1. 1 . . 11.1 . 1 1 I 'll, I Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNiVERSITY OF MICHIGAW UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 I rope You'Brought All Your Tools Th. ime" When Opinions Are Free, . Truth' Will Prevail". l Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. VEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: MARY LEE DINGLER iPVL l s a,. ' .; , y: ., "' ; Tti ° :y :e' iF y( )lt . J'+s ' _ +oo 1I APb ,,IIP .'l _ R .'ir,'.._ ...._. *i' ,. . If Ike Runs, Many Other Questions Must Be Answered 6 ~' -(YI~r 19; f ri'.a e": . S 1k't. y: ~~' ' iil '4i~. "d (EDITOR'S NOTE: In an important news con- ference at the White House this morning, President Eisenhower may answer the vital quxestion; Will he run again in November? But there wil be other vital questions. Discussing them are James Reston in an article reprinted from the New York Times.) WHEN the President gets around to saying "yes," "no" or "maybe"-the popular guess that he will say "maybe",-he also will be confronted by a number of additional questions. The first of these will be whether, if he is "drafted," he will insist on Vice President Rich- ard M. Nixon as his running mate, or give *he Republican convention a choice of several "ac- ceptable" Vice Presidential candidates, as he did in 1952. The second is whether, if he runs, he will press Congress for legislation that will clear up the constitutional flaw about who decides how the government should be run in the event of the "inability" of the President to "discharge the-powers and duties" of the Presi- dency. A third question is whether the Assistant to the President, Sherman Adams, who has been the most powerful official in Washington dur- ing the worst part of the President's illness, is to be permitted to continue exercising extra- ordinary Presidential powers without being ac- countable to the public or Congress for his actions. There will, of course, be many other questions about the course of the President's thinking since last October, when, he was depressed and apparently convinced that he should not accept another nomination, but these three questions undoubtedly will be uppermost in many minds. THE PRESIDENT clearly may decide to run or permit a "draft" regardless of his health. The Constitution provides for succession in the event of his death. Neither the Constitution nor, custom, however, deals satisfactorily with the President's right to delegate power to indi- viduals who hold themselves beyond Congress' power to question, or with the other problem of who decides what to do if the President is un- able to carry on his job. The provision of the Constitution dealing with the succession question is Article II, Section I, Paragraph six: "In case of the removal of the President from} office, or of his death, resignation, or inability to discharge the powers and duties of said of- fice, the same shall devolve on the Vice Presi- dent, and the Congress may by law provide for the case of. removal, death, resignation or inability, both of the President and Vice Presi- dent, declaring what officer shall act according- ly until the disability be removed or a President shall be elected." As Profs. Edward S. Corwin and Louis W. Koenig point out in a timely book just pub- lished ("The Presidency Today," New York University PressY, neither this nor any other provision of the Constitution ,answers these questions: Who is authorized to say whether a Presi- dent is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office? When he is unable to do so, does the office become vacant? To what does the Vice President succeed when the President is disabled, or is removed, or has died-to the "powers and duties of the said office," or to the office itself? Or does he succeed to the powers and duties when the President is disabled, and to the office when the President has permanently departed the scene? What is the election referred to in the last clause of the quoted language-the next regu- lar Presidential election or a special election to be called by the Congress? "I H FACT IS," Professors Corwin and Koen- ig observe, "that the founding fathers left the problem of disability hanging in the air, thereby in effect relegating the direction of affairs to a (Joe) Tumulty (President Wilson's secretary during the President's paralysis in 1919), a Mrs. Wilson, or a Sherman Ad- ams. * * *" The authors suggest that "a far more ra- tional course" would be to recognize the dis- ability question and pass legislation authoriz- ing a new type of Presidential Cabinet, drawn from the Executive and the leaders of Congress, to determine when the President is disabled. Congress, under the Corwin-Koenig sugges- tion, also would declare its opinion that in the event of such a decision by the enlarged Cabi- net, the Vice President would "act for" the President only for the period of the President's "inability." It should be noted that, in the quiet debate that has been going on here about the unusual power exercised by Mr. Adams during the Presi- dent's convalescence, nobody has questioned the character or good faith of Mr. Adams. What has repeatedly been said, however,, is that it is wrong in a democracy to give even a good and honorable man hidden power to act without having to explain his actions to Congress. Professors Corwin and Koenig, commenting on this problem, make this observation: "The commanding role in the Administration tea'm (during President Eisenhower's illness) belonged * * * to the Assistant to the President, Sherman Adams, who presided over a staff system * * *. This system, the outcome of Mr. Eisenhower's military experience, lodged great power in one man. "THAT MAN was appointed to his post solely by the President, and his duties rested on only the most general statutory authorization; yet his impact on the Presidency in the pro- longed period of the President's disability wa* greater than that of any elective official. "This arrangement, to say the least, is hardly in accord with the precepts of democracy, and to argue that it worked well in 1955 hardly justifies reliance on it as a suitable pattern for similar situations in future Presidencies * * *." The questions to be answered soon, therefore, are not merely whether the President is willing, but whether he is able to carry the full burden of the Presidency, and if not, how his White House aides are to be made accountable for the acts they take in his name. 4 a r . _ ' sC - . ' Stia+ . -<;-- t'.'F.. a . a ~ - , Fes,.: QJ 195 M WW4S 11 P tSr c ., WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Iyrownell on theStand By DREW PEARSON{ ATTORNEY Ge n e r a Herb Brownell was finally cornered behind closed Senate doors by a belligerent Anti-Monopoly Sub- committee. He came out mopping his brow and muttering, "This was the roughest grilling I'ever got." Brownell hadn't been on the wit-. ness stand more than five minutes before his 32-molar smile started to fade and the sweat began to pop out on his forehead. The press and public were barred from the hearing room. However, this col- umn is able to report the high- lights of what happened. South Carolina's barrel-bellied Sen. Olin Johnston, acting as Chairman, asked whether anyone wanted the Attorney General put under oath. "Oh, no. Certainly not," said Wyoming's Sen. Joe O'Mahoney. * .* THAT WAS the last kind word of the hearing, as O'Mahoney pro- ceeded to outprosecute the prose- cutor. He pointed out that the Justice Department had sided with the Dixon-Yates power combine in the early stages of the controversial Dixon-Yates deal. It had O.K.'d the legality of a government con- tract, which President Eisenhow- er had been forced to cancel after Senator Kefauver revealed that Adolphe Wenzell of the First Bos- ton Corporation acted both as gov- ernment consultant and private financier on the deal. Now, O'Mahoney noted, the Jus- tice Department was obliged toj change sides and fight against the Dixon-Yates combine in the eourts. Kefauver first suggested, and O'Mahoney now urged ,that a special, impartial counsel outside the Justice Department be ap- pointed to handle the case. "The Department of Justice ap- peared in the early stages of theI case in alliance with the Dixon- Yates attorneys resisting every ef- fort that was made to produce cer- tain evidence," charged O'Maho- ney. * * * i NORTH DAKOTA'S GOP Sena- tor Langer interrupted, but not to help his fellow Republican. He pointed out that Assistant Presi- dent Sherman Adams had tele- phoned SEC Chairman Sinclair Armstrong to stop a Securities and Exchange Commission hearing that might have embarrassed the White House. "It would be analogous to Mr. Adams telephoning a federal judge in the middle of the trial and say- ing please hold this up," shouted Langer, his voice taking off with a terrible roar. Then, glaring fiercely at Brown- ell, the North Dakota Republican demanded: "Do you propose to subpoena Mr. Adams in this in- vestigation?" "Whenever it is necessary or advisable in order to protect the government's interest in this mat- ter for us to confer with or get information from anybody in the Executive branch, we will do.so," replied Brownell with legalistic polish. * * * "IN THIS investigation, if Mr. Sherman Adams refuses to tell you why he telephoned Mr. Armstrong, what are you going to do about it?" persisted Langer. "It is our professional job to get the information, to see that every scrap of evidence which will help the government goes into the rec- ord," Brownell declared. "That is what we will do in this case." "These career attorneys in the Department of Justice will have charge of this case," explained the perspiring Brownell, "and if they think it is advisable or necessary from the standpoint of the gov- ernment to have certain witnesses before the court, they will have them.' "Were you consulted by Sherman Adams prior to the calling off of the SEC hearings?" demalded O'Mahoney, taking over. "WELL," stammered Brownell, "I would have to look up my rec- ords on that." Referring to an earlier statement that the government's prosecutors "would have access" to Sherman Adams and other high officials, O'Mahoney pressedl: "I draw a dis- tinction between having access to and having power to compel the delivery to the Department of Jus- tice of the evidence that might be necessary." "Well, let me put it this way," retorted Brownell crossly. "They would have exactly the same pow- er as the special counsel would. They would be representing the President." (Copyright 1956, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) HYNOSIS STUDY: Bridey'- Sign Of The Times? The Search for Bridey Murphy, if it were entered into the best- seller competition in fiction would probably never make a showing. However, the book is presently one of the fastest climbing best- sellers in the country-chiefly ow- ing to the fact that this fantastic story is listed as non-fiction. The theme of the Bridey Murphy book is hypnosis. The author, Mor- ey Bernstein, a successful Colo- rado businessman, is in his spare time an amateur hypnotist. This book is, first of all, his public plea that greater and more ser- ious attention be given to the seemingly unlimited power of hyp- lotic suggestion; secondly, the book is the report on a remark- able experiment in hypnosis made by Bernstein on a Colorado house- wife. Since the nature of the second phase of the book has proved so fascinating and provocative to the mass American reading audience, It would seem that the intent, curious, crusading Bernstein is, to a large extent, destined to achieve his first goal. In fact, it is our guess that Bridey Murphy will be only the first in a sudden series of new books which will explore the long-ignored potentialities of hyp- nosis. THE NOW-CELEBRATED Bri- dey Murphy experiment conducted by Bernstein was, essentially, an experiment in age regression. Sub- jecting a patient to age regression while he is under hypnosis is noth- ing new. The procedure, which involves sending t h e subject, through suggestion, back into an earlier period of his life, has been employed many times before, us- ually in an attempt to discover the origin of nervousand mental dis- orders. Bernstein, in fact, had accomplished it successfully sev- eral tiimes before. But one night, with the tape recorder humming at his side, he tried something different. The subject, a twenty-nine year old, woman whom he had hypnotized before and age-regressed to the age of one year, was put into a deep trance. This time Bernstein took her back to childhood, back to infancy, past age one to birth and then-he took her beyond. Now, apparently having "'bridged the gap," Bernstein asked his sub- ject her name. It was, she re- plied, Bridey Murphy. Further questioning brought out that the date from which she was speaking was 1806; that she lived in Ire- land, in Cork; that her father was a barrister; and that she had one brother who died when he was four. Bernstein's subject now sur- prised him by developing a marked Irish accent. IN EFFECT, what Bernstein had done was to "regress" the house- wife into an earlier life. With more and more details filled in on her "past life" by the subject in later sessions, the present day search for Bridey Murphy began. Evidence collected up to the time of the author's writing seemed to corroborate that such a person really did exist, in Cork, in 1806 ... The rest of the story makes fas- cinating reading. And it seems that the American public is about ready to read it, to establish some link or acquaintanceship with the reaim of mysticism- perhaps a sign of the times. Actually, nothing Morey Bern- stein has done is new. All his ex- periments have been conducted be- fore and he gives credit where it is due, especially to Edgar Cayce who pioneered in the field of ther- apeutic hypnotic suggestion. Bern- stein's real contribution is that of dramatically bringing the potenti- alities of hypnostic suggestion into the area of popular understanding. Stimulated public interest will un- doubtedly lead to further serious exploration into the practical values of hypnosis. It would seem that there is much to be done in this direction. Even today, with the evidence of the Bridey Murphy experiment at hand, Bernstein bas found university research heads complaisant and generally unin- terested in his findings. * * * THIS ATTITUDE seems to be the fashion. As "Time" magazine once put it, "Hypnosis has been the hard luck kid among medical techniques. A century ago it was just beginning to win acceptance as a pain killer when ether was discovered, and hypnosis was dis- carded. It was making a come- back sixty years ago when Freud hit upon the idea of psycho-analy- sis, and the experts again lost in- terest in hypnosis. Now, the third time around, it is once again win- ning the support of reputable men in both the physical and psychic areas of medicine." The present progress has been ,if sure, extreme- lv slow. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN THE Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3553 Administration Building before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for the Sunday edition must lie in by 2 p.m. Friday. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1956 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 14 General Notices Petitions to the Hopwod committe must be in the Hopwood Room (1006 Angell Hall) by March 1. Open House for faculty and staff at Library Extension Service, on ground level of General Library. Fri., Mar. 2. 3 to 5 p.m. Beta Alpha Psi, National Accounting Honorary Fraternity will meet Wed., Feb. 29, 3:30 p.m., fifth floor conference room, School of Business Administra- tion, to elect new members. Blue Cross Rate Ancrease. Effective March 1, 1956, Michigan Hospital Service will increase its rates for the hospital care portion of the Blue Cross-Blue Shield program. The new rate increases are .33 a month for a single person and $1.14 a month for two persons and family coverage. Noon showing of new films every Wed. at 12:30 p.m. in the Audio-Visual Education Center's auditorium Room No. 4051, Administration Bldg. This week two health films, "Understanding Vitamins" and "Sneezes and Sniffles." Agenda, Student Government Council, Feb. 29, 1956. Cave Room, Michigan League, 8:00 p.m. Minutes of the previous meeting. OFFICERS REPORT: President-MSU Meeting, March 5, 4 p.m., League. vice-President - Orientation Commit- tee reports. Treasurer. COMMITTEE REPORTS: Coordinating and Counseling - Rod Comstock. Constitutions: College of Pharmacy, Student Council, requests recognition. Election. Student Activities Building Commit- tee-Dick Good. National and International - World University Service, drive; Regional As- sembly. Education and Social welfare - Ala- bama incident, Principia Conference, Political, lecture series, Academic Coun- seling. Student Representation -- Student Activity Scholarship, Sponsorship of Homecoming. ACTIVITIES: March 22, 23, 24, Junior Girls' Play, Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. March 9-change of date for Pete See- ger concert, approved for Feb. 24. Old and new business. Members and constituents time. Lectures Lecture, auspices of Center for Japan- ese Studies. "Independent Burma," by Daw Mya Sein, prof. of history at Ran. goon University. 4:15 p.m., Auditorium A, Angell Hall, Thurs., Mar. 1. University Lecture. Prof. S. N. Bisen- stadt, chairman of the Department of Sociology at the Hebrew University, will speak on "The Social Structure of Israel" Feb. 29 at 4:10 p.m. in Aud. A, Angell Hall. Open lecture. Academic Notices The Extension Service announces that there are still openings in the following class to be held in Ann Arbor: Finishing of Wood 7:30 p.m. Thursday, March1 Wood Technology Laboratory, Glen Avenue and Catherine Street Eight weeks, $11.00. Glenn P. Bruneau, instructor. Philosophy 34 make-up final examina- tion Thurs., March 1, 1:30 to 4:40 p.m. in 2208 Angell Hall. Bacteriology Seminar; Thumrs., March 1; 1520 East Medical Bldg., 4:10 p.m. Factors affecting the inactivity of ci- trate oxidating enzymes in Echerichia Coli and Brucella Abortus-Russell Mac- Donald, Dept. of Bacteriology. Interdepartmental Seminar on Appljed Meteorology, Thurs., March 1, 4 p.m. Room 4041 Natural Science Bldg. Prof. Frederick H. Test will speak on "Forest Micrometeorology in the Tropics." Makeup Examinations in Economics 51, 52, 53, 54, and 153 will be held Fri. March 2, at 3:00 p.m, in Room 207 Economics Building. Organic Chemistry Seminar. 7:30 p.m., Room 1300 Chemistry Building. Dr. H. Blecker will speak on "3, 5-Diarylisoxa. zoles." Physical- Analytical- Inorganic Chem- istry Seminar. 7:30 p.m., Room 3005 Chemistry Building. Mr. A. Krivis will speak on "Homogeneous Precipitation." Graduate Students expecting to re- ceive the master's degree in June, 1956, must file a diploma application with the Recorder of the Graduate School by Fri., March 2. A stu ent will not be recommended for a degree unless he has filed formal application in the office of the Graduate School. Doctoral Candidates who expect to receive degrees in June, 1956, must have at least three bound copies of their dissertations in the office of the Gradu- ate School by Fri., May 4. The report of the doctoral committee on the final oral examination must be filed with the Recorder of the Graduate School together with two copies of the thesis, which is ready in all respects for pub- lication, not later than Mon., May 28. Doctoral Examination for Blue Allan ' Carstenson, Education; thesis: "A Method for Studying How People Per- ceive the Power Structure in Their Com- munities as Tested in Five Michigan Communities," Wed., Feb. 29, 1020 South University (3rd floor), at 12:00 noon. Chairman, H. Y. McClusky. Pirrwom 1)7#. Ni t'e MF 4 Ir++ Y Mf wt . ': 4 w a a { i L4 /v. l 1 1i f INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Surplus Foo Problems To The Editor rt H if I -- if I 'f By 3. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst DO YOU REMEMBER when foreign cartoon- ists, back in the early 24s, habitually de- picted Uncle Sam as a fat moneybags sitting heavily on the aspirations of his allies in World War I? The United States is sitting today on great piles of another kind of wealth, more vital than dollars, about which she must do something as she prepares to meet Russia's new-type cold war.{ They are piles of surplus food. It doesn't matter so much at this moment, when there is no great food emergency. But just let times become a little worse in the countries for whose allegiance Russia and the West are competing, and new cartoonists, us- ing ancient languages which have a new im- pact on today's world, will be depicting Uncle as a fat old hoarder. Editorial Staff Dave Baad .......... Managing Editor Jim Dygert ...................................City Editor Murry Frymer .,.................... Editorial Director Debra Durchslag .................... Magazine Editor David Kaplan ......................... Feature Editor Jane Howard ........................ Associate Editor Louise Tyor .,.......... ......Associate Editor For the sake of her own economy, as well as for utilizing its value as a weapon in the cold war, a system of distributing this food has be- come as important, to the United States as anything else right now. THE PROBLEM cannot be solved by a mere giveaway program, or by "dumping." Other friendly countries, and some of the countries which must be courted, produce food for export as a regular part of their economies which must not be upset. That's one of the troubles with the idea of relieving the pressures of the food surpluses on the American economy by continued price sup- ports at home while selling the balance abroad for what it will bring. The United States has been making small experiments with a system which permits some needy countries to buy surpluses with their own currency, then use the currency under the eco- nomic aid program for development of their economies, instead of being given dollars. That makes the food a gift which can be turned into a political football by foreign gov- ernments, and is unhealthy for a large long- term program. And in the long run Americans will not support a program which permits for- eign housewives to serve bread from American wheat more cheaply than it can be done in Kansas City. PERHAPS some system could be worked out by which all producers of exportable foods would work together to see that shortage areas were supplied, with repayment on the best pos- Women's Honoraries ... To the Editor: LOUISE TYOR'S editorial re- garding women's honoraries being confused about their campus role presents a gratifying example of a thoughtful and sincere ap- proach on the part of the writer and of the members of the honor- aries who are doing the "soul- searching." As a former member of one of these groups, I think I experienced some of the mixed feelings that these people have- a sense of accomplishment and an LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler // ///~ / 1,/i 516NA ~N OTfI r / / - ~, // U ~ 6- atflEgS i(. VaT'* f l ~ p o p f c D !n a ; p o ( uD O D .!QI-! ;D q -, D O.G. excited pleasure at being selected along with a very fine group of girls, but along with this, some constantly gnawing questions: What is the purpose of our be- ing selected as a group if we do not have the time and left-over energy to do anything together? If we really have been outstand- ing in our contribution to the Uni- versity, hasn't this been sufficient- ly recognized both by others and to our own inward satisfaction? What about the list of girls we are going to tap? Aren't they those who are either well-known and recognized as a result of their work or else have chosen to con- tribute on a quieter basis or among a smaller group of people? What about the list of girls we aren't going to tap, even though in the last analysis some of them are jukt as deserving, if not more so, than those who will be? . . . And as one question led to another, they all led to the inevitable, "Why hon- oraries at all?" If the answer is, "Why not?" I would think that one of the strong- est reasons is because the exist- ence of honoraries contributes but another facet to the fabricated jewel that often glares too bright- ly on this campus-that of "suc- cess" of the type that is achieved through blind, competitive striv- ing or simply based upon what other people seem to think is im- portant. If this is an inevitable pattern w 4: -4 .t I