THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'rTTF.QT'VAY IftfwM1ftIiV lit iroxim THE_.IC.IGAN _DAIL ..LLJ.mmA7L2. li'x"sL iz 11 , 1551 5 McNamara Claims Ike Not In Charge By PETE ECKSTEIN "I don't think Eisenhower really ever has been the President," Sen. Patrick V. McNamara (D-Mich.) said Sunday, "and there will not be a great difference in the opera- tions of the Administration" due to the President's illness. Speaking at a Democratic par- ty barbecue near Ann Arbor, Sen. McNamara charged "the govern- ment is in the hands of men like Weeks, Humphrey and Adams, who seem to veto everything that is for the people and favor every- thing that is for the giant corpora- tions and giant financial institu- tions." He said he was "sorry the Pres- ident has been incapacitated to the degree that he has been. It's obvious his health has been be- low par. I don't think he could stand the pressure of the office. Criticizes Congress "It's logical," Sen. McNamara told a crowd of approximately 250 persons, "that others should carry the brunt of the job." The freshman senator criticized the last session of Congress for "too much compromise and not enough accomplishment, too much concern for giant corporations and giant financial institutions and no't enough for the people." Refprrmg to the Republican slo- gan of "Peace and Prosperity," he answered with one of his own - "Prosperity for Whom?" SHIRT SERVICE Service Jobs Increasing - DETROIT (P)-Are there more Try Our 4-Point Program clerical or farm workers in this country? Surprisingly, says an official of .'Washed sparkling cleanthe Chrysler Corp., it's about even -about eight million each. George W. Troost, vice president * 2. Ironed to perfection by our in charge of finance at Chrysler, experienCed operator. says there is a "dramatic swing in employment toward 'service' jobs." * 3 Checked forrmissing buttons ~In a meeting of systems engin- *i beers yesterday, Troost said more and repairs. than half of the nation's 65 million workers are engaged in such serv- f 4. Packaged in cellophane for protection ice work as transportation and 4 communication, public utilities, retailing and wholesaling, finance, insurance, real estate, government, education, entertainment and KYER MODEL LAUNDRY aueet He added, "By far the biggest AND CL EAN ERSshare of the total number of jobs are those connected with the 814 S. State 601 E. William distribution of jobs once they are 1302 S. University 627 S. Main 619 Packard produced - moving them, selling them, accounting for their pay- ment and keeping tabs on their whereabouts." "There is little prosperity for the farmer and too much unem- ployment," he asserted, setting the jobless figure at from two-and- a-half to three million men. Sen. McNamara predicted "the Admin- istration's hard money policy will add considerably to that figure be- fore next year's election. 'Going Too Fast' "The hard money policy," he continued. "is a continuation of the Mark Hanna program of op- erating government for the bene- fit of the few. People who have to go to the banks find the policy costing them much more in in- terest charges. "T h e administration should' make money easier to get. "I say they're going too fast putting the brakes on the econo- my," he charged. "The Republi- can party's afraid of a constantly expanding economy." Turning to the issue of falling farm prices, Sen. McNamara said "for sure the flexible' farm price program has proven a failure and surely under the present adminis- tration it will continue a failure." Calling the farmers the "for- gotten people of the economy," he said a Democratic agriculture pro- gram "hasn't jelled yet." The sen- ator told reporters at the barbe- cue that he favors a program "more in line with the Branna plan and less in line with the Ben- son plan." Next Year's Election Independent businessman, 'the senator asserted, "are not sharing in prosperity to the degree that giant corporations and giant fi- nancial institutions are." He said that while their business volume is high, the independents are re- ceiving "little profit." Turning to the elections, Sen. McNamara described Gov. G. Men- nen Williams as "probably the greatest campaigner in the coun- try." He said he favors the "young and vigorous" governor for the Democratic Presidential nomi- nation. "The Democrats can win," the senator said, "whether Eisenhow- er is the candidate or not." The main issue of the campaign will be, he predicted, "a government solely concerned with giant cor- porations and giant financial in- stitutions." Talky Planned By Markham James W. Markham, chairman of the news department at the Pennsylvania State University School of Journalism, will deliver the first in this year's series of University lectures in Journalism today. The talk, entitled "The Reporter and the Editor," will be given at 4 p.m. in the Rackham Amphithea- tre. Markham will receive the 1955 Kappa Tau Alpha Research Award for his book, "Bovard of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch," from Prof. Wesley H. Maurer, chairman of the Department of Journalism here and national president of KTA, the honorary journalism so- ciety. A native of Texas, Markham received his B.J. and M.A. from the University of Texas and his Ph.D. from the University of Mis- souri. He has served on the staffs of the Ft. Worth Press and the Dallas Journal, and was assistant professor of journalism at Baylor University and associate professor at the University of Missouri. Coldup NEW YORK (I)-Seven gun- men ruled a Brooklyn restau- rant for nearly 12 hours yester- day. They supplied whisky for warmth to 10 people locked in a refrigerator and finally left with about $6,000. In the course of their siege, the gunmen forced the cook to serve them meals, and sat drinking and chanting casual- ly for hours, waiting for some- one to show up who knew the combination to the office safe. The bandit squad seized pos- session of Tappins Restaurant about 2:30 a.m., long before opening time, and didn't leave until mid-afternoon, That was after manager Pete Chahales arrived and at gun- point opened the safe. Chahales was then imprisoned in the re- frigerator along with the others. NEW YORK (P) - knew last week what to fall on you. You never was going An airplane propeller crashed through the roof of a house in Pleasanton, Calif. and awakened a man taking a nap. The flying instructor and his student, who had landed safely after the left propeller fell off, came along pretty soon, noted the three-foot hole in the roof and claimed the missing property. Leaflets fell. from a plane over Texarkana, Ark. They read: "It's a girl, Sheila Kay McCall, five pounds eight ounces, ten fingers, ten toes, mother OK." The pilot was announcing the arrival of his first born. In Nagoya, Japan, a tab fell on unsuspecting wedding guests. As they filed in, the groom said a fee of 150 yen-41 cents-was being charged. For each payment the guest received a lunch box, a Wonders Ne 'ver Cease Hagerty Hits paper napkin and a small bottle lta.iiieiiiin of beer. Then he was led upstairs surprise too. A lunch for 10 tour- ing Russian housing officials of DENVER (P) -- White House course called for Vodka. The Press Secretary James C. Hagerty Americans in the party drank it yesterday angrily denounced a all right. But nine Russians had news motion picture crew for fly- tomato juice and the 10th had ing in a helicopter over Fitzsimons beer. Army Hospital while President Dwight D. Eisenhower was sunr Getting back on the straight and ning himself on an open terrace. narrow was more harrowing for a "The health of the President of young soldier at Ft. nox, Ky- the United States is far more im- Tired of stockade life, he made a portant than any sneak photo- dash for the open spaces. Sudden- graph and I believe the people of ly heavy gunfire shook the earth this nation feel the same way under his feet, tanks closed in, about it," Hagerty told a news grenades burst around him and conference. rifle fire deafened him. He added heatedly that if the Mightily impressed with the ex- President, recovering from a heart tremes to which the Army would attack, "ever gets it into his mind" go to keep its own, the soldier fled that his being out on the hospital back to the stockade. Then he sundeck might result in disturb- learned that his flying feet had ance of other patients, "he won't taken him to the middle of a man- go out on that porch again and euver area where war practice was he'll be deprived of the air and going on. sun he needs." S *C hesterfIeld Register Now 45 licerrr & Mym sToBacco Co. YOU MAY BE AN UNDISCOVERED STAR! AUDITION NOW FOR VARSITY NIGHT There is a spot for YOU in the All-Campus Revue of 1955 October 28th in Hill Auditorium at 8:15 P.M.. *AUDITO O In general, industrial, governmental, technical And for administrative and teaching positions on the elementary, secondary and college levels. By Attending the Annual Bureau of Appointments' Placement Meeting