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 "You Said It, Pal-We Both Got A Right To Poison The Air" To The Editor Em.r - MEM inions Are Free Will Prevail" gals printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. OCTOBER 7, 1956 . NIGHT EDITOR: TAMMY MORRISON Sorority Rushing System Hurts More Than It Helps m ANNUAL institution comes toga close day, the most favorable words anyone cted with it can truthfully utter will be, ik, goodness that's over!" this afternoon marks the final step in. phenomenon apparently necessary for ;uation of the University's Greek letter -sorority rushing. the traditional pledging ceremonies in >f the 21 houses on campus, actives will ly greet their new "sisters." Roughly one- of the approximately 1350 women who d at the beginning of rush will participate t happy event. ood percentage of the other 900 will go o the routine of daily life, nursing an un- ed blow to the ego. )rity women and their soundfing boards, ishint pamphlets and Panhel booklets, libly tossed off such phrases as "Rushees lect the house they want.. ." The naive cheerfully began the rounds, only to hrough painful experience that too often ement -of choice rested unequivocably in nds of the affiliates. HING, it would seem, contradicts the rorities' main drawing card: that it pro- for a closely-knit unit of people based compatible personalities. Once under the roof, the "sisters" must participate in mass integration process, for it is rather usible that actives are endowed with such >yance th t they can instinctively rec- qualities in an individual that are more surface deep. in reality, they can't and they don't. Any affiliate who has not completely lost her iden- tity in service to the "cause" will readily attest to that. She will admit that since a coed is accepted into the ranks almost purely on the basis of first impressions, the whole rushing system can qualify to be nothing more than a large-scale, over-planned hit and miss game.- In "picking straws" to decide whom to ask back, the more honest sorority member will say that her group is guided by the rushee's abilities to impress one of the actives with her conversational prowess, that the shy person or the coed who doesn't happen to "hit it off" with the active is unfortunately quickly dropped by the wayside. She will add that decisions are influenced in part, in favor of the coed who is known no better than the next, but whose arrival has been preceded by a packet of letters highly- touting her attributes. THE FACT that a rushee has been "dropped," sorority members generously contend, should place no black mark upon her character. This is a poor explanation-if one considers the paradox of the whole rushing system, the fact that an active can not even begin to know the character of any one individual If sororities play an integral part in campus life and there are many who question the bene- fits of their existence, the rushing system as it now stands, seems to hurt more people than it helps. -ROSE PERLBERG TODAY AND TOMORROW: Differing Practical Judgment Sponsor, Then Condemn To the Editor: I'VE JUST READ Time Maga- zine's account of Ester Kefeau- ver's campaign tour (which was quoted approvingly in the Sunday Free Press.) You may recall it ran as follows: "Already the traveling press is . . . tired mentally because Estes bores them with his unvarying routine, his dull, platitudinous, primerlike speeches repeated with little variation at stop after stop, his tedious habit of shaking one hand after another, looking at its owner with glazed, unseeing eyes, hardly hearing himself mouth some meaningless banality." For pure descriptive terminology the writer (Serrell Hillman) is in the same class with that ubiquitous writer of dirty stories. But the conten is a somewhat dramatic illustration of the unfair and dis- honest representations of non- -Republican candidates. It's been only five years sisce Kefauver captivated the American television public with his very creditable handling of the Senate Crime Investigation. It is interest- ing to note that his sponsor on television was Time Magazine. -W. J. Collins,'57L Watt Next? . . To the Editor: A FEW DAYS ago for the third consecutive evening the lights were out in Williams House, West Quad for over an hour, from 9 un- til past 10, when conceivably some of the residents might be trying to study. We had thought that after the lights went off at ap- proximately the same time two nights in succession the manage- ment would take steps to solve the difficulty. We were not disappoint- ed. They reacted in typical West Quad. fashion: they placed the blame on the students. The Quad "Wheels" tiptoed from room to room with their little master key and ransacked the rooms while the occupants, were in class or watch- ing the World Series on TV. (M.V.D. Take note!!) Several hours of their patient, painstaking gumshoeing- yielded three (3) hot plates. Aha, here was the cause of the difficulty. I am not an electrical engineer but it would seem to me that judg- ing from this evidence, a couple dozen of these babies would suf- fice to put the Detroit Edison Co. out of business! Be that as it may, tonite the lights were out again. What next? 15 watt bulbs in every room? This is our home away from home? dOn well, students come and students go but the management lives on. --Ken Graham, '57 Save Money? . . To the Editor: RE THE Student Bookstore ideat This is no way for a student to save very much money. Consider- ing an average outlay of $50 per semester for books and supplies, a maximum saving of 15% (which assumes complete subsidy of over- head costs) would amount to only $7.50. In any event this saving is not particularly significant in terms of the magnitude of the other costs. Are you really interested in sav- ing money? Some students at the University of Michigan are now saving about $150 per semester in room and board costs compared to dormitory rates. How? By the cooperative technique, together doing their own house work, cook- ing, management. -Paul U. Strauss, '58Med -Ton Rudd, '58Ph Lansing 'U' . . To the Editor: THERE is a world outside of Michigan where confusion -is ripe over our two "State Univer- sities." Historically the State University has always been in Ann Arbor. Since \we have an imitator we could alleviate some misconcep- tions by referring when necessay to the other university as the "Lansing University." You tap an influential type- writer-do seize the imminent op- portunities' for educating the pub- lic. -D. M. Brown 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, OCTOBER 7, 1956 VOL. LXVII, NO. 16 General Notices Meeting of the University Staff at 4:15 p.m. Mon., Oct. 22, in Rackhani Lecture Hall. President Hatcher will dis- cuss the state of the University. All members of the University staff, aca- demic and non-academic, are invited. Tickets for Individual Lecture Course Attractions on sale Tues., Oct. 9. Tickets for the eight numbers in the 195-57 Lecture Course may be purchased at Hill Auditorium box office starting Tues., 10 a.m. Season tickets will be available through Wed. night. Students are offered a special rate of $3.50 for the complete course, second balcony, unreserved. Meeting of all interested in Rhodes Scholarship Wed., Oct. 10 at 4:15 p.m., in Room 2013, Angell '(all. Applications for the Scholarships Will be due Oct. 19 and should be handed in at 2026, Angell Hall. Further Information may be obtained from Clark Hopkins, 2011, Angell Hall. Lectures Leture, auspices of the Economiom Club, "British Trade Union Wage Policy and Inflation." Hillary A. Marquand, former Minister of Health in the Brit- ish Cabinet and Professor of Economies at the University of Wales. 8:00 p.m., Mon., Oct, 8, Rackham Amphitheater. Department of Journalism. Robert Fisler, assistant to the publisher, Sports Illustrated Magazine, will speak on "Nobody Sleeps on Bunday Afternoon or Sports and the New America" In Rackham Amphitheater, Mon., Oct,$8, at 4'p.m. Operations Research Seminar. "Opera- tions Research in Industry." Philip Morse, Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology. Coffee hour, 3:30 pm., Wed. Oct. 10, in Room 243, W. Engineering; seminar, 4:00 p.m. in Room 229. All faculty members welcome. Academic Notices Mathematics Club will meet on Tues., Oct. 9, at 8 p.m., in West Conference Room, Rackham Building. Profegsor William J. Leveque will talk on "The Thue-Siegel-Roth Theorem". Anatomy Seminar, Wed., Oct. 10, Room 2501, East Medical Building. Dr. William Castor will speak on Biosyn- thesis of Mucopolysaccharides by Syno- vial Cells in a Simplified Tissue Cul- ture Medium. Doctoral Examination for Robert Lloyd Davis, Mathematics; thesis: "Lie and Engel Modules and Their Relation to Burnside's Problem", Mon., Oct. 8, 3218 Angell Hall, at 4:00 p.m. Chairman, R. M. Thrall. Anthropology Club. The first in a series of four lectures dealing with "Mathematical Thinking in the Social Sciences" will be held at 8:00 p.m. Tues., (Continued on Page 8) 4 Justice Accorded McKeon THE REDUCTION in Marine Staff Sergeant Matthew C. McKeon's sentence by the Sec- retary of the Navy brings the Sergeants punish- ment much more into proportion with his offense. Convicted of negligent manslaughter for the death of six recruits in a night march at Parris Island, S.C., a military court directed that Mc- Keon be giveni a bad conduct discharge, be con- fined at hard labor for nine months, and fined $270. Secretary Thomas has ordered this scaled down to three months confinement and the discharge and fine completely remanded.. The important point to be noted here is that McKeon, a professional soldier, will not be barred from 'following his chosen career as he would have been. under the original sentence. That punishment was unwarrantedly severe' and violated the spirit of justice when the cir- cumstances surrounding his error in judgement are considered. - Sergeant McKeon, in leading the recruits into the swamps, was conducting training'that, while it may not have been pre- scribed in the book, was condoned by the Marine Corps. THAT he commited an error of judgement is hard to doubt but he should be punished for that and that alone. The disciplinary action rendered by the !Secretary of the Navy is in accordance with this principle. Sergeant McKeon, a good soldier with a fine combat record, will be given a second chance. From what we read of the man's character, this faith in him should prove to be well founded. -RICHARD HALLORAN Editorial Director By WALTER LIPPMANN THE differences about Suez be- tween this country and its allies, Great Britain ahd France, do not really stem from such views as we may have on "colonialism." They stem from a differing prac- tical judgement as to how to deal wisely and effectively with Col. Nasser's seizure of the Canal Com- pany. There is no difference on the fundamental point that all the na- tions of the world have indubitable rights in the use of the canal, and that these rights must be protec- ted by a regime established under an international treaty. The ques- tion of colonialism does not arise. For Egypt is not a colony and no- body is claiming that the canal zone iq anyone's colonial property. What we, together with the Brit- ish and the French, are claiming is that the rights which are pledg- ed by the Treaty of 1888 shall be made secure. How substantial are our actual differences it is difficult to say precisely. For none of the three governments was prepared for Nasser's coup. None had a consid- ered policy. Each reacted at the outset rather by its reflexes than by reflection. Since then, the three Foreign Mi isters have met twice at big international conferences. But they have been, it would seem, too preoccupied and too hurried to make sure that they understood one another. OUR DIFFERENCES are not clear or sharp. But they seem to turn on two points, neither of which has anything to do with col- onialism. The one point has to do with military force. The other has to do with a policy to follow in working towards a solution. It is not true, as has been sug- gested abroad, that this country is unconditionally opposed to a resort to force, or that responsible American opinion has been opposed to the little mobilization of forces in the eastern Mediterranean. We have been troubled and even frightened at what we thought we were hearing from London and Paris about the objectives for which these forces might be used. Nobody has opposed, almost all would approve, having forces available as a precautionary meas- ure to prevent anti-Western riots such as occurred in Cairo in 1952. Nor would there be American op- position to the use of force, even in spite of a Soviet veto, if Nasser closed the canal or violated the rights which are guaranteed under the Treaty of 1888. We drew back from the sugges- tion, which has been at.least semi- official, that these forces might be used to overthrow Nasser. That, in our view, would be an illegal and immoral use of force. We drew back too from the idea that mili- tary force might be used to impose on Nasser the kind of regime which the-18 nations have proposed. In our view, these proposals cannot be made into- an ultimatum and should be traced as negotiable. THOSE OF US who take this view believe that it rests on a cor- rect appraisal of the military and political situation. We believe that military intervention is almost cer- tain to entangle Britain and France in a prolonged guerrilla war, as in Algeria and Cyprus, if Egypt has the backing of the Sov- iet Union, of India, and of vir- tually all of Asia. We think such a war would be easy to start and hard to finish. From this it follows, so we be- lieve, that a settlement must be sought by negotiation, and that the key to a successful negotiation is to work towards an internation- al regime for the canal which has the support of the Soviet Union and of India. There is little doubt that the vital interests of India are identical with our own, and that they call for the free use on reasonable terms of an efficient canal. As for the Soviet Union, though it has o such vital inter- est in the canal or, even perhaps, in a workable settlement, it is on record as supporting the Indian plan. OUR VIEW, it is evident, dif- fers from the view of those who believe that the prestige of the West will collapse in the Middle East and in Africa if we avoid a show-down with Nasser, if we do not overturn him or at least pun- ish him. Our answer is that the circumstancesn arenot now right for a showdown, and that no show- down should be had unless and until Nasser has committed a, gross and deliberate violation of international rights. For the time being, if we can negotiate a settlement, the prin- ciple will have been vindicated that the canal is an international water- way, and that it is not under the unfettered control of Egypt alone. 1956 New York Herald Tribune Inc. Stock Market NEW YORK (A)-The stock market broke a string of three straight weekly declines and posted a fair gain this week. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks rose $2.80 to $177.50. ..4 4 A4 4 ti INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Red Goal: Controlled Ferment I By WIMAM L. RYAN AP Foreign News Analyst CAUTIOUS but confident, the Russians are approaching the United Nations Security Council debate on the Suez crisis with the notion that they have the United States over, a barrel. The Russians appear to want a settlement Df the immediate crisis, for one big reason. They have not liked the look of British and French military preparations. They do not want an Arab-Western war that would spell danger for the Soviet Union. But they do want to capitalize on the fever of na- tionalism and anticolonialism in the Arab world. Moscow thus can be expected to press Egypt to offer a Suez settlement which would sound logical. Actually, Moscow expects and depends upon American support in this. RUSSIANS plainly are telling President Nasser of Egypt: Settle the crisis by finding some means of offering an ironclad guarantee of operation while gaining recognition of the; canal as a sovereign Egyptian right. Secretary of State Dulles' indication Tuesday Editorial Staff RICHARD SNYDER, Editor that the United States was following a course independent from that of Britain and France underscores the U.S. dilemma. The United States apparently wants to demonstrate it does not automatically support colonial countries. Middle East oil causes the State Department to tread warily. The Russians have seized eagerly on Ameri- can fears. The Soviet press indicates a grow- ing confidence that the Suez question, coupled with far-reaching Middle East implications, can' be used to drive a wedge between the United States and its allies in Western Europe. Prav- da, official voice of the Soviet rulers, says the U.S. aim in the Suez dispute is to make itself master of the canal and the whole Middle East, at Britain's expense. AN ARAB world explosion over Suez or any other major issue could represent a serious danger to Western Europe and a tremendous problem to the United States. At the least, a threat to the flow of Middle East oil would call for a heavy outpouring of American dollars to shore up Western Europe through a harsh crisis. The United -States at the moment does not seem to be thinking in terms of British-French prestige, or colonial future, but of the immediate prospects of a severe economic dislocatioin to be offset only by American dollars. As always, the Red goal in the Middle East is ferment. But this time it is a goal of con- trolled ferment. The Russians do not want the situation to get out of hand. New Books at the Library Belden, Thomas Graham and Belden, Marva Robins - So Fell the Angels; Boston, Little Brown, 1956. Brown, D. C. - Journey from the Arctic; NY, Knopf, 1956. Eddy, Roger - The Bulls an dthe Bees; NY T. Y. Crowell, 1956. Gascar, Pierre - Beasts and Men; Boston, At- lantic - Little Brown, 1956. Hanson, Lawrence and Elizabeth -The Tra- gic Life of Toulouse-Lautrec; NY, Random House, 1956. Harriman, Margaret C. - Blessed are the Debonair; NY. Rinehart. 1956. A TALKING ON TELEVISION: New TV Season Spectaculars Seem Geared To Color I RICHARD HALLORAN Editorial Director LEE MARKS City Editor GAIL GOLDSTEIN ............ Personnel Director ERNES'I 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 Business Staff DAVID SILVER, Business Manager MILTON GOLDSTEIN .... Associate Business Manager WILLIAM PUSCH........... Advertising Manager CHARLES WILSON ...............Finance Manager PATRICIA LAMBERIS ..... Accounts Manager HENRY MOSES..............Circulation Manager By LARRY EINHORN Daily Television Writer OCTOBER gives us Columbus Day, Halloween and the be- ginning of the new television sea- son, not necessarily in that order of importance (although some of the new shows tend to place them in that order). By now almost every program has .debuted and the 1956-57 tele- vision season is in full swing. Of the many veteran shows which have now returned nothing needs to be said. They are generally just as good (or just as bad) as in pre- vious years. One of the first spectaculars to to be sprung on the public this season was last Saturday's "Es- ther William's Aqua Spectacle." Here was the prime example of a spectacular being beamed to- wards the small group who have pioneered and bought color TV sets. *4* * THE ENTIRE emphasis must have been on the colors for the program content was nil. NBC financed Miss William's recent +nm. n.rnoA wt ei r a mn of ,,in The only excitement occurred when one of the girl water skiers, atop the shoulders-of her partner, decided to go for an unexpected early evening dip. * * * IF NBC is to invest their fi- nances into productions with the ulterior motive of using them as spectaulars, this show should in- spire them to' invest in produtions which are suitable for television. CBS may be better finaniers, for they invested in "My Fair Lady" and will eventually use it as a spectacular. Jackie Gleason re-activated his live hour-long variety show be- cause as Jackie put it "Perry Como has made me live again." As you may remember Gleason sort of lost his "King of Saturday Night" title last year when Perry Como entered as his opposition. Gleason's first show was as good as any of the programs he did when he still had his royal title. The June Taylor Dancers high- lighted the proceedings with one of their magnificent production numbers. An addition to the show board for two performers who are now top stars. Roberta Sherwood, presently one of the hottest night club attrac- tions, made her comeback debut on "Stage Show." Another singer also made his national debut on this program. He appeared on the show five or six- times and never created too much of a sensation, except for a few screams and yells from the studio audience. He wiggled and danced more violently than he has on subsequent TV appearances. Yet no cries of "Keep him off TV" were heard from the public at that time. * * HE DID NOT achieve the 82.6% share of the audience or 43.7 Trendex rating which he achieved for Ed Sullivan a few weeks back. He was then just another hillbilly singer. For better or for worse "Stage Show" should be credited for bring- ing to the American public the young man who is currently the nation's No. 1 recording artist and TV attraction. It took a new Saturday night ease in handling the emcee chores on this program than he was dur- ing his stay on "The Big Surprise" last season. This is because he owns this show and is his own boss and therefore doesn't have to look up to anyone. I The show, as all the others, has its gimmicks. Like two isolation TV studios for the contestants and a set of twins to escort the con- testants into the studios. But the emphasis is on common knowledge in all subjects instead of genius abilities in one category. ANOTHER FEATURE of this program is that it is possible for a contestant to stay on indefinitely and eventually win an infinite amount of money. Possible, but not very probable. In capsule comment form some of the other new shows appear thusly. "The Brothers," new situation comedy ith Gale Gordon and Bob Sweeney, was described by the pre-- ;eason experts (mainly CBS pub- licity men) as "this year's" situa- tion comedy. Its first show places it in the "just another situation romdv" elane-. fering, wasn't saved by the guest appearance of Jackie Gleason and Red Skelton. Shriner, as of his first show, seems better cast as host on "Two For The Money." Jack Webb's directing and pro- ducting coupled with a good cast of new TV personalities account for the interesting "Noah's Ark" Tuesday night series. It's the "Medic" idea (except this medic is a veterinarian) presented in the "Dragnet" style. BUDDY HACKETT'S "Stanley" completely evolves around Hackett, and this fact alone makes for a very funny program. This is one of the very few situation comedies which is presented live and is one of the first non-spectacular type shows to be produced by Max Lieb- man. Janet Blair proves to be a wel- come addition to the already popu- lar "Sid Caesar Show," which moved back to the Saturday night schedule 'this;season. * * * THE ONLY CLEVER thing about Tennessee Ernie Ford's new night- time show is that the star and the / -I