1 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 "Want.A Lift?" hen Opinions Are Free, Truth Will Prevail Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. . - t: - " t . " - , s-f ft + A . y , L - ,f. .-' ' '" - tt " a _ AY, APRIL 29, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR, MARY ANN THOMAS f Richard Nixon's Decision: Two Views- Changing Principles !how No Definite Stand f{ICHARD NIXON is a peculiar personality. People either endorse him whole-heartedly r they can't stand him. There seems to be omething profoundly unreal about the Vice- 'resident which provokes violently negative eactions, and yet there is something else that .as drawn people to his side like a magnet. He's almost like a big-business smooth-talk- ig advertising man in politics. He represents nothing. True, the Democrats ccuse him of being extreme right, but his ecord does not bear this out. He will just as eadily support the left-wing one day as he as supported the extreme right the day be- ore. It somehow seems difficult to picture .im with a set of hard ideals, either good or ad. He's just "likable" in the sort of over- weet radio commercial sort of way. . It has been pointed out that if someone. ould coin the word "Nixonism" it would have o meaning. Nixon stands for nothing. His speeches when analyzed, say very little, ut have the folksy huckster flavor of a TV ,uizmaster. For example: AND REMEMBER folks, Eisenhower is a great man. Folks, he is a great man and vote for Eisenhower. is a vote for what is opd for America." Even more of the subtle ad copy-writing echnique stands out in the following passage. "I have just been thinking what would have appened if Mr. Stevenson had been President or the last three years. We,'of course, do not now the answer to that question, but of these. rinciples I am sure: Indecision, weakness, re- reat and surrender do not bring peace in deal- ig with dictatorial, aggressive Communism." Here one sees the same trick that the soap ompanies and patent medicines use-when the eeling is left that something has been said hen actually there was nothing said. One lust read the passage twice to realize that ixon has not even come close to accusing tevenson of indecision and weakness. Nixon is the epitome of the yes-man: shal- w, open, and able to switch instantaneously rom one set of principles to another. Nixon's plan to seek re-election with Eisen- ower is regretable. If the Eisenhower-Nixon eam is elected for another four years, Eisen- ower's health makes it likely that Richard ixon may someday find himself President of his country. America needs something more han a hot-shot non-entity at its helm. -TED FRIEDMAN As Political Leader, Nixon Gets Results VICE-PRESIDENT Richard M. Nixon an- nounced his candidacy for renomination this week and there appears to be no one this week. Although his record may appear unimpressive to many, there are good reasons why President Eisenhower calls him "a great leader of men" and the rank-and-file Republi- cans favor him over other candidates. It is not for his views that he is favored, for they are indeterminate. It cannot be for what he has accomplished for that has been primarily in the line of maneuver and, be- yond this, has been very little publicized. But Richard Nixon is admired as a person. He embodies much that is held in high esteem by Americans, especially in the middle class to which he belongs and which is recognized by the Republican Party as its best .source for. members. He is young, loyal, frank, and enter- prising. More than anyone else, he has set the poli- tical style of the Eisenhower Administration with its stress on public relations and sin- cerity. He improvised the campaign formula of 1952, "Korea, Communism-corruption-con- trols," and was the leading strategist in that election. There is little doubt about his capacity as a. political leader. He gets results. Were it not for him, the President's first tax, program would have been torn to shreds in the House Ways and Means Committee. Chairman Daniel Reed of New York finally called off opposition to the bill after swords with Nixon. NIXON HAS been particularly useful at times when the President could not count on regular Republican leadership. When the Asia-first Republicans complained about the Korean truce negotiations; Nixon was success- fully able to gain their support for the settle- ment, one of the Administration's most prized accomplishments. He cannot be classified as either a right-wing or a left-wing Republican. He is therefore able to act valuably as an intermediary. Although Democrats see Nixon as a reac- tionary, isolationist, and a trifler with national security, his record shows he has been as liberal as most Democrats on issues of federal funds for construction, school aid regulation of trusts, and even more, liberal on civil liberties. There undoubtedly will be campaigns to get other Republican leaders to enter the vice- presidential race at the party's national con- vention in San Francisco this August. How- ever, with the President's support, there ap- pears to be no;man who can defeat him. There is no need for the,President to take the second best when he can have the best in the form of Richard Nixon. -DIANE LABAKAS ..z~ .. , .. , : >j C P16 0- , kl. s 0- -91 . ^ r y \ P0 'rMt LETTERS to the EDITOR Art Coverage . To the Editor: THIS IS to express my apprecia- tion of the excellent coverage the Daily has been giving the Museum's art exhibitions in recent weeks. I can assure you it has* made a big difference to us and to our student public. Incidentally, would you be kind enough to brief Mr. Thomas Bern- aky and others who handle our shows to be more explicit in their communication, and attribute ex- hibitions to the Museum of Art and not just to Alumni Memorial1Hall? Alumni Memorial Hall is a place, merely, and naturally has nothing to do with the processes of plan- ning, arranging and paying for art exhibitions: all this is done by the Museum of Art, and good jour- nalism demands no less than com- plete and accurate reference in such matters. The Daily has high standards, but it may as well aim at the top as at a point somewhere beneath it. I am sure you will instantly agree to all this', but in case you wonder how I got this way I men- tion that long before I became a professor and a museum director at the University of Michigan I was an art reporter and an assist- ant art critic on both the Boston Herald and the oldNew York Her- ald, and myself learned the funda- mentals the hard way. -Jean Paul Slusser Frivolous Attitude . . To the Editor: WE WISH to voice our hearty ap- proval of the recent letter wrtten by Mr. Walsh of the Law School. He has described the prevailing attitude among the law students with the perceptive abili- ty possessed only by those who have received an authentic liberal education from the Ivy League schools we respect so much. Personally we have been doing as much as possible to further these objectives. The Law Club is the center of the frivolous at- titude, aid for that reason we have moved to an apartment where we can more fully devote our time, not only to the daily assignments, but to independent research as well. Students of The Law must de- vote full time to their studies if they are to later help in preserv- ing a well-ordered society. For that reason we are doing the fol- lowing, to wit: boycotting the forthcoming "Crease Ball" and re- moving the offensive advertise- ments which destroy the dignity of that edifice so graciously donated by W. W. Cook. We are initiat- ing a movement whereby all law students shall turn in their I.D. cards and refuse to attend those athletic events' which disrupt a well-organized study program. Recognizing the fact that some social activity is desirable, as well as the mixing of the sexes for limited purposes, we are advocat- ing Saturday night lectures by prominent faculty members on the importance of the lawyer's wife in furthering the career of her spouse. -Roger A. Law, '57L -James F. Sams, '57L on -- tVWS6 .lg 4we"4A)MN kJ cr GO WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Butler: AmN r By DREW PEARSON REPUBLICANS and Democrats may cut each other's throat, but there's, one thing they're neut- ral about-calling me a liar. Us- ually the Democrats, however,, reach for more headlines in hurling their epithets. Paul Butler, chairman of the Democratic National Committee, had some4t ings to say about neu- trality and veracity at a recent session of the Democratic National Committee. Nettled by Kefauver's charges that he had leaned toward Stevenson, Butler told assembled Democrats: "I want you to know that I have 'been, neutral, I am neutral, and I will continue to be neutral. And I deeply resent anyone saying that I'm not neutral. "I don't like to single out a member of the press," Butler con- tinued, "But Drew Pearson has published a completely erroneous set of facts." *. * BUTLER THEN emphatically denied that he had had anything to do with forcing Mary Farmer to withdraw from the Kefauver delegation in New Hampshire, as reported by this column March 5, after she had joined the staff of the Democratic National Commit- tee in Washington. "Miss Farmer wasn't contacted by me either directly or indirectly, but resigned on her own initiative," Butler said. At the luncheon which followed, Chairman Butler came over to the table where Mrs. Myrtle McIntyre, Democratic National Committee- woman from New Hampshire, was seated with Ted Dudley of CIO- PAC, Mrs. Clara Shirpser, a com- mitteewoman from California, and Mary Farmer, the girl who retired as a delegate in New Hampshire. Mrs. McIntyre turned to Miss Farmer. "Mary." she asked in Butler's presence, "Didn't I call you and tell you Paul Butler had told me that you had to leave the delega- tion in two or three days or you couldn't keep your job on the Na- tional Committee?" * * * "YES, YOU DID," replied Miss Farmer. "Butler, however, stood by his denial. But Mrs. McIntyre was insistent. "Paul, you told me that," she repeated. "I put her on the dele- gation and you told me I had to take her off. How could I forget what you said? It was of the ut- most importance to us in New Hampshire that she stay on. Yet you now deny that it ever hap- pened." "I'm positive I'm right," re- plied Butler. "Only one of us can be right," replied Mrs. McIntyre, "and I'm positive that I'm right." MRS. McINTYRE considered setting the facts before the en- tire committee when it resumed after lunch, but Martha Ragland of Tennessee dissuaded her. NOTE-A Republican who has also differed from me recently is Elliott Bell, publisher of Business Week, when I reported that he had ambitions to become Secretary of the Treasury in the next Eisen- hower cabinet. Mr. Bell tells me he has no such ambition, that he is very happy running Business Week, is not reorganizing its staff with a view to eventual departure, and intends to remain in and on that job indefinitely. IKE WENT out of his way to recognize correspondents of small newspapers at his last press con- ference. He gave an early nod to Sarah McClendon-of various small Texas papers, who has sometimes had a hard time getting recognized in the past. He also recognized Larry Ferns- worth of the Concord, N'.H., Moni- tor, and put off Scotty Reston, head of the New York Times Bureau, until the last question. Reston, who has probably got more questions answered at press con- ferences than many newsmen, kept popping up for recognition but Ike gave the others a turn be- fore getting around to him. (copyright, 1956, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) 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. SUNDAY, APRIL 29, 1956 VOL. LXVIII, No. 58 General Notices Petitioning for the Joint Judiciary Council will open Mon., April 30 and close Fri., May 11. Petitions may be picked up in 1020 Administration. Veterans who expect to receive edu- cation and training allowance under Public Law 550 (Korea G. F. Bill) must fill in VA Form 7-1996a, MONTHLY CERTIFICATION, in the Office of Vet- erans' Affairs, 555 Administration Build- ing, between 8:30 a.m. Tues., -May 1 and 3:30 p.m. Friday, May 4. Science Research Club May meeting' in the Rackham Amphitheatre at 7:30 p.m. on Tues., May f. "Some Sampling Plans for Use in Life Testing," Cecil C. Craig - Mathematics: "A Second .Look at Sea..lamprey Control in .thp Great Lakes," James W. Moffett -/ZoOlogy; U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service. Dues for 1955-56 accepted after 7:10 p.m. Election of officers, Concerts Student Rectial: Phyllis Legband cellist, recital at 4:15 p.m. Sun., April 29, in partial fulfillment of the require- ments for the degree of Bachelor of Music. Mrs. Legband is a pupil of Olives Edei, and her program will be open to the public. She will be assisted by Helen Mendelson in Vivaldi's Sonata in E minor fro Cello and Piano, and Brahms' Sonata in F major for Cello and Piano. Student Recital. william Cole, tenor, at 8:30 p.m. Sun., April 29, in Aud. A, Angell Hall, recital in lieu of a thesis for the Master of Music degree. A pupil of Chase Baromeo, Cole will per- form compositions by Mozart, Beethov- en, Schubert, Brahms, Wolf, Faure, Rachmaninoff, Tschalkowsky,, Moussor- gsky and Prokofieff. Open to the gen- eral public without charge. Faculty Concert: Robert Courte, viol- ist, and Lydia Courte, pianist, at 8:30 p.m. Tues., May 1, Rackham Lecture Hall, in a program of compositions by Beethoven, Brahms, and Ross Lee Fin- ney. Open to the general public with-, out charge. Academic Notices Aeronautical Engineering High Alt- tude Seminar. L. M. Jones of the Upper Atmosphere Research Group will speak on "Instrumentation and Results of Michigan Rocket Methods, III" on Mon., April 30, at 4:00 p.m., in Room 1504, East Eng. Bldg. 402 Interdisciplinary Seminar on the Application of Mathematics to Social Science Mon., April 30, Room 429 Mason Hall from 4:005:30 p.m. Prof. M. O. Kendall (London School of Economics) will speak on "Further Contributions to the Theory of Paired Comparisons" Open to public. Doctoral Examination for Robert William Buggert, Musicology; thesis: "Alberto da Ripa,rLutenist and Com- poser," Mon., April 30, East Council Room, Rackham Bldg., at 4:00 p.m. Chairman, L. E. Cuyler. Doctoral Examination for William Ar- thus Bradley, Civil Engineering; thesis: "The Determination of Moments and Deflections in Plates by the Moire Method and by Finite Differences with Application to the Square Clamped Plate with Square Cutouts," Mon., April 30, 307 West Engineering Bldg., at 1:00 p.m. Chairman, B. G. Johnston. Events Today Free Films. "Nature's Half Acre" by Walt Disney. 4th, floor Exhibit Hall, Museums Bldg., April 24-30, at 3:00 and 4:00 p.m., including Sat. and Sun, with extra showing Wed. at 12:30. Placement Notices The following schools will have repre- sentatives at the Bureau of Appoint- ments to interview teachers for the school year 1956-57. Monday, April 30: Wayne, Mich. - Teacher needs: Ele- mentary; Elementary Art; Elementary Music, Vocal; Elementary Instrumental (with violin) Music-man pfd.; Driver Training; Junior High Vocal Music; Junior & Senior High Social Studies/ English; Math/Science; High School Librarian. Tuesday, May 1- Flint,'Michigan-Teacher needs: All fields. East Detroit, Mich.-Teacher needs: Elementary; Elementary Speech Correc- tion; Junior High Comm./Math; Art/ English; English/SS; Boys' Special Room; Mech. Drawing; Gen. Science/ Math; Handicraft/Art; Vocal Music/ Girls' Phys. Ed.; High School Wood Shop; English; Comm. Law/Typing; In- strumental Muise; Vocal Music; Social Studies; Economics; Girls' Phys. Ed.; Reading; Librarian; Art/English; Math. Walled Lake, Mich. - Teacher needs: Junior High English/Social Studies; Art; Science; Algebra/9th Grade; Math; Gen. Business; Home Economics; Li- brarian; Senior High English; Social Studies; English/Social Studies; Driver Ed.; Math; Biology. Saint Clair Shores, Mich.-Teacher needs: Elementary; Elem. Vocal Music; Girls' Phys. Ed. Consultant; Junior High Math; Junior High Vocal Music. Wednesday, May 2: Battle Creek, Mich. - Springfield School - Teacher needs: Elementary. Pontiac, Mich. - Teacher needs: Ele- mentary; English; Art; Visiting Teacher; Girls' Phys. Ed. Wyandotte, Mich. - Teacher needs: Elementary (Kdg. to 6th); Junior High Social Studies; Speech Correctionist; Librarian; Mentally Handicapped (man); Art/Music (Elem); Physical Ed/ V :4 .1 -.4 INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Foreign Aid and the UN By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst THIS IS A MOMENT in world history where a concrete display of American altruism might go far toward creating a situation which democracy would have a better chance to ex- pand, and communism a lesser one. There is one way in which such a display might be attempted toward which Congress and successive administrations have been cold. That would be to turn over as much or all of foreign economic aid to the United Nations. PRESIDENT EISENHOWER barely touched on it at his lews conference last Wednes- day. 'He said he favors having the United Nations take a more active interest in the handling of foreign aid. He didn't spell it out. An active interest might consist of a contribution of advice from UN agencies already at work in the field. It might result from larger participation by k*t Editorial Staff DAVE BAAD, Managing Editor MURRY FRYMER JIM DYGERT Editorial Director City Editor DEBRA DURCHSLAG ................ Magazine Editor DAVID KAPLAN ............ .......... Feature Editor JANE HOWARD................. Associate Editor LOUISE TYOR ........................Associate Editor PHIL DOUGLIS ......................... Sports Editor ALAN EISENBERG ,............Associate Sports Editor JACK HORWITZ .............. Associate Sports Editor MARY HELLTHALER.............. .. Women's Editor ELAINE EDMONDS ......... Associate Women's Editor JOHN HIRTZEL .................. Chief Photographer Business Staff DICK ALSTROM...................Business Manager BOB ILGENFRITZ .......Associate Business Manager KEN ROGAT.................... Advertising Manager MARTY WEISBARD .................Finance Manager MILT GOLDSTEIN................Circulation Manager the United States in the work these agencies are doing. 1 HE UNITED NATIONS has a small program almost parallel to the American economic aid program. The UN activity is largely financ- ed by the United States. But the United States, by will of Congress, wants to keep strings on its major expendi- tures i nthis field. It has used the foreign aid program to enforce observance of its other policies by foreign recipients. For that reason, some countries like India have accepted help only with reluctance. They don't like the attitude of "See, it pays to line up with America." It runs against their pride and. their philosophies. They react the same way Americans would if some giant business founded a university purely for the purpose of turning out only capitalist-minded gradu- ates. T HERE IS ALSO a sneaking suspicion that the foreign aid program, especially if it develops the long-range aspects now proposed, will not be a complete success until it looks less like pure self-interest. Secretary Dulles addressed himself to a con- nected idea when he suggested the European satellites might begin the road back to self- determination by sticking to Titoistic com- munism while weakening their connection with international communism directed from Mos- cow. Vast areas of the world are going through a revolution, intent primarily on independence, willing to take chances with international com- munism's help as against the already experi- enced effects of Western colonialism. A MERICA'S alliance with Western colonial ft. JUST TWICE EVERY YEAR: Visitor's Day in The East German Zone A (EDITOR'S NOTE: David Learned is a University student studying under an exchange program at the Free Uni- versity of Berlin.) By DAVID LEARNED JUST TWICE every year western visitors are received in the Ger- man Democratic Republic. Out- side of these two times the iron curtain becomes quite a tangible thing to anyone who has a desire to visit a part of East Germany. Leipzig, the city with a longer than 700-year fair tradition, is the one city to which western visi- tors to the Russian Zone are al- lowed relatively free access. Leipzig today is to western visi- tors very much the town Germel- shausen of the German version of the "Brigadoon" legend. It ap- pears only for a short while at very long intervals, and then dis- appears again under its political swamp until the next fair. At the time of the fair, every- thing is cleaned up (to a cer- tain extent), and the inhabitants are very happy to see fair guests. Guests who all seem to have a lot of East German money, a good percent of which is bought before- hand on the western market at one to four instead of one to one. This is the westerners' oppor- tunity to buy silks and other goods made in China, as well as optical equipment made in the once, and na.mh em m illnrAfom,c. nnti... allotment of ration stamps for such things, but at least during the fair it's there to buy. Rationing is still quite a real thing in East Germany. A family is alloted 110 pounds of coal a month; one extra month's worth is alloted if the fsamily puts up a fair guest. Pensioners are al- loted 300 grams of butter ("fat stamps") a month, where students can buy about 450 grams. It's also this way with sugar, coffee, and meat. When one eats in one of the still non-state owned res- taurants, one gives out ration stamps for the fat on the steak as well as the meat itself. When there's meat, etc., to be had, one can buy it in the state stores for prices the ordinary worker can't often afford to pay. One can now eat very well in the Auerbachs Keller where Mephis- topheles with Faust, according to the story, bewitched the three stu- dents; the place is now state owned. FOREIGNERS can eat in such places, but cannot order any meat dishes in non-state restaurants or stores. In the non-state stores of any sort the selection of goods is poorer, 'and what goods are de- livered to these stores from the "peoples' own" factories are de- livered only after the state stores have been well provided for. even in the greater cities of East Germany is the effect to be felt. For a month before the fair, color film, for example, could not be bought in the capital city, Ber- lin. What about Leipzig? One could buy the stuff by the case if he wanted to. And then when we returned to Berlin after the fair and visited the "Democratic Sector" a few days later, we could again find color film. Such goods, food and small luxuries, are concentrated in Leipzig by special trucks and trains from wherever they are to be found in the Zone to show the westerners and the representatives of newly acquired European and Asian "peoples' democracies" what a land of milk and honey this communistic land is. * * * THE FAIR exhibitions them- selves could be summarized as being deceitful; in many cases the people of the Zone can buy the things newly displayed only years after they were to be seen at the fair as "a product of one of our peoples' own factories." The "Hall of the Soviet Union" is naturally the most pretentious exhibition halls one finds there. , It's a huge white marble (inside and out) structure with a great gardened antrum back from the huge entryway. In the center of the circular antrum stands a great rivers driven by pumps instead of a propeller. Outside of this hall was a special side exhibition of an American weather balloon with a lurid en- lightenment of the what, how, and why of this infernal machine. Then of course there were the usual pictures !of spying and sabotage evidence, and of the spy organi- zations to be found especially in West Berlin, among them, inci- dentally, the American secret service house next door to our foreign students' home here in Dahlem in Berlin. * * * ONLY TO mention a part of Germany which unfortunately can't be seen in the usual summer tour of Germany will I say some- thing about the city's heritage. There is a huge monument on the order of the Washington Monu- ment to the memory of the people who fought to stave off Napoleon's advance in 1813. Then there is a beautiful Rus- sian church built to the memory of the Russians who had fought with the people of Leipzig to save the city at that time. And the St. Thomas church, the home of the world famous St. Thomas Choir, of which Johann Sebastian Bach was a member and director is to be found there. Bach's sarcopha- gus is there in the nave of the church. ,_ 1