I 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 Remember Those Davy Crockett Caps You Had On Sale?' Ft- =e--It, 'en Opinions Are Free, Truth Will Prevail" :ditorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be. noted in all reprints. AlL f WS" I"URDAY, MARCH 24, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: GAIL GOLDSTEIN Faeulty Civil Rights Report Fair to Both Sides THE AAUP Committee report on faculty civil rights controversies is an excellent post- mortem of the University's actions of May, 1954. Suspensions and subsequent dismissals of H. Chandler Davis and Prof. Mark Nickerson caus- ed debate and dissension among University factions almost without parallel. When President Hatcher announced the Uni- rersity's.policy of "cooperation" (with investi- gating committees) those opposed to that policy regarded it as a total betrayal of the ideals of academic freedom. k As the hearings progressed nothing could persuade the President's antagonists that due process was being accorded. Nothing could persuade them that his actions could by any standards be valid. Perhaps for many of both sides the emo- ional involvement and the heat of the moment prevented them from seeing the forest for the rees. N The AAUP Committee has done a good job of seeing the forest. IN A SENSE their report is a vindication of the University's policies. Not that the AAUP agrees with the President's views -- they are still in steadfast opposition. The important point, though, is that they give credit, and ustly so, to opposing views honestly and sin- ,erely arrived at. In effect the report admits that on some of he basic issues it is possible for there to exist i reasonable difference of opinion among reas- mable men. The report credits the adminis- ration with basing its judgments on justi- itations "not necessarily invalid." It is by now a common platitude that differ- ence of opinion is the keynote to intellectual advancement-that free views must be allowed, above all, in the universities. AAUP appli- cation of this principle to differences of opinion as to what constitutes academic freedom it- self is noteworthy. The one disturbing point is failure of the University to grant severance pay. Although the committee condemned the University on this point it did not consider it a basic enough violation of their code to invoke censure. It is uifortunate the University failed to carry through the policies. of fairness it initially adopted. Their case would have been stronger if they had. THE AAUP report, titled Academic Freedom and Tenure in the Quest for National Se- curity, is a clear, coherent and logical ap- proach to a difficult problem. It defines the faculty member's obligations to his institution in terms which leave no doubt a clear obligation exists. Despite the risk of self-incrimination incurred the report claims faculty members have the duty of dis- closure to their administration. The report stands firmly behind faculty mem- bers who invoke constitutional rights before investigating committees or refuse to sign loyalty oaths. It should. The Committee has done a fine job. We urge adoption of its report both by the local branch of AAUP and by the national group when it meets in April. --LEE 'MARKS f ,I a f/ t I it ..-- 1 v 4 " x r. i7 . J" c, 1 J 700 TALKING ON TV: Gold In Them Thar TVY Films By LARRY EINHORN Daily Television Writer TELEVISION films (or as they are professionally known, vid- pix) are now an integral part of the television industry. In the early years of television, viewers were subjected to many kinescoped programs and poor quality films, both television films and regular feature films. The live program was in great demand. So most of the "big" shows were presented live. , Even the situation comedies of early television were live. Today you have to look a long way be- fore you can find a live situation comedy, or even a live half-hour dramatic presentation. * * * THE REASON for this big change is purely technical. Bet- ter quality filming processes were developed. Today you very rarely hear anyone criticize a television program because it is on film. This was not the case five years ago. There are obvious advantages in filming shows. If you goof, it has not gone on the air.' You can film shows far enough in ad- vance so you can take a vacation while the show is still being seen. And you can do a show in sec- tions, which eases preparation. But the major advantage in filming television programs is not so obvious. It can be summed up in one word ... M-O-N-E-Y. A brand new phrase has been coined because of television films -"re-runs." A re-run is a tele- vision show or series which has been filmed for network origina- tion and then, in a year or so, becomes available for national or local presentation again, and again, and again and again. "I LOVE LUCY" and "Dragnet" are the two prime examples. "The Lucy Show" and "Badge 714" are the old "Lucy" and "Dragnet" series. And every time this film is presented the original stars get more money. Surprisingly enough the public seems to like re-runs. According to a tecent rating both "I Love Lucy" and "The Lucy Show" were included in the top 10 of all na- tional television shows. To prove the profitability of re- runs "Dragnet," in some cities, is being shown for the fourth and fifth times under the banner of "Badge 714." In some cases per- formers are receiving more in- come from their re-runs than they are from their regular shows. The profitability is not limited to the television performers. Desi- lu, one of the big television film companies, now produces more film footage each week than does M-G-M. And local advertisers can capitalize on the success of national shows by sponsoring their re-runs locally. Unknown singers, actors and models who are fortunate enough to participate in a filmed commer- cial that is syndicated nationally can almost retire until the adver- tiser decides to drop that parti- cular commercial. If you really want to know where the yellow went look in the pockets of anyone who is con- nected with a successful television film. 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,pm. the day preceding publication. Notices for the Sunday edition must be in by 2 p.m. Friday. SATURDAY, MARCH 24, 1956 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 35 General Notices President and Mrs. Hatcher will hold an open house for University faculty, staff, and townspeople on Sun., March 25, from 4:00 to 6:00 p.m., at the Presi- dent's House. The University Club will hold its regu- lar annual tea in honor of members of the Faculty women's Club on Wednes- day, March 28, from 3:30 to 5:30 in University Club rooms in the Michigan Union. The tea will also serve as an open house for the remodeled quarters. All members of the faculty and their wives are Invited to attend. Academic Notices History 50 midsemester examination, Tues., March 27, 9:00 a.m.: Eggert's and solvick's sections in Natural Science Auditorium; Lurie's sections in 102 Architecture; Brown's and Milligan's sections in Aud. B, Angell Hall. Placement Notices PERSONNEL REQUESTS: The University of Pittsburgh, School of Retailing, Pittsburgh, Pa., announces scholarships. Harvard-Radcliffe Program in Business Administration, a 1 year graduate cur- riculum for women offers instruction in marketing, human relations, report writing, administrative practices, per- sonnel administration, etc. Some fel- lowships offered. The Girl Scouts of the U.S., National Headquarters, wants Women for Girl Scout Executive Careers. Family Service Agency of Genesee County, Flint, Michigan, offers Scholar- ships fox Graduate Study in Social Work. Martin E. Stegal & Co., New York, is looking for a young man or woman with a degree In Math or Actuarial Science who would be interested in an actuarial career in the pension consultant field. There is a book on Social Work Fel- lowships & Scholarships in the U.S. and Canada at the Bureau of Appointments The New York State Civil Service Dept. will conduct a Professional and Techni- cal Assistant examination on May 12. Correction Institutions of New York need Men and Women for Prison Guards, Criminal Hospital Attendants. New York State Civil Service announ- ces opening for Dentists, Pharmacists, Veterinarians, Nurses, Engineers, Archi- Itects, Construction Workers, Scientists, Statisticians, Accountants, Teachers, Social Workers, Artists. Board of U.S. Civil Service Examiners for the Detroit Arsenal announces ex- armination for Student Trainee in Engi- neering. U.S. Civil Service Commission an- nounces an examination for Criminal Investigator. Michigan Civil Service announces openings for the following positions, Accontant, Airport Engineers, Nursing, Student Engineering Aide, & Personnel Methods Trainee. For further information cpntact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admins- tration Bldg., Ext. 371. New Books at Library Allen, Dexter-Coil of the Serp- ent; N.Y., Coward-McCann, 1956. Boucher, Anthony, ed. - The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction; N.Y., Doubleday, 1956. Boynton, Mary Fuertes, ed.-- Louis Agissiz Fuertes; N.Y., Ox- ford University Press, 1956. Buke, Norah-Jungle Child; N.Y., Norton, 1956. . i4 1 :1 I WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Post-Primary Soul-Searching By DREW PEARSON TODAY AND TOMORROW: Foreign Aid Trouble t. THIS IS THE TIME when ,each year the President has to go to Congress, asking it to vote American money for the use of foreign governments. Congress is always reluctant to do this. But it has never been so reluctant as it is now. There are not only those who do not want to give away American money. This year, there are also those who, though they have been supporting foreign aid, are quite unhappy with the way it is now working. The administration will, it seems to me, do better if, in arguing its case, it takes Congress more clearly and candidly into its confidence.. The central fact in the whole business is that the old policy of foreign aid has now to be thoroughly reappraised and drastically revised -that these changes cannot be worked out before June 30 when the time for appropria- tions expires-and that Congress is really be- ing asked to keep the flow of funds going while a new policy is being worked out. Though almost nothing of the sort is said plainly in the President's message, this is what is im- plied in the request for greater "flexibility." Congress is, in fact, being asked to give the administration time and opportunity to work out the changes in foreign aid which have become necessary because of the great changes in the world situation. The administration, though it is aware that the policy has to be revised, is not now able to tell Congress what the revisions will be. Yet it is not safe to cut off the old program, to stop the flow of funds, and then to start all over again later on when the revised policy has been worked out. I would suppose that to argue the case this way would appeal to the coimon sense of those who are not opposed to foreign aid in principle but are unhappy about much of what is now happening. Our post-war foreign aid policy was origi- nally conceived at the time of the Marshall Plan in 19j7-'48. Since then there have been very greatchanges in the world situation. Then we still had a monopoly in nuclear weapons. We now have arrived at a balance of power which has produced a military stalemate. Further- more, when the United States foreign aid policy was first adopted, the Soviet Union had not yet emerged from its economic isolation to become a competitor in the economic world. There have been other great developmeits, such as the economic recovery of Western Eur- ope the reappearance of Germany and Japan as big powers, the rise of China as a great power in Asia, and a very large increase in the power of the peoples of South Asia and North Africa. We have come to the end of the time when the non-.Communist world is willing or is com- pelled to look solely to Washington for economic aid. We are living in a time when almost all of the countries which have been receiving aid from us feel that we have a competitor in the Soviet Union, and that they are now in a posi- tion to bargain with both of the two super- powers. THE MILITARY stalemate is having a pro- found impact on the whole business of mili- tary aid, which is, of course, the preponderant part of our existing program. In all the coun- tries which do not themselves have nuclear FALTER LIPPMANN I truly modern armaments--has produced, as it was bound to produce, various forms of mili- tary neutralism in the countries which do not have nuclear armaments. It seems almost cer- tain therefore, that our emphasis on military aid will have to diminish. The administration's foreign aid estimates to Congress do not show this change of emphasis. But there are al- ready signs of the change in the way Mr. Dulles has recently begun to talk about the Manila and Bagdad pacts. The emergence of the Soviet Union as an economic power in the world will require deep changes in our conception of foreign aid. We have thought of that aid as at bottom a con- tribution to consolidate our allies, and to pre- vent inflation and economic collapse which Communists would then be able to exploit. This conception is still, broadly speaking, valid in the countries that are wholly depend- ent upon us-in South Korea, Formosa and South Vietnam, But in India, the rest of South Asia, in the Middle East and North Africa, the situation is radically different. The countries there are not dependent upon us because they now have an alternative supplier of capital and technical aid. The emergence of the Soviet Un- ion as a competitor is one of the great historic developments of our times. It is altering radi- cally the position of the United States and of its European allies, and it is enhancing enor- mously the power of the native peoples who were once part of the old European empires. It is necessary to adapt our foreign aid poli- cy, and in fact our foreign policy, to a situation which no one took into account when post-war foreign aid was first conceived about eight years ago. This is that the uprising against the West, which has been smoldering, has now gotten the backing of the great power of the Soviet Union. We have to adapt our foreign aid to this competitive situation, which means, among oth- er things, that we shall not be able to attach many military and political strings to our con- tributions. Yet we shall have to go on with foreign aid. For we cannot refuse to compete, leaving to the Soviet Union by default a mono- poly in the under-developed countries of South Asia and North Africa. THE PRESIDENT says in his message that his program of foreign aid "is a demand of the highest priority on our resources," and "as fundamental to our own security and well-being as the maintenance of our own armed forces." This is, of course, true and it is an essential reason for continuing foreign aid. But it is not the sole reason. Beyond the urgency of obvious self-interest, the United States has, I hold, a moral obligation to the less fortunate people. We cannot justify the enjoyment of our high standard of living without helping other coun- tries to proceed along the same road. Without our help, the gap between the richer and the poorer countries is bound to widen. Although our obligation is humanitarian, it is not only that. We have a deeper moral ob- ligation. With less than 10 per cent of the non-Communist world's population, and only 8 per cent of its area, the United States is con- A LOT of soul-searching took place after the Kefauver sweep in Minnesota. It took place on several sides-some by the Re- publicans, a lot more by Steven- son leaders, perhaps most by Con- servative Democrats of the stop- Kefauver school. Here are some of the things they searched their souls about: Soul-searchers No. 1-The Re- publicans. Their vote in Minne- sota was less than half the total Democratic vote. This could be ex- plained by the fact that there was no real GOP contest. On the other hand, Eisenhower boosters used four times as much radio-TV time as Stevenson. So a haunting fear faces GOP leaders that the farm revolt goes deeper than they thought, that the Republicans who crossed over in hordes to vote for Kefauver may stay crossed over in November. Soul-searchers No. 2-The Ad- lai-ites. They now face some tough primaries, the toughest being Flor- ida and California. In both, Stever enson and Kefauver will be cam- paigning against each other, face- to-face. The situation in Cali- fornia is already shaping up like that in Minnesota where Adlai's boys got in early, lined up the chief leaders of the Democratic party, only to have this backfire. * * * IN CALIFORNIA, the stanchest Estes-ites of 1952 began jumping off his bandwagon for what they considered a sure winner-Adlai. Jimmy Roosevelt jumped. Con- gressmen Chet Holifield, Clair Engle, Fay Porter, all jumped from Kefauver to Stevenson. Only a small corps of devoted loyalists with no money and little influence stuck with Estes. Like Minnesota, the California party bosses were all for Adlai. From that inauspicious start, however, Kefauver stock in Cali- fornia has zoomed. Private polls taken by Stevenson in southern California showed the two candi- dates running neck and neck-and this was four days before the Min- nesota victory. In less populous northern California, Stevenson was ahead, but how he rates after Kefauver's Minnesota victory is anybody's guess. SOUL-SEARCHERS No. 3-The stop-Estes Democrats. They are led by Sen. Lyndon Johnson, Speaker Sam Rayburn, and Sen. Richard Russell of Georgia. The stop-Estes Democrats are inspired partly by personal jeal- ousy, partly by the fact that Kefauver leadership would take party control completely out of their hands. Some also remember that Kefauver was the only South- ern Democrat who stood up and voted for "cloture," the all-im- portant means of killing filibust- ers against the Negro on Civil Rights. What the Stop-Estes soul- searchers have to worry about, however, is that the Democratic Party has to fight a Presidential campaign with no dough in Demo- cratic coffers and with plenty of dough in Republican coffers. Ke- fauver has shown that he can do this. He is the only Democrat since Truman who by old-fashion- ed campaigning has offset the power of new-fangled Ike-TV cam- paigning. Another thing: Any Democrat who wins in November must be able to woo Republican voters. This political axiom was why FDR won in 1932. He wooed Republi- can voters. The converse was true in 1952 when Eisenhower pulled Democratic votes over to the Re- publican side. Kefauver appar- ently has this knack of wooing Independent voters. In Minneso- ta he polled around 50,000 more votes than Eisenhower. This 1s going to be tough for the Stop-Estes boys to overlook. (Copyright 1956, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) : .4 .4 I , LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Blames All White Men For Negro Murders 4 To the Editor: 1 FEEL that this letter is per- haps superfluous in view of Miss Judy Gregory's intelligent and convincing refutation of Mr. Reynolds' line of argument in his recent pointlessly abusive at- tack on Mr. Frymer. Nevertheless, I have a few points to make that I think are long overdue in the debate con- cerning Southern Negro-killing and desegregation problems. As far as Mr. Reynolds' epi- thets are concerned ("sadistic idiots"), I fail to see where the "sadistic" applies to Mr. Frymer or his able colleagues; but I can very well see how it could fit- tingly be applied to some South- ern thugs and hoodlums who have been permitted to intimi- date, persecute and even kill Negroes for a great many years and who are still doing so. The "idiots" too do not seem to me to be found among Mr. Frymer's friends but rather among those, who, against all precepts of sci- ence, reason and logic and in open violation of the very prin- ciples of Christianity, justice, equality and decency, still insist on treating the Negroes as sec- ond-class citizens, members of an inferior race, and among those who perpetrate or hypo- critically c o n d o n e outrageous crimes against individual Neg- roes or against the colored tors whose criticism of Northern- ers appeared not so long ago in the Daily. Knowing full-well that justice, morality and even the law are 100% against the beliefs and practices of the South, they take, refuge in a cowardly and hypo- critical position of "Let's wash our hands, of this (like Pontius Pi- late), we are not to blame. Please understand us. And don't do any- thing rash in order not to provoke hatred and bloodshed." What about the innocent blood that has already been shed? The point is, you are to blame! As long as even one innocent Negro is murdered and his assassins go unpunished, it is every white man's fault! You plead for time and understanding; but you have had time, 100 years almost, since the Civil War. And have you accorded the Negro any understanding? You and your an- cestors are to blame; they, for bringing the Negroes here in chains and selling them like hum- an cattle into slavery, you, only in so far as you're not doing any- thing to improve their lot. You are to blame for being complacent and apathetic! This is the only position I can see, the only Chris- tian position, the only just posi- tion, the only reasonable position. "Ah, but," you say, "think of the poor Southerners and their problems!" Frankly, I am no longer interested in their prob- lems. They have made their bed perhaps in a few other states, may be physically exterminated by the southern brand of storm- troopers or mentally and mor- ally destroyed in that ignomin- ious mockery of justice that some Southerners have the ef- frontery to call "law courts." Furthermore, calling these heinous crimes "the mistakes of a few," as Mr. Reynolds did, seems to me utterly ridiculous. If it were only a question of a few thugs, then why did the so- called "judges" and "juries" who tried the Till and Melton cases acquit the men everyone knew to be brutal assassins, with the apparent public approval of the white populace in that state? Why do the few decent and lib- eral editors, lawyers and church- men among Southern whites have to fear for their jobs, their property, their safety and even the safety of their wives and children? Why was mob-rule in Montgom- ery, Alabama, permitted to pre- vail in the case of the Negro coed, Autherine Lucy? And why is the Negro not accorded equality be- fore the law in education, oppor- tunity or anything else, anywhere in the "deep South?" Another ridiculous contention is that of the faint-hearted who claims that the use of force to back up the law would only increase violence and even promote "another Civil of the fanatics, the Neo-Nazis and all those who advocate and prac- tice open and violept defiance of the law. For this kind of defiance is as surely "un-American," un- lawful and subversive as the acti- vities of the Communists! There can be no question of any "civil war." Once the trouble- makers and fanatics were under control and a firm precedent were established at some point, it is perfectly obvious that the majori- ty of Southerners (who might not like desegregation but who are probably more or less reasonable and law-abiding people) together with the (small) group of those who are intelligent enough to know what is right and brave enough to fight for it, would then gain con- trol of the situation, which, up to now, has unfortunately been domi- nated by the hot-heads and the worst reactionaries, at least, in some states. Such a precedent, sorely needed, would make it possible for mod- erate, enlightened and cooler heads in Dixieland to work out, in co- operation with responsible Negro leaders, a reasonably gradual and equitable policy of compliance with the law, backed by the moral and physical force of the nation. In conclusion, I.would like to make one very serious point all Americans would do well to con- sider. About 20 years ago the Germans ran "amuck" under 14 many of them in Russian slave- labor camps, and their land badly dismembered, much of it now in the hands of their traditional Sla- vic enemies, and controlled by Communists at that! It i$ as Jesus of Nazareth said! "All those who take the sword, will perish by the sword." (St. Matthew, 26) Already far too many men in the South have "taken the sword" for far too long a time! We white men of the West, all of us, Europeans and Americans alike, are again faced with a ter- rible threat to our entire way of life and civilization. It is up to us Americans now! We can save our world or we can lose it. We can convince the untold millions in underdevol- oped lands that we are sincere, that we are their friends, that we really believe in all the fine principles of freedom, justice and equality, etc., which we are always verbally proclaiming. Or we can convince them of the fact that we are still a chip off the old (British) block, that we are still the arrogant white men of old, the Anglo-Saxon "hypo- crites," as many millions of for- mer and present colonial people, rightly or wrongly think of us. Let us just remember that every time one Negro is murd- ered in Mississippi, more than } h A 4a k . .x I