THE MCBIGAN DAILY 'TTTF:.44DAV_ t' V..rrAl;tTIt_ 11. Ifit [ THE MICHIGAN"" DAILY TTT aUr~'Qn ]a V7 uuflwG li 1865 1iEfriiyinu fa Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNNVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. " Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 11 NIGHT EDITOR: ERNEST THEODOSSIN Too Much Individuality "Say, Maybe We Haven't Got It So Bad" - t su --S & i %6 C ~\ - -' A -- WE HAVE "been accustomed to take Gallic irresponsibility as a charming trait of the Frenchmen. The French know how to live -their wine is good, their women are beauti- ful, and they appreciate the interest that chaos lends to politics. ' The world watches the ups and downs of the French National Assembly unconcernedly -even with a little smile. In fact, there is a fascination in the vagaries of French politics that a strong two-party system doesn't provide. It doesn't seem to disturb the French people very much that Faure is the 21st post- war premier, and it provides us with good front page copy. ACTUALLY, the French government is more stable than appears on the surface. The premiership may change hands often, but the deputies, stay on in one function or another. Cabinet men usually remain in key spots, and never does a new government mean a total shifting of responsibility. When the premier falls, he doesn't take many people with him-and often the premier himself comes back to help his country along. But stability at the lower levels and con- stant uncertainty at the top still do not make good government. It is charming and delight- ful that the French can turn its top political jobs into games of chance, and that they do not let their position as a world power force them into stuffy, matter-of-fact regimes. FRENCH individuality is also a thing that has been of much interest to newspaper read- ers. A Frenchman will never sacrifice his dig- nity to expediency, and he finds it difficult to modify his own views to agree with another's. Furthermore, the strong Teligious, regional and political convictions of each party make it difficult for two of them to agree on many issues. A cabinet may hold together while foreign affairs occupy the agenda, but may shatter completely as soon as religion, for ex- ample, enters the question. INDIVIDUALITY and a certain carefree atti- tude cannot be totally condemned, even when it sometimes interferes with the govern- ment. If France can maintain her dignity and position as a world power and still have a skir- mish every now and then to prove that they are still Frenchmen-well and good. But it is a difficult line on which to balance. The events of the last week show that France has not only lost her balance, but she has stirred up uncomfortable situations both at home and in the United Nations in the pro- cess. The country which has been called the key to Europe seems to have forgotten that she is still an important member of the United Nations. First of all, the French government has failed to face its responsibility in North Africa. It has appeased both nationalists and conser- vatives by alternate policies of concessions and repressions so that the end result has been a stalemate. In Morocco, for example, Premier Faure has tried to win the favor of those who ap- proved a more realistic policy toward nation- alism by adopting a plan for the Sultan's un- conditional departure-but then to appease the conservative he. fired the man who framed the plan, General Gilbert Grandval. THE ONLY man who tried to come to grips with colonial ferment was Pierre Mendes- France-and then the government would not let him go through with what was the only concrete plan proposed by a post-war premier. When Mendes-France embarked on a policy of vigorous concessions to the nationalists, his government fell. When France walked out of the United Nations, it was refusing to face issues once again. Even "some of the most loyal allies the French have in the United Nations," said the New York Times, "believe that . . . it would have been smarter politics to stay and fight out the General Assembly's claim to jurisdic- tion over Algeria." But irresponsibility and individuality car- ried the day-and France's obligations to main- tain world peace were submerged in another run of test votes in the National Assembly. -DEBRA DURCHSLAG Daily Magazine Editor Top of the Heap Nice -Both Ways IT'S GOOD to see that the University of Michigan is now Number One in the nation's football ratings. It took a great deal of effort, spirit and determination to do it. Next order of business: How about Number One in the academic ratings? -M. F. LETTERS to the EDITOR 'Highly Exaggerated'... To the Editor: ALTHOUGH I usually prefer to keep out of arguments in the Daily's_ Letters To The Editor column and let others make fools of themselves, I feel that the fol- lowing is very pertinent to the Panty Raid discussion. A shocked 1955 graduate sent me the following clipping which appeared in one of the Boston newspapers. "College Raiders Wreck Ann Arbor. "Ann Arbor, Mich. (AP)-Univer- sity of Michigan students overran three girls' dormitories in a panty raid last night. "The raiders, estimated at more than 1000, broke from a campus pep rally on the eve of the Michi- gan-Michigan State football game. "They spread havoc along a campus business district. Theater marquees were torn down and cars pushed up onto sidewalks. Police said no arrests were made. "Walter B. Rea, dean of men, commented, "We'll have to organ- ize better pep rallies." It can be noted that there are many exaggerations in the article, but, AP carried this story all across the country! Mr. 'Not-too-proud-but-happy Participant' says "The University's reputation is not based on the panty raids of its freshmen." This, perhaps, would bedso if only the truth about the raid were sent around the world, but, with AP sending such highly exagger- ated reports, the reputation of the University cant help but suffer! -Stanley Cool, '56E. Unrealistic... To the Editor: ITHINK most people will find Jane Howard's shoulder-shrug- ging editorial on sorority rushing (Oct. 6) a little silly in view of the realities involved. The intimation that the Pan- hel has tried to do anything but induce the maximum numbers of freshmen to rush is misleading. This year freshmen were signed up for rushing before they had any idea of what the campus looked like, to say nothing of what the sorority situation here was. It seems that Panhel's de- sign in doing this was not to ease the disappointments, but to make the sororities as sought-after (in ignorance) as possible, and con- sequently, to make the number of disappointments as great as pos- sible as a result of the limited number of bide'. That this university should per- mit such a system that leads so many naive girls deliberately into heartbreaks is a disgrace. -Jacky Asbury Greeting from Afar ... To the Editor: HAVE found many servicemen stationed here in Hawaii who are rooting for Michigan. Some are alumni-others are students who expect to return to the 'U' as soon as possible. We get the games over radio and TV re-telecasts. We all ex- pect to see the team at the Rose- WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Hint Margaret-Peter Hitch -BY DREW PEARSON 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, OCTOBER 11, 1955 VOL. LXVII, NO. 14 General Notices Blue Cross Group Hospitalization, Medical and Surgical Service Programs for staff members will be open from Oct. 10 to Oct. 21 for new applications and changes in contracts now in ef- fect, Staff members who wish to en- roll, or change their coverage to in- clude surgical and medical services, should make such changes at the Per- sonnel office, Room 3012, Administration Building. New applications and changes will be effective Dec. 5, with the first payroll deduction on Nov. 30. University Lecture in Journalism. James W. Markham, School of Journal- Ism, Pennsylvania State University, will deliver the annual Kappa Tau Alpha Research Award Lecture at 4 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre, "Bovard of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch." Open to the public. Fellowships are being offered by the Bell Telephone Laboratories for pre- doctoral study. The field of study should have a direct beariig on elec- trical communications and may include such fields as electrical engineering, Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, En- gineering Mechanics, and Mechanical Engineering. Awards are for one year's study and the stipend will be $2,000.00. Fellowships may choose any academic institution within the United States at which to pursue their studies. Applica- tions may be obtained in the offices of the Graduate School, and must be re- turned to that office by Dec. 5, 1955. Late Permission: Because of the I-Ho, all women students will have a 1:30 late permission on Sat., Oct. 15. Wo- men's residences will be open until 1:25 a.m. Academic Notices Mathematics Colloquium: Tues., Oct. 11, at 4:15 p.m. in Room 3011 A.H. Prof. C. J. Titus, "A Projection Operator Associated .with Systems of Partial Dif- ference equations." (No meeting of the Math Club, Oct. 11.) Beginning Classes in Fencing. Tues- days and Wednesdays in the Boxing Room of the Intramural Building at 4:30 p.m. for all interested men. First meetings Tues., Oct. 11 and Wed., Oct. 12. Weapons and protective equipment will be supplied. Experienced fencers are invited to try out and drill from Mon. through Thurs. at 5:30 p.m. for fencing in the Amateur Fencers League of America competitions. First team competition in Detroit Sun., Oct. 16. Assembly for all engineering freshmen Oct. 12 at 2 p.m. in Aud. A, Angell Hall, and at 4 p.m. in Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Louis P. Shannon of E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Company will speak. Make-up Examinations in History-. Sat., Oct. 15, 9:00-12:00 a.m., 229 Angell Hall, See your instructor for permission and then sign list in History office. M. A. Language Examination in His- tory Fri., Oct. 21, 4:00-5:00 p.m., 407 Mason Hall. Sign list in History Office, Dictionaries may be used. Events Today Zinka Milanov, Metropolitan Opera star, with Bozkdar Kunc at the piano will give the first program in the current Choral Union Series tonight at 8:30 p.m. In Hill Auditorium. Meeting of all undergraduate women living off-campus tonight at 6:45 in the League. Check the bulletin board i the League for the room. Placement Notices Notice of Closing Date for the Ae- ceptance of Applications for Jr. Pro- fessional Assistant: The United States Civil Service Com- mission, seventh region, Chicago, Ill., hereby announces that applications for the position of Junior Professional Assistant, GS-5, will not be accepted after Oct. 17, 1955. Applications received after Oct. 17, 1955 will not be accepted unless they are received by mail and bear a postmark on or before that date. For further information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., Ext. 371. i A Murry Frymer - IN ITHIs CORDNER Rch Reserve Act Needs Change--Soon YOU CAN look for an official an- nouncement from Queen Eliza- beth fairly soon that her sister, Princess Margaret, will marry Pet- er Townsend, the dashing 40-year- old divorced flier. Prime Minis- ter Anthony Eden worked out de- tails for the announcement while visiting the Queen at Balmoral Castle. Princess Margaret, like her uncle, the Prince of Wales, will renounce all right to the throne-here's hoping she's hap- pier with Captain Townsend than the Duke is with Wally Simpson today. More dictators are in for trouble in Latin America. D i c t a t o r Stroessner of Paraguay, who gave refuge to Dictator Peron, may be looking for refuge soon himself. Colombian Ambassador Zuleta, one of the ablest envoys in Washing- ton, is going back to Colombia be- cause he's unhappy with his own authoritarian government. I t s crackdown on Colombia's leading newspaper, El Tiempo, smacks too much of Peronism. The new Premier of Greece, Constantine Karamanlis, is not only able but a good friend of the U.S.A. Washington bigwigs were impressed with him when they met him on the George Vour- nas farm in Maryland some time ago. BRITISH NEWSPAPERS have been asking their government just who tipped off the two Brit- ish spies, Donald MacLean and Guy Burgess, thereby letting them get away. Here's the answer: The FBI got suspicious of the two dip- lomats while assigned to the Brit- ish Embassy in Washington. An FBI report on their activities was then turned over to the British, but British security was so lax the FBI report ended up right in MacLean's hands. That was why he and Burgess ducked behind the Iron Curtain. * * * - SOVIET FOREIGN MINISTER Molotov has flatly rejected Secre- tary Dulles' plea to stop Czecho- slovak arms to Egypt. British For- eign Minister MacMillan also pro- tested to Molotov even more vig- orously than Dulles. But the stony- faced old Bolshevik wouldn't budge. He claimed Czechoslo- vakia is an independent country, has the right to trade where it wishes, kept referring to the arms shipment as "commercial exports." * * * HERE'S THE UNIQUE record of Assistant Secretary of Commerce Lothair Teetor, president - on - leave of the Perfect Circle Com- pany in Northern Indiana where eight men were shot during a strike last week. As a member of the Indiana State Legislature from 1945 to 1951 Teetor voted against Workmen's Compensation amendments, against the State Labor Relations Act, against the Wage-Hour Law, against equal pay for equal work, against the State Public Housing Act, against the Fair Employment Practices Act, but voted for picketing and for segregation. The amazing thing is that a man of his b%ckground would get a key post in the Eisenhower ad- ministration. H i s appointment highlights the long-raging battle between Seecretary of Labor Mit- chell and Anti-Labor Secretary of Commerce Sinclair Weeks. New York Republican State Chairman, has been going through upstate New York proposing the "unit rule" for the New York delegation at the next GOP Con- vention. He recalls that four N. Y. delegates held out for Taft against Dewey in 1952. With Moorehouse such a strong Dewey man, politicos interpret this as a sign Tom wants to run again, and wants air-tight control over the N.Y. delegation. Taftites are waiting for Con- gressman Carroll Reece of Ten- nessee to get home from Europe to organize the anti-Dewey bloc. Carrill is considered the best anti- Dewey organizer in the right wing of the GOP. Dick Nixon is really having rough going with-his fellow Cali- fornian, Govenor Goody Knight. Nixon may not know it yet. but Knight intends to dog Nixon's footsteps on a speaking tour, speak in every city Nixon speaks in be- fore the convention. * *. * Chief Justice Warren asked for the privilege of swearing in his old friend, Walter Gordon, as Governor of the Virgin Islands. Gordon is one of the first Ne- groes appointed to high office, having been Warren's chairman of the California Adult Authori- ty (ParoleBoard). He is an ex- cellent choice for the Virgin Is- lands. The Farmers Union, hitherto_ not strong in the corn belt, has bee nadding new members like a prairie fire. The Farmers Un- ion is grateful to Brother Benson. (Copyright, 1955, Bell Syndicate, Inc.) i NO ONE was particularly happy when the new Military Reserve Bill was enacted into law last summer. The legislators weren't happy because the, bill was overly compromised, cut, and modi- fied. The Army wasn't happy because what it wanted was universal military training, and this was far from it.E And the youth who were to be affected weren't happy because the act was even more confusing and more unfair than the previous military system. The startling new featqlre of the act was to, build up the military reserve by allowing 172 to 18-year-olds to get their active duty, out of the way in six months, then serve in the reserves for seven and a half years., IF THESE youths choose to wait, they then become subject to the draft at 18%V2, which means two years of active service, followed by four years in the active reserve. To the army officials this looked like a good way to build the reserves. Surely, the 18- year-olds would flock to the recruiting offices to take this opportunity while they could. But it hasn't worked this way. The num- ber of enlistees in the six-month program has been a mere trickle. Army officials are baffled. As Secretary of the Army Wilber M. Brucker said here recently, "it certainly is a much bet- ter deal for the young men than the draft." Editorial Staff Dave Baad .......................... Managing Editor Jim Dygert..........................City Editor Murry Frymer ..................... Editorial Director 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 Hellthaier. .....................women's Editor Elaine Edmonds.............Associate women's Editor John Hirtzel ...................Chief Photographer Business Staff Dick Alstrom .................... Business Manager There are a combination of factors deter- ring the 18-year-olds today. First, there is the present world "peaceful coexistence" poli- cy. The Russians have announced army cuts (whether true or not, it sounds good), the United States has cut its armed strength by 240,000 men, arid just the other day, the Brit- ish announced cuts of 100,000 men in her de- fenses over the next thirty months. COMBINE this with one of the features of the reserve act - its non-universility - you might not 'have' to go, and the young man suddenly has a problem. He just might get away with no military service, if he waits. But that's not all to deter the 18-year-old. The Army has chosen to drop many' of the benefits, especially educational benefits, that previous veterans were given. The prospect of a free college education accounted for a good many enlistments before. Also, if the young man waits to get his college education in before going to the Army (there's little chance now of having college training interrupted by the draft) he could land a better job in the Army afterward, or could join a ROTC unit in school. Nevertheless, the 18-year-old is in a bit of a dilemma. He's faced with a choice, how to fulfill his army obligation in the most com- fortable way, and there's no guarantee any way. IF HE studies the bill he'll get tangled in a wide variety of deferments for some stu- dents, two-years service for others, escapes for other men through such side-steps as the national guard, and so on. What he wishes for most, especially at 18, Is a definite and clear-cut answer. Despite the fight being put up on many fronts, much of today's youth would welcome universal military training if he could be sure-sure of his term of service, sure of when he would have to go, sure that he wasn't missing some 'angle' to escape the military, and sure that everyone was fulfilling a similar obligation. Today, he is sure of nothing. He may go for six months, plus active reserve training, while a friend serves not at all. Or he may find himself waiting, taking a chance, then bowl. Good luck. -Pvt. Raymond Tanis Hawaii NEW MILLER ONE-ACTS: 'Think' Plays Trend On Broadway Boob Exchange,... To the Editor: On Page 1 of The Daily for Sept. 21 you mention "Student Boob Exchange." I'm in favor of it. If you can trade 1000 of the boobs who staged the panty-raid for 100 students, it would be a, bargain. Remember that news of folly spreads farther and faster than news about Phoenix Pro- ject. --Norman Anning :a By WILLIAM GLOVER Associated Press Writer BROADWAY'S got a new slogan B-Think,'Think, Think. The trend in new shows has done it. Seven serious dramas - some- times a whole seasoh's quota - have already arrived in the first anutumnal month of theatrical bustle. And not a single caper or rollicking farce among them. SUCH ITEMS, the traditional escapist fare aimed at the tradi- tional tired businessman, haven't been completely forgotten of course; many such wares are pledged for presentation later. There hasn't, however, been such a serious cycle in quite a spell. What's more important, the trend hasn't shown any signs of scaring the ticket-buying public. What has caused the trend is hard to say, but one man who is having a lot to do with Broadway's new look has some ideas about it. HE IS Kermit Bloomgarden, a "Diary of Anne Frank." Several of the reviewers reached for the superlatives on "Tiger." . . . Less fortunate were "The Young and Beautiful," a Sally Benson play based on F. Scott Fitzgerald stories, and "Island of Goats," by the late Ugo Betti . This week marked another not- azle milestone in the epic run of Victor Borge - the third birthday of his one man show at the John Golden Theater, with the amazing Dane pouring champagne for the entire audience at the anniversary performance and slicing up a birthday cake Reviewers There will be a meeting for all Daily reviewers and car- toonists at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Ensian office, Student Publications building. The following persons are re- quested to attend: Tom Bernaky, Culver Eisen- beis, Bruce Jacobson, Mike LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dikk blter - - - ' -t I ARTHUR MILLER , . . 'think' dramatist Bloomgarden, matter of fact, has had his mind on producing comedy ever since he entered the- impre- sario ransk 10 years ago. In all that time he has produced three light shows-which turned out to be less than triumphant-but has won renown with such brain stim- ulators as "Deep Are The Roots," "Delath of a Salesmnan" andrlnine I