fk A£ir1 4gan :dal 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 ... Then Longen Folk To Goon On Pilgrimages" - ry- -, :n Opinions Are Free. rutb Will Prevail" fitorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. ESDAY, MARCH 27, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR, LEE MARKS -, _ Three Weapons in World Conflict: Military, Economy, Ideology N WASHINGTON today a review of the fundamental character of American foreign policy is being undertaken by the various gov- ernment and political elements concerned. A major consideration in this discussion is whether or not the United States should cease. emphasizing military alliance as a criterion for determining allotments of economic aid, turn- ing instead to long term economic aid to combat the Soviet new look with its bland offers of friendship and economic and technical aid, no apparent strings attached. Although it is encouraging to see a move toward less reliance on the purely military as- pects of foreign policy, the current debate does not reach the core of the failings in the conduct of foreign affairs. What is needed today is a renaissance in the quality of American foreign Poliey. " The present global conflict is being fought with three weapons-military force, economic power, and ideologic persuasion. In the military field, the United States can hold its own and in all probability has a slight edge over the Communists. Economically,, we can certainly outdistance them. This nation is potentially* the powerhouse, the industrial plant, the gran- ary of the world. In resources and ability, none can touch us. It is in the sphere of ideology that we have been found wanting. America is currently losing the battle of ideas. We are particularly in bad shape in that part of the world which stretches from the Dardan- elles across the Indian sub-continent, through the sprawling Southeast Asian peninsula and islands, along the East Asian coast to the tight little islands of Japan. This vast area is in the throes of a great social, economic, and political revolution. In a sense, America provided the impetus which started this revolution. The United States is the greatest revolutionary nation the modern world has seen. The masses of Asian people who are now in the various phases of throwing off shackles of one kind or another are taking their cue from what happened along the eastern seaboard of this continent in 1776. The tragedy of the affair is that we are no longer the undis- puted leaders of this revolution but are rapidly losing leadership to the Russians and Com- munism by default. Our failing lies in the fact that we have let the Soviets pervert the meaning of the word revolution. They have stolen our thunder right out from under our noses and we have allowed them a monopoly on the use of the word. 1T MIGHT be well to note what his dynamic word revolution signifies. It usually connotes a drastic and often violent method for disposing of a despised oppression when other methods fail. But there is more to it than this. A true revolution does not end when M~e violent out- burst subsides. It continues, producing a marked effect on the entire social structure of the nation or culture undergoing the revolt. Revolution, to have any significant meaning, must have as its purpose the building of a better state dedicated to the advancement of the welfare of its citizens. In these terms revolution for rebellion's sake alone is worse than no revo- lution at all. Overthrowing oppression without a design for establishing a new order of stability can only result in anarchy and chaos. The greatness of. the American Revolution does not arise from the art of revolt itself but rather from the stable order which evolved after the fighting was over. Today, most of the young nations of Asia have finished their fighting and are in the early days of their struggle for na- tional stability. The idea which we must promote, first at home, and then abroad through the mechanism of foreign policy, is that we are not trying to model'Asian nations after the United States nor are we forcing them to be mere partners in a military alliance for our own defense. Rather, we should promote the concepts of independence and self-determination as out- lined in the Declaration of Independence and point to our own history of a growth of political stability, not demanding that others be like us, but encouraging them to do as we did. Our foreign policy should'be aimed at stim- ulating these young and vigorous nations into channeling their efforts into areas where it will strengthen and ultimately stabilize their own political, economic, and political institu- tions. Where we can be of assistance in a material way, we should offer. As many nations do not have the material advantages our country had in its youth, America should provide them with as much help as is reasonably possible. THIS, in many instances need not be huge sums. Indeed, indiscriminately lavish spend- ing can wreck a developing economy. Spending, like energy, must be directed in proper amounts to places where it will do the most good. Above all, such assistance can not be tied to military agreements. If economic aid is to be given at all, it must be given in the spirit of encouragement to use it wisely for the building of a strong nation with foundations resting solidly upon its own cultural values. American policy must emphasize inde- pendence, self-determination, and stability as the reasons behind assistance. The day of Teddy Roosevelt's "speak softly but carry a big stick" has passed. The United States must not be so naive and foolish as to throw away the big stick of military force. Keeping it within quick reach will be an evil necessity for a long time but we need not rely on it as our main weapon for foreign policy. Nor should economic power alone be utilized. The leaders of the new Asian nations cannot be bought. But they can be encouraged both materially and ideologically to stabilize the political order and provide an important ele- ment in the maintenance of peace. In this effort, America, with a revival in ideas, her most valuable export, can regain her posi- tion of positive and progressive leadership. In this we must succeed, for our own safety and for the survival of the new nations against the encrochment of communism. Success lies in the proper meshing of the tools of military, economic and ideological power at a given time as the situation dictates. The call now is for ideologic leadership back- ed by realistic economic assistance and holding military force in reserve in the hope that it need not be used. -DICK HALLORAN 'U' Approval of AAUP Report Commendable THE RECENT report of the AAUP Committee on Academic Freedom and Tenure in the Quest for National Security will come up for a vote on April 6 in St. Louis. In essence the report summarizes faculty civil rights action at 21 schools and universities, lauding some, condemning others. The Univer- sity was one of ten schools discussed but for whom no recommendations were made. The Executive Committee of the University's branch of AAUP has approved the report and Prof. Ferell Heady, the University's delegate to the convention, has been instructed to vote for its acceptance. The Executive Committee's action was well- taken. It is to be hoped the report is accepted quickly by the AAUP in St. Louis. It is a credit to the organization. -LEE MARKS AT THE STATE: 'Man' Is Excellent War Film "THE MAN Who Never Was" is a true story of espionage during the second world war. Adapted from the best seller of the same name by Ewen Montagu of the British intelligence office, the film tells the story of how the British convinced theGermans that they were going to attack Greece, not Sicily. * '' " ' THE JOB OF devising some ruse fell to Montagu (Clifton Webb). The plan he put before his super- iors was this: to dump the body of a man carrying the identification of a British major and some per- sonal letters pinpointing the fake attack in Greece into waters off the Spanish coast. A German agent was to get hold of the papers and report them to his superiors, who would move troops away from Sicily, leaving that island more open to attack. As Webb-Montagu says, he has a rougher time convincing the top' brass than the Germans. 'But he finally gets the all-clear from 10 Downing Street. From this point onward, the film proceeds with documentary-like precision and objectivity, yet hu- man, warmheated character de- lineation. Webb strides through the problem of finding a suitable body and transportation for it with mili- tary accuracy, yet he is very much human when dealing with the father of "Major William Martin" and when going through the grisly business of dressing the corpse during a bombing. The film's biggest liability is Gloria Graham, who has been horribly miscast as Webb's secre- tary's roommate and "Major Mar- tin's fake girl friend. She invari- ably looks as if the makeup man had carefully dipped her in oil before each take, and her acting is consistently overdone. Stephen Boyd, playing the Ger- man counter-espionage agent whose assignment is to check up on the authenticity of "Major Martin," does an extremely fine job, although his role is confined to the last part of the film. THE PICTURE'S major virtues lie in its understated account of the mechanisms of the war of brains rather than weapons. It puts its emphasis on those who stand and wait and for the most part avoids the emotionalism and histrionics of the usual saga of men at war. It has used the documentary ap- proach with great care and to good advantage, and becomes unrealis- tic only when it turns to overplay- ed sentimentality. It stands as an excellent and believable account of how wars are often won in an office, rather than on a battlefield. -Tammy Morrison New Books at Library DeHartog, Jan-A Sailor's Life; N.Y., Harper,1956. Dreiman, David-How to Get Better Schools: A Tested Program; N.Y., Harper, 1956. Engle, Paul & Martin, Hansford -Prize Stories 1956; N.Y., Double- day, 1955. Heyer, Georgette-Bath Tangle; N.Y., Putnam's, 1955. Hoagland, Edward-Cat Man; Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1956. Hoffman, William-The Trump- et Unblown; N.Y., Doubleday, 1955. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND:i Jonson ampan Details By DREW PEARSON< 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 27, 1956 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 37 General Notices 1' ON MARCH 21, Drew Pearson reported that Carl O. Hanson, Montana director of the Farmers Home Administration, had been buying wool for private interests while working for the government; had also engaged in politics in vio- lation of the Hatch Act; and had used government phones for politi- cal activities. On March 23, Carl 0. Hanson resigned. HERE ARE more details on how the giant Brown and Root con- tracting firm, which has received many lush contracts from the gov- ernment, contributed to the first Senatorial primary of Lyndon Johnson, now Democratic Leader of the Senate, and then deducted the contributions from income taxes. The case history is important for several reasons. First, this un- fortunately, is a practice used by other companies. They hand out bonuses to vice presidents, then re- quire that a percentage of the bonus be contributed to a certain pet candidate. Afterward, that candidate, if elected, is in hock to the company. It controls his vote, which is why the Congress today, more and more, is losing its inde- pendence. Second, the Brown and Root history is important because they. were active during the gas bill debate. George Brown entertained Sen. Lyndon Johnson and other bigwigs at his Middleburg, Va., estate on weekends, came to Wash- ington between weekends. * * * FINALLY, Senator Johnson has exerted his influence to sidetrack the original forthright probe of the gas lobby proposed by Senator Hennings (D-Mo.), and is now ex- erting his influence against the re- cording of political contributions in primary campaigns. Yet, it is primaries, including his own in' Texas, that really elect Senators in about one-third of the states. In Johnson's own Senatorial primary in Texas in 1941, Internal Revenue agents discovered that Brown and Root had' issued the following checks through their sub- sidiary, Victoria Gravel Co., to Edgar Monteith,an attorney in Houston: $5,000 on May 26, 1941; $4,500 on June 7; another $3;000 on June 7. Monteith then used a compli- cated, roundabout way of using the money. He distributed $10,000 of it as a profit between himself and his law partner, A. W. Baring. Then Baring transferred the entire $10.000 back to Monteith, and Monteith, in turn, wrote checks to pay the expense of *the Lyndon Johnson campaign; When Johnson was given a chance to explain this, he said he had never heard of Monteith and never received financial help from him. However, Monteith's father was the former mayor of Houston and a well-known personage. * * * INTERNAL REVENUE agents found that the Second National Bank of Houston microfilmed all checks, including these, and that Monteith unquestionably had used the money to pay for radio time, printing bills, and other Johnson campaign expenses. Internal Revenue agents also found on Brown and Root's books an interesting list of bonuses paid to its vice presidents and other officials at the exact time of the Lyndon Johnson primary election. There was no explanation for these sudden bonuses, and the em- ployees who received them could give no adequate explanation. Nor could they show any furniture, homes, automobiles, etc., for which they used the money, despite the fact that they cashed the bonuses on the same day they got the checks. Yet today, Senator Johnson, a victim of the terrific cost of raising money in a primary, does not want primary expenses and contribu- tions made a public record. More on the Brown and Root case tomorrow. (Copyright 1956, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Automobile Regulations, spring recess: The automobile regulations will be lifted when classes are completed on Fri., March 30. 1956, and will become effective again at 8:00 a.m. Mon., April 9. Student Activities Scholarship appli- cations may be picked up at the Student Government Council office, Quonset Hut A; or at the Scholarship Division, Office of Student Affairs. Up to $450 will be awarded. Deadline for filing applications is April 15. My Very Own, 1955 Hopwood Award Play of the Department of English, written and directed by Beverly Can- ning, Grad., will be presented by the Department of Speech Wed. and Thurs., March 28 and 29, at 8 p.m. in the Lydia Mendessohn Theatre. Lectures University Lecture, auspices of the Department of Romance Languages. "L'Esprit du dix-huitieme siecle," in French. Prof. Gilbert Chinard, President of the Modern Language Association of America. 4:15 p.m., Tues., March 27, Rackham Amphitheater. Readings by Members of the English Department. Prof. R. H. Super, "The Poetry of John Donne," Tues., March 27, Aud. A, 4:10 p.m. University lecture: Proessor Richard Waterman of the Department of Anthro- pology, Northwestern University, "West- ern African Music" on wed., March 28, at 4:10 p.m., in Aud. A, Angell Hall. Illustrated with recordings. Sponsored jointly by the Department of Anthro- pology and the School of Music. Wed., March 28, Prof. S. D. Atkins, of Princeon University, University lec- ture, auspices of the Department of Classical Studies and the Committee on Linguistics, at 4:15 p.m., in Aud. C of Angell Hall. "The Theocritean Pastoral: Ingredients and Structure." Academic Notices Reading Improvement Classes. Regis- tration for the April series of 7-week reading classes will be held Wednesday through Friday, March 28-30, from 8:00 to 11:30 a.m., and 1:00 to 4:30 p.m., and Saturday, March 31, from 8:00 to 11:30 a.m.' at the office of the Beading Im- provement Services, 524 University Ele- mentary School. Call university exten- sion 648 for further information. Regis- tration will require one hour. Preliminary Examinations in English: Applicants for they Ph.D. in English who expect to take the preliminary exami- nations this spring are requested to leave their names with Dr. Ogden, 1634 Haven Hall. The "old style" examina- tions will be given as follows: English Literature from the Beginnings to 1550, Tues., April 10; English Literature, 1550- 1750, Sat., April 14; English Literature, 1750-1950, Tues.; April 17; and American Literature, Sat., April 21. The "new style" examinations will be given as follows: English and American Litera- ture, 1550-1660, Tues., April 10; 1660- 1780, Sat., April 14; 1780-1870, Tues., April 17; and 1870-1950, Sat., April 21. The examinations will be given in Angell Hall, Room 2203, from 9 a.m. to 12. Seniors: College of LS&A, and Scool of Business Administration, Education, Music, and Public Health: Tentative lists of seniors for June graduation have been posted on the bulletin board in the first floor lobby, Administration Building. Any changes therefrom should be requested of the Recorder at Office of Registration and Records window Number A, 1513 Administration Build- ing. Applications for admission to the Joint Program in Liberal Arts and Medicine must be made before April 16 of the final preprofessional year. Application may be made now at 1220 Angell Hall. Students intending to take preliminary examinations for the doctorate in Lin- guistics should notify Prof. Marckwardt before March 30. These examinations will be given on May 11 and 12. Notice to Freshman Men enrolled in Physical Education. Men who were en- roiled in beginning golf during the fall semester may now transfer from their present activity to Intermediate Golf. These classes will meet outdoors one day per week for a two-hour period. Fly and Bait Casting classes are also avail able to men currently enrolled In Physi- cal Education for Men. All transfers may be made in Room 4, Waterman Gymnasium. Sports and Dance Instruction. Women students who have completed their physical education requirement and who wish to elect classes may register on Tues. and Wed., March 27 and 2s from 8:00 a.m. to 12 noon on the main floor, Barbour Gymnasium. Instruction is available in tennis, swimming, diving, life saving, synchronized swimming, ballet and modern dance. Seminar in the Resolution of Conflict (Problems in the Integration of the Social Sciences, Economics 353) will meetTues., March 27, in the Conference Room, 3063, of the Children's Psychiatric Hospital. Dr. George Levinger will speak on "Conflict Resolution in the System of Kurt Lewin." Mathematics Colloquium: Tues., March 27, at 4:10 p.m., in Room 3011 Angell Hall. Prof. A. L. Shields will speak on "Semigroups onLa Manifold with Boun- dary." Tea and coffee in 3212 A.H. at 3:45. Doctoral Examination for Calvin War- ren Lane, English Language and Litera- ture; thesis: "Narrative Art and History t9 I ,ti 4 .1 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Readers Offer Differing Points of View INTERPRETING THE NEWS: RepTercussions in Moscow By TOM WHITNEY Associated Press Staff Writer IN DENOUNCING Joseph Stalin the present Kremlin leadership may have started some- thing it won't be able to stop. The "collective leaders" have set in motion a re-examination of Soviet history in which they themselves were intimately involved. It may be they are doing this in full confidence there is nothing in their own personal records of which they need to be reticent or ashamed. A leading American authority of the USSR suggests that one of the reasons for revealing Stalin's crimes now may be that the present leaders retained a Leninist morality throughout the years they served Stalin. This Communist "conscience," he feels, may have emerged after Stalin's death as a force driving them to expose his real record. If this is true Soviet Communists and the Soviet citizenry may understand and respect it and accept Nikita Khrushchev as the leader of the new era. T COULD also be that the Kremlin leaders by convicting Stalin of blunders and crimes plied, according to this account: "What could we do? There was a reign of terror." There is certainty that Russians will accept that as a satisfactory answer. It is certain that many are asking themselves where Khrushchev, Nikolai. Bulganin, Anastas Mikoyan, Georgi Malenkov and other leaders were when Stalin was doing his purging. N 1936 the important Bolshevik leaders Leon Kamenev and Gregory Zinoviev were tried in the famous treason trials and shot. In January 1937, Nikolai Yezhov was named commissar for state security and the purges begin in earnest. Before it was over several million were victims, In December 1938; Stalin decided to call it off. He brought Lavrenty Beria up from Georgia and put him in charge of the secret police. Beria purged the purgers, including Yezhov. 'Khrushchev during these crucial years was the Communist party chief in Moscow. Like other Soviet leaders during this bloody period he denounced openly and repeatedly the "trai- tors" who were executed. ' Georgi Malenkov was closely associated with the great purger, Yezhov. In 1934, before Kor- 'Anti-Intellectual Vote' To the Editor: IN FRIDAY'S Daily Murray Fry- mer bemoans the Stevenson fail- ure in Minnesota and asks: "Why is a man who has won such wide support among our educators and educated people unable to appeal similarly to the nation as a whole." There are two interesting (and unwarranted, methinks) as- sumptions here. One is that Stevenson's appeal to the whole nation was proportion- ately smaller than his academic appeal. I just don't think this was true in 1952-as Frymer suggests. For example on this campus Stev- enson probably received about the same percentage of votes as he did nationally . . for though I per- sonally do not likerit I believe this university community, like most, gave more votes to-Ike than to Adlai. (If you study the vote in Ann Arbor precinct by precinct in that election it is difficult to as- sume otherwise.) Frymer writes that "college men . . . cannot be optimistic about their own chances in the political battlefield." Per- haps in view of the support which non-intellectuals (to be mild about it) like Eisenhower received and continue to receive from supposed- intellectuals the sentence should be revised to read, "The political gressional leaders who did not vote for the sectional interests of. an immediate constituency but who thought, acted, and voted in terms of the total welfare. To either con- sciously or unconsciously think of his as having less concern for in- tellectual problems or the total community well-being than his distinguished primary opponent is less than accurate. To this point witness Kefauver's differentiation on the parity question between the family-sized farm and the large corporation-owned factory-in-the- field. Kefauver is trimming Stevenson because Stevenson'has been trim- ming his sails. Apparently deter- mined riot to repeat 1952's "errors" Stevenson's present campaign has been managed by the professional polticians. The results in his ap- proach to many issues, particularly racial discrimination and segrega- tion, have been apparent. Kefauver has never trimmed his sails to suit the timidity of the professional pols, the recalcitrance of an ugly Southern old guard, or the ques- tionable ethics of big-city ma- chines. This is why he lost the 1952 nomination. This is why he is win- ning it in 1956. This writer 'worked hard for Adlai in 1952-nor was I dissatis- fied with his campaign and its content. However the key to the Minnesota primary is found in Frymer's statement about Steven- son in 1956: "His call to reason and moderation . . . is not much different than President Eisen- hower's." Exactly! And many Min- nesota voters apparently felt this an accurate statement, anti chose to vote for a more liberal, con- sistently more liberal, candidate than Stevenson. By my personal lights this is a cause for rejoicing, Inot the sour note Frymer struck. 'The Minnesota vote cannot be in- terpreted as an anti-intellectual vote. Bob Marshall N~ew Investigatio ... To the Editor: T IS encouraging to note that the SGC, having completed investi- gations into the automobile prob- 3'- i k] :. ,.: ~ fl