it no good. The Administra- tion must decide between allowing this to happen by leaving Congress to its fun, and fighting for Benson's program which has been developed through months of expert study. It boils down to whether the Repub- licans will attach more import to what is considered the proper course for the good of .the country or to what can be termed the wisest move politically. -Jim Dygert BMOC, 1954: Robert Munger and the SFA (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is a.conden- sation of an articte by Douglass Cater in the cur- rent Reporter.) IN EARLIER TIMES, the undergraduate hungry for the ephemeral glories of Big Man on'the Campus picked his way care- fully up the rungs of clubs, teams, publi- cations and class politics. Robert Munger, a student a the University of Southern Cali- fornia, has devised a new technique, much better attuned to the temper of the 1950's. He has demonstrated that with all the sus- picions rampant in the academic commun- ity today, a plausible youth can become a Big Man, if not exactly on the college cam- pus, at least among high-school students and influential adults, by tracking down what he considers "Leftists." Like many success stories, Munger's be- gan in adversity. U.S.C. was the third col- lege he had attended. He had spent one year each at Los Angeles City College and" Pepperdine College also in Los Angeles. At the former he had made an effort at conventional campus politicking when he ran for the student-body presidency. le lost by a very large margin, but it ap- pears that this failure gave Munger the inspiration that was to speed him to success. In the fall of 1951, General Douglas Mac- Arthur, having been called home from Ja- pan the previous spring, was making loud political noises over the land. It was an auspicious time for the meeting of the two momentarily blighted careers. Munger founded the National Collegiaite MacArthur Clubs in October, 1951. The headquarters were established at P.O. Box 2124, Holly- Wood 28, California. This device of the se- cretive "cover address," as it is known in clandestine circles, Munger uses to this day. From the outset, the, MacArthur organi- zation, as depicted in its monthly newspaper, The American Student, set out to create the impression of a burgeoning student move-, ment whose primary aim was "winning our battle against Communism." The N.C.M.C. had a simple premise: "N.C.M.C. is the only truly rightist student movement in exist- ence on a nation-wide basis." After the Republican National Conven- tion in 1952, Munger decided that a change of name was in order. According- ly, the organization was reconstituted as Students for America. A confidential handbook issued by Students for America gave a startling index of its aims and techniques. Munger had apparently stu- died well the organizational practices of the Communists whom he sought to out. wit. There was to be the "select hard core of the membership" which would control the organization. Local chapters would not seek recognition from the college au- thorities but would remain a "loyal under. ground" in the State Department tradi- tion. "We have found it much more ex- pedient not to seek to be officially recog- nized onthe campus by the administra- tion." A vital part of National Headquarters was to be the "National Security Division" en- trusted with responsibility for "carrying on direct liaisons with anti-subversive govern- ment agencies and keeping up-to-date in- formation on all leftist student groups and their operations." There was, naturally, proper concern over the danger that Students for America, while. busily infiltrating the leftist groups, might in turn be infiltrated. When in doubt about a prospective member, a chapter was coun- seled to contact National Headquarters, which could "provide any information as to the membership or participation of that in- dividual in subversive activities or organi- zation, on very short notice." As a possible sop to those members who were not permitted to join the under- ground, Munger revised a sure-fire tech- nique for keeping tabs on professors. Members were "to take notes and direct quotations from the lectures of those pro- fessors who consistently insert Commun- ist and socialist propaganda into the classroom." A record was also to be kept of reading assigned or suggested by these professors. S.F.A. is not all juvenilia. The support that has rallied round Munger and his or- ganization is distinctly middle-aged. In May, 1952, Munger was awarded the Motion Pic- ture Alliance Memorial Award as the col- lege student in America who had done most against Communism. The following Novem- ber, Walter Winchell on his radio program addressed a "Special Flash to All Students." "It is imperative," he said, "that you con- tact the following people on how to recog- nize the Communists among you. Write to Students for America . ." Students for America seems to have suc- ceeded almost everywhere except in the col- leges. Munger has claimed a membership of 2,500 on more than 120 campuses. Pre- sumably this includes high schools, but even so it appears to be grossly exaggerated. S.F.A. continues to list many of its ori- ginal officers; the organization has noth- ing approximating a constitution and no democratic processes by which local chap- ters can have a voice in the national or- ganization. In this, too, it reveals Mun- ger's assiduous study of the Communist monolith. For Munger, as for David Schine of the Cohn-Schine team, the call of the Army has interrupted what was getting to be a well- publicized if not particularly fruitful career. In a recent interview, Munger declared that he was devoting his final weeks as a civilian to finishing up his fight against Commun- ism. Despite the fallow years that may lie ahead in the Army, Munger still has plenty of time. After all, he just turned twenty- four last January. Greatest Deliberative Body In The World 'P - 3 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN i x c 7 t C 3 1 C ON THE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND WITH DREW PEARSON Back In the Fold SECRETARY OF the Army Robert Stevens' brief resistance to the seemingly in- vincible Senator has ended with a "Mun- ich" peace conference and the heretic of a few days has been welcomed back to the fold. With Stevens' agreement to give Mc- earthy the information he has requested another branch of the government has bowed to the investigators and all but acknowledged their superiority. In the case of the Army, this action is even more regrettable than it has been with other groups. The Army has a strong case and Secretary Stevens himself is above re- proach. That public .support. was behind the Secretary's action was evidenced by the favorable telegrams his office-received, and by press and radio editorial support. But, it appears the Administration lack- ed Stevens' courage and thus pressured him into surrender. As Stevens has said he is not the kind of man to capitulate but obviously the Administration leaders are not of the same caliber. In short- sighted fear of splitting their ranks, the GOP has once more allowed McCarthy to take advantage of their weakness in or- der to gain more power. Eventually McCarthy must be challenged. By postponing such an event we are only insuring that it will be a harder and more bitter fight. -Arlene Liss New Books at Library Burke, Norah--The Splendour Falls. New York, William Morrow, 1953. Churchill, Winston S.--Triumph and'Tra- gedy; Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1953. Gresham, William Lindsay-Monster Mid- way. New York, Rinehart, 1953. Harrer, Heinrich-Seven Years in Tibet. London, Rupert Hart-Davis, 1953. IT TAKES courage to acknowledge a wrong. Bernard Shanley the President's special counsel, has acknowledged an "unfortunate mistake" last fall in labeling Government employes separated for security reasons as "1456 subversives ... kicked out of Govern- ment jobs." Mr. Shanley's confession of error comes only after considerable outcry and it does not atone, of course, for the political use made of the security figures by other Administration spokesmen. The spasmodic breakdowns now being made, showing that few of the separations have been connected with loyalty, make such distortions hollow and tawdry indeed. But Mr. Shanlev has taken a necessary step toward the restora- tion of honesty and decency in the handling of the security problem. His"'example com- mends itself for adoption elsewhere. -Washington Post cut RNr s Rackham Lecture Hall MOANA, the second of four films in the Robert Flaherty Festival. DURING THE thirty years Robert Flah- erty was making films, perhaps his chief problem was to avoid the temptation of making pictures that he did not believe in. Certain projects he ignored to begin with; others he found himselfrinvolved in and, losing faith, felt compelled to drop out; a few times he completed his own commitments on a film only to have a commercial studio add to his footage or edit in such a way that he considered his intentions' to have been violated. Consequently, out of a career that em- braced almost all of his later life, only four full-length features have emerged which Mrs. Robert Flaherty, the Festi- .val's honored guest, chooses to call "free films"-that is, films made free of out- side interference. The secdnd of these, "Moana," the story of a Samoan family, made in 1926, was shown last night at Rackham, bringing the Flaherty Festival to its halfway point. The film was created in the tradition of "Nanook of the North." Again, Mr. Flaherty spent two years with the Samoans in mak- ing the film, and again he returned to America with a close, personal account of "a primitive way of life." This time the story centers around the idyllic existence of a young native boy, Moana, who arrives at manhood with the official tribal tattooing ceremony. The startling contrast with "Nanook," a story of the primal fight to survive, has caused "Moana" to be called in the Mu- seum of Modern Art foreword an "idealized" picture of the courage and nobility of a primitive civilization. Although the film does begin with a rather glossy quotation from Robert Louis Stevenson, I would quar- rel with the word, "idealized." Quite natur- ally, Flaherty seeks the most expressive, per- haps most lyrical elements of Samoan living to compose his film. In doing this,.however, he preserves the human expression, the hu- man gesture which is not idealized and never permitted to become anything but what it is. Moana staggers with the weight when he helps his father carry the wild boar home, he flinches during the tattooing, again the producer's belief that no man achieves in a vacuum. In his work, he has focused on the capacities of men who have justified his faith. "The Land," a documentary about ag- ricultural unemployment which was made for the government in 1941 completed the bill. While effective in parts, predictably enough it lacked the lucidity a propagan- da work should have: Mr. Flaherty is not at his best proving somebody else's points. "Man of Aran" and "Louisiana Story" will complete the Flaherty Festival next week, March 1 and 3. -Bill Wiegand WASHINGTON-Before President Eisenhower sent his economic message to Congress an important debate took place among White House advisers as to whether it should include two remedies for re- cession. These were: 1. Tax relief in order to stimulate retail trade and business ex- pansion.t 2. A public works program to take up the slack resulting from re- duced defen§e orders. The President's economic advisers wanted such a program spelled out in black and white in the message to Congress. But the public relations advisers (Democrats call them "hucksters") were opposed. They argued that too much emphasis on the re- cession by the President would create a bad psychological reaction and only increase the recession. Some also pointed out that if the Democrats were going to be accused of talking us into a recession-as presidential assistant Sher- man Adams did shortly thereafter-it was poor strategy for the President to give them any ammunition. So the public relations advisers triumphed over the economic ad- visers and the economic message went to Congress without these two recession remedies. HERBERT HOOVER'S LESSON SINCE THEN the President has disclosed one of the remedies at a press conference-namely tax reduction. However, there remains considerable worry among presidential advisers as to how long they should let the business down turn drift without taking definite action. Some of Ike's friends on Capitol Hill remember all too vividly the mistake Herbert Hoover made in talking about "prosperity just around the corner" at a time when he was being urged to act rather than talk about the depression. Among Hoover's advisers at that time were Walter Gifford, head of American Telephone and Telegraph, who was put in charge of unemployment relief; Colonel Arthur Woods, former police commissioner of New York; and Eugene Meyer, former governor of the Federal Reserve Board and head of the RFC. All urged that he act vigorously, and Meyer advised constructive financial steps in Europe long before the depression clouds got serious. Hoover, however, did not act-with the resultant economic catas- trophe now all too well remembered. Remembering this, some of the Ike advisers on Capitol Hill urge that he not make the same mistake. NOTE-ex-President Hoover stated again this week that he ex- pected no great depression, and that he considered himself an expert on such things. DEPRESSION D-DAY NSIDE FACT IS the White House has now fixed two warning sig- nals as D-Day for depression. When those signals approach, the White House advisers are ready to advise the President to begin tax cutting and pump priming. The two D-Day signals are: 1. When unemployment reaches the 4,000,000 mark. Since some estimates now put the figure at 3,500,000, this may not be far away. 2. When the production index drops to 14 per cent. At present it's, dropped only to 9 per cent. Meanwhile, Secretary of the Treasury George Humphrey, Secre- tary of Defense Charles E. Wilson and other big business members of the cabinet are urging their friends in private industry that this is the time to pump private capital into the economy and show that they have confidence in the capitalist system. Wilson's old firm, Gen- eral Motors, stepped forward as the bellwether by announcing a bil- lion-dollar expansion program. It is hoped that others will follow suit. Word has been passed out that now is the time for all good busi- nessmen to come to the aid of the party and show that they do not have to fall back on government spending. AIR FORCE OIL MAN A BIG OIL executive who recently sold gasoline to the Air Force has now been given the job of buying gasoline for the Air Force. He is W. W. White, Vice President of ESSO, who while working for that company negotiated a $30,000,000 agreement last year to of all aviation gas that will be used by the Air Force overseas during whittled down to $24,300,000 but it still constitutes about two-thirds of all aviation gas that will be used by the Airi Force overseas during the current fiscal year. Now White will walk round to the other side of the table and purchase gasoline for the Air Force. White is not giving up his hold- ings in ESSO, as Secretary of Defense Wilson did in General Motors. In fact he will return to ESSO after one year. White was required to appear before Secretary of Defense Charles Wilson and agree that he would not favor his own company in hand- ling petroleum contracts, after which Wilson told the Air Force he was satisfied White's holdings would not influence his decisions. In fairness to the Air Force it should be noted that it is hard to get men experienced in this field, and the only field from which they can be secured is the oil industry. Therefore, no mat- ter whom the Air Force picks, he is bound to have a conflicting (Continued on Page 4) March 1 to talk with June men grad- uates, Bus. Ad. or LS&A, about employ- ment in sales, production, purchasing, cost control, accounting, and personnel. Tuesday, March 2: The Kroger Co., Cincinnati, Ohio, will hold a group meeting and film showing on March 2 at 4 p.m. in 4051 Admin- istration Building. (See Interviews on Wed. and Thurs., March 3 and 4). La Salle Steel Co. in Chicago, Ill., will have"'interviewers here on March 2 to talk with June men graduates in Ac- counting. Cold Metal Products Co., Youngs- town, Ohio, will be on the campus on March 2 to interview June Bus. Ad. and LS&Amen graduates for positions in production management or industrial sales. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co., of Ak- ron, Ohio, will have representatives at the Bureau on March 2 to interview June men graduates, Bus. Ad. or LS&A, for employment in credit, sales, field accounting, and retread shop manage- ment. Wed., March 3: The Warner & Swasey Co., Cleveland, Ohio, will visit the campus on March 3 to talk with June Bus. Ad. and Indus- trial Management men graduates about the company's production training pro- gram. Wed. and Thurs., March 3 and 4: The Kroger Co., Cincinnati, Ohio, will have interviewers at the Bureau on March 3 and 4 to talk with Bus. Ad. and LS&A June men graduates about the organization's Executive Training Program in merchandising, personnel, warehousing, transportation, account- ing and real estate. Students wishing to schedule appoint- ments to see any of the companies list- ed above may contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3 5 2 8 Administration Bldg., Ext. 371. PERSONNEL REQUESTS. The Seventh Region, U.S. Civil Serv- ice Commission, has announced exami- nations for Administrative and Staff Service positions, Grades GS-7 to GS- 13, for duty in Federal establishments within the States of Illinois, Michigan, and Wisconsin. Tremco Mfg. Co., Cleveland, Ohio, is interested in contacting alumni or June graduates for the firm's Sales Training Program. For additional information concern- ing these and other employment oppor- tunities, contact the Bureau of Appoint- ments, 3528 Administration Bldg., Ext. 371. Lectures Illustrated lecture, sponsored by the College of Architecture and Design. "The Copenhagen Metropolitan Region- al Plan" by Steen E. Rasmussen, Dan- ish architect and town planner, Fri., Feb. 26, 4 p.m., Architecture Auditori- um. University Lectures, auspices of the Department of History, Department of Classical Studies, and the Kelsey Mu- seum of Archaeology. Frank E. Brown, Townsend Professor of Latin and Master of Jonathan Edwards College, Yale Uni- versity, will give two lecturestat the jUniversity. The first lecture, "Etruscan Rome," will be given Mon., Mar. 1, 4:15 p.m., in the Rackham Amphitheater. The second, "Rome of the Scipios," will be given on Tues., Mar. 2, 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheater. Academic Notices Department of Biological Chemistry. Dr. W. W. Ackermann, Associate Profes- sor of Epidemiology, will speak on "Some Aspects of Metabolic Integra- tion" at the seminar of the Department of Biological Chemistry held in 319 West Medical Building at 10:15 a.m., Sat., Feb. 27. Make-up Examinations in History will be given Sat.,'Feb. 27, 9 to 12 a.m., 2429 Mason Hall. See your instructor for permission and then sign list in History Off ice. Astronomical Colloquium, Fri., Feb. 26, 4:15 p.m., the Observatory. Dr. Leif Owran will speak on "Solar Radio As- tronomy." Seminar in Logic and Foundations. Dr. Norman Martin of WRRC will speak on "The Universal Turing Machine" at 4 p.m., Fri., Feb. 26, in 411 Mason Hall. Doctoral Examination for Paul Rowley Mcsaac, Electrical Engineering; thesis: "A Study of the Initial Permeability of Ferromagnetic.Metals at High Frequen- cies," Fri., Feb. 26, 3521 East Engineer- ing Bldg., at 1:30 p.m. Chairman, S. S. Attwood. Doctoral Candidates who expect to re- ceive degrees in June, 1954, must have the bound copies of their dissertations in the office of the Graduate School by Fri.. April30. The report of the doc- toral committee on the final oral ex- amination must be filed with the Re- corder of the Graduate School not lat- er than Mon., May 24. T e ttIT TO THE EDITOR Concerts George London, bass baritone of the Metropolitan Opera, will be heard in recital, in the eighth concert of the Choral Union Series, Sunday evening, Feb. 28. in Hill Auditorium. Mr. Lon- don will present the following program, with Leo Taubman at the piano: Mo- zart's concert aria, "Rivolgete a lu o sguardo; a group of Brahms songs; Credo from "Othello" (verdi); La Pro- cession (Franck); Paysage (Han); Man- doline (Debussy); Fleur jetee (aure); Waille, Wailie; Gambler's Bong of the Big Sandy River by John Jacob Niles; and Blow the Man Down. Tickets are available at the offices of the University Musical Society in Bur ton Memorial Tower until noon Stur- day; and will be on sale at the Hill Au- ditorium box office preceding the con- cert, at 7 p.m. Exhibitions Museum of Art, Alumni Memorial Hall. African Sculptures, through Feb. 28, The Embellished Surface, through March 1, Flaherty Photographs, through March 7. Hours: 9-5 on weekdays, 2-5 on Sundays. The public is invited. Events Today wesleyan Guild is co-sponsoring the Cinema Guild movie tonight. See you in the lounge at 8 and we will all go together. Semi-Anual International Coffee Hour, Lane Hall, 4:30-6:00 p.m. Sponsored by the International Committee of Inter- Guild and the Protestant Foundation for International Students. Everyone welcome, Lydia Mendelssohn Box Office is open from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. today for the sale of season tickets for the Depart- ment of Speech 1954 SPRING PLAY- BILL. Tickets for individual perform- ances will go on sale Mon., Mar. 1. In- cluded on the series are Richard Strauss' comic opera, ARIADNE OF NAXOS, produced with the School of Music, March 2-6; Shakespeare's THE TAMING OF THE SHREW, March 25-27; and Eugene Hochman's 1953 Hopwood. winner, VERANDA ON THE HIGH- WAY, April 22-24. Season tickets are available at $3.25-$2.60-$1.90. Student season tickets for the three opening nights are $1.50. Episcopal Student Foundation, ea from 4 to 5:15 this afternoon at Canter- bury House. All students invited. Episcopal Student Foundation. On- terbury Club, 7:30 p.m., tonight at Can- terbury House. Recordings and dis- cussion of T. S. Eliot's "The Cocktail Party." Refreshments. All students in- vited. Roger williams Guild. Game Party. $ o'clock this evening at the Guild House. Ping pong, chess, checkers, etc. Coming Events Newman Club Cabaret will be held Sat- Feb. 27, from 9-12. Newman Clubs from Michigan State College, Michigan State Normal College, and Wayne University will be present. Various kinds of en- tertainment will be featured with each club taking part. Dancing and refresh- ments will be included in the evening's fun. Everyone is urged to attend. Informal Folk Sing at Muriel Lester Co-op, 900 Oakland, Sun., Feb. 28, at 8. Everyone invited! HILLEL Friday 6:00 p.m.-Sabbath Dinner 7:45 p.m. - Friday Evening Services 8:30 p.m. Dr. Abraham G. Duker speaking on "American Community and Jewish Living" Saturday 9:00 a.m. -- Community Service Sunday ..10:30 a.m. - Hillel Student Council Meeting 3-6:00 p.m. -- International Open House. All students are cordially invited to attend! Entertainment, refreshments, 'and dancing. 6:00 p.m. - Sunday Nite Supper Club. Dancing and Dining 7:00 p.m. - Hillel Chorus Chess Club. Samuel Reshevsky will give a simultaneous chess exhibition Sun., Feb. 28, at 4000 Tuxedo, Detroit. Play will begin at 2 p.M. If you are in- terested in playing call TR5-8450, Ext. 19. The Inter-Arts Union will hold its "weekly meeting 2 p.m. Saturday in the League. In addition to those who are already members, any persons interest- ed in joining are cordially invited. i * * * *: At Architect Auditorium ARSENIC AND OLD LACE with Cary Grant, Priscilla Lane, Josephine Hull TWO SWEET old ladies from Brooklyn, vestiges from a mere genteel era in Brooklyn have set up housekeeping at the Architecture Auditorium. Their occupation- the manufacture of elderberry wine with a little arsenic, a little strychnine and just a touch of cyanide to. give it punch. The pur- pose of their occupation-charity. They want to give old, lonely men a look of peace and repose. Into this world of thick rugs and crys- tal wine glasses, of understanding cops and loving killers, comes Cary Grant, drama critic and man of the world, and the only sane mutation in this solidly in- sane family. The result-very funny, high-class slap- stick. Josephine Hull, as might be expected, steals the show. As one of the' charitable sis- ters, she putters around domestically, stop- ping only long enough to open her eyes wide and say "of course there are thirteen dead bodies in the basement." Jean Adair who plays Miss Hull's sister is pleasant but sim- ply has not succeeded in creating as com- plete a person as Miss Hull's "Aunt Brews- ter." Unfortanately Cary Grant, who's around most of the time maintains a steady state of hysteria which becomes a little irritating about half-way through the movie. There is really no "supporting cast" in this film. Sta;s Raymond Massey, Peter Lorre, Priscilla Lane, Jack Carson and Jack Gleason all have sizeable roles. Of The Tyrant . . To the Editor: SHOULD like to comment on professor Leslie's last sentence published in the February twenty- third issue of the Daily. He states "It's ironic that Washington was great because he protected sep- aration of powers-to that extent, McCarthy is a subversive." Sixty-Fourth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Harry Lunn.........Managing Editor Eric Vetter..................City Editor Virginia Voss...,.... Editorial Director Mike Wolff....... Associate City Editor Alice B. Silver..Assoc. Editorial Director Diane D. AuWerter... Associate Editor Helene Simon........ Associate Editor Ivan Kaye.............Sports Editor Paul Greenberg....Assoc. Sports Editor Marilyn Campbell. Women's Editor Kathy Zeisler. .. .Assoc. Women's Editor Chuck Kelsey ......Chief Photographer Business Staff Thomas Treeger......Business Manager William Kaufman Advertising Manager Harlean Hankin....Assoc. Business Mgr. William Seiden......Finance Manager Don Chisholm.....Circulation Manager Telephone NO 23-24-1 Member ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATE PRESS Member of The Associated Press 1 i am certainly not in favor of interest. many of McCarthy's methods, but NOTE-White was educated at the expense of Uncle Sam but I would like to cite another Gen- never served a day in the Armed Forces except on petroleum matters. tleman whom people called a ty- He graduated from West Point in 1923, then was sent to Princeton rant at the time he was in office. for advanced studies. As soon as he got out of Princeton, he resigned This gentleman exercised military from the Army, but came back in 1942, when he was automatically and domestic powers that would commissioned a full colonel. Instead of using his West Point train- normally have been under the con- ing, however, he served on the petroleum board. His service was com- trol of Congress as required in the petent and the Air Force has now recommended White for promotion constitution of the United States.