Sixty-SixtAh Year EDITL- 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 The Great highway Gamble TODAY ANDX TOMORROW: T reaty ShNould De fine Rights of Users 4 aInions Are Free Will Prevail" 4 s printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. . SEPTIEMBER 20. 1956 - NIGHT EDITOR: DONNA HANSON By WALTER LIPPMANN MR. DULLES s facing an even more difficult task at the sec- ond London conference than he did at the first. For the Western position, that of the Big Three, has deteriorated, and It will re- quire ome hard work to retr Junk ing Staggered Distribution No Solution to Ticket Problem ERS AT THIS YEAR'S seven home foot- Li. games will probably be closely correlated wrhere in the alphabet the last names of udent spectators fall. . nks to the ever-Increasing genius of the to department, football enthusiasts - ien and seniors alike--who have had the tune of being born into families from SKni will be spending the coming Satur- fternoons in the less desirable seats at gan Stadium. cy in previous years has been to pass ckets during registration but to stagger clstribution so that a student who regis- on the last day would have the same 3 of getting a good ticket as -one who ~red on the first. This fall tickets were iuted on a non-staggered basis. sequently, the good seats In each class i went to those stugdents who registered trliest and hence received their ticket s first. From Monday to Wednesday the ole seats got progressively worse and the s, Harrises and Jones justifiably became r dnd madder. WOT STAGGERING the good and bad rets, distribution was undoubtedly much administratively thIs year. But if the c department thinks that administra- rnvenience is more Important than not sing people because of their last names, reens, Harrises and Jones say it has ~r think coming. Perhaps there were disadvantages to the staggered system, but the athletic department would have been more reasonable in remedying the disadvantages within the staggered system rather than junking It completely. ONE (XE'THE chief problems encountered in staggering occurred when ticket-seekers waited itround the counters until the good tickets came up in their section. But this prob- lem Is no reason to do away with staggering completely. A solution would have been simply to ask the students how many tickets they Wanted and give them the tickets with no previous information on whfether or not the tickets were in a good Stadium location. There would thus be no way of knowing whether the tickets distributed would get better or worse if the student waited a little longer. The Incentive to organize group seating blocks has been lessened under the new system. Now individuals are hesitant to wait until all members of their prospective group have regis- tered, since the longer they wait, the smaller the number of available seats. Before, groups stood the same chance of getting a favorable location no matter when they registered. Staggered ticket distribution should be re- instituted next fall as the most equitable method for the student body. -RICHARD SNYDER Daily Managing Editor Great Britain and France, though they have not said so ex- actly, have encourage the notion that in order to get international operation of the canal they might reoccupy the canal zone. Then, under pressure from the United States and from world opinion, they have almost but not quite said that they would not use force to impose their solution on Nasser. In the game of power politics, which is what Is being played at Suez, it Is a mistake to threaten If you are not quite certain that you can carry out the threat, and It ls equally a mistake to give your opponent a public assurance that you will not use force. A good dip- lomat does not talk much about force; he letsi the other fellow wonder and worry about it. Co1~7~10~t, 1956, Tht PuIltet PUbI2BbIDZ C@.. St. Louis Post-DisPfttCh I~IIerbtock Is on Vacation) WASHING TON MERR Y-GO-RO UND f Israel A 'Pressure-Cooker'8 By DREW PEARSON Eo operation in Student Driving A8 UNIVERSITY students went through the semi-annual registration chaos earlier this week, they were asked to turn In a signed card stating that they understood- and were willing to abide by the provisions of Regents' Bylaw 8.06 and the Administrative Code., Many students, anxious to enter the classifI- cation room, no doubt signed the card without giving a thought to the pledge of responsibility it entailed. Others, having reached the charmed age of 21, were pleased by the thought that they are ~now allowed to drive as well as drink. New University driving regulations are the product of many long months of hard work and cooperation on the part of students and admin- istration. It is the biggest step taken so far to' insure a friendly spirit of cooperation between. these Vwo Important, but notoriously antagonis- tic campu~s groups. If the new regulations work out well, the cooperative spirit may well be: brought Into play with regard to campus drink- ing and the housing problem. BUT IF STUDENTS disregard the new regula- tions, the 26-year driving age may well return d mand, more iportant, the spirit of co- operation may receive an almost irreparable setback. The University is going to be tough, very tough. They have hired three additional police- men and bought new equipment. First offense will bring a $50 fine; second offense may lead to a semester's suspension. Because the University couldn't get authority to stop any car suspected of violating regula- tions, some students may think it easy to escape the $7 registration fee or the trouble involved in getting an under-21 permit. . But it won't be es.Becas'te ar deputy sheriffs, campus cops willebe aby e t stop any car violating state or local regulations. An unregistred car could legally be stopped for going 21 m.p~h. in a 20 m.p.h. zone. Whether this sort of procedure is ethical or not is another question and not germane to this particular situation. ICE-PRESIDENT LEWIS has said that there wil b e every attempt to be as fair as possible. We bleve that the University will not abuse itsprivilege to stop cars. Ahendr wehope that students will not abuse terpriiege to drive them. .-TAMMY MORRISON SYRIA,. Israeli Border - Two Syrian border guards stood sil- houetted against the sky on the hill just beyond us. They looked down, across the ravine where the Jordan River came tumblijig down from Syriq across Israeli and on toward the Sea of G&Wge. It had been tumbling ddwn that ravine since David crossed it to escape the attack of his son Absa- lon, since Jacob's daughter looked for her brother Joseph when his brothers sold him into slavery in Egypt, and since John the Baptist immersed his converts in its rest- less waters. . Oblivious apparently to the part It had played in history, the River Jordan paid no ajtention to the two Syrian guards on the hilltop, nor to our own'"group which lis- tened to Dr. Paul Doron, chief irrigation engineer for the Jordan Valley project, tell of his plans to harness the turbulent river below. * , * * THAT WAS why the two Syrian sentries were suspicious. On pre- vious occasions they have shot at Israeli engineers as they pushed work on a half-mile canal con- necting a 90-mile irrigation ditch with the Jordan. The sentries did not fire this time, however, perhaps because two jeeploads of Israeli troops were with us; or perhaps because Israel has now stopped work on the con- necting link of the Jordan canal in deference to a request from the United Nations. Alongside us was rusting machinery, mute testimony that work on this end of the canal had stopped. Work on the rest of the 90-mile stretch of canal and concrete pipe, however, has not stopped. It ex- tends down, all the way through Galilee, through Judea and the Sharon to the deserts of the Negev, over which I drove en route to the Dead Sea. There, water carried from the Syrian border in the north almost to the Egyptian bor- der mn the south should make the desert bloom like a rose. - * * * THE REASON the rest of the Jordan River project is being pushed is because of the intense pressure on the Israeli government to feed its present population and take in more population to fulfill the centuries-old dream of a Na- tional Jewish Home. "Israel is not a melting pot, it's a pressure-cooker," explained Ja- cob Herzog, son of the Chief,Rabbi of Israel. "We have absorbed all the Jews of Iraq, 60,000 Jews from Yemen, 350,000 Jews from the Arab countries. We have 70 nationali- ties to absorb, and there are more to come. We have to support them and feed them if we are to fulfill our pledge of mankind." To feed them requires crops; and crops require water; and water re- quires irrigation. That is the rea- son for the two suspicious Syrian sentries who watched us from across the Jordan. * * * THE TRAGEDY Is that the so- called TVA for the Jordan Valley would benefit the Arab countries of Lebanon, Syria and Jordan just as much as it would benefit Israel. But, despite the patient, pains- taking diplomacy of Eric Johnston, the Arab countries have not agreed. 'whey have not, agreed chiefly because they don't want to help Israel. They would rather hurt than help themsel.es, and therein lies the biggast roadblock in the path of peace for the Near East. Most people don't realize It but there are 180,000 Arabs living In Israel. Thist is about the same pro- portion as thae Negro population in the U.S.A. 'This does not include the Arab refugees who live outside Israel, but the Arab population which did not escape and chose to take a chknce on getting along with the JeW's. One of the lswrgest of these Arab settlements is In the ancient city of Acre, which the crusaders con- quered inn their log campaign to take Jerusalem from thie Moslems, but which Napoleon did not con- quer in his quest to turn the Medi- terranean into a. French Lake. ** * THE KADI oX Acre Is Sheik Moussa Tabori, a -tall, handsome Moslem, whom I interviewed in his office next to the Mosque of Yassar Pasha. "I am Intrust ed with presiding over the Moslem~ courts," the Kadi explained. "Since the Arab popu- lation has different marriage and divorce laws, thes Israeli govern- ment has given us'.separate courts for these domestic-matters." "What are the relations between the Arabs and the Jews?" I asked. "Excellent; we get. along very 'well together," was the reply. "We have complete faneedom of worship and we also have Moslem schools. They are opera ted by the Israeli government, of c ouss but In them, the children study AMabic, Hebrew and English." (Copyright 1956, by :BeitSyndicate, Inc.) HAVING renounced military force through Mr. Dulles' state- mentN that we would not shoot our way through the canal, the Brit- ish amd French, with the United States dragging its feep behind it, began to talk as if they icould bring Nasser to his knees by organizing a boycott of the canal. Mr. Dulles then watered down that press. In this chapter of the story the world was treated to the embarrassing spectacle of Sir Anthony Eden and Secretary Dulles talking different- ly about a proposal that they were alleged to have agreed upon. The Western position has been weakened by these thregts and backdowns. But most seriously of poseaNsolution which t wasp the Western powers have made it very difficult Indeed for them- selves to negotiate with Nasser at all. For by taking what is so very nearly an inflexible position on their proposal for operation by an 'international board, they have left themselves with very little room to maneuver. The event has shown, so it seems to me, that the sound course would have been to present the Western proposal, not on a take It or leave it basis of international operation or nothing,but with a willingness to modify It by negotiation. The modification should have been in the direction of the Indian and, I believe, the Spanish proposals for international advice to the Egyp- tians operating the canal. Our ob- ject should have been to create a commonfrot of all the 22 con trie t the first Londo cone- ene, which would havenincluded India and thle Soviet Union, on the fundamental principle of the legal right of all the nations In the use of the canal. AS IT IS, standing so Inflexibly on the demand for international operation, there is no common front. Instead, Nasser'has the ex- tremely powerful support of the Soviet Union and of virtually all of Asia. Now, if we negotiate for anything short of international operation we shall be climbing down from the too high horse we mounted so hurriedly. The Western terms of settle- ment, which Mr. Menzies took to Cairo, were a reasonable proposal with which to begin a negotiation. But were they' so good as to war- rant standing on them to end ne- Suppose Nasser had accepted the principle of an International board to operate the canal. It would have been a board which had among its directors not only Egyptians but also, let us say, a Swiss, a Swede, and Indian, -per- * * * WHATEVER the membership of te boardIt would be opertni- side of Egypt, within the military and the police power of Egypt, de- pendent on Egyptian public utili- ties and Egyptian administrative services. What reason Is there to think that such a board could In some specifically dependable way guarantee the rights of the users if the Egyptian government were determined to violate those rights? The old Suez Company, which Britain and France found so sat- 1sf actory, was unable to enforce the treaty of 1888 agaist the Egyptian government in the case of the Israeli ships. This leads me to the belief that since the, canal is In Egypt and within tle mili- tary power of Egypt, free and equal use of the canal Is not guar- anteed by as private operating company nor would it be reliably guaranteed by a public Interna- tional operating company. The rights of the users will be only as good as their power and Influence, which Includes their ability to obtain the support of other nations. For that reason we are, I believe, missing the bus in not.getting the Soviet Union and India explicitly and firmly aligned behind a new treaty which defines the rights of the users. 1956 New York Herald Tribune Inc. Reviewers 7:15 p.m. Monday in the 'Enslan offi eofteSstudent Publica- Those who have previously reviewed for the Daily, and per- sons interested In reviewing movies, drama, music, books and art are invited to attend. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daiy Offelial Bulletin gs an of- fiital publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editoria1 responsibility. No- tices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3553 Administration Building before 2 p.m. the day preced- ing publication. 4 A -A V THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1956 VOL. LXVII, NO. 2 General Notices V The Thinking Citize 1,LL here we go again. People have come back to the Univerity ul oenhsam eagerness, imagination-real fireo len soam- thing, push grades up a couple of notches, "really get something out of college.'' Plenty of determination to stick to the books all week, no partying except on an occasional weekend. For most, this will last about a week, maybe two, three at the most. .Then back into the same old rut, trying to do half asm te's work the night before the mid-term blue-book'; writing as fast as the prof talks In the lectures and never thinking about the course once out- side the classroom.nHappensd every fall. - coming at the end of four years and a reason- ably well paying job with security follows, why worry? We've always been able to muddle through before. One reason for concern is that the world has become a far more complex place in which to live and work. Every community faces grave poblems and the problems become tougher on he national and International level. THE ONLY WAY the grave complexities of the modern world can be handled Is by Editorial Staff RICHARD SNYDER, Managing Editor RICHARD HALLORAN LEE MARKS Editorial Directo City Editor GAIL GOLDSTEIN -......... Personnel Director ENSTREODOSSIN..........EMagaine Eiditor MARY ANN THOMAS. ............Features Editor DAVID GREY......................... Sports Editor RICHARD CRAMER ...... Associate Sports Editor STEPHEN HEILPERN . .. ..... Associate Sports Editor VIRGINIA ROFERTSON............Women's Edio VERNON SODEN .... ............Chief Photographer Business Sta f f think ing citizens. The purpose of this or any oher university is to produce thinking citizens. Whaever other reasons one may have for getting a higher education, an underlying one should be the attainment of some awareness of the responsibilities one has as a citizen. The evils of the world won't destroy them- -selves. We can be rid of them only througha the efforts of alert, comprehendin citizens Many obstacles lie hrn the path of the student striving to become a thinking citizen. Not the leasth of tese are some of the characteristics of te Uiversity itself--the bigness, the loss of identity in the classroom, the distance betwee the studentc andhis teacher Theseb thestude n those he throws In his own way, allowing him- self to be distracted from his essential purpose as a student. Among them is the tendency to conform, to submit to the influence of the group, rather than seeking one's own way both intellectually and socially. It takes courage tert oeel out of a group headed for entsedtainment in favor of an evening of some outsie reding TODAY, more than ever, the community, the nation, and the world needs thinking citi- zens. The day wIll come when we can no longer muddle through. This Is the tas bfralofuasti school year begins eoealo sa hs -RICHARD HALLORAN Daily Edit orial Director New Books at the ibrary Harris, Mark--Bang the Drum Slowly; NY, Knopf, 1956. Heriat, Philippe--The Spoiled Children; NY, Putnam's, 1956. Hodeir, Andre--Jazz: Its Evolution and Es- sense; NY, Grove Press, 1956. Horsf all, J. C.-Australla; NY, Fred. A. Prae- ger, 1956. goitin CATASTROPHIC EFFECTS: Engineering to Home Ec: IHM Needs Oil. By LEE MARKS Daily City Editor A FUSE blowout in the Univer- sity's master IBM machine would be a catastrophe of no small dimension. It would force life in this vibrant community to a virtual standstill. It would determine that automa- tion, which has been creeping up on registration for years, has fin-- ally taken control. The last remnant of individuality disappeared when student acquired numbers at registration. The stu- dent number is on all IBM cards, elections cards and cashiers re- ceipts. As a woman in the statisticians office explained, "You're much easier to alphabetize as a number." * * * ALTHOUGH WE realize that utilizing numbers for identification rather than -Namnes is purely ad- ministrative we can't help feeling a little sad. There is something frightening in being told you're easir tohandle as a number.usd for branding cattle or tagging warehouse items. AND PICTURE the freshman of tomorrow reporting to the Office of Academic Counseling for advice. He's greeted by a sterile looking secretary who says, efficiently, "Please write your number on the second line. Fill in all information. Do not pass 'Go,' do not collect $200." Because this is the age of auto- mation the freshman's high school record, the results of several elec- tronically scored aptitude tests, his age, parent's address and other vital Information have all been transferred to his IBM card. As soon as he's completed the blanks the freshman hands his card to the secretary who puts it in the machine, sets the crank- frizzle for medium, adjusts the carboshaft and flicks the switch. hUnfortunatel sh ueforgot to pil a notch 'and forces the poor chap to major in home economics. But, after all, machines are only hu-' man. - * REGISTRATION proved more than just automation. It demon-- cate the overthrow ofa the driving ban by force. Signed,.Sammy Stu- dent." It will probably tr.Jke a Joint Judic decision to deteTfline if the oath must be taken by all students or just those in sensaitige positions. * * * REGISTRATION. ; iOver now and the drama is not to be re- peated for several .nporaths. We've been branded and sworn to uphold law, order and the driving ban but we've emerged unscathed. Students, take hope. They may number us and run us through IBM machines, they may force us to sign away our lives and take eight o'clocks, but, as Winston Churchill once put- it, "We have nothing to offer but blood, toll,- tears and sweat." Activities Sponsored by Student Or- ganizations. All activities and projects sponsored or produced by student or- ganizations must receive the approval of the Student Goternment Council. Petitiorns forul considertin d by the' Administrative secretary of the Coun- cil in the Office of Student Affairs at least two weeks before the event is to take place. Petition forms may be se- cure ntat ofie, 102 Amnista recognized, registered student organiza- tions only will be considered, and acti- vities and Proj ects under the sponsor. ship of an individual student or group of studensznt oconstituting a recog- Closed Social Events (for members and invited guests only) sponsored by student organizations must be, regis- tered in the Office of (Student Affairs, 1020 Administration Building. Appli- cation forms may be secured in the Of- fce of Student Affairs, 1020 Adminis- tration Building. Requests for approval must be submitted to that office NO will be published in the ,Daily Official Bulletin on Thursday of each week semestr soial carmen are remind that the calendar is closed seven days prior to the beginning of final exam- inations. For the present semester, ex- aminations begin Jan. 15. Art Print Loan Collection will be on view Thunrs. and Fri., Sept 20 and 21 Rackham Galleries. Special Student Rate on Lecture Course Tickets - Season tickets for the University Lecture Cgurse are now on dnts are grantdta special rate of $3.5 for the complete course of eight at- tractions, including dramatic programis and discussions of world affairs. Box office hours are from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Recreational Swimming - Women's Pool. Starting Thurs., Sept. 20: Women only: Mon-Thurs. 5:10-6:10 p.m.-Tues. and Thurs. s:15-9:15 p.m.-- Fri. 4:00-6:00 p.m. Co-Rec Swimming: Sat. 7:15-9:15 p.m. Sun. 3:00-5:00 p.m.- for flies wth ichildre unde 308 years)-8:0-9:30 (for other faculty fam- ilies). Michigan Night: Sun. 7:15-9:15 p.m. A cademic Notices Correction in Time Schedule. Psych. 31, Lecture B will meet Mon. and Wed. I,,-.. I /t4~ 1t