f 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 "ow Do You Think It Looks Fiom Over There" AT ARCH1TECTURE AUD: 'Western Front' . ltorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. .This must be notd in all reprints. RSDAY, MARCH 8, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: ERNEST THEOOSSIN Overconfidence Could Lick GOP Still Powerful APPROXIMATELY a quarter century has passed since "All Quiet On the Western Front" made its first appearance, but the film is still profoundly beautiful and moving. "Western Front" is basically a plea for pacifism, an outcry againkt the destruction and misery of war. With great simplicity it traces )RESIDENT Eisenhower is by no means "in" for a second term. Last Wednesday when President Eisenhower vealed his intention to run again most Re- iblicans began counting their November chick- is. Democrats tried to make the most out of id news by (under their breath) expressing >nfidence of at least controlling the Congress. Although pollsters say that at present 61% ' the people want Ike to rin again, three fore- oding obstacles loom in he way of his No- ember victory-losses he may suffer from cam- aign issues, the fortune of 'peace and prosper- y' in the next eight months, and GOP over- rnfidence. It takes 266 electoral votes to win an elec- on. Ike had 442 in 1952, but is likely to lose uch of his surplus on two issues-the farmers' light and the GOP's association with racial itegration. This could lose him 52 conquests i Indiana, Iowa and Kansas-Delaware, Mary- nd, Florida, Missouri, Oklahoma, Tennessee, exas, and Virginia. This would be a total loss of nearly 130 elec- ral votes. 'Peace and prosperity' are subject to fortune. lthough American troops aren't fighting any- 'here now, the situation in a sense could be alled a Pyrrhic peace-the communists are ourting in the Middle and Far East; Popular ront rumors are being increasingly heard in 'rance, Greece, and Italy. A brushfire war Let' Get Fa EFORE the American Legion rushes off on, more anti-Communist campaigns, it would 'ell be advisable for it to get its facts straight. In its lates escapade, it has attacked the niversity of Wisconsin, among other reasons, rying the campus Labor Youth League (listed y the Attorney General as subversive) spon- ored the mammoth anti-racial bias petition rculated at that university. "The fact that the petition.. . was sponsored y the LYL," Wisconsin Legion commander G. '. Sipple charges, "is a clear cut illustration f the fact that they invariably use a device ke this-supposedly justified-to further their ause." Actually, the Labor Youth League was prae- cally the only political organization. at the niversity which did not sponsor the petition. 'he LYL's name appeared nowhere in the docu- tent. In the same statement, Sipple goes on to at- ack the editorial policy of the student news- aper, the Daily Cardinal, for only, featuring egative opinions towards the McCarren-Wal- er Act. However, the editorial page he referred to ontains an editorial endorsing -safe driving rnd a statement concerned with the McCarren riternal Security Act-not the McCarren-Wal- er Immigration Act. As if this were'not enough, he goes on to ssail the university because it allows the abor Youth League to exist. in Korea, the Chinese straits, or elsewhere could knock the GOP slogan down to half size. The prosperity horizon looks stable, but the Democrats could capture many votes with their "Big Business-favoritism" attacks. THE DEMS leave the 'health' issue alone and impress upon the voters the urgency of strong and active leadership in the next four years they make make the most mileage. Few Republicans really wish Richard Nixon for sec6nd place on the ticket-except Ike, so it looks like he will be there. This -could be the GOP's most costly mistake. Because of apprehension about the President's health, vot- ers will eye the V.P. nominee carefully. A factor less predictable (but something which Thomas Dewey will tell you is significant) is that Republicans may feel too confident of an' Ike-led ticket, slacken the door-to-door cam- paign work and even forget to vote. The Democrats have their obstacles too, but they exist internally and can be solved. They are on the offensive and need be less cautious of statements and less fearful of the coming eight months. The GOP will assume a bragging defensive and hope that the.next eight months will sus- tain peace, prosperity, and the President's health. It will be a good race. -JIM ELSMAN lets Straight "THE COMMUNIST DAILY WORKER," he writes in bold capitals, and other publications boasted of the existence of the organization on our campus, and told of speakers appearing and the number of students present and the fine reception accorded the speaker." CONTRARY to the Daily Worker's implica- tions, the Labor Youth League on the Wis- consin campus has a grand total of three mem- bers.S And, at least according to the student news- paper, most of the audience attending its speeches come to jeer. . When the American Legion usually makes its charges, although everyone may not agree with the disposition with which the Legion meets the situation, most people may agree that the overt facts (for example, the number of people using the Fifth Amendment) are cor- rect. But when the specific facts referred to are out and out wrong, then the Legion does not have too strong a case. Perhaps if commander Sipple did not rely so heavily on the Daily Worker for his infor- mation, the Legion's charges would be more critical. But until the time comes when the American Legion will try to find out what it's talking about before it starts throwing charges around, its charges had best be taken with a grain of salt. -TED FRIEDMAN s.. ,',, t /jj 1 -.,.1 J'_ ^ 6 t , i-y :'.; cY' '.I~ (pow- the effect of death upon a group for fighting, hoping to win glory and triumph in the trench fight- ing of World War I. One by one the boys die, they die in the mud, in quiet little hos- pitals, in the burst of bombs. And in one of the most famous cine- matic scenes of all time, the last surviving boy is ironically shot while he reaches out to catch a butterfly. THERE IS NO USE denying that "Western Front" shows its age. Its sound track is often inaud- ible; its lighting is seldom ade- quate; its women look like buxom, cigar-box adornments; its dialogue is s(,metimes developed with an excruciating naivete, occasionally unbelievably so: these are tremen- dous handicaps for any picture, but the brilliance of "Western Front" overcomes them all. Some of the film's technical shortcomings actually add a feel- ing of pictoral and dramatic real- ism. For example, the present print is choppy and exhibits con- siderable frame jumps. Added to the dark-grained quality of the photography, it gives the illusion of newsreel shots. And the act- ing, which is usually delivered without any voice inflections, seems remarkably appropriate for the young boys. "WESTERN FRONT" manages to continuously avoid what has since become film stereotype. It has its lighter sides, its occasional slapstick episod'e, its romantic in- terlude, but these serve mainly as a contrast to the grim business of war that it is depicting. After picturing the bodies of young men being tortured, ripped apart and "destroyed for nearly an hour and three quarters, in its final, tragic scene-a soldier's dead hand reaching for a fluttering but- terfly on a barren field of war- it makes its point with terrifying force. No war movie has ever said more. AS PACIFISM has come and gone out of style over and over again, so has "Western Front." During the Second WorldY War, when Hollywood studios were- busi- ly acclaiming the nation's armed forces, it was seldom if ever shown. But pacifism is a subject of great delicacy, and "Western Front" ex- pounds pacifism with such ve- hemence, that it will probably al- ways lay in quiet vaults for long periods of time. Like any great masterpiece, it may not always convince, but it always demands that one consider what it has to say. -Ernest Theodossin DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN of young schoolboys who volunteer WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Morse Opposes Eastland By DREW PEARSON SOME significant backstage con- ferences took place before and after Sens. Wayne Morse of Oregon and Herbert Lehman of New York made their fight against Sen. James Eastland of Mississippi to be Chairman of the key Judiciary Committee. One conference took place the day before the Senate fight when a group of liberal Democrats tried to persuade Morse from taking a stand against Eastland. They told him he was sure to lose, was fight- ing a hopeless battle. "Eastland's friends will retaliate against you by cutting appropria- tions for public works,' Morse was advised, referring to the fact that public works are important to the Far West. "All you're doing is guaranteeing that I make the speech," Morse replied. HE WENT ON to argue that Eastland had virtually accused the U. S. Supreme Court of treason, therefore should not be in charge of judicial matters; that he had investigated the New York Times when other members of his com- mittee knew almost nothing about the investigation; and that in gen- eral Eastland had out-McCarthy'd McCarthy. To make a man of this type chairman of a committee which passes on 50 per cent of the Senate's legislation merely because of the accident of seniority, Morse argued, was a mistake. But of the Liberals present, only Neuberger of Oregon and McNam- ara of Michiganagreed to go along with him on a roll-call vote. Later from 7 to 8:30 that eve- ning Morse met with Acting Delio- cratic Leader Earl Clements of Kentucky and Sen. Hubert Hum- phrey of Minnesota who also urged him not to make the fight against Eastland. Next day Morse went ahead with the speech. He did not attack East- land personally, nor the right of Mississippi to send whomever it wished to the Senate. He did criti- cize the placing of a man at the head of the Judiciary Committee who would act as the spokesman of the entire Senate, yet who, he said, did not represent the Senate. Finally Eastland himself came out of the cloakroom and slid into a seat beside the Senator from Oregon who had challenged his right to be Judiciary Chairman. "Wayne," he said, "I feel badly that you were against me, but youI and I are lawyers, and I want to thank you for the high plane of your legal argument." And as usually happens in the U.S. Senate, the two men contin- ued to differ on issues but con- tinued to follow the traditions of the "world's msot exclusive club." (Copyright 1956, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) 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 be in by 2 p.m. Friday. THURSDAY, MARCH 8, 15 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 21 General Notices Late Permission: All women students who attended the Lecture Series at Hill Auditorium on March 7, had late per- mission until 11:10 p.m. Late Permission: All women students who attended the Speech Department Opera had late permission until 11:20. Meeting for all members and prospec- tive members of the Society for the Advancement of Management (S.A.M.) Thurs., March 8, 4:00 p.m., Room 225, West Engineering. The following student sponsored social events are approved for the coming weekend. Social chairmen are reminded that requests for approval for social events are due in the Office of Student Affairs not later than 12:00 noon on the Tuesday prior to the event. March 9: Alice Lloyd, Delta Sigma Pi, Delta Theta Phi. Phi Delta Phi, Sigma Nu, Theta Chi. March 10: Alpha Chi Sigma, Alpha Delta Phi, Alpha Epsilon Pi, Alpha Kappa Kappa, Alpha Sigma Phi, Chinese Students Club, Delta Chi, Delta Tau Delta, Delta Theta Phi, Gomberg, Kel- sey, Nu Sigma N, Phi Delta Phi, Phi Kappa Sigma, Phi Sigma Delta. Phi Sigma Kappa, Psi Omega, Sigma Alpha Mu, Sigma Chi, Sigma Phi Epsi- lon, Strauss, Taylor, Theta Xi, Van Tyne, Phi Delta Epsilon. March 11: Phi Delta Phi. Lectures Psychology Colloquium and University Lecture. Dr. Harry Harlow, George C. Comstock, professor of psychology, Uni- versity of Wisconsin. "The Macaque Monkey's Monthly Menl Maturity Measurement." Fri. Mard 9, 4:15 p.m., Angell, Aud. B. Concerts Teresa Stich-Randall, distinguished operatic star, who has made sensational operatic successes in Europe, will give one of her four American concerts in the Extra Concert Series, Fri., March 9, at 8:30 o'clock in Hill Auditorium. Tickets are available at the offices of the University Musical Society in Bur- ton Memorial Tower and will also be available after 7:00 o'clock on the night of the performance at the Hill Audi- torium box office. Academic Notices 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 appro- priate officials of their School, with Room 1513 Administration Building, where it will be transmitted. Organic Chemistr~y Seminar. 7:30 p. M., Room 1300 Chemistry Building. C. J. Verbanic will speak on "Solvent and Steric Effects on Hyperconjugation." Physical- Analytical- Inorganic Chem- istry Seminar. 7:30 p.m., Room 3005 Chemistry Building. Prof. R. K. Mc- Alpine will speak on "The Autooxidation of Iodine in Alkaline Solution." Mathematics Colloquium: Thursday, March 8, at 4:10 p.m., in Robm 3011 A.H. Prof. G. Kreise, of the University of Reading and Institute for Advanced Study, will speak on "Transcendental Proofs." 402 Interdisciplinary Seminar on the Application of Mathematics to Social Science will meet Thurs., March 8, Room 3401 Mason Hall from 4:0-5:30 pm. L. Kish will speak on "The Problems of Variance Computations for Cluster Samples." Interdepartmental Seminar on Applied Meteorology, Thurs., Mach 8, 4 p.m., Room 441 Natural Science Bldg. Prof. Samuel A. Graham will speak on "Forest Microclimates and Insect Populations."" Events Today The Magic Flute will be presented by the Department of Speech, the School of Music and the Department of Physi- cal Education for Women tonight at 8 p.m. in' the Lydia Mendelsoohn The- atre, Tickets are available at the Lydia Mendelssohn box office: $1.75-$1.40-$1.00. Late-comers will not be seated during the overture. Free Films: University Museums, 4th floor Exhibit Hall. "Grouse of the Grasslands" and "Happy Valley" (Nova Scotia). Daily at 3:00 and 4:00 p.m., including Sat, and Sun., with extra showing Wed, at 12:30. Through Feb. s._ rt t1 QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS:. 'Israel Will Survive in Mideast'-Efirnenco' TODAY AND TOMORROW: qh h The Farm Problem. IN A PRECEDING article, I discussed the fal- lacy of supposing that the problem of the farm surpluses can be solved in any serious measure by dumping surpluses abroad. We are left with the task of managing the farm problem at home. Needless to say, I do not know how to solve the farm problem. I know just enough about it, however, to' be reasonably certain that no solution of the problem is now, in sight, and that the best we can hope.for from the meas- ures being debated in Congress is that the ag- grieved farmers will get some degree of tem- porary relief. It cannot do any harm, and it might possibly lead to something useful, to ask ourselves-as if we had just arrived from Mars-what it is that we are trying to do. It transpires; I be- lieve, that we do not usually, if ever, say direct- ly what it is that we are trying to do. What we are trying to do is to provide the farm population with incomes which keep pace with the incomes of the industrial population. It is now an accepted rule, which no public man disputes, that the income of farmers must not stand still, much less may it fall, in rela- tion to industrial income. That is the mean- ing of what is called parity. Now the fact is that during this century- at least since World War I-farmers' incomes if left to themselves have tended to fall away from parity. To prevent this falling away from parity is the 'object of all the farm plans. They are at bottom of two kinds. One is to restore parity directly, the other is to restore it indirectly. T.HE DIRECT way would be to vote the farm- ers a federal subsidy to cover the deficit between the income they earn and the income which under the principle of parity they ought VALTER LIPPMANNI A direct subsidy system would work out some- thing like this. In the case of cotton, for ex- ample-where there is one of our largest and most stubborn surpluses-total market require- ments, both domestic and foreign, would be estimated for the crop year. Farmers would be assigned production quotas in terms of bales. Cotton would be sold at market prices and would no longer be supported at non-competi- tive levels. Subsidies would be paid directly to the farm- er to make up the difference between the price he sells his cotton for and the amount gie should receive to maintain his income in parity with the economy as a whole. Production limitations would be compulsory for those farm- ers who elect to receive the subsidy. This system would have many advantages over the present system. At prices which are competitive and meet the actual conditions of supply and demand, cotton sales could probably be increased. In any event they would not pile up in unused surpluses which are not only wasteful but by their very existence exerts a depressing influence on cotton prices and mar- kets. The cost of the subsidy to the government and the taxpayer would probably be lower through the elimination of storage and insur- ance costs and a reduction in administrative expenses. And finally, what is perhaps most important, the long-run adjustment of pro- duction and consumption would be improved. For such a subsidy system would rely on market prices to allocate the farmers' productive ef- forts more realistically. It seems to me that if the direct method is the easier to work effectively, we should not By MARY ANN THOMAS Daily Staff Writer IN A University classroom recent- ly, the professor prefaced his lecture with the remark that whereas he had previously thought it necessary to explain why study of the Near East is important, current newspapers are presenting even more pertinent reasons. News of tensions in the Near East is raising interest in an area hitherto unknown to the average American. Prof. N. Marbury Efi- menco of the political science de- partment, who teaches courses in international relations and the Near East, here reviews current problems in the area. Q. What are the possibilities of a permanent peaceful settlement of the Arab-Israeli situation? A. No kind of peaceful settle- ment is possible unless both sides are willing to accept some compro- mise formula and move away from the rigid positions assumed to date. A second solution might be found in pressure exerted by the Big Three powers to maintain peace and force Israel and the Arab states to draw a permanent boun- dary line. The Big Three might also guarantee the boundaries, which might require troops main- tained on Cyprus ready for action., Another Big Three responsibil- ity is to put pressure on Israel, Jordan, Syria and Lebanon to ac- cept development of a Jordan River Authority. A large-scale loan should be advanced to help start the project. Boundary lines will have to be readjusted to take into account in- equities of the present armistice lines which in many cases separate farm lands from the villages. A third solution might be the now prevents. Modern education will help to erase vengeance ideas and intransigent attitudes on the part of the Arabs. A final possibility would be a final round of war ending with the destruction of either side. Present conditions do not make this likely, however. Q. What are the views of the Arab states on the dispute? A. They believe the partition is invalid and refuse to accept Israel as a state. Secondly, they hold that the minimum price of any peace settlement is a return to the United Nations resolution for partition of 1947. The significance of this is that the present demarcation lines are based on the results of the Palestine War which netted Israel 220 square miles of territory. They also call for repatriation and compensation of Arab refugees who lost their property in the war, and they insist on the readjust- ment of the demarcation lines which separate villages from the farmlands. Q. What is the stand of Israel? A. The government of Israel of- fers a peace settlement based upon the principle of non-aggression pacts and does not favor any ces- sion of territory to the Arab states. It wants the present boundaries guaranteed by the western powers. Israel has been willing to permit families to be reunited but wants refugees to be settled in Arab ter- ritory. It has in principle admitted compensation with two conditions: That Israel be given an economic loan and that the Arab states re- move their economic boycott. Finally Israel says the Arab states must recognize the existence of the new state and treat it as an equal in the area. Q. Do you believe Israel will N. MARBURY EFIlMENCO e. "both sides must compromise" Q. Will the United States and/or Great Britain send. troops to the Near East to maintain peace? A. It is a possibility. In case the military strength of Egypt should present a danger of increased bor- der conficits and indicate a re- sumption of hostilities, it is likely that Anglo-American troops may be sent in. The drawback to this is Soviet criticism. The basis of Russian foreign policy is the attempt to de- stroy the basis for American troops on foreign soil. But if border hos- tilities increase, it would leave the Big Three no choice. Q. What is United States policy toward the Near East? A. We have not changed it fun- damentally since the partition of Palestine. We still base our policy on a peaceful settlement on mu- Soviet aggression and to extend economic aid to increase the pro- ductivity and standard of living in the area and thereby favor the growth of democratic institutions. Q. What is the significance of the Baghdad Pact? A. It aims at guarding the vital regions on the eastern and south- ern part of the Arab world by strengthening the northern por- tion and linking the area to the North Atlantic Defense Pact, of which Turkey is: a member. Actually, in strategic position, the inclusion of Iraq is a liability, but the Pact seeks to make a solid link in the chain of states from Scandinavia to Pakistan' Q. What are Russias objectives in the Near East? A. Soviet objectives in the area are largely misunderstood. From the record, Soviet policy appears to be basically mischief-making- to stir up nationalistic feelings in the area against the West. Other policies have been to send stiff notes'threatening dire consequenc- es if any state joins western pacts, and offering large favorable trade agreements and loans on a mu- tually favorable basis. Q. What are the basic problems in the Near East today? A. The basic problem is to carry out social and land reform pro- grams that would increase the standard of living on a wider basis. There must be some kind of corre- lation between technical improve- ments along with social welfare and planning, particularly at the village level. Another problem calls for train- ing of administrative staffs to develop standards of loyalty, effi- ciency and devotion to the public. The area also needs an increase in the size of foreign investments 4. 4( A