q. We've Got Something For Everybody, Too" Sixty-Seventh 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 Men Opinions Are Free Truth Wil Prevail" F f +.q ? , ... / { I . _ - i ,yc yfTLC . _ . +r Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: WILLIAM HANEY Lecture Committee Product Of Circumstances, Not Ideology FORTUNE TELLERS ' i - (j , 4.., RACKHAM AMPHITHEATER: Indian Movie Has Powerful Theme ORIENTAL MUSIC filled the air. It was the premier of an Indian movie in Ann Arbor - and the movie chosen for the occasion was one of the best India ever pro- duced. Awara (Vagabond) is the story of a boy who had no means to an education, and no money for food, What path was the boy to take in life? What was to be his role in the society? Was the boy to be turned into a criminal? These were the questions before the boy. And these are the ques- tions that millions face in India. And millions in Asia. And in Africa. The story seeks to prove AFTER studying the existence and policies of the Lecture Comittee one concludes that it is a creature of University circumstance and cowardliness. Internally, the circumstances are two. With the growth of the University since 1837 has come an increase in the University's bureaucracy. One hundred years ago, students and faculty played relatively larger roles in campus life compared with .administrators. Now, owing to the necessity of coordinating this conglomeration of 21,000 students and 2,000 faculty members, the students learn, the faculty teaches, and the administrators run things. Also, through time and the increasing con- cern with social sciences and political issues, student thought has fragmented into various and often warring camps. This has manifested itself in the sometimes irresponsible conduct of student-run political debate on this campus. Thus, the bureaucracy, of which the Lecture Committee is a case in point, got its foot into the student activitie's door first as an arbiter, then found the role of judge an easy next step. EXTERNAL factors of circumstance are legion.. Most important we are a State university. We must act our Sunday-best seven days a week. The Ways and Means Committee of the Legislature judges our conduct in the form of University . appropriations bills every year. Free speech means little to the taxpayers so the Legislators judge; the public is interested only that the University not be party to any- thing that smacks of "communism", "social- ism", "radicalism", or even "liberalism". To complicate the problem, newspapers in the state stand ready to pounce on any un- toward situation at the University. How do you assess the situation resulting from these circumstances - the existence of a Lecture Committee which screens and dis- courages controversial debate on this campus? FIRST, you feel a little less proud of your alma m-ter because it has drifted with the tide of a McCarthy-poisoned phobia of men's minds and has not, in its position as a fore- most educational institution, attempted to guide men's thought with reason. Second, you wish the faculty would as- sume more leadership on this campus, insuring that the pending, controversial issues of the times would have a full airing here. Faculty members and groups don't need a Lecture Com- mittee okay when bringing outside speakers to campus. Third, although the University thinks it naive, you hold to your interpretation of the democratic faith that any person should be al- lowed to say anything before anybody on this campus, as long as he violates no federal or state law.I And fourth, you go over to the General Li- brary and read about ideas which you think free men should be allowed to debate openly. --JAMES ELSMAN, JR. i ; "" \ f / t . { .. . . , / ° /1 IJp0LL M i T 'h / f t , a,. I t F. . 4 f X+ h j T :c'. 1 'to -v . xn x yl ,. 5 . . "y7a-,t j Si k ' q TN L . s 'M11 , 'l, K ,", . a Yr { . 1,'f 1 / f}/) A a , .34 ^'. ' W a{i., j i r , i ' *;'c , - ; t G'q,.'SZT- w,5Hta4tT J s-t-c WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: yiThe Battl of theO Titans Bly DREW PEARSON. Middle East a Complex of Crises THE current complex of crises in the sizzling Middle East is, to put it-mildly, an explosive situation replete with threats and counter- threats, defiant declarations, charges and counter-charges. Israel, though faced with a threat of pos- sible annihilation at the hands of her Arab neighbors, is nevertheless openly defiant, charg- ing with some justification, Jordan, Iraq and Egypt with warlike moves, and claiming "free- dom of action", or the right to take the fight to the enemy should he proceed any farther with military preparations and troop move- ments: This declaration was prompted by the planned movement of 3,000 Iraqi troops into Jordan. This move was later called off and the forces held in readiness at the Jordan frontier, even though the United States and Britain had approved the proposed action in the hope that it would stabilize King Hussein's shaky rule against more extreme elements, i.e. Egypt's Nasser. The Arabs are apparently solidly united against Israel, but are nevertheless embroiled in a struggle for power, and squabbling among themselves, especially over the Baghdad pact, a pro-Western alliance to which Iraq belongs. Salah Salem, editor of a Cairo newspaper and a former propaganda minister under Nas- ser, has charged, for example, that the Iraqi troop maneuver was a plot to occupy Jordan, a Western conspiracy to undermine Arab unity, and part of a plan to overthrow the Egyptian government. THE blame for the tension cannot be laid to any one party. Israel pleads that she is the victim of un- provoked aggression and deserves Western help. Yet Maj. Gen. E.L.M. Burns, chief of the United Nations mixed armistice commission, reports that his investigations of the ever-recurring border, incidents have been balked by Israel's refusal to cooperate. At the same time, Premier David Ben- Gurion is renewing his demands for UN inves- tigation of. alleged Jordanian aggression in the border area. Contradictions such as this be- tween Israeli words and Israeli deeds raise seri- ous doubts about the sincerity of her pleas for an end to the frontier clashes. Ben-Gurion continues to add fuel to the fire under the Mideast pressure cooker with claims for more license, specifically free use of the Suez Canal, without danger of search or confiscation of cargoes. This is certainly no more than simple jus- tice, but such fighting diplomacy is to be ad-' mired only when used wisely. At a time such as this, however, when the lid threatens to blow sky-high at any moment, it is unwise and can serve only to aggravate the tension. N THE light of President Eisenhower's pledge to send American aid to any Middle East ag- gression victim, a promise which Secretary Dulles reaffirmed this week, it would seem that Israel is virtually inviting attack, in the belief that the West, especially the United States, would intervene and perhaps destroy the Arab threat to Israel for years to come. Such intervention seems to be Israel's only chance for survival in event of war, despite the courage and determination of her people. The Arab nations appear only too ready to accept Israel's challenge. They have made repeated pledges of solidarity against her, and have begun to mass troops closer to the Israel frontier. The long-standing desire of the Arab World to wipe Israel off the map and reclaim that supposedly Arab territory is no secret. If left to themselves, there is little doubt that war would erupt in the area tomorrow, with the annihilation of the little Jewish nation a pro- bable result. THE Western powers, particularly the United States and Britain, have taken the only sensible course open to them - attempting to act as a stabilizing influence, with the insti- tution of sanctions against any aggressor. To take sides with Israel would be to alienate the desired friendship of the Arab world. To side with the Arabs would be to refuse Israel her God-given right to stand as an individual na- tion where her people, now scattered all over the globe, can and are finding a home they can call their own. An eventual solution to this monumental Middle East problem will be reached only with more patience, wisdom and cooperation than has so far been shown in the activities of the nations involved. --EDWARD GERULDSEN f los Angeles-Here in California is being waged the battle of the titans. It's the millionaires against the billionaires. And it has aroused almost as much attention as the battle between Ike and Adlai. It's a statewide vote on point 4 to adopt a new oil conservation plan to keep California's vast, but fast dwindling oil reserves from being further squandered. Though it's a state battle, it has national repercussions: first, because other oil states face the same conserva- tion problem but even more im- portant because. it continues the same pattern used by the oil and gas companies to get what they want-namely, to buy up the leg- islature, the Congress or the elec- torate. In the case of the natural gas bill in Washington last winter, the gas-oil moguls tried to buy up the Congress. In California for years they have bought up the legislature. And right now they're trying to buy up the California electorate. Never in the history of California have newsmen seen the state deluged with so many handouts, billboards, TV plugs, blasts and counterblasts all aimed at influencing the vot- ing public. * * * A TOTAL OF $985,000 is offi- cially listed by the billionaires, the big oil companies, as spent to put across their conservation plan, How much has been spent beyond the official listing is of course not known, A total of $575,000 is listed by the millionaires, the independent oil companies, to block the con- servation plan of the billionaires. Unquestionably California needs oil conservation. Ten years ago it produced all the oil it needed. To- day it produces 70 per cent of what it needs. If oil isn't conserved, California will be forced to buy more and more from Arabia. But the big question is: should California have a conservation law rammed down its throat by the greatest propaganda machine ev- er seen in the state; and if the law passes can it ever be changed? The power of oil-company mil- lions is such that change is diffi- cult. * * * IN THE PRESENT battle of the billionaires vs. the millionaires the people of California are at least able to watch two groups of oil companies battle it out. They are fortunate enough to be on the side-lines, acting as referee. The reason they are able to act as referee, however, is in itself a sad commentary on present legis- lative methods. For the California legislature is so tightly controlled by the independent oil companies -the millionaires-that no oil- conservation law could pass. That is why the big companies-the bil- lionaires-went to the people with a referendum. The California legislature is controlled by Harold Morton, at- torney for Howard Keck and Su- perior Oil. Morton is one of the most astute lawyers in California, with his son-in-law, Joe Shell, vice-chairman of the Assembly Oil Committee and perhaps the next speaker of the California Assem- bly. * * * H. B. KECK is the same tycoon whose representatives o f f e r e d $2,500 to Senator Case of South Dakota during the natural-gas de- bate. He is also the same Keck who gave $5,000 to President a Eisenhower's dinner committee during the gas debate. Senator Case returned the $2,500, but Ei- senhower forces did not return the $5,000. Superior Oil has since been indicted by Brownell's Justice De- partment, though Keck, who put up the money for both Case and the Ike committee, was permitted by Brownell to go unscathed. His Superior Oil Co. is now leading the drive against Cali- fornia's point 4 plan, the com- mon name for conservation. With Keck are 170 independents, in- cluding Signal Oil, Universal Con- solidated, and one major, Union Oil. Union is the company for- merly run by Herbert Hoover, Jr., now Undersecretary of State. Un- ion is largely owned by Gulf which imports much of its oil from Saudi Arabia and the Gulf of Persia, which may account for Hoover's consistent stand against Israel and for the Arab nations during state department policy meetings. On the side of the billionaires are eight big majors-Standard Oil of California, Richfield Oil, Shell, Tidewater Associated, Gen- eral Petroleum, Ohio Oil, Conti- nental Oil and the Texas Co. OF VITAL INTEREST to the American public outside of Cali- fornia is the way these oil com- panies throw money around from the privileged position of their 27% per cent oil-depletion allow- ance. No industry in America is so favored by the tax laws, thanks to the generosity of speaker Sam Rayburn and the potent Texans who dominate the key committees of Congress. And no industry has been more wanton in bribing Leg- islators, trying to bribe Congress and trying to influence public opinion-all with money allowed them as a result of this privileged tax position. Here is some of the money be- ing thrown right and left through advertising firms and public rela- tions experts to influence the peo- ple of California regarding point 4. (Copyright 1956, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) AT THE MICHIGAN: Walkers depressing FOR three days only, the Michi- gan theater is showing a thrill- ing motion picture, "Walk the Proud Land." It is in cinemascope and stars Audie Murphy. Shows are continuous from 1 p.m., with the features at 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, and 9:30, Thank you for calling. The information above may most easily be obtained by simply dial- ing the Michigan's answering serv- ice number, NOrmandy 2-2513, whereupon a dreadful female voice will tell it to you, personal- like. Unfortunately, it is my sad duty to point out that those who do walk this proud land, actually an Apache reservation, are a strange and depressing group. * -* * AUDIE MURPHY is there, as J. P. Clum, a saintly Indian agent who, opposed by the Army and the voters, wanders into the land ofGeronimo and tricks the wily Indian into surrendering, with the aid of some impromptu sound effects. There is a strangely blue-eyed Indian girl around who wears lip- stick and provides a welcome con- trast to the run-of-the-mill Indian women who sltuffle wearily and look old and wrinkled. Also a strangely brown-eyed girl from the East who marries Clum and has a hard time. DOES this all ring true? Can a foolish white man subdue the Indians and the Army and the Governor, and keep his wife happy while surreptitiously keeping a squaw around? And can he bring the whole affair off without get- ting hardly anyone killed, except a renegade named White-Fang? Even the sophisticated theory that all Indians are mostly good, and all white men are usually bad fails to answer these questions. The cartoon is a fair riot. -David Kessel Stock Market .e. A LATE RALLY led by steels, coppers and some rails gave the stock market its first rise of the week today. Advances running to around 2 points or so were made by key stocks. The market was mixed from the start. Tendencies toward the up- side or downside occurred but got nowhere most of the day when trading was at its slowest pace of the week. In the final hour, however, an upward move won buying support and the trading pace quickened considerably.. Earlier in the day stocks paid little or no heed to various new items of good corporate earnings. Later, however, wall street be- came a veritable hall of bullish rumors and phophecies. Brokers credited these with much of the improvement. that no person is a born criminal, however low his means. It is the environment that turns boys to vice after society has closed its doors to them. Awara has a powerful theme that revolves around a rich and idealistic judge, his son Raj who was torn away from his father and brought up in the slums and Reeta, Raj's girl, who sought to retrieve Raj from the pit of sinful life. HIGHLIGHTS of the film in- clude realistic acting by two of India's most popular stars, Nargis and Raj Kapoor, a spectacular dream sequence symbolizing Heav- en and Hell and a lilting music scoreby Shanker-Jaikishen, two of the most popular music-makers of India and Pakistan. ,The film was produced and directed by Raj Kapoor, one of the youngest and ablest of 'India's film producers, dAwara was selected by the Ina dian government for the Cannes Film Festival in 1953 and was also released in the Middle East, Eu- rope, Asia, and the Communist contries. It received a wide ma- sure of popularity everywhere. The film has a particular sig- nigicance for Americans. To the extent that Awara portrays some of the problems in the East realis- tically and frankly, it leads to a better understanding of the East- a most necessary condition for the Americans today in view of the woild situation and communist ef- forts to win over Asia's millions of uncommitted people to their side. -Mohammed Azhar All Khan Mohammed Azhar Ali Kahn is a University of MichiganrUniversity Press Club fellow; foreign corres- pondent, Pakistan Press Associa- tion; Ann Arbor correspondent, Asian Student; and former Chief of Press Unit, United States In- formation Service, Karachi. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily official Bulletin is an of- ficial publication of the University o1 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. General Notices FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1956 VOL. LXVII, NO. 26 Student Government Council Ele- tions, Nov. 13,;14. Students wishing to run as candidates for election to the Council may secure petition forms in Room 1020 Administration Building. Five one-year terms, one %i year term open, Petitions must be returned by 6 p m. Oct. 23. Nodextension of this deadline will be made. Late Permission: All women students who attended the concert on Wed., Oct. 17, had late permission until 11:15 p.I. Anyone who has rooms to rent to alumni on football weekends, please call the Michigan Union Student Acti- vities Offices. Meeting of the University Faculty and Staff, Oeneral staff meeting at 4:15 p.m. Mon., Oct. 22, in Rackham Lec- ture Hall. President Hatcher and the Vice-Presidents will discuss the state of the University. Certifiates will be presented to the recipients of the Dis- tinguished Faculty Achievement Award. All members of the University staff, academic and non-academic, are in- vited. Student Government Council. Sum- mary of action taken, meeting of Oct. 17, 1956. Approved: Minutes of previous meet- ing. Interim action: Pakistan Students Association, movie "Awara" Oct. 18, 19, Rackham Amphitheatre. Budget of $10,502.90 for 1956-57. Calendaring: May 3, Crease Ball, one o'clock closing; May 3 Military Ball;. May 4 Inter House Council, spring dance; Dec. 8 Student- Faculty-Administration Conference. Ex- emption from filing of 350 signatures for John Wrona in filing candidacy for election. Appointments: Ron Shprr as Public Relations chairman. M-Mndbook study committee: Lewis Engman, chairman, Tim Leedy, Ron Shorr, Janet Winkel- haus, Rod Blackman. Resignation: John Wrona. Vacancy to iemain until November elections. Received: Oral report on Activities Building - Dick Good, Free University of Berlin - David Learned Administra- tive Wing; Lecture Study Committee Progress report. Postponed until meeting of October 24 a motion to open petitioning for the Free University of Berlin scholarships. Reported Herbert Marks and Rod- ney Blackman will attend the Stud- ent Conference on U. S. Affairs to be held in December at West Point. Name change: Indian Institute of Chemical Engineers to Society of In- dian Chemical Engineers. .Lectures. Political Science Round Table monthly meeting Mon., Oct. 22 at 8 p.m. in the Rackham Assembly Hall. Muriel Grind- rod will speak on "The Rebuilding of Italy: Democracy's Struggle Against Left and Right Extremism." Concerts Student Recital: Patricia Jean Sten- berg, senior in the School of Music, .4 SGC IN REVIEW: Candidate Petitioning Slowly Picking Up INTERPRETING THE NEWS: H-Bomb Ban Precarious By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst ONE thing about Adlai Stevenson and the H-bomb, he has made the Republicans ac- cept a campaign issue where none grew before. Just how much impact the dispute is hav- ing on voters, none can tell. But where the American public had appeared to be the world's least interested people, at least a few letters to the editors are beginning to appear over the country. Stevenson's statements of his ideas on the subject a'e still open to dual interpretation. Either he is proposing to stop American bomb tests and ask others to join, or he is proposing to initiate negotiations looking toward an agreement for simultaneous stoppage. A LOT of people who know little or nothing about it are arguing over whether this would be safe. Some of the facts may be cleared up by an official government statement next week. However, in view of the traditional secrecy - much of it necessary - about nuclear matters, perhaps it is doubtful whether the public will be given enough information to form an intel- ligent opinion. Stevenson has said that if elected he would seek an agreement with Russia to ban the tests. An agreement might be reached quickly- provided Russia sticks to her public statements that she is ready to enter such a pact. The question would then revolve around the efficacy of American safeguards against Russian violation. Russia is not noted for keep- ing her political contracts. Her ideology teaches her to mko nr hreak them as her self-interest By TAMMY MORRISON Daily Staff Writer ALTHOUGH the number of SGC candidates got off to a slow start, things are picking up. To date, sixteen people have taken out petitions, promising fair com- petition for the six available posts. And since petitioning doesn't close until Tuesday, a few more students will probably join the candidates' ranks. But out of the sixteen candi- dates, only one is female, and she's already vice-president of the group. The Council's present membership roster includes only two female elected members, Veep Jan Neary and National and Inter- national Affairs Chairman Anne Woodard. Sue Arnold, Carol De Bruin and Jean Scruggs are all ex-officios, and Jan Winkelhaus was appointed by the Council to fill a vacancy. What's hapnening to the distaff furthef investigation and evi- denced an unusual amount of in- tensive study and discussion by the group, something rather rare in this age of "Let's-refer-it-to-a- committee." Students and faculty alike have pointed out inadequacies in the University's various counseling facilities for a long time. First set up when this campus was much smaller, many of them have been unable to keep pace with expan- sion. Students are generally ignor- ant of counseling's vast scope - besides academic counseling, with which all students are unfortu- nately familiar, there are also psy- chological, vocational, financial and religious counseling facilities, ** * RECOGNIZING the need for ex- amination and coordination of counseling, SGC last spring asked Student Affairs Vice-President sary. For instance, inter-commun- ication among services is practi- cally nil. As a result, there is uncertainty about specific func- tions of an area of counseling, and wasteful overlapping ensues. In order to get more information, the group drafted two questionnaires; one to be sent to each counseling service, and one to be sent to a scientific sampling of the student population. The questionnaires are complete and thoughtful, and without them, the study can proceed no further. Students have yelled loudest and longest about inadequate counsel- ing facilities. Soon, they will have an opportunity to submit their opinions to the committee, and the committee will make its recom- mendations on the basis of those opinions. If the vital counseling programs are to change and grow with the University, the opinions contained ments were advanced against it. First, particularly in the fall, lack of time between Administrative Wing tryouts and elections would mean that many people who de- cide to run for SGC over the summer would have to wait until spring to do so. Second, most of those who run foi*SGC have prior experience in other campus organ- izations. Lack of time is the fault of SGC's tryout program. Most other organizations have tryouts during the first two weeks of school, and it seems unnecessary for SGC to wait until the middle of October, even for all-important rushing to conclude. * * * ALTHOUGH SGC is similar to many campus organizations in structure, it is not identical. Ex- perience in IFC or Assembly wouldn't necessarily qualify a stu- dent fr the ('onenil though it A A t. :, r