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 'You Got Your Course Charted Yet?" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. FI SNp TUESDAY, MARCH 13, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: DICK SNYDER Two Big Issues This Week Important to Future Student THIS IS AN important and, in a sense, fright- ening week. Two opportunities to make contributions to- ward. bettering the general lot of future Univer- sity students will be either accepted or rejected soon, probably today and tomorrow. The Residence Halls Board of Governors and the Student Government Council are nearing decisions on respective proposals to revise appli- cation policies regarding the role of race and religion in freshman roommate assignments and to defer the sorority rushing period. A common concern and philosophy seems to run through both proposals. First of all, if enacted they will both mainly affect future students-those entering residence halls and those contemplating pledging sororities. Secondly, both proposals seek to move in the direction of greater conformity to the consider- ed judgement of the individual student. The Residence Hall Governors are being asked to include in their room applications questions which will better.determine the student's (and his parents') attitude toward rooming' with someone of another race or religion. Just as important, they are being asked to declare as their policy the intention to respect those wishes-be they opposed to such a roommate, favoring one, or of the opinion that race and religion are not important criteria. The an- nouncement of such a policy would serve two purposes. It would provide a valuable guide to those making roommate assignments. And it would encourage those incoming students filling out the application to fully consider their an- swers, because they would know those answers would be respected in the assignment of room- mates. Past practices of making assignments with race and religion as important criteria can be explained away 'as being based on inadequate information on student and parental attitudes. The Board of Governors has been asked to better ascertain those attitudes. To fail to do so, or to fail to indicate that those attitudes will be respected, will be interpreted by many as being an announcement that the Residence Hall Governors seek to impose what appears to be segregation on those who have stated (or would have stated if only asked) that they do not desire it. THE DEFERRED sorority rushing proposal also attempts better determination of the considered wishes of the student, but it recog- nizes that unlike racial and religious questions, the sorority question is one completely new to the experience of incoming freshmen women. The decision to rush is often made on the basis of absolutely no experience with the University situation regarding independents and affiliates. Pledging decisions are made with only a few weeks of such experience, crowded in with the necessary preoccupation with mat- ters of adjustment to University life. The chances of "getting into the swing of things" appear greatest if the woman pledges her freshman year, allowing a maximum of the sort of sorority life described in the movies and by hometown alumni. All that deferred rushing asks is that the freshman woman be made to, feel she is not risking the loss of important advantages if she takes a semester to consider and compare the two ways of life here at the University. For sororities to claim that deferred rushing may hurt them in reaching their quotas seems to be a rather sad admission that if the woman is not hurried into a decision, if she takes her time about deciding between the two ways of life, she is less likely to choose affiliation. BECAUSE THEY propose to give the student greater control over his or her own course at the University-free from unwarranted assump- tions regarding roommate preferences, free from ignorance of two systems which must be chosen between-the decisions expected today and tomorrow make this week important. They make it frightening, too, in that count- less -months of effort by the Human Relations Board and the Panhel-Assembly Rushing Study Committee could easily end in frustration. It can only be hoped that the Board of Governors and SGC will take advantage of the opportunities they are being offered to improve the lot of the future University student. -PETE ECKSTEIN a.'V - .C' *r 4 $, M. k :..r . Zf_.:.wh "7 .T 1 :..Y_- _ _ , t= .. -^- , ." 'I. K- K;°P4b- " K Reb ' ''-': ."'4.p !k T'?V ch'"W'z 's t. t j , __ 1 z 3 .-4.- - s~ f . ... . ....Mi ~aT Y- t WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Bridges Stalling Gas Probe By DREW PEARSON: Conressional Roadblock SENATOR Harley Kilgqre's sudden death and oblivious to the talents and character of the the rigid 'seniority' rule recently combined men concerned. to place the Congress's most arch segregation- ist In a position of power. HEN the Democrats hold the Congress the The Senate could best forego a hoary tradi- effects of 'seniority' are seen in their worst tion when the likes of Mississippi's Senator light. ,'Safe district' congressmen, mostly from James Eastland began chairing the Senate the South, can roadblock the will of the major- Judiciary committee'. ity. Their thought is invariably ultra-conser- manaioa poe-vative and narrow. The national interest is Constitution trampler and national spokes-not seen bythem. Their obligations are only man for the South's racist White Citizen's to their constituents who make them 'safe'. Councils, Eastland can now virtually block the Also, many potentially great public men are appointment of integrationist Federal judges- hesitant to run for Congress because of the Supreme Court et al. All civil rights, immigra- guild system of advancement-the apprentice- tion, and internal security legislation must pass ship to power and influence. his bigoted eye. Blame for the scope of East- Lastly, 'seniority' inhibits the responsibility land's sway can be laid at the disproportion- of a congressman to his party. His position is Btepowesuofcommitterchirdmag gsh dsecure whether he toes the party line or not. But that such an anarchical demagogue should Perhaps enough public concern over Senator capture a committee chairmanship is the fault Eastland's new job could convince both the of a hallowed Senate tradition which auto- GOP and Democratic parties that a better plan, matically gives key committee posts to congress- considering only party allegiance and ability men who have served the longest number of in chairman selections, would be a boon to both consecutive years on a committee, the Congress and responsible government. That is the 'seniority rule'-as it operates, -JIM ELSMAN O NE MONTH has now passed since Senator Lyndon John- son of Texas, the handsome Sen- ate Democratic Leader, lashed out at Republican Senator Case of South Dakota for impugning the integrity of the Senate. Since then various moves and countermoves, stalls and counter- stalls have been made in the pro- cess of protecting the fair name of the Senate, but its name re- mains even less protected than on the day meek Senator Case'opened wide the Senate Pandora's Box of political constributions. One of the most likeable mem- bers of the Senate is Styles Bridges of New Hampshire-also one of the most astute. Being skilled in the ways of Senators, Bridges seldom gets out on the firing line. He can oper- ate better backstage, with other Senators fronting for him. He has friends on both sides of the aisle, can usually work with Demo- crats as well as with Republicans. For a man of Bridges' power and prestige to step out on the firing line as a member of both Senate investigating committees, therefore, is highly unusual. It means that the investigation of gas-oil contributions is so im- portant either to the Republican Party or to Eisenhower or to Bridges himself that he is not going to trust anyone else. In- stead he, the ranking Republican, stepped in and exercised his right to sit on both the George Special Committee probing the Case offer and the Select Special Commit- tee supposed to probe the entire field of lobbying. * * * T H I S UNUSUAL move on Bridges' part struck Capitol ob- servers as strange at the start. As ' the story unfolded, however, it be- came more understandable. For it eventually leaked out that Elmer Patman, lobbyist for Super- ior Oil, who had splashed the money around for Senators in South Dakota, Iowa, and Nebras- ka, listed expenses for two trips to New Hampshire to confer with, Senator Bridges. This came out one month after Bridges got himself appointed on the George Committee and select- ed his personal friend, Charles Steadman, as committee counsel. It came out only after Patman's expenses, showing trips to Con- cord, N.H., were made public, fol- lowing which Senator Bridges was queried by newsmen and admitted one of the Patman visits. Patman's expense accounts showed two vis- its. er to his conscience or to his col- leagues to step aside and not serve on the two committees. On the contrary, he decided that he must serve. The conclusion seems unmistak- able, therefore, that the tactic of the likeable Senator Bridges in stalling the wider investigation of the select committee is deliberate and calculated. What the public is entitled to know, is why the stall? The politically wise already know that Bridges is a big money-raiser for the GOP. 'Thus, if the gas lobby was contributing to the gen- eral GOP campaign fund in addi- tion to such individual states as South Dakota, Iowa, and Nebraska, the lobby would likely do it through Bridges. . * * ON THE OTHER HAND, if El- mer Patman merely wanted to con- sult Bridges about the timing of the gas bill he weld do it by telephone, not take a long trip to New Hampshire. But if he wanted to contribute to the Republican Party, he would make a special trip. Cash, which was what the Superior Oil lobby used in South Dakota, Nebraska, and Iowa, can't be sent easily by mail. These are questions already raised in the public mind which it's entitled to have answered. (Copyright 1956, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) LETTERS to the EDITOR Curiosity . . To the Editor: SUNDAY, at three, We lawyers did see A-comin through the quad, Three girls alike Out on a hike- Hey, ladies- Where was ya' going'? What was ya' doin'? When's ya' comn' back? -Howard Moldenhauer, '56L Controversy Coming ... To the Editor: THE Unitarian Student Group has invited that dean of con- troversy, Paul Blanshard, to speak to the faculty and students of this University. Mr. Blanshard will deliver a talk entitled "Book Burning and Lit- erary Censorship." (Here it is- controversy right at our doorstep!) Mr. Blanshard and his lecture have been approved" by the University Lecture Committee. He has seen more on the issue of censorship than the banning of "Robin Hood" from an occasional public library. The role of pressure groups and "hysterical politicians" in deciding what shall and what shall not be read by the public has assumed such tremendous proportions that Mr. Blanshard and others feel it has seriously interfered, with our right to be informed. While neither Mr. Blanshard nor the Unitarian Student Group is dedicated to spreading controver- sy for its own sake, we are ap- palled by the lack of attention given to the existence of "clear and present danger" to our ideas of free thought and the open ex- pression of it. I personally feel that the right to hold opinions must extend to the right to have access to opinions, however weird or inane they may appear to re- actionaries and/or radicals. What Paul Blanshard says to his audience Wednesday evening may, antagonize some people on this campus, but it can only an- tagonize those who dislike having their opinions challenged. One of Mr. Blanshard's virtues is that he consistently provides his listen- ers with the evidence on which he bases his views. Mr. Blanshard is the author of "American Freedom and Catholic Power," "The Irish and Catholic Power" and "The Right to Read." Perhaps the success or failure of his visit to the campus will be an indication of the fate of future efforts to deal with controversial issues at this University. -Dave Nelson, '57 Questions Criticism . . IN REPLY to Mr. Tsugawa's critique on the Rubenstein con- cert, I would =like first to quote from Edgar Allen Poe's "The Mys- tery of Marie Roget." "We should bear in mind that, in general, it is the object of our newspapers rath- er to create a sensation-to make a point-than to further the cause of truth.- The latter end is only pursued when it seems coinci- dent with the former. If they print which merely falls in line with ordinary opinion (however well founded this opinion may be), it earns for itself no credit with the mob. The mass of people regard as profound only him who suggests 'pungent contradictions of the general idea. II ratiocina- tion, not less than in literature it is the 'epigram' which is the most immediately and the mosl universally appreciated. In both it is the lowest order of merit." If Mr. Tsugawa's biting sar casm was meant to be an obJective appraisal of his views on the per formance, this is to be commendec as a furtherance of the freedor of the press. However, if the criti cism was merely to cause a furo and widen circulation, such acri monious remarks seem to be ir very poor taste. Genius should no, be immune to criticism, but genius should be recognized in the ful light of honest and intelligent ap praisal. -H. Arthur Hoverland, Grad. Good Paper .But - . To the Editor: YOU PUBLISH the best univer sity newspaper I have seen i this country. Your coverage o international, domestic, and col lege news is in excellent balance I especially like your feature piece s.uch as the opinions and interpre tation of Michigan's own foreigi students. Will you make a brief note o correction? In your March 9 report of m; talk your columns said, "Dr. Clin chy pointed out that extreme ag gression can result in world de struction. Hate not communise is the real danger." That is no quite accurate. I do believe tha 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 be in by 2 p.m. Friday. TUESDAY, MARCH 13, 1956 VOL. LXVI, NO, 25 General Notices Petitioning for thie Delta Delta Delta local scholarship closes wed., March 14 at 6:00 p.m. Applications, accompanied by three letters of recommendation, should be returned to the Office of the Dean of Women by this time. winners of the two $125.00 scholar- ships will be announced at League Installation Night on April 16. Disciplinary Action in cases of student mlscondtict: At meetings held on Jan. 10, Jan. 19, Feb. 16 and March 6, 1956 involving 15 students were- heard by the Joint Judiciary Council. In all cases the action was approved by the University Sub-Committee on Disi- pline. Violation of state laws and city ordinances relating toathe purchase, sale and use of intoxicants: Conduct unbecoming a student: a. Attempting to purchase intoxicants with falsified identification. One student fined $40 with $20 suspended. b. Attempting to purchase intoxicants with borrowed identification. One student fined $20. c. Attempting to purchase Intoxicants with a falsified draft registration card (third offense). One student fined $30. d. Attempting to purchase intoxicants with false identification and acting In a drunk and disorderly manner. One student fined $20. e. Drinking in student ,quarters and appearing drunk and disorderly on the street. One student fined $10. f. Presenting false identification at a local tavern in an attempt to secure intoxicants. Two students fined $15 each. Violation of University automobile regulations: One student fined $20 (fourth offense) and warned that future misconduct would result in severe pen- alties; one student fined $15 (second offense); one student fined $15 (third offense); two students fined for driving after drinking, $15 and $20 (second of- fense). Conduct unbecoming a student: a. Presenting false identification in or- der to gain entrance to local tavern, without an attempt to purchase in- toxicants. Two students fined $5 each. b. Loaning T.D. card to another student in order to gain entrance to local tavern. One student fined $500. Lectures Ben S. Morris, Director, National Foun- dation for Education in England and Wales will lecture Tues., March 13, at 4:00 p.m. in the University Elementary School Auditorium on, "Selective versus Comprehensive Secondary Education in England" Auspices of the School of Education and the Psychology Depart- ment. Sociology Colloquium: The Sociology Department will present a talk by Louis Moss of the British Social Survey on "Social Research for the British Gov- ernment" on Tues., March 13 at 4:10 p.m. in Aud. A, Angell Hall. Open le- ture. iConcerts Virtuosi Di Roma, Renato Fasano, conductor will give the ninth program in the current Choral Union Concert SSeries Tues., March 13, at 8:30 p.m. in 7Hill Auditorium. A limited number of tickets are available at the offices of J the University Musical Society, Burton Memorial Tower, and will also be on sale at the Hill Auditorium box office at 7:00 the night of the performance. Faculty Concert: Program of Baroque Music by Nelson Hauenstein, flute, Florian Mueller, oboe, and Marilyn Ma- son Brown, harpsichord, 8:30 p.m. ed., March 14, in Aud. A, Angell Hall. Coi- positions by Loeillet, Telemann, Quantz, and Frederick the Great. Open to the general public without charge. , Academic Notices Results of the language examination for the M.A. in history are posted in the office of the Department of History, 3601 Haven Hall. Contest for the Bronson-Thomas Prize in the Department of German will be held on March 20. All applicants are requested to register at the German r office, 108 Tappan, by Fri., March 16. 1 Medical College Admission Test. Ap- t plication blanks for the May 5 adminis- s tration of the Medical College Admis- sion Test are now available at 110 Rackham Building. Application blanks - are due in Princeton, N.J. not later than April 21, 1956. If you expect to enter medical school in the fall of 1957, you are urged to take the test on May 5, 1956. * Law School Admission Test. Applica- tion blanks for the April 21, 1958 administration of the Law School Ad- - mission Test are now available at 122 n Rackham Building. Application blanks are due in Princeton, N. J. not later than April 11, 1956. Chemical Physics Seminar, Tuesday, ,g March 13, 4:10 p.m., Room 2308 Chem- istry Building. Prof. J. 0. Halford will - speak on "Internal Rotator Energy Levels. fMathematics Club: Tues., March 13, at 8 p.m. in theW est Conference Room, Rackham Building. Prof. W. F. Eberlein, y visiting Professor at Wayne University, - will speak on "Functional Quadrature." - Seminar in Conflict Resolution (prob- - lems in the Integration of the Social n Sciences, Economics 353) will meet in )t the conference room of the Children's ,t Psychiatric Hospital at 3 p.m. Tues., . March 13. Dr. J. E. Bardach will snnk r 11 r r * * * BRIDGES did not, however, vol- unteer this information as the Senate investigation first began, nor did he use it as an excuse eith- SON OF DISMISSED OFFICER: 'Mideast War Will Involve World' , INTERPRETING THE NEWS : Red Farming in Final Phase I By TOM WHITNEY AP Foreign News Analyst THE KREMLIN has now launched the de- cisive phase of its 39-year war against the Soviet peasant. The objective is to transform the entire Soviet agricultural population into landless wage laborers who work for the state. On Saturday the Soviet government pub- lished in Moscow a new set of directives to collective farms. The most important points were instructions to reduce sharply the size of private garden and house plots belonging to Soviet collective farmers and to limit-and eventually end-the rights of farmers to own private livestock. Collective farmers make up the overwhelm- ing majority of the Soviet rural population. With their families they constitute nearly half the total, population. At present by far the greater part of the land is farmed collectively by members. The distribution of products from collectivized lands is closely controlled by the state. A big chunk goes to pay taxes. Some more goes to pay for the collective farm bureaucracy which runs the farms, nominally for the members but actually for the state. A part goes for capital investment, maintenance of the farm, crop in- surance, seed funds and similar expenditutes. C~~c trht s nf n n f ral hpn m- out of 1,094,855 rubles money income in 1954 the members of the farm got altogether as compensatioi for their work 110,701 rubles- around 10 per cent. On a very few farms the portion of money income paid out to members is as high as 45 to 66 per cent. THIS MEANS a large percentage of collec- tive farmers cannot live on what they get for work on the collective and survive by farming small private plots of land left to them around their house and from private livestock consisting often of a cow, a pig and some chickens. The new Communist directives aim to reduce drastically the size of these plots and eliminate the private livestock. The goal is to force the farmers either to work all the time on collective fields and be completely dependent on the state or else get off the farm entirely and work in factories. This is a bitter pill for the Soviet farmers. The Kremlin knows this, however, and is try- ing to sugar it. It has prepared carefully for this step by raising considerably in the last three years prices paid to farms for their pro- duce. It has enlarged the collective farms by merging small farms into big ones. It has sent thousands of city executives and Communist party personnel into the collectives and By MIKE KRAFT Daily Staff Writer PASSING unnoticed in the furor caused by Jordan's King Hus- sein firing the British commander of the Arab Legilon, Lt. General John Glubb, was the simultaneous dismissal of three Jordan Army officers. The highest ranking of the oust- ed trio is Colonel Salim Karachy, whose son Waleed is a. Michigan student. In his first year at the Univer- sity, the stocky Jordan student is an intriguing conversationalist, combining his remarkable grasp of American idioms with his force- ful gestures to make a point. Showing no reluctance to relate his views, The Van Tyne House resident said the firing of General Glubb stemmed from more than the King's dissatisfaction with the Britisher's alleged refusal to re- organize the Legion to meet any Israel aggression. * * * "GLUBB WAS the controlling power in the Jordan Army," the 22-year-old student explains, "and* the presence of the Englishman was a barrier to Arab unification. By firing Glubb, King Hussein. satisfied the strong nationalists in both Jordan and the other Arab officers. During the 1948 fight- ing, he related, "The troops under my cousin's command gained con- trol of Jerusalem in two hours, but then some 'higher-ups' sudden- ly ordered them to withdraw.It was the British who were con- trolling the Army." "WHAT THE ARABS want," he said, "is the removal of the British shackles, so they can unite to form one power and be free from chains." He discounted the possibility of Russia moving in where the Brit- ish-and Americans-are forced out. "We do not want to free our- selves from one chain only to be caught by another." He added that the Russians are anxious to gain control over the oil rich region. "Each pro-Israel action by the Western powers hurts their stand- ing with the Arab nations. "The problems of the Middle East will be settled best if the other nations stayed outside the ring." He emphasized that "with- out the fires being fanned by out- siders, including both the West and the Reds, the tensions would gradually ease and both sides would find it easier to be rational." Mentioning the problem of the Arab refugees, Waleed asked, "How would you feel if you were sudden- t, -Daily-Vern Soden WALEED KARACHY . . "only natural to want your home." three years at the London Hospi- tal Medical School as a medical technician. Also during the same period, the 20-year-old King Hus- sein attended Sandeers, England's West Point. WALEED'S FATHER then re- turned to Jordan to serve as Chief Education Officer, the position he held when fired. Waleed also re- turned to Jordan, in May, 1954, and worked as a medical techni- cian. I