"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 "Hey - Pravda Is Reprinting From Us" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: VERNON NAHRGANG Sigma Kappa's Decision Awaited With Confidence THE UNIVERSITY chapter of Sigma Kappa has not yet been judged and has not yet been found wanting. Nevertheless, members of the local chapter are faced with the necessity of making a ser- ious decision at a very awkward time, in the midst of the last fall rushing season. But until that decision has been made, there should be no question of the position on this campus of Sigma Kappa's local chapter. The record which it has established during the short time since its reactivation is recog- nized as outstanding. No rushee should allow the events of the past week to raise a question of the sincerity and unselfishness of Michigan's Sigma Kappas. The thoughtless action of Sigma Kappa na- tional, however, requires that the Michigan women reflect publicly on the suspension of two sister chapters after pledging Negro girls. The Daily offered the national office an op- portunity to explain its stand and was rudely turned away. THIS COMES in suprising contrast to the spirit of cooperation wisely extended by other members of the fraternity and sorority family. They, at least, have recognized that af- filiates are minority groups in themselves and must cultivate the art of public relations or bear the heavy burden of public misunder- standing. Tomorrow, the president of Sigma Kappa will be asked for a stand. She has several alter- natives, more than one of them completely ac- ceptable to the University community. The severe pressure of rushing may mean that there has not been sufficient time for the whole house to consider the problem. This is under- standable, but it should be only a short post- ponement. The uncooperative attitude of the national may easily have influenced the local. In that case, Sigma Kappa should take at least a tem- porary stand, using the facts at hand until more are available. A committment without sufficient discussion is not asked, nor is an immediate suicidal op- position to the national organization, for the delicate relationship of one small chapter to its parent is realized. On the other hand, any pro- crastination, especially after house meetings have discussed this particular problem, cannot be viewed in a favorable light. T HE MEMBERS of Sigma Kappa are in a very enviable position. With a few short sentences they can easily and genuinely re- affirm the ideals of racial and religious under- standing long ago reflected by the students of this University. They have been given the rare chance to take a lead among their fellow groups on campus. It will require no small amount of courage, but they can quickly stand beside their sisters at Tufts and Cornell with the understanding and admiration of the rest of undergraduate Sigma Kappa, we hope, without fear of punish- ment. -Their decision is awaited with unqualified confidence. -ALLAN STILLWAGON III '~ pALY WORKER r Y Yjj f -, r t e WASHiNGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Congressman s Ki Bnefi r 1 TODAY AND TOMORROW: Eisenhower Policy One of Avoiding Trouble By WALTER LIPPMANN PRESIDENT EISENHOWER'S reputation as a peace-maker was won, as I tried to show in a recent article, in the Far East. There, instead of war on three fronts-in Korea, the Formosa Strait and Vietnam- there is now a truce. It rests on compromises which involve the parti- tion of Korea and of Vietnam, and the containing of Nationalist China in Formosa and a few off-shore islands. The President's special contri- bution to this truce is that he has made the concessions on which these compromises rest acceptable in the United States, especially to the right wing of the Republican Party, and he has cleared his concessions of the charge that they constitute appeasement of Communist China, The FarEastern truce is not a peace settlement, or even an ap- proach to a peace settlement. It is an armistice in which both sides, China and its smaller allies, the United States and its smaller allies, have stopped fighting on lines beyond which neither can advance Misuse Official Position THE DRAFT BOARDS of Bullock County, against Gray for his participation in the boy- Alabama and neighboring counties are guilty of serious dereliction of duty in the squabble regarding the deferment of Fred G. Gray. Gray, who had been deferred earlier as a "'practicing minister," acted as attorney for the group who had organized the boycott of Montgomery city buses. Attempt to draft him when his board discovered the amount of time he had devoted to the boycott situation brought an indefinite deferment from Lt. Gen. Lewis Lewis B. Hershey, national director of the Selective Service System, and eventually the recent resignations of local draft board offic- ials in protest of Hershey's action. The attempt to draft Gray plus the degree of protest by the boards resulting from Hersh- ey's action indicate that the board members are misusing their capacity as local representa- tives of the Federal Government to "retaliate" cott. THE REFUSAL of the Bullock County board to continue induction in spite of an assign- ed quota is equally serious. This is outright defiance of the laws of the nation and should not go unpunished. Members of draft boards have responsibilities and obligations as citizens far above personal prejudice. To allow personal beliefs to interfere with the performance of duty on the part of such officials can have disastrous consequences. The charges of a Crenshaw County SSS appeals agent, Alton L. Turner, that Hershey acted for political reasons and is endangering the Selective Service by bowing to "the wishes of the NAACP" seem to be little more than a diversion from their own emotional, subversive actions. -ROBERT BALL, JR. (EDITOR'S NOTE: Drew Pearson, after a tour of the Middle East, is en route home. This Washington, Merry-go-round release is written by his junior partner.) By JACK ANDERSON ASHINGTON - Congressman Gordon McDonald (R., Cal.), who looks and votes conservative, has always opposed welfare benefits with one curious exception: he has voted down the line to aid govern- ment workers. This solicitude might have some- thing to do with the fact that he has loaded the government payroll with relatives. They automatically share in most federal employee benef'its. No congressman has voted as faithfully as McDonough, for in- stance, to increase federal retire- ment. His office pesters the House and Senate Civil Service com- mittees with questions on each new retirement measure. The question- ing inevitably gets around to how congressional employees will bene- fit. Here are relatives who have profited from his votes: TEN DAYS after McDonough was sworn in as a congressman in 1945, his wife, Catherine, went on the payroll for $2,340. Each year he grew more generous, and grad- ually he~upped her salary to $9,129. For 16 months during 1949-50, the congressman also kept his son, Gordon, Jr., on the payroll for a salary ranging from $3,600 to $4,600. The day he left the pay- roll, his brother-in-law, John Mannelly, was substituted in his place. Mannelly started at $2,800, now draws $4,300. He has never work- ed in the congressman's office, doesn't even line in his congres- sional district. Mannelly has an- other full-time job with the M and M Audit Company of Los Angeles. When he finds time to visit Mc- Donough's district and work for his constitutents isn't clear. At the same time Mannelly is drawing pay from Congress and the Audit Company, he has also collected two $500 checks from the Republican County Central Com- mittee for his services as McDon- ough's campaign manager. MANNELLY'S WIFE, the con- gressman's daughter Lucille, also spent 18 months on her father's payroll in 1951-52 at a $3,000 sal- ary. Whatever she did for the tax- payers must have been done at home where she stayed with her four children. McDonough has another unique arrangement with the Coast Fed- eral Savings and Loan Association which provides him with a private office, free of charge, when he's in Los Angeles. The office comes complete with free secretarial serv- ice if he needs it, For this generous gesture, Mc- Donough is indebted to the com- pany's president, Joe Crail, who also contributed to the famous Nixon slush fund. It is not, however, a one-sided deal. McDonough happens to be a member of the House Banking and Currency Committee, which has life-and-death power over Federal Savings and Loan Assoc- iations. His votes on the committee have consistently been on the side of the real estate interests, (Copyright 1956, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) without a big bloody and danger- ous war. In the Middle East the Presi- dent has also been standing for the prevention of war, and in playing his part there he is fol- lowing the same basic pattern as in the Far East. This is to make acceptable-this time to Britain and France-the best compromise obtainable without the risks of war. Once again, in the Middle East as in the Far East, his objec- tive is a modus vivendi, an ar- rangement to avoid immediate trouble and not a policy which looks towards a settlement. * * * IN A JUST estimate of Presi- dent Eisenhower as a peace- maker, one would have to say, I think, that his specialty has been the making of compromises to stop hostility and to prevent hos- tility from breaking out. But nei- ther in the Far East nor in the Middle East has he done anything significant to form policies which are for the long term-what, for example, is to be the future of the two Koreas and the two Vietnams and the two Chinas, and how in the Middle East are we to. work out a relationship with the Arab world which can endure? In the absence of long range policies which look towards the settlement of great issues, the mere prevention of war-desir- able as that is in itself-results in a kind of erosion, the giving up of one thing after another in or- der to avoid trouble. For lack of long range policies, the President does not have the initiative. He is not acting to make peace. He is reacting to the threat of trouble, and the basic reaction is to with- draw in the face of the inevitable and the unavoidable. * * * THE HISTORIANS may well say, I think, that under Eisen- hower, and because of his pres- tige with the American people, this country has learned to ac- cept two momentous but unpal- atable historic developments. One is the emergence of Red China as the leading power in eastern Asia. The second is the recognition of Soviet Russia as the great power in the Middle East. I do not myself tink that any President could hdve prevented these two developments, or that there would be any profit or ad- vantage or chance of success in resisting t h e m irreconcilably. What worries me is that we are accepting them, not with some long view of the realities and of the future but because we can- not think of any way to stop them. We have no big objectives except to avoid trouble. We do not have, therefore, a policy which corresponds withthe new situation, and what we are really doing is to improvise and to mud- dle through. 1956, New York Herald Tribune, Inc Reviewers A meeting for Daily reviewers and cartoonists will be held at 7:15 p.m. Monday in the 'En- sian office of the Student Pub- lications Building. Those who have previously reviewed for the Daily, and per- sons interested in reviewing movies, drama, music, books and art are invited to attend. LETTERS to the EDITOR Fine Record . To the Editor: . Thursday's Daily article con- cerning Sigma Kappa's compliance with University bias clause regu- lations coming, as it did, the day before the start of sorority rushing, could easily turn coed rushee opinion against the local chapter. The Daily's judgement in print- ing the article at this time can- not be questioned: it is a news- paper's responsibility to gather and put before its readers any such information. Indeed, coed rushees should be aware that if subsequent investigation indicates that Sigma Kappa cannot conform to campus regulations, its SGC recognition could be declared out of order, and liable to withdrawal. Rushees, however, should. be DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an of- ficial publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. No- tices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3553 Administration Building before 2 p.m. the day preced- ing publication. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1956 VOL. LXVII, NO. 5 General Notices STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS PLAN. NING TO BE ACTIVE during the pres- ent semester should complete registra- tion in the Office of Student Affairs not later than OCTOBER 12, Forms for registration are available in that office, 1020 Administration Building. Student organizations registered by OCTOBER 12 will be considered as officially rec- ognized for the current semester and will be eligible for assignment of meet- ing rooms in University Buildings and for the use of the Student Organiza- tions of the Michigan Daily for announ- cements. The STUDENT DIRECTORY will include a list of student organiza- tions and their presidents as registered on this date. All men interested in learning to fence are invited to the Intramural Building Boxing Room located in the east end of the basement at 4:30 p.m. Monday or Tuesday, Sept. 24 or 25. Weapons and protective equipment will be provided. Participation in various in- dividual and team competitions will be possible later in the year for men suf- ficiently advanced in technique by that time. Plans are also being made for weekly coeducational fencing. Michigan Technic Tryout Meeting Monday, Sept. 24, 7 p.m., 3505 East Eng. Ineering. Women Students-Sports and Dance Instruction: Women students who have completed the physical education re- quirement may enroll in classes on Monday, September 24 from 8:00 a.m. to 12 noon. Instruction is available in: Square and Social Dance, Modern Dance, Field Hockey, Tennis, Swimming, Diving, Red Cross Water Safety Instructors Course. Academic Notices On all Sundays during the current academic year, beginning September 23, the General Library will be open from 2 p.m.-6 p.m. Service will be giv- en in the Main Reading Room, the Periodical Reading Room, and at the Circulation Desk. In addition, the First Floor Study Hall, in which smoking is permitted, will be open, and reserved books regularly shelved there will be available. Other Reading Rooms and Study Halls in the building will be closed, but books needed for Sunday use may be transferred to the Periodical Read- ing Room if the request is made on Saturday. Holders of stack permits will have accessto the stacks and may withdraw books. Other users of the Library may return anderenew books, at the Cir- culation Desk. Beginning September 30, the Social Science Library will be open evenings, 7-10 p.m. Correction in Time Schedule. Psych. 31, Lecture B will meet Mon. and Wed. at 3:00 p.m. instead of 9:00 a.m. Medical College Admission Test: Ap- plication blanks for the October 30 ad- ministration of the Medical College Ad- mission Test are now available at 122 Rackham Building. Application blanks are due in Princeton, N. J. not later than Oct. 16, 1956. Concerts Concerts. The University Musical So- ciety announces the following concerts for the University year: Choral Union Series (10 numbers): Season tickets: $17.00, $14.00, $122.00 and $10.00 - now on sale. Extra Concert Series (5 numbers): Season tickets: $8.50, $7.00, $6.00 and $5.00 - now on sale. Tickets for single concerts for both series will go on sale beginning Mon- day, September 24. Messiah (Handel) - Two perform. ances. Tickets will go on sale October 15 (50 cents and 75 cents. Chamber Music Festival of' three concerts. Season tickets $3.50 and $2.50; single concerts, $1.75 and $1.25. 1957 May Festival (6 concerts) Season ticket orders accepted and filed in sequence beginning as of December 1. For information or tickets address: Charles A. Sink, President, University Musical Society, Burton Memorial Tower. Lecture Course Season Tickets Now on Sale. The University Lecture Course -1 1( .} .A Suez Interim Plan Unnecessary SECRETARY OF STATE John Foster Dulles is attempting to straddle an uncomfortable fence with his latest plan for control of the Suez Canal. Most nations admit the legality of Egypt's seizure of thenwaterway in July, but fear that Egypt will not keep the canal open to all users. Primarily concerned is Great Britain, for whom the canal is a vital lifeline. Britain's in- sistance on better security than Nasser's word that the Shez Canal will be kept open is under- standable. But whether Britain is right in trying to squeeze Egypt out of sole control of the Canal by economic or political methods is another question. That Egypt has not yet compensated the canal company's stockholders may be a point for the British, but in neither the first international conference on the Suez nor the recently concluded one has this been an issue. Angered at Nasser's abrupt seizure, Great Brit- ain and France mistrust him and in some respects wish to punish him. ON THE OTHER SIDE of the situation, while Egypt is in a strong position legally, she holds a weak one economically. It is a new Nation, young and inexperienced. Nasser's posi- tion itself is similar. But the new Egypt can not cut its bonds with Editorial Staff RICHARD SNYDER, Editor RICHARD HALLORAN LEE MARKS Editorial Director City Editor GAIL GOLDSTEIN........,.... Personnel Director ERNEST THEODOSSIN ............ Magazine Editor JANET REARICK....... Associate Editorial Director MARY ANN THOMAS............. Features Editor DAVID GREY.................... Sports Editor RICHARD CRAMER.....Associate Sports Editor STEPHEN HEILFERN ........ Associate Sports Editor VIRGINIA ROBERTSON .............. Women's Editor JANE FOWLER ............ Associate Women's Editor VERNON SODEN............... Chief Photographer Business Staff DAVID SILVER, Business Manager MILTON GOLDSTEIN .... Associate Business Manager WILLIAM PUSCH............. Advertising Manager CHARLES WILSON............... Finance Manager PATRICIA LAMBERIS........... Accounts Manager the past. After more than 100 years of French and British domination, Egypt is torn between a desire for economic development and a hatred for the British and French. Thus, Nasser has little motivation towards giving up control of the Canal. From Egypt's past experiences, such control is one more step away from foreign interference and imperialism. Dulles' plan for a users association is an at- tempt to ease Great Britain's fear of a block- ade while working for the cooperation of Egypt. Reports indicate that the plan is not meant to be a permanent solution but an interim modus operandi until final agreement is reached. But operation of the users association will not depend on Egypt's consent. Association ships are to pay the association and not the Egyptian authorities, and profits divided be- tween the association and Egypt. Both sides will eventually have to com- promise in this tense situation. This plan, as it now stands, appears to be little more than an attempt to control the canal, with or without Egypt's consent. Why else is an "interim" plan required when the Canal is enjoying uninter- rupted operation under Egyptian authorities? An interim plan for operation would seem nec- essary only if and when present operations were halted or the canal closed by Egypt. NASSER has already condemned the plan and threatened war if it is implemented. Whether the West is willing to press Egypt that far remains to be seen, though world sentiment appears to favor reference of the problem to the United Nations. Little hope is held for any settlement by the recent proposals. of the Suez Conference. -MARY ANN THOMAS Daily Features Editor New Books at the Library Cooper, Madison A.-Sironia, Texas, 2 vols.; N. Y., Houghton, 1955. Cottrell, Leonard - The Mountains of Phar- aoh; N. Y., Rinehart, 1956. Mardikian, George-Song of America; N. Y., McGraw-Hill, 1956. O'Flaherty, Liam-The Stories of Liam O'Fla- herty; N. Y., Devin-Aidar, 1956. TALKING ON TELEVISION:' Summer TV Fare Just Fair i By LARRY EINHORN IN THE summer this young man's fancy turned to . . . well, at least part of the time turned to his television set to see the sum- mer TV offerings of the major networks. And once again sum- mer television in general left much to be desired, in fact in most cases left all to be desired. Some of the programs continued through the hot months, especially those of the quiz and panel spe- cies. A few of the more success- ful situation comedies showed re- runs from last season. And some of the less successful situation comedies also showed re-runs. As usual the two All-Star games, fights and horse races were pre- sented for the TVrsports fan. And the two conventions filled up most of the available air time whlie they were in progress. But it was in the area of the de- velopment of new shows for the summer that the networks really failed. There wasn't a "64,000 Question", which emerged in the summer of 1955. The only original summer program which showed some promise of becoming a good year-round venture was "The Er- nie Kovacs Show." Kovacs and his talented wife, Edith Adams, fnially hit the big time, taking over the Sid Caesar Monday night hour and filling it with fresh comedy, very effective camera techniques and such out- standing guests as the Nerobi Trio, probably the most exciting specialty act ever seen on tele- vision. Fortunately NBC has finally dis- covered Kovacs' talents and he cans". On one particular program he was supposedly reading the mind of Denice Darcel and unfor- tunately Miss Darcel either wasn't properly prepared or else she also has extra sensory perception for the amazing Dunniger kept on reading thoughts which she was not transmitting. The amazing Duniger cleared up the situation by saying that he was receiving these thoughts from someone in the studio audience and asked the person not to con- centrate so hard. It probably would be a great deal easier to believe in Dunniger's super-human feats if he didn't look like one of the characters that would star in a future "Racket Squad" presentation. * *-* Steve Allen started his early evening Sunday program 'and he needed Elvis Presley to top the strong Ed Sullivan competition. According to the ratings Allen's only triumph over Sullivan came on the night Elvis appeared on his show in top hat, tails and blue suede shoes. For some reason Allen began the series using the same exact material for his comedy sketches which he had previously used on his "Tonight" show. This was ob- viously for the benefit of the few million new viewers which the Sunday show attracted but it was sort of repititious for the regular late night Steve Allen viewer. Allen has presumably decided to join Sullivan instead of fighting him for he has presented Smith & Dale, an ice show remote and tonight will present for the first time on live TV Rin Tin Tin. It's Perry Como hired three of his friends, Julius La Rosa, Tony Ben- nett and Patti Page, to take over "The Perry Como Show". They all appear to be doing alright on their own and it seemed strange for them to keep on thanking Como publicly for giving them the op- portunity to be on his show. Miss Page, however, did not show any allegiance to NBC for she took over the mistress of ceremonies chore on the CBS "Ed Sullivan Show" for one week while Sulli- van was recuperating from his automobile accident. Frankie Laine did the best job of filling in on a variety show, taking over the Wednesday night "Godfrey And Hi& Ex-Friends" time for the second summer in succession. Laine is probably con- tent in spending the winter months counting his money as opposed to working, for he could do a good job on any of the regu- lar variety programs. * * * BUT THE REAL gem of the 1956 summer television season oc- curred on the first of September when ABC-TV was covering the Gold Cup boat races from Detroit. Because of inclement weather conditions the races had been de- layed and the announcing staff had used every conceivable meth- od.of keeping the program moving by filling in with color commen- tary. But they eventually ran out of things to say and the races were still unable to continue so as a last resort they sent one of the an- nouncers into the crowd to do some fan interviews. -4 4 A