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 f. "WI ho's Whistle-Stopping?" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: WILLIAM HANEY Alumnus Dewe .Dredges Depths of Partisanship J, "" C ell, A u.~_w - , NH b ~*I s t L 51 ~5Fr~ t1$~~ U! ~~10, ,., N THE first speech during his current cam- paign to make "a Dewey" out of Stevenson, Republican two-time loser Thomas E. Dewey managed to dredge the muddy depths of par- tisanship. While he graciously admitted that Stevenson "is a man of peace and a man of the best in- tentions," most of his speech was designed to obliterate any such notions his audience might have had, and his argument took many turns. One was the attempt to label the Democrats as the "war party." While again using the deny-but-suggest technique, Dewey refused to argue that recent Democratic Presidents were "each responsible for getting us into war," perhaps because the point is unarguable. But in his next paragraph he went on to imply just that when he said, "It is to be re- membered that three times in this century clever and effective speeches helped win elec- tions and each time thereafter the country was plunged into war." HIS CASE against Stevenson, expressed large-. ly in negative terms, centered around re- cent proposals by the Democratic nominee on the draft and on hydrogen tests. He called Stevenson's suggestion that the draft might be ended within the foreseeable future - if found consistent with national security - the "stuff of which wars have been made in the past." Had Stevenson expressed his suggestion in the form of a promise - which he was careful not to do - it might be vulnerable on such grounds. But Stevenson qualified his statement" on the draft so carefully as to make it as meaningless as Vice-President Nixon's recent predictions of shorter worling hours if Eisen- hower policies are continued. What is disappointing in the Stevenson state- ment is not that It represents any peril to our security, but that it is hardly in keeping with its author's 1952 intention to "educate and elevate a people whose destiny is leadership." One of the Democratic nominee's most ap- pealing traits has been his willingness to sac- rifice momentary political gain in order to contribute to a public opinion equal to the responsibilities of America's world position. His statements have been unaccompanied by any convincing evidence that our defense pos- ture could be maintained without the draft, a'nd in such a form they appear to be the sort of "easy solutions" which the candidate in 1952 warned against suggesting to the voters. Stevenson can be accused of a certain amount of intellectual dishonesty on the draft issue, in that voters who do not read his draft state- ments with a. lawyer's eye for hedges may get the impression he is promising an end to the draft. However, one must assume that Dewey does get more than a headline-reader's view of the newspapers, and his charge that a Ste- venson victory would leave us all dead is hard- ly excusable coming from a man of Dewey's sophistication. THE other Stevenson proposal which Dewey says could lead to war was a perfectly sound one. Many free nations, especially in Asia, where the United States has used the atomic bomb, and a large segment of the thoughtful American public has been revolted by the tre- mendous advances being made in, atomic- PROFITS OVERRATED: 'U' Bookstore- Difficulties Explained hydrogen weapons by both sides in the cold war. Not only are they concerned over the des- tructiveness of the weapons themselves, but several noted geneticists have warned of the harm which may be befalling future genera- tions merely from the frequent American, Brit- ish and Soviet tests. At a time when this country's peaceful in- tentions are questioned in much of free Asia, Stevenson has proposed that we display our de- sire for disarmament in a way far more graph- ic and meaningful than the President's much- praised proposals for "open skies" and "atoms- for-peace." By unilaterally cancelling all atomic and hy- drogen testing we would not, as Dewey charged, be "stripping the free world of its best defense-- our leadership in the field of atomic energy." What he chooses to ignore is Stevenson's oft- stated condition for cessation of the tests -- that the Soviet Union likewise discontinue atomic detonations. Modern detection methods permit the whole world to be aware of any atomic explosion on the scale of a weapons test within days after it ,occurs. IF THE Soviets followed suit it would be a victory for the cause of weapons control and the genetic continuity of the human race, while in no way jeopardizing our present "lead- ership in the field." If Russia failed to discontinue testing, it would be a great help in our attempts to con- vince the-world that the Soviets are responsible for the Cold War and are the real enemies of world peace. The few months any tests might have to be postponed would certainly not be decisive in the arms race but would be time well spent in this period of non-militaristic "com- petitive co-existence." What then is there to justify Dewey's chai-ge that Stevenson's bomb test proposal "indicates that the New America would be a place where most of us would not°live long enough to en- joy it," which is as serious a charge as any yet made in this political campaign. 1 . THERE is much more in the Dewey address which should be discussed-his great build- up of the Administration's role in ending the Korean War coupled with a refusal to specify a single change in American policy contributing to the armistice, his great emphasis on the cur- rent struggle for the uncommitted nations while ignoring the Adminisration's inflexibility and moral righteousness in this area, his distorteI version of the record of the 84th Congress. But the war-scare portions of Dewey's speech were the really irresponsbile ones. The Republicans in 1952 succeeded in gener- ating healthy public concern over the Korean War into near-hysteria, capping their efforts with General Eisenhower's "I will go to Korea" speech. The lack of such feverish public atti- tude today is actually jeopardizing Republican chances in November. Dewey's current speak- ing tour - if its kick-off is any indication - appears to be a campaign to recreate 1952 at- titudes by painting a picture of imminent war and devastation should Stevenson be elected. The present members of the University com- munity need feel no pride that Alumnus Dewey chose his alma mater as the starting point of such a campaign. --PETER ECKSTEIN -,,-, X_ , ' . =<. t_ ' .'a '+ " . r a t t- " . -- : : ~ f (Ed. Note: Bob Marshall, -a local businessman, has for many years taken an interest in student problems. His article, explaning the difficulties of es- tablishing a University-owned bookstore, takes the form of a "Letter to the Editor") To :the Editor: IN Tuesday's DAILY Mr. Richard J. Giannone writes regarding the university's "unfortunate neglect of its responsibility to establish a bookstore." As a bookseller not engaged in the text-book business as , ._ ' t f 6'4 . 4 43Et.g r.0 fe. q Yr -h+g w..si+r.a trori pa4t' us ; WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: New York Democrats Loafing By DREW PEARSON AS IT looks today, Adlai Steven- son and the Democrats will lose the most populous state in the union - New York. Reports trickling in to Demo- cratic headquarters from the farm belt, from the South, and from the Northwest all look good for the Democrats. But from New York, with its huge block of electoral votes, the reports are bad; also from New Jersey and Connecticut. Chief trouble is Carmine De Sapio, head of Tammany and mastermind of Governor Harri- man's abortive attempt at the nomination in Chicago. He isn't working. The organization men around Carmine also aren't work- ing. New York is as dead as a dodo as far as Democratic political ac- tivity is concerned. * * * CHIEF REASON: They don't want to lose their man-Bob Wag- ner-as Mayor of New York. If Wagner goes to Washington as Senator, he can't do them any fa- vors. If he stays in Manhattan as Mayor he can do plenty. DEMOCRATIC politicians also have -no great love for Abe Stark, the Brooklyn clothing-store man and president of the city council, who would automatically replace Wagner. Meanwhile, ex-congressman Jack Javits, despite lukewarm Republi- can support at first, is expected to win a heavy Jewish vote in a city where the population is prepond- erantly Jewish. It was Javits who administered the surprise defeat to Franklin Roosevelt, Jr., for New York Attorney General two years ago. A WASHINGTON taxi driver pulled up alongside Vice President Nixon's limousine at an intersec- tion the other day. Recognizing Nixon in the back seat, the cabbie yelled: "Hi, Mr. Vice President." Nixon rolled down the window, leaned out and replied cheerfully: "How do you do?" "Better enjoy that big Cadlilac while you can," advised the cabbie amiably, "because you won't have it next January." INSIDE FACT about those 24 F-86 jets which Canada is selling Israel is that Secretary Dulles lit- erally hounded Canada's foreign minister Mike Pearsoi into selling them. I From the moment Dulles heard that Canada had some spare Sabre jets, he made Pearson's life miser- able. Finally Canada came across with the planes for Israel. This is part of the Dulles policy of trying to curry favor with the Arabs yet at the same time please the Israelis. He has consistently told Colonel Nasser and other Arab leaders that the United States would not sell arms to Israel. But last spring he arranged with Gen. Alfred Gruen- ther of NATO to get the French to sell 24 Mystere jets to Israel. An American okay had to be giv- en for such a sale, since the jets were part of the NATO forces built up with American aid. The United States did more than give its okay, however, it actually arranged for the sale. * *. * THE ARABS were not fooled. They protested the sale, but they d did not protest to Paris. They laid their protest right at the door of John Foster Dulles. Only trouble with the sale of these planes is that Israel, facing a backbreaking job of financing its country, hasn't the money to pay for weapons. It needs them, but can't afford them. It faces the fact that Russia has bartered 200 MIG's to the Egyptians - jets which could make a bombing raid on Tel Aviv from Cairo in about 30 minutes. So it must have jet planes to defend itself. All this results from Russia's policy of dumping arms in the Near East - a policy which has made Near Eastern countries spend most of their budgets on arms when, according to the al- leged Marxian theory, they should be spending money to improve the lot of the common man. * * * DEMOCRATIC strategists might well take a look at the record of one member of the Eisenhower truth team - the group sent to follow up Stevenson-Kefauver and supposedly tell the American pub- lic the real truth. Most vigorous, vitriolic mem- ber of the truth team is Sen. Bar- ry Goldwater of Arizona. It would be interesting to ask Senator Goldwater to undergo a lie-detector test regarding his friendship with the late Willie Bioff, famed labor racketeer who went to jail for shaking down the motion picture industry. After he got out of jail, Bioff lived in Phoenix under the as- sumed name of William Nelson, and ran a poker game at a Phoenix club. Goldwater was once presi- dent of the club. He became so chummy with the convicted labor racketeer that he flew to Las Vegas with him onhone occasion and registered at the same hotel. The same Senator is now trav- eling around the country checking on the truth of Adlai Stevenson. WASHINGTON PIPELINE - The White House ordered the Army to get out of the coffee busi- ness and give up its'roasting plants this summer. The price promptly shot up from an average of 75 cents to 84 cents a pound. The taxpayers pay the difference to the big coffee companies . . . Theon Wright, boss of the gaso- line pump manufacturers associa- tion, has warned that gas pumps aren't keeping up with the auto industry.. Pumps now used in gas stations won't be able to pump the volatile, high-powered gasoline to be used by the auto engines of the future..-. (Copyright 1956, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) the term is usually employed per- haps I might be regarded, if not as an unbiased commentator, at least as one able to shed some light on the situation.-' Mr. G's letter discusses a good deal of mis-information and fails to consider many aspects very ger- mane to the question he raises. 1. He is unhappy about the jam- up in stores at text-book time. So is every text-book dealer. It is economically impossible for any store, regardless of its ownership, to handle 10 to 20 times its normal business without a certain amount of confusion for a two or three day period twice a year. This con- fusion is of the nature of the beast - a store which handles at most two or three hundred custo- mers a day on 340-odd days of the year is suddenly confronted with two or three thousand customers or more on four-odd days of the year. With the jam-up at regis- tration, a university-run function, fresh in Mr. G's mind, why loes he suggest a university-run book store would be any different? * *. * 2. Mr. G. is concerned about the prices he pays. As far as new books are concerned, prices are fixed by the publishers and are uniform throughout the country. If Mr. G. wants to say that prices on text- books as set by publishers are too high, this is his privilege, and could be considered in another letter. But it is palpably irrespon- sible to talk about "Ann Arbor's array of high-priced bookstores" without first ascertaining who es- tablishes these prices, and without considering the Fair Trade Laws. (Again, if Mr. G wants to discuss the pros and cons of fair trade, let'shave it, but until such a dis- cussion, let's not damn the local merchant who is bound by these !laws.) w3. On used books, Mr. G. is on shaky ground also. He suggests that the student book exchange is a step in the right direction. Let's look at this. The student book ex- change is subsidized by the Uni- versity, Student Government, and the Union. It receives FREE rent, heat, light, water, janitor service, insurance, tax-exemption, adver- tising, and LABOR ... yet appar- ently its prices are not signifi- cantly lower, if at all, than those of the 'capitalist" stores where none of these costs are free. If the prices were appreciably lower how could the existing stores continue to, operate in the used text' business? What more would Mr. G. have the University furnish in the way of a subsidy than that it now furnishes to student book exchange? The plain facts are that even with a very heavy subsidy of every cost save that of the books themselves, even with student book exchange paying NONE of its operating costs, it still does not compete successfully with stores which must pay ALL their operat- ing costs. 4. THE MOST interesting of Mr. G's remarks concerns situations at other campuses. On these cam- puses the situation is not quite as we havesit presented to us. Rather glibly we are informed that "the university-run bookstores give an automatic discount to all students, say ten or fifteen per- cent." Mr. G., this just is not so, and you owe it to your readers and to yourself to ascertain facts be- fore you make such sweeping statements. None of Mr. G's examples are tax-supported institutions. At both Harvard and Yale, two of the three mentioned, there are cooperative stores. These have been formed with capital provided by their cus- tomers, who also serve in a mana- gerial capacity thru elected offi- cers and the like. There is no "automatic discount" in such co- operatives but rather a share in the profits (if any) on the basis of the amount of patronage by each member. * * * IF MR. G had written endorsing the idea of a cooperative book- store, this would be a legitimate point and could be discussed on its merits. As a onetime member of the board of directors of the now-defunct Ann Arbor Coopera- tive Society I should be delighted to see Mr. G. activated in this di- rection. That he would succeed, however, is not likely, because the increased costs of doing business in all retail establishments, in- cluding book stores, has stopped the growth of American coopera- tives to put it mildly. This fact should be emphasized. Mr. G. obviously is not aware that recently-published figures by'both +he Avamin'R. n nrne11a. A Cgrn. dent spends no more than fifty dollars a semester on books and supplies, this means the local mer- chants, contrary to the vitupera- tive statements of Mr. G., are sharing a net profit of $3.00 per student MAXIMUM PER YEAR. Divide this up between Follett's, Overbeck's, Slater's, Wahr's, Ul rich's, Morrill's, Music House, Mu- sic Center, Music Corner, plus the supply business of all the drug stores and the dime store, leave a few pennies for Bob Marshall, and you'll see that none of us are getting rich in the "book business". THERE IS one clear point in Mr. G's argument, however. If the University wants to subsidize a book operation, and spend a good deal more money on it than they do even on studentrbook exchange, they could undersell the local stores. This does happen in some schools. They could undersell to any degree they want, not just 10 or 15 percent but 100% if the uni- versity wanted to subsidize that heavily. But let's be clear about this: the economics of the book business at retail, as I can testify from very close and at times sad, experience, just doesn't allow even an efficient operation more than a 2 or 3 per cent net profit. Savings beyond this must come from a subsdiy of one form or an- other. And if the university is pre- pared to do this, wouldn't it be a lot simpler just to reduce tuition fees to the amount the subsidy would cost? Before Mr. G. wrote his letter he should have checked with the work which has been done over the years on this campus by stu- dent governmental bodies. I have Imet with three such committees in the past 7 years. *Speaking as a professional book- seller who feeds his family because of his ability to cope with these figures, I can say that these com- mittees did their work well, ended up with a good grasp of the retail book business. After each investi- gation they decided it was not economically feasible to set up a non-profit book operation. Per- haps Mr. G. should have studied these reports before his blast at my colleagues. In conclusion, I very much wish Mr. G. was closer to the mark - that profits were as substantial as he implies. For the going in the book business is tough, there are fewer book stores in this country than in 1900. The financial re- wards are even lower than those of the professorial commnity! -Bob Marshall DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an of- ficial publication of the University of Michiga for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. No- tices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 8553 Administration Building before 2 p.m. the day preced- ing publication.-- FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1956 VOL. LXVII, NO. 9' General Notices Urgent notice. All persons who were selected as ushers for the coming season for the Choral Union, Extra Series, and Lectures, whose names were listed in this column Tuesday, Sept. 25, will please pick up their usher tickets at Hill Auditorium Box Office either on Thursday Sept. 27 from 5 to 6 p.m. or on Sautrday, Sept. 29, from 10 am. to noon. Vetrans who expect education and training allowance under Public Law 550 but have not yet made application to the Veterans Administration for benefits mustreport to Office of Vet- erans' Affairs, 555 Administration Building, before 3:00 p.m. Tues., Oct. 2. Applications for Phoenix Project Re- search Grants. Faculty members who wish to apply for grants from the Mich- igan Memorial-Phoenix Project Re- search Funds to support research in peacetime applications and implica- tions of nuclear energy should file applications in theePhoenix Research Office, 118 Rackham Building, by Wed., Oct. 3, 1956. Application forms will be mailed on request. Telephone 2560. Social Chairmen. Open houses before and 'after home football games are authorized in orgnaized student resi- dences on the Saturday of the game between 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. for pregame functions and between 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. for postgame functions. Guest chaperons are not required, and registration of these events in the Of- fice of Student Affairs is not necessary provided they are confined to the hours indicated. The following student sponsored so- cial events are approved for the com- ing weekend. Social chairmen are re- t~ r Arab-Israeli Truce Not Enough T HE CRISIS in the Middle East between Is- rael and the Arab countries seems almost to have reached the boiling point again. Dag Hammerskjold, Secretary General of the United Nations, made a hurried trip to the Middle-East hot spot last spring in hopes of bringing the hostility between the two foes to a standstill. Troubles between the two had been increas- ing since the creation of Israeal in May, 1948. Editorial Staff RICHARD SNYDER, Managing 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 HEILPERN ........ Associate Sports Editor VIRGINIA ROBERTSON ...... ...... Women's Editor JANE FOWLER.............Associate Women's Editor ARLINE LEWIS ............. Women's Feature Editor VERNON SODEN ..............Chief Photographer Some of the causes of the rivalry can be traced back centuries to cultural and religious differ- ences. This cultural difference has been aggravated by the presence of Arab refugees on the Israeli borderline and reprisal attacks by Arabs on Israeli territory. Hammerskjold managed to secure a tentative, uncertain truce between the two nations and lulled the Western powers into a false sense of security concerning the Arab-Jew problem. THEN ONLY six short weeks after the truce was declared, fighting began again with skirmishes along the border. This week it has flared up once more. However this problem is not one concerning the two rivals alone. It has been made a world wide one bringing in the two greatest powers in the world today, Russia and the U. S. Russia indirectly put her foot in the Middle East by encouraging the Arabs with promises of military assistance. She has made good her promise by backing such military aid as the Czech-Egyptian arms agreement in 1945. In turn the Israeali government in Tel Aviv requested American aid. While the U. S. re- fused direct aid she made it clear she would not protest if aid were given by her allies in the West. Thus the problem left unsolved by Hammer- skjold is increasing day by day with military armaments being built up by both sides. If the problem which has been simmering for so long reaches the boiling point it may be the sark which ronula na~cPa. n +nlT.-1- LETTERS to the EDITOR More Bookstore . . To the Editor: Cheers and a few bouquets for Richard Giannoe for his recent letter asking why the University has not established a book store for the benefit of students. The situation as it stands in Ann Arbor today is just plan outrageous. Con- sider the unbound collection of mimeographed notes needed for an E. M. class and selling for $5 in local book stores. Much as we like to poke fun at State, it might profit all U of M. students if a delegation was sent there to study some of the features found at that school. A Univer- sity book store where books may be purchased at reasonable rates and a system of registering stu- dents that takes a fraction of the time and effort expended here and requires no 'railroad ticket' are a few of the more outstanding fea- tures that could well be found here. Perhaps in the face of Univer- sity reluctance to take any posi- tive steps toward relieving the burden Dlaced on students by in- Business Staff DAVID SILVER, Business Manager MILTON GOLDSTEIN .... Associate Business WILLIAM PUSCH ............ Advertising .CHARLES WILSON .............. Finance PATRICIA LAMBERIS .......... Accounts HENRY MOSES..............Circulation Manager Manager Manager Manager Manager i ........... ~ .