U . P t.C t ttt :4 3 tt 1J' When Opinions Are Free, Truth Will Prevail 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 -'Time For Your Investigation Of The Press, Senator" le,. AT THE LYDIA MENDELSSOHN Inge Play Provides Frustration Theme THE Ann Arbor Civic Theatre put in another one of its good at- tempts last night, and again, didn't quite make it. William Inge's "Picnic" is a well-drawn study of character types, whose full flavor can be exploited only by an experienced cast. Es- sentially, "Picnic" is a play of tension-and it requires extreme deli- cacy of handling to do such a play justice. The cast has made a conscientious effort at producing on-stage 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. J W' ;RIDAY, JANUARY 6, 1956 - NIGHT EDITOR: DICK SNYDER Congress Feels Election Pressure In State of the Union Message 3 I ON January 5, 1955, the winter was cold, butb Washington warm and friendly as Presi- dent Eisenhower held out a hand of coopera- tion to a Democratic Senate in his State of the Union message. Yesterday, the atmosphere was somewhat different as an election year Congress listened to progress and plans of the Administration, spelled out in the broad outline of this year's message. Many of the key issues of a year ago remain, and several will become the key issues of pre- primary campaigns, which will probably get into fuller swing after the program is detailed in upcoming special and budget messages. THE first of the special messages, due Mon- day, indicates a change in farm conditions from a year ago. Last January 5, Ike told the new Congress "Farm production is gradually adjusting to new markets ... we can now look forward to an easing of the influences de- pressing form prices." Yesterday his message stated "Our farm people expect of us . - . understanding of their problems and the will to help solve them." Monday he will propose a plan for a "soil bank" program for acreage reserve, and reduc- tion of surpluses of crops in serious difficulty. But the Democrats want an increase of parity to a stable 90 per cent level, and will probably make the farmer a key man in their attack on the Administration and GOP. The pressure has been increased also in the field of education, and moreover, in tax re- ductions. Last January Ike asked for a year with no tax reductions, to enable headway to be made toward a balanced budget and erasing part of the national debt. This year he is requesting the same, and Democrats, and many Republicans as well, would prefer tax reductions to such spending items as foreign aid, until after the election.. The Democrats are also likely to be dissatisfied with appropria- tions for school aid, unless they are substan' tially higher than anticipated. IN addition, the foreign policy program will be more subject to partisan criticism than . a year ago, when the program was keyed to aversion of "the catastrophe of nuclear holo- ~RENtE E'OU 1?'t- M _ c fi y y kF r e d isms soy _. .. war +"yyvM7." ° ' i 711 yr , sw.'Y" C caust." Ike's optimism extended to the Geneva conference, where it was allowed to swell under the surface smiles of Russia's "happiness boys." But the Geneva bubble burst recently, and we are back to, as Ike said yesterday, "waging peace." The Democrats have long favored an increase in economic aid to underdeveloped areas, and it is beginning to appear the best way to "wage peace." If the Administration adopts this pro- gram, it will be a feather in the Democratic cap. In the field of labor Ike reiterated recom- mendations for broadening minimum wage cov- erage, and extension of the Old Age and Sur- vivors' Insurance program. He evaded, how- ver, the Taft-Hartley Act, which controls union activity. It is a key issue at which the Democrats, and the newly merged CIO-AFL union, with its 16.million members have been hammering. ELECTION year pressure may also be brought to bear in consideration of immigration laws. The President recommends greater flexi- bility in the implementation of quotas, and he will probably gain s'upport from metropolitan areas where immigrant vote is' heavy. There might conceivably be a move to abolish quotas altogether, though-the motion will probably not receive wide-spread support, outside of minority interests, intensely concerned. Likewise, the issue of civil rights should rise in importance, as Democrats are already be- ginning to lambast Administration inactivity in implementing a program to back up Supreme Court rulings on segregation. Eisenhower took the initiative in civil rights, however, by re- commending a bi-partisan Congressional com- misson be apponted to study charges of de- priving Negroes of the right to vote in the South, The atmosphere is undoubtedly a different one from the receptive air in which the 84th Congress heard his last State of the Union message. But it is improbable that the mes- sage alone will have much effect on the in- tensity of campaigning until the special and budget messages explain in detail the Adminis- tration program. -LEW HAMBURGER I SC1l DVL ' . 1 r :.. 1001, n1 s r \ emotional conflicts, but the real credit for the evening must go to Playwright Inge. Despite some excellent individual performances, it is theplay itself that creates mood, not the cast. FORTUNATELY the play is good enough to mesh the perform- ances into a dominant theme. "Picnic" is about frustration-the frustration of old maid school- teachers, middle-age bachelors, pretty girls who want to be in- telligent, intelligent girls who want to be pretty. The characters are ordinary people of a small town, a remark- ably unsensational roster.rThey are average people who have man- aged to suppress their emotions into respectable lives. It takes the arrival of a young boy to bring out these emotions. The action takes place on the day of the annual Labor Day pic- nic, an affair planned with great caution by the spinsterly house- wives. * *.* THE PICNIC ITSELF is unimn- portant, but it provides a core for the play and allows for interaction of personalities. In fact, it is in- teresting that with very little dramatic action, Inge has created an absorbing play. The reason for this is, of course, in his charac- ters. Although the actors have not been able to present the inter- relationships effectively, they have turned in some fine performances individually. Joan Conover as Millie, the kid sister who is going to write novels, does a particularly good job in a supporting part:. In the lead role of Hal Carter, Al Douglas does an interesting performance, but lacks some of the intensity that the part requires. Mary Lee Merriman as Rosemary Sydney must be complimented on carrying off her main scene with. skill. The set design (Bob Maitland) deserves special note, mabaging to provide the right atmosphere with- out interfering with the action. -Debra Durchslag DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Pentagon Brass Shun Movie F By DREW PEARSON Do-A-Lot' Congress Eyes November As the second session of the Eighty-Fourth Congress opens, the only thing than can safetly be assumed is that the coming months will see considerable legislative activity-a good percentage of which will probably conconstruc- tive. Both parties will be striving to put through a program to which they can attach their name and which will be pleasing to the voters in Novemer. The party which can put its name on a substantial program will have a big advantage in the presidential campaign. The Republicans have an opportunity to increase the strength of their "Peace and Prosperity" slogan if they can identify them- selves with such a program. They have be- hind them the prestige of the White House and the President. Their biggest problem in plan- ning for the coming elections is that they have no candidate, at present, with which to work. On the other side of the fence, the Democrats have an abundance of candidates but have no strong vote getting issues, with the exception of the farm problem. They need desperately to be associated with forward-looking legislative program. To get this they have the valuable asset of having control of Congress and the legislative machin- ery. THE lawmakers will face many problems of a popular nature that can attract votes in many instances there is agreement that action is necessary; the degree or type is the point in dispute. Here are some of the key issues: TAX REVISION-a tax reduction would be popular with the voters and both parties may try and get through their version of such a measure. The Republicans probably will be a little more cautious until a balanced budget is in sight. However, economists warn that to e 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 !lan Eisenberg..............Associate Sports Editor Jack Horwitz ................Associate Sports Editor Mary Hellthale ................... Women's Editor Elaine Edmonds...........Associate Women's Editor John Hlrtze7 . .. ................ Chief Photographer Business Staff Dick Alstrom......................Business Manager Bob Ilgenfritz ........... Associate Business Manager cut taxes would put more money in the con- sumers hands which in turn would invite serious inflation. This may throw cold water on tax cuts. FARM POLICY - both parties admit, the Democrats in a slightly louder voice, that farm- ers are in trouble. , The Democrats will attempt to return price supports for basic commodities to 90 per cent of parity. ,This is the theo- retical formula designed to match the farm- er's income with his expenses. The Republicans will attempt to keep flex- ible supports plus some additional measures to aid the farmer. However, should the Demo- crats pass a high parity bill the President would probably veto it and in so doing give campaign ammunition to the opposition. HIGHWAY CONSTRUCTION-the problem here is whether to finance such a program by bonds or by special highway-use taxes. Both parties agree that something must be done and quick, and both have committed themselves to a major construction program. FEDERAL AID TO SCHOOLS-here again is a problem both parties agree needs immed- iate attention. The fight will probably be over amount and source of aid. SOCIAL SECURITY-efforts will be made to expand and liberalize requirements for cover- age. NATURAL GAS-a fight is seen in the plan to get Senate approval of the bill to exempt producers of natural gas from Federal control. The House has passed this bill already. A Democratic split, which could hurt their elec- tion chances, is probable with Senator Lyndon Johnson (D) Texas pro and Senator Paul Douglas (D) Illinois con. DEFENSE-the administration is expected to up the ante by one billion dollars to around 35 billion with concentration on missles. A basic agreement seen here. BOTH parties must produce results in Con- gress this year to have much success in November. That the Democrats realize this was demonstrated in a recent speech by Senator Johnson in which he listed a 13 point legisla- tive program which his party will attempt to pass and stamp with the appropriate label. The address delivered in late November was early enough so the Democrats will have little trouble establishing claim to it should it be the one passed by Congress. What will happen legislatively in the next few months is anybody's guess; but it will be substantial, because the 1956 Congress is not going to be a "do-nothing" Congress. It's go- ing to be a "do-a-lot" Congress. The party that shows the most united front will fare the THE ARMED FORCES have been at each other's throats over everything from helicopters to troop-transport planes, but sud- denly they have decided to carry out "unification" in regard to mo- tion pictures. The Pentagon has decided to give the cold shoulder to Gary Cooper's new picture, "The Court- Martial of Billy Mitchell," because it puts the Air Force in a favor- able light compared with the Ar- my and the Navy. Instead of opening with a big hurrah, with a send-off from the Pentagon brass, the picture is opening at an inconspicuous down- town theatre. But, more impor- tant, the Navy slashed to ribbons one important part of the fight- over-air-power story. * * * THIS WAS the real history of how the Navy, in trying to pro- mote its lighter-than-air dirigible, The Shenandoah, forced Com- mander Zachary Lansdowne to go on a flying junket over Midwest county fairs despite his protest that he couldn't carry enough fuel to make the trip and avoid ap- proaching storms. As a result, The Shenandoah crashed in one of the worst air disasters in naval history. Commander Lansdowne was a close friend of Billy Mitchell. Both were fighting for aerial warfare as against infantry and battle- ships. But when Milton Sperling, producer of "Court-Martial of Bil- ly Mitchell," asked the Navy where he could locate Lansdowne's widow, the Navy claimed she was dead. Finally he locatedher in Washington, the present Mrs. Betsy Caswell, and got from her the story of 'how her late husband, Commander Lansdowne, had writ- ten a protest against taking the dirigible on a flight at the request of congressmen to cover a series of county fairs. * * * THE NAVY, however, overruled the protest. It was lobbying for Congressional appropriations and wanted, to appease the congress- men. After the dirigible was lost in an electric storm, Commander Lansdowne's safe at Lakehurst, N.J. was found broken open and his written protest gone. His wid- ow, however, had carbon copies, and at the Naval Board of Inquiry called to fix the blame for the dis- aster, she read his confidential protest and cleared her husband's name. Later she also testified at the Billy Mitchell court-martial. * * * HOWEVER, when Warner Brothers proposed putting this part of the story in the Billy Mitchell picture, the Navy pro- tested, threatened such road blocks that this part of the story was eliminated. Despite this censorship, howev- er, the picture is sensational enough that top Pentagon brass decided it put the Army and Navy in a bad light, and that for "uni- fication's" sake, the picture would be officially ignored NOTF-This '.s the second re- cent attempt at Government mo- vie censorship; the other being the crack-down of Narcotics Commis- sioner Harry Anslinger on "The Man with the Golden Arm." An- slinger objected because Frank Sinatra, who plays the part of the dope addict, gets cured instead of committing suicide a; happened in the original plot. Government frowns seem to heip, however, for "The Man with the Golden Arm" is now big box ofL ee. A TAX-CHEAP liquor pipeline is operating secretly out of Boll- ing Field here, fed by a prosperous Washington liquor mer ch ant named Harry Slavitt. With tax-free liquor now barred from sale on U.S. militaryases due to Congressional action, Air Force brass hats are thus beating high liquor taxes in the 48 states by ordering their booze from the nation's capital, where such taxes are much lower. Air Force crews stopping at Bolling Field on official flights do the rum - running. They merely telephone Harry Slavitt at Metro- politan 8-5080 and within an hour a truck rolls into Bolling Field - each case of hooch carefully dis- guised in plain brown paper. Slavitt is cleaning up - two weeks ago, for example, collecting $3,920 on a single sale of scotch to airmen from Maxwell Field in dry Alabama. The brand: Greer- son's No. 1. Slavitt's part in the bootleg op- eration is probably perfectly le- gal, since it's the Air Force that admits his trucks to Bolling Field and also the Air Force that flies the liquor across state lines. Nat- urally state revenue officers don't have airplane police facilities to challenge the plane as it enters the state. (Copyright, 1955, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) '1 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. FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 196 VOL. LXVII, NO. 69 General Notices Regent's Meeting: Fri., Jan. 27. Com- municationsufor consideration at this meeting must be in the President's hands not later than Jan. 19. Change in Parking Regulations. Ef- fective Sat., Jan. 7, all University parking lots will be restricted to per- mit holders until 12 o'clock noon on Saturdays. The lots will be patrolled by the Ann Arbor Police and the reg- ulations will be enforced. The signs at the entrance to all lots have been changed to conform with this regula- tion. Nelson International House is now accepting applicai ons for Houseparents or Housemother. Preferably University affiliation. 26 or over. Steward and social responsibilities. Phone Peter Barnard, NO 3-8506. 915 Oakland. Student Government Council: Sum- mary of action taken at the meeting of Jan. 4, 1956. Approved: Minutes of previous meet- ing; Galen's "Caduceus Ball" Feb. 18 Union, 10-1 a.m.; Appointments to Joint'Judiciary Council-Michael Mc Nerny, Jon Collins, Robert Burgee, Mary Nolen, Shirley Lawson. Recognition granted and construc- tion approved: Alethia, a local, under- graduate sorority. Defeated: Motion "Each candidate (for SGC) will be asked to show evi- dence on the basis of his graduation date, that he will be able to fulfill his obligation to serve a full one-year term unless he has previously served on the Council." Referred: To Public Relations, sub- committee on elections-motion relat- ing to election of all senior class offi- cers in April, in elections separate from other spring elections. To be reported back at first meeting of the new semes- ter. Recommended: Re-implementation of By-law 8.05, peration of motor vehicles (Revision now under consideration.) (1) That a share of the registration fee of' approximately $3 be used for proper enforcement, but that this fee be used primarily for the alleviation of the parking situation. (2): All justiciable infractions shall be handled by the Joint Judicia"' Council. (3) Enforcement officers be empow- ered, if possible, by the University to stop and question students suspected of violating University driving regula- tions. (4) Fines collected from infractions of University Driving Regulations be allocated toward construction of park- ing facilities. Approved: student appointees of Student Affairs committee established to draft policy and procedures 'for implementation of proposed change in By-law 8.05 if approved: Fritz Glover, Eugene Hartwig, Debbie Townsend. Lectures Dr. Robert Heine-Geldern, Professor of Ethnology, University of vienna, will give two lectures on prehistoric contacts between Asia and America. Mon., Jan. 9, Aud. B, Angell Hall at 4:15 p.m. "Chinese Influence in the Art of America." Tues. Jan. 10, Aud. B, Angell Hall at 4:15 p.m., "Hindu- Buddhist Influence in the Art of Meso-America." LETTERS to the EDITOR Education To the Editor: Needed... MORE GODFREY FIRINGS? Some Predictions For '56 TV, Radio By CHARLES MERCER Associated Press Writer OUR operatives have finally re- ported in after consulting the sibyls and soothsayers, the astrolo- LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler "./. aot i __,_)_-__ -- i gers and assorted prophets on what to expect from television and radio in 1956. The statisticians have projected their curves and see a boom busi- ness year for the industry. The figures to support this are very dull and won't be mentioned here. There will be an increased num- ber of longer television programs; the two-hour program will be commonplace by the end of the year. The brief newscast, which reached an all-time high in radio in 1955, will be heard with even greater frequency in 1956. IN LIGHTER hearted vein the astrologers see other things. There will be about 27 new quiz programs on television. Of these, about 26 will imitate features of the couple of thousand now on the screen. One will be totally different - and may last three weeks or three years. Arthur 'Godfrey will fire five AS a practical matter, civil lib- erties might be described as the line on which governmental auth- ority encounters resistant public opinion. Of late, due to the muddled government security pro- gram, this line has become blurred and public opinion confused. More subtle and dangerous, however, is the long erosive trend to "big" cities, "big" governments, and "big" managements - all of which make for ,"little" people. The great threat to our way of life is not in mere "bigness." It is in the organizational disease which afflicts bigness - namely, bureau- cracy. Under bureaucracy our nor- mal respect for the individual is supplanted by rules and proced- ures. These create a "no man's land" where even men of con- science,' responsibility, and com- mon sense dare not enter. Lesser men do not ever question. In the final analysis, civil lib- erties depend on education. Many of our citizens clearly have no concept of the way in which civil rights have structured their lives. Administrators, both public and private, reveal serious gaps in their knowledge of' our nation's tradi- tions. It is not unreasonable to cite these as evidence of the fail- ure of educational institutions., The education of the leaders who will form public opinion is the function of our universities. Yet few universities bother to in- form students as, to what civil rights consist of. Is there any university which explains to all its students that the enterprise of our businessmen, the self-reliance of our scientists, the essential char- acter we think of as "American" -that all derive from a way of life which is structured by certain basic freedoms? Has anyone ever heard a professor define civil rights as the legal expression of our Christian respect for the in- dividual? When an intangible and over- whelming power threatens many individuals, a new power tends to grow up to balance the threat - much as labor unions grew during depression days. Civil rights .in themselves are an example of this Academic Notices Engineering Seniors and Graduate 'Students: Free copies of "Career" and "Engineers Job Directory" available to engineering seniors and graduate stu- dents at Engineering Placement Office, Room 347 W. Engineering Bldg. Copies alsomavailable on order to underclass- men and others at $5.00 and $3.50 respectively. Law School Admission Test: Applica- tion blanks for the Feb. 18, 1956 administration of the Law School Ad- mission Test are now available at 110 Rackham Building. Application blanks are due in Princeton, N. J. no later than Feb. 8, 1956. Psychology Colloquium: Dr. Robert Zajone of the Research Center for Group Dynamics will discuss "Cognitive Structure and Process," Fri., Jan. 6, 4:15 p.m., Room 429 Mason Hall. Doctoral Examination for Robert Marion Cooper, Engineering Mechan- ics; thesis: "Cylindrical Shells under Line Load," Fri., Jan. 6, 222 West Engi- neering Bldg., at 3:00 p.m. Chairman, P M. Naghdi. Doctoral Examination for Robert Woodrow McIntosh, Conservation; thesis: "Wildlife Planning Procedures with Emphasis on Recreational.Land Use in the Tahquamenon-Pictured Rocks Region, Upper Peninsula of Mich- igan," Fri., Jan. _6, 300 West Medical Bldg.,eat 1:30 p.m. Chairman, R. L. Weaver. Doctoral Examination for Hazel Mar- garet Batzer, English Language and Literature; thesis: "Heroic and Senti- nal Elements in Thomas Otway's~ Trade S v1 I I