Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 n Opinions Are Free, mtb Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. DAY, MARCH 4, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR, LEE MARKS Four More Years of Nion? THE GOOD possibility of the President's re- election and the hazards to the health of t man of his age and condition make the iuestion of a Vice-Presidential candidate a mat- er of national concern. There are two problems involved. Now more han ever, the Vice-Presidential nominee must e a man well-qualified not only as a Consti- utional successor to the Presidency but also as an extra-legal stand-hi should the President be disabled for any period of time. The ques- ion is how the Republican Party will meet the unique challenge presented by the President's andidacy. Unfortunately, the chances now are that the' Party's response will be dictated by a number of factors not necessarily pointing in the di- rection of the public good. For although pub- ic confidence in Vice-President Richard Nixon s quite low, his chances of renomination are luite high. To fail to renominate Nixon would be in effect saying a number of things, both about he Vice-President and the President. None of hem would benefit the Republican cause., About Nixon the party would be saying that either it or the people had lost confidence in aim. Actually he is one of the President's de- clared favorites, and it is an unusual news conference indeed in which the President does aot sing his praises. He has done much in the way of vigorous campaigning for the party, and his past record of Taftism and present record of Eisenhowerism make him acceptable to most wings of the Republican Party. What Rate Fo DO STUDENTS take an interest in student government? This question has been voiced on the Michigan campus before this spring. The perennial answer is found to a great extent in he low number of petitions taken out each spring semester by potential SGC candidates. Lack of candidates has come to be somewhat of a tradition as the student body regularly at- empts to choose fellow students who will re- sponsibly and effectively represent them. With three more days left to return petitions, only seventeen students have expressed a desire ,o compete for the seven SGC positions being vacated this semester. Even if each of the seventeen become official candidates, seven out of seventeen indicates less than a passing in- erest in the Council's accomplishments and failuires in its first year of operation. Criticism of student government activity or, student government inactivity often flows fast and furious on campus. Constructive criticism in the way of ideas is found to a lesser degree. But when it come to devoting the necessary time and energy to the execution of these con-' structive ideas, Michigan students-especially the ones who are the most critical-are hard to find. In only a short period of existence, Student FOR THE PARTY to reject Nixon on the grounds that he lacks popular support would be a first-rate insult to a man who has kept himself prominently in the public eye as a representative of the Administration for four years. Roosevelt could dump Henry Wallace in 1944 and get away with it, but this is the "team," and to dump Richard Nixon would be very poor team play indeed. Not only would the nomination of someone to succeed Nixon be a slap in the face to one of the Party's key leaders, but it would be implying things about the state of the Presi- dent's health which Republican orators and doctors will be denying up and down the land for the next eight months. To choose a Vice- Presidential candidate less objectionable to in- dependent voters than Nixon, the party would be publicly admitting to all the world that the President's chances of surviving a second term are significantly poorer than were his chances of surviving his first. The Nixon name on the ticket will be a liability, this year much more than in 1952. But against it must be balanced the liabilities of displaying a lack of confidence in the team's head cheerleader, and of publicly ack- knowledging and therefore emphasizing the dangers to the President's health. As of to- day it appears that those who have been unable to reconcile themselves to the will and ways of Richard Nixon will have at least four more years in which to try. -PETE ECKSTEIN )r Capabilit Government Council has raised itself to a posi- tion where it is no longer merely recognized by faculty and administration, but actually aided in its attempts to solve in a cooperative mood some of the practical problems confront- ing the University and its student body. But no government is run in inertia built up from previous successes. Effective student gov- ernment depends on active participation on the part of the student' body. The structure of SGC in particular calls for a strong, intelligent elected membership. Without it, successes of the past can be overshadowed by failures of the future. Though no scientific poll has been taken, it is reasonable to assume there are more than seventeen qualified students for seven SGC positions. In fact the makeup of the University's student body intimates that a seventeen to one ratio might be entirely within the range of possibility. Premium rates on insurance against incapable student leadership would be much less with such a ratio. How high a rate is the student body willing to pay? -DICK SNYDER "Congratulations, Mr. President - It's All Yours" -- S~ldS ------ ----- _7 -'4 N A 4 c - F _ ,o~" " t . ^ t o,,,,,5 < ., .... .ti y, ality celluloiding shows in England. Reviews" using the stars of Eng- land and American stars appear- ing in England as the featured guests. The Ricardos and Mertzes are in the midst of their tour of Europe, using the continental story line as an attempt to get away from the usual format. As with most situa- tion comedy shows, the writers can come up with just so many ideas with the same situation, and a trip abroad opens up many oppor- tunities which would otherwise not be available to them. Another show which is filmed in England for American viewing is "The Adventures of Robinhood." Because of this arrangement an interesting situation has arisen. ON JUST about every television program which brings people to the point of origination every week, such as any of the multitude of quize shows, a working agree- ment has been made between the producers of the program and an airline. For a plug at the end of the show the airline agrees to fly all the contestants to the program free of charge. At the end of each "Robinhood" show there is a plug for an airline. But the airline has not flown one passenger"in connection with the program. The plug reads: "Films of this program have been flown to the United States via Pan Am- erican Airlines." And to top off the England-Am- erican agreement some of our old movies will soon be sent overseas to haunt the late-late viewers in England. * * .C HERE ARE some items which i can be classified in the "Things We Would Like to See on TV De- partment:"E -Two masked thugs attempt to steal one of the questions on the "$64,000 Question" from Mr. Feit. It would then be interesting to C see what those two policemen who have been guarding Mr. Feit and the questions for the past forty a weeks would do. -Bob Warren as the principle subject on "This Is Your Life." He's the announcer on the show F and has to be tlere every week anyway. -And Perry Como and Jackie Gleason starring in "The Miracle on Madison Avenue" with Bill, Paley, Bob Sarnoff and Bob Kit- ner in supporting roles. TALKING ON TELEVISION: U.S. Entertainers Giving Britishl Their Due By LARRY EINHORN Daily Television Writer IN GRATITUDE for all the gems which the motion picture industry of the Commonwealth of Great Britain have so graciously allowed the sponsors of the American Late-Late Shows to use as their form of entertainment, some American television stars are now using England as the scene for filming their shows. Bob Hope is the prime example of an American television person- I. 4 HOPE AND CO. ... Promoting British relations 1. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ot94-jfy~szuAsAIP 6'r*Clg. Hope has done two "Continental WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Dubious Chemical in Baking Dy DREW PEARSON FEW HOUSEWIVES know it, but a dubious chemical that comes from petroleum is still used as a "freshener" in rolls, cookies and other bakery products-though its use in bread has been banned. Called polyoxyethelene mono- stearate, its use in bread was fought succesfully by the Food and Drug Administration three years ago., But it's still used to freshen other bakery products be- cause of complicated legal pro- cedures that today hamper the Food and Drug Administration in protecting the public. Congressmen, certain food man- ufacturers, and Food and Drug Administrator George P. Larrick are trying to plug the loophole in the law by requiring government approval before chemicals can be added to food products. They point out that during the last 15 years, approximately 25,000 such chemi- cals have been screened by manu- facturers, of which 24,600 have been discarded as unsafe. More- over of the 400 now in use, it is estimated that 15 have never re- ceived adequate testing. Polyoxy- ethelene monostearate is just one example. Tragically, it is just one lone congressman, battling on behalf of the chemical industry, who is keeping the loophole from being closed too tightly. He is Rep. Joseph P. O'Hara (R., Minn.), author of a bill that ostensibly would close the loophole, but which actually would leave the Food and Drug Administration still virtually powerless. * * * O'HARA'S BILL would force the government to prove its case in court every time the Food and Drug Administration pretested a. food chemical and found it dang- erous. This would tie up the Food and Drug Administration in end- less legal red tape. J. M. Gillet of the Manufactur- ing Chemists Associations, Inc., is the chief source of the pressure on O'Hara. He has the backing of several representatives of the Food and Packing Industries, including John A. Gosnell of the Adhesives Manufacturers Association of Am- erica and H. T. Austern of theI National Canners Association. Nine food industry groups are also back- ing the chemical firms in their drive to keep the door open a crack, among their spokesmen be- ing Glenn G. Paxton. Chief Justice Warren and the 11 chief judges of the Federal Appeals courts are opposed to the position of the chemical industry, since they believe the overworked federal trial courts are not comp- etent to decide highly scientificj matters. They agree that the Food and Drug Administration should have the power to enforce its find- ings and sent Judge John Biggs, Jr., of the third circuit to so testi- fy before the house committee. Congressman O'Hara, however, was adamant. "We do not ask physicians for legal advice, and we should not ask judges or juries for medical advice," argued William W. Good- rich, Assistant General Counsel of the Department of Health, Edu- cation, and Welfare. This piqued the Congressman from Minnesota. "You have given this bill about the most distorted view of any- body I've heard," he told Good- rich. He is still blocking the Food and Drug Administration in its at- tempt to protect housewives. * * * SECRETARY of the Treasury George M. Humphrey was discus- sing the advantages of a balanced federal budget at a closed-door meeting of the House Appropria- tions Committee. "As long as we can balance our income with our outgo we will not go bankrupt," declared Humphrey. Rep. J. Vaughan Gary of Vir- ginia agreed: "I am very much in hope that your estimates of receipts will prove correct for the fiscal year 1957," he said, "and that Congress will find some means of reducing the expenditures without weaken- ing our national defense." "That would be wonaerful if you could do it," said the Treasury boss, "and I certainly would sup- port it in every way. There is no Treasurer who is not 100 per cent in support of that if it can be done. "I feel like the fellow who woke up and found a burglar shining an electric torch in his face," Hump- hrey continued. "The burglar said, 'I hear there is $500 here, and I want to find it.' The fellow in bed said, 'Wait a minute. I want to get up and help you-look."' IN THIS CORNER: More ThanRight & ron By MURRY FRYMER T'S DISAPPOINTING that so many people who should know better are spouting solu- tions to the Southern segregation dilemma, at the same time overlooking or failing to see the problem. If it were just a matter ofright and wrong, democracy and justice, how simple it would all be. We would just have to read a few passages from the Constitution or some other docu- ments of democratic theory and rest assured that the point had been proved. What baffles many of our extremist anti- segregationists is that this simplicity is not as apparent to the South. They are bewildered to hear about rock-throwing mobs, obviously unjust court decisions, and unpunished South- ern killings. They wonder how the Southern mind works that can accept this behavior. Con- fusion grows to condemnation and finally hatred and an appeal to force. The Southern racists take another road and arrive at, the same destination-hatred. To them the Negro is a moral, economic, social, and biological degenerate. The words "nigger" and "filthy" can be used interchangeably. As- sociation with the Negro is a task enough-in- tegrated living is absurd. The racist can under- stand the Northern position no better than his own is being interpreted. His only conclusion is that outsiders who do not have to face the consequences are butting in, trying to dictate to him their superiority. And if they're going to' be talking about force, by God, he'll counter with force. The two extremities are far apart, so far that to some observers a forcible showdown seems imminent. Yet, quietly and slowly a third force has developed, both in the North and the South. Segregation is unjust and a blotch on American democracy, these people agree. But they interpret the desired end not as mere legal integrations, but as social under- StA~ns Anrl ,ipmhinTn tm tq . sth IN RECENT DECADES advocates of this poli- cy have made much progress. Negroes and whites work together in many areas of the South where this would have been unbeliev- able a little earlier. Many schools hive been integrated, even before the Supreme Court de- cision on education. And in countless other little ways the Negro has been voluntarily "accepted" by the white. Of course, one can say that the process is too slow, too painful, and that modern genera- tions of Southern Negroes must no longer be condemned to the vile abuses that still exist. How can one condone the Till case in Mississip- pi, or the Lucy case in Alabama simply to say that in two or three generations hence this might no longer happen.u Obviously we cannot-nor can most South- erners. But it is a valid argument in the South that there are Northern groups and individuals who are in themselves responsible, at least in part. The Lucy case was handled, despite the obvious ideals of justice, so as to make inte- gration at Alabama U. more painful than it needed to be, or than the Alabamans were willing to endure. Although understandably on the side of justice, there is a danger that some Negro groups might prefer martyrdom to suc- cess. The Supreme Court decision has done much to make both North and South conscious of unfulfilled democratic ideals, and this is com- mendable. Yet, it has also led to an increasing self-consciousness for the Negro and this may become unfortunate. Although the Montgom- ery bus boycott is an example of united, and courageous passive resistance, an effort at success rather than conflict, such propositions as a nation-wide Negro hour of sympathy can only lead to increased tension and unhappi- ness everywhere. IF THERE is any clear-cut solution to the To The Editor morning, March 2. The very head- Missed Facts . . . line of this editorial suggests to To the Editor: the casual reader, and most are, AS AN ex-officio member of the that all SGC will bar an ISA Student Government Council, I representative from running for feel it is my obligation to comment the council. Then Mr. Snyder on some of the GLARING general- opens his article by saying, "If the izations and utter nonsense that views of two SGC members can be hats andearedttwosrecent edi- taken as representative. " has appeared in the orenadl - Obviously, the headline and intro- torials i The Michigan Daily ductory sentence, on which the The first of these so called ditorial is based, are unfair and editorials that I refer to is Mr. eneraied. Elsman's on the rushing study genera izmember of SGC, do not committee deadline of March 5th. feel that these two anonymous It seems obvious that since the opinions represent mine or any SGC, through the "so called Frank council member's reactions but motion," mandated IHC, IFC, Pan- their own, and I don't think Mr. hellenic, and Assembly to have Snyder can pretend to try to their reports in by March 5th, convince the campus that they do. that this "editorial" was nothing If Mr. Snyder had deemed it neces- but nonsense and a waste of valu- sary to get other reactions, he able space. I don't think that any- would have uncovered the ASTON- one was given cause to believe that ISHING fact that last Spring these reports would not be in in many SGC members spent a great time. What, pray tell, was Mr, deal of time trying to convince ISA Elsman editorializing about? to run a candidate for SGC. The other editorial that I refer Unfortunately, Mr. Snyder miss- to is Mr. Snyder's, "SGC 'Voices' ed this fact and these OTHER Unrealistic in Barring ISA Seat," opinions. which appeared in the Daily this Hazel Frank, '56 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.. the day preceding publication. Notces for the Sunday edition must be in by 2 p.m. Friday. SUNDAY, MARCH 4, 195 VOL. LXVI, NO. 18 General Notices Students and Staff Members who have already rented one picture from Art Print Loan and wish to secure another one may do so Monday and Tuesday, March 5 and 6. Hours 8-12 and 1-5. 510 Administration Bldg. (basement) There is still a fine selection of prints avail- able. Science Research Club. The March meeting will be held in the Rackham Amphitheatre at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, March 6. Program: Isotopes in Chemi- cal Reaction Kinetics, Richard B. Bern- stein, Chemistry; The Acetlycholine- Choline Esterase System in Nerve Trans- mission, Lloyd R. Yonce, Psysology. Dues for 1955-56 accepted after 7:10 p.m. The Women's Research Club will meet on Monday, March 5, in the West Lee- ture Room of the Rackham Building at 8:00 p.m. Dr. Lois Biggers Gehring, Research Associate in Biochemistry, will speak on "Tools in Biochemistry." Lectures Dr. C. Freeman Allen will lecture on "Fatty Acids of the Tubercle Bacllus" on Mon., Mar. 5, at 4:15 p.m. in Chem- istry Bldg. 1300. University Lecture, auspices of Eng- lish Dept. Frank O'Connor, distinguish- ed Irish author and critic, on "The Rise and Decline of the Novi." Rackham Lecture Hall, Tues., Mar. 6, 4:15 p.m. Concerts Student Recital, 8:30 p.m., Sun., March 4, in Aud. A, Angell Hall, by Jane Stoltz, violinist, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Bachelor of Music degree. A pupil of Gilbert Ross, Miss Stoltz will play c'Ompositions by Brahms, Bach, and Hindemith. Open to the public. Miss Stoltz is a pupil of Gilbert Ross. Organ Recital by Robert Noehren, University Organist, 4:15 sunday after- noon, March 4. in Hill Auditorium. This is the first of four programs continuing the series of Bach organ music and fea- turing the-Caibn, Part III. Others will be performed by Pofessor Noehren on March 11, 18, and 25th; all are open to the general public without charge. Academic Notices Aeronautical Engineering High Alti- tude Seminar. LMr. L. M. Jones of the Upper Atmosphere Research Group will speak on "Survey of High Altitude Re- search," Mon., March 5, at 4:00 p.m., in Room 1504 East Eng. Bldg. Open to seniors, graduate students, and staff members. Doctoral Examination for Harold Woodrow Paulsen, Education; thesis: "The Development and Application of Criteria for Evaluating Guidance Serv- ices in College Departments of Physical Education," Tues, March 6, East Council Room, Rackham Bldg., at 10:00 a.m, Chairman, P. A. Hunsicker. Mktg., Sales, Distribution, Merchandis- Helicopter and vertical Take-off Field,' by Mr. Norman C. Taylor, Chief Engi- neer, Piasecki Helicopter Corporation, Morton, Pennsylvania, Mon., March 5, at 5:00 p.m., in Room 311 West Engineer- ing Building. Schools of Business Administration Education, Music, Natural Resources and Public Health: Students, who re- ceived marks of I, X, or 'no reports' at the end of their last semester or sum- mer session of attendance, will receive a grade of "E" in the course or courses, unless this work is made up. In the School of Music this date is March 10. In the Schools of Business Administration, Education, Natural Resources and Public Health, the date is March 13. Students, wishing an extension of time beyond these dates in order to make up this work, should file a petition, addressed to the annro- 4i CERAMICS OUTSTANDING: Detroit Crafts Exhibit Worth Investigating T HE ELEVENTH annual exhibi- tion for Michigan artist-crafts- len opened at the Detroit Institute of Arts last week, where it may be seen until March 25. This exhibition of ceramics, tek- tiles, metal and woodwork by Michigan artists is well worth investigation by people going to Detroit anyway; ceramics are cer- tainly the outstanding feature. Only prizewinner from Ann Ar- bor was J. T. Abernathy who pick- ed up $50 for a stoneware bowl. J. T. has another bowl in the show which is big enough to hold punch for half the freshman class. A new direction in ceramics was own hby T.Rnhep4 n. of larly imaginative. There were, for instance, no interesting examples of enameling, But the ice tea spoons, bowls, pendants, and cuff. linky were carefully made, cer- tainly. Assorted textiles showed most strongly the so-called Cranbrook influence. Most prominent here is Marianne Strengell, whose excel- lent work is well represented. Subtlety in fabric was most evident here, John Risleey has a diverse as- sortment of woodwork including a chess 1set with charging pawns, praying bishops, meek kings, and fierce queens. Other woodwork was . 4 x