, I "Okay -Now Scram'" c* 4r £iAr1igan Daily 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 "When Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: EDWARD GERULDSEN Calendar Committee Requires Indication of University Opinion THE UNIVERSITY has recognized a definite problem and is taking the opportunity to clear up the difficulties involved. The academic calendar, object of numerous gripes and criticisms in past months, will be dissected and studied by a new student-f aculty- administration committee that begins work to- morrow. The committee chairman has already indi- cated the group's investigation of the calendar will be a thorough and penetrating one. Recom- mendations for change are to 'be expected. BUT THE NEW Committee on the University Calendar cannot suggest a calendar any more favorable to the majority than the present one unless those persons who are concerned with the dates of the school year express their concern now. Complaints have been many-the session after Christmas vacation is a useless two weeks; Christmas vacation is too short for employ- ment; classes should not start until two weeks after Labor Day in September; there should be a "dead period" between classes and final exams; Tuesday-Thursday-Saturday classes should be treated equally with Monday-Wednes- day-Friday classes. How valid, then, are these criticisms and wants? Are they representative of the majority? How can the calendar committee answer these questions? Thecommittee needs, obviously, an indication of opinion-particularly student opinion-on the calendar. The best way to achieve this is for those persons who are concerned to present their feelings. STUDENT Government Council will hold an- other of its forums today. This discussion will cover the University calendar, will present views of individual student, faculty and admin-- istration members, and will allow for contribu- tions and questions from the floor. All members of the new calendar committee have been invited to the forum to acquaint them with the initial problems of the calendar. No better time could be presented for students with calendar complaints to make themselves heard and expect some action to be taken. The attendance at today's forum will indicate the seriousness of student opinion on the calendar. -VERNON NAHRGANG I- pS " f 5s r .d. ASHINGTONERY-GAS4frUN-'PPS'--*--t WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: 1*'* Boycott at Alcorn Capitol Drinking Questioned By DREW PEARSON CLENNON KING, history professor at Missis- sippi's Negro Alcorn A&M College was re- portedly fired last weekend. King had written several newspaper articles criticizing the NAACP for "having done nothing locally" for the Southern Negro, and pointing out that the Negro, as well as the white, must learn tolerance. This in itself made little, news, but nearly 500 of the college's 561 students boycotted the school in protest. Most of them were expelled last week. King's criticisms were generally valid. The NAACP has appeared to be concentrating its efforts in test cases and trouble spots, places where it seemed the publicity would do them the most good. But they have accomplished this to the neglect of a concerted attempt to raise the social and economic status of the Southern Negro to a point where he might more easily be accepted on equal terms by his white con- temporaries. King himself suggested that the NAACP was responsible for agitating the boycott. IF HIS REPORTS are true, it suggests that the Negro organization and the small state-sup- ported college are in unethical collusion-the NAACP and the students for attempting to silence a critic, and the college for bowing to this pressure. The students, at least, and per- haps the college administration and NAACP seem to be letting racial self-consciousness get out of hand. Another question arising from the situation: In times when educational facilities are at a premium, one wonders if the students fully realized the possible consequences of their boy- cott. Students financially hard-put to attend the college haven't gained. Unless the State Col- lege Board recants, allowing the students to re-enter, the students' education has been set back. And if a "blacklist" is effected among Southern schools, their penalty could be worse. IF THE NAACP was implicated in the boycott, they have foolishly sacrificed the welfare of 500 students to accomplish an end, however well-motivated the action was initiated. The cause of desegregation and raising the level of civil rights has not been advanced by this attempt to silence a critic. Alcorn's stu- dents, and the NAACP, if involved, made a mis- take in resorting to unethical tactics to gain a valid objective. -ROBERT BALL Middle of March But a Glimpse of Spring THERE WERE couples sitting on the steps of Angell Hall yesterday, reflecting in the warmth of an early Spring day. One professor took his class outside and conducted a seminar on the lawn near Natural Science Bldg. The day was clear with only a slight chill in the warm breeze. Couples strolling across the Diag had a don't-give-a-damn-about-studies look in their eyes. And one girl was wearing bermudas. It was the first day for sitting quietly on the lawn in back of Haven-Mason and just thinking. There are no leaves on the trees yet, they haven't caught up, and only the bravest of birds are back in town, but there was unmis- takeably the feeling of Spring. Best part of it, though, was that people were taking it easy. Even the professors were gazing out the long glass windows as they lectured. Dogs were barking. People were strolling across the fields of the Arboretum, along the streets of campus-town, across the paths of the Uni- versity. They were talking, smiling, their lips were smeared with ice-cream. It's still the middle of March, and Ann Arbor weather being what it is, we probably haven't seen the last of Winter. But even if yesterday was only a glimpse of Spring, and not Spring itself, it was a wonderful day. -L.R.M. TWO PLUSH cocktail parties in the Senate Office Building have raised ,the question of drinking in government buildings-a question which has been debated pro and con ever since Daniel Webster used to appear inebriated on the Senate floor. The question happens to be a bipartisan one, since both Presi- dent Eisenhower and Adlai Steven- son attended the cocktail parties in question-one for ex-Chairman Len Fall, Republican, last week; the other for new Sen. Joseph Clark, Democrat of Philadelphia earlier. There was a time when the Methodist Board of Temperance and Social Service, of which the late Bishop James cannon was the crusading chairman, kept an eagle eye on Capitol Hill drinking. As a partial result, the Senate does not permit even beer to be served in its dining room. The House does per- mit beer, but nothing stronger. In other government buildings there arerregulations against the serving of liquor, though around Christmastirhe officials diligently look the other way. * * '* BUT ON Capitol Hill, which has its own police, the Solons have made their own rules. They date back to 1837 when Congress voted to banish the official bar from the INTERPRETING THE NEWS: A Return to the Law Of the Fang and Claw? By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst IF THE United Nations Emergency Force proves incapable of preserving order in the Gaza Strip the world will face the prospect of a return to the law of the fang and claw. It is almost incredibly important that this first shaky experiment '4 Halls of Congress, chiefly because Daniel Webster and Henry Clay spent most of their time there. About the time the official bar was banished from the Capitol the ring of saloons that surrounded the capitol also was dried up, in- cluding Pendleton's famous House of Fortune. In those days there was one saloon to every 90 people in the city. But all bars were abol- ished from around the Senate and House and remained banished. The first real dent in this taboo on bars near the capitol building came immediately after Eisen- hower was elected. Some of the most distinguished leaders of the Republican Party set up the Capi- tol Hill Club at that time, just across the street from the House of Representatives where a thirsty Solon could slip across and get a quick snifter. The bar was located in the for- mer home of ex-Congressman Charley Dewey of Chicago, and such GOP leaders as John Foster Dulles, Clare Boothe Luce, ex- Secretary of War Pat Hurley, and Sen. Frank Carlson from the once very dry state of Kansas, each kicked in $500 to get the club going. , * THE GOP BAR aroused a furor among Washington clergymen partly because it was the first bar near the Capitol since 1837, partly because the GOPeers pulled wires to get their place licensed. A license1 for a package store had just been vetoed right next door to the GOP club, despite . which Republican leaders overruled all precedent and wangled an "on-the-premises'-' drinking license. They even got the D.C. law waived regarding the fingerprint- ing of the license owners. The dis- tinguished Republicans who ap- plied for the license didn't want to be fingerprinted, so the law was ignored. Now, as a result of the two open super-duper cocktail parties, one Democratic and one Republican, held in the Senate Office Building, Washington drys and clergy are up in arms. You're sure to hear a lot more demand that the capitol go back to the laws of 1837. THE JOINT Chiefs of Staff have warned Ike to expect a Chinese Communist assault on Quemoy or Matsu next month. Secret photos show a steady buildup of the Red military. University Students in East Ger- many are so restive that the Com- munists have formed armed "alert squads" to patrol and police the universities. (Copyright 1957 by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) in collective enforcement of peace shall not fail, Not merely because Israel is al- most certain to retalate with full force against continued violence directed against her from the area, resuming a war which no amount of talk will be likely to stop this time. But because it would mean the failure of what is up to now the one promising means or providing a cooling off period for settlement of violent disputes. * * * THE COMBINATION of Egyp- tian civil administration with UN military occupation may, be the best arrangement that can be made now for this kettle of hate, provided both agencies live up to their responsibilities. To maintain the precarious peace the civil administration must not return to its former encourage- ment of raids across the Israeli border, and the UN force must stop them if they do occur. The United Nations force is hanging in midair. Its legal basis under the UN Charter is by no means clear. It represents a deci- sion by the nations to do some- thing which has never been tried. Nations have acted in concert before to repress or to encourage a war among the smaller countries, but never before under the aegis of such an organization as the UN. The power of the emergency force was envisioned at the begin- ning as primarily moral. But it has had to shoot already, and it may have to shoot again. * * * EVEN THE immoral attacks on Egypt could not be pulled back without leaving a serious impact on the situation as a whole. If a situation developed where the UN force had to be pulled back, hope would have to be pulled back, too. The trouble is that the force is in the Middle East by agreement and not by imposition. If Egypt demands that it get out, will it do so? Hammarskjold has no authori- ty to defy such a demand. The General Assembly, which could quickly reconvene, might not authorize defiance if it involved the possibility of the use of force against a member. Firmness at the front is now the cnly weapon of the UNEF, while negotiators at the rear attempt to ward off a showdown. BOOKS: Detective Fiction BEYVARE THE CURVES by A. A. Fair, Morrow. BY NOW just about everyone knows that A. A. Fair is the favorite pen name of no one less than Erle Stanley Gardner, crea- tor of the tremendousy popular Perry Masn. Under the Fair pseudonym, Gardner has turned out more than a dozen mysteries featuring the rather unique team of Bertha Cool and Donald Lam. To clear things up for good, Gardner himself writes a Preface to "Beware The Curves" in which he makes the truth known. But even more noteworthy than this revelation is the two-hundred- plus page detective novel that fol- lows. Readers who are not yet aware of Gardner's peculiar end almost perverse grasp of reality will become forcibly acquainted with it in this novel. In the course of getting their client off in a murder trial t'by having him convicted!) Bertha and Donald manipulate society and law in an astounding manner. Seldom before has Gardenr dis- played his special talent so bril- liantly - even in the celebrated Mason series! Lj (Continued from Page 3) and West Lynn, Massachusetts; Schen- ectady and Syracuse, N.Y. Women with B.A. or B.S. in Mathematics, Physics or Chemistry for 1. Data reduction; manual solution of problems requir- ing continued application of judg- ment and technical knowledge; pro- gramming and operation of large cale electronic computers. 2. The area of general investigation - working with engineers and scientists in solving re- search, development, and design prob- lems. May include laboratory activity as well as mathematical analysis. 3. In solving analytical chemistry, prob- lems. Women majoring in Liberal Arts or Business Administration Interested in the Cincinnati area for positions. Thurs., March 21 The Kroger Company - See above. The College Life Insurance Company of America, Indianapolis, Ind. - Loca- tion of work: Openings in most states. Men with any dgeree for Sales and Sales Management. King-Seeley Corporation, Ann Arbor, Mich. - Men with B.A. or B.S. in Lib- eral Arts or Business Administration for Accounting, Production control, Standards, Plant Layout and Estimat- Ing. McGraw-Hill Publishing Company, New York City, N.Y. - Location of work: New York. General Offices; Dis- trict Offices in Atlanta, Boston, Chi- cago, Cleveland, Dallas, Detroit, Green- ville, Houston, Los Angeles, Philadel- phia, Pittsburgh, St. Louis, San Fran- cisco, Tulsa and Washington. D.C. Men with Liberal Arts or Business Adminis- tration degree and some technical background helpful for Assistant Ed- tors of McGraw-Hill magazines, after 6 months on-the-job training. As hn Assistant Editor you are a recognized professional in the field of your publi- cation. You travel occasionally but are usually based In New York in the Mc- Graw-Hill Building. You develop ori- ginal feature stories through inter- views with men in operating and exec utive positions in the industry that your magazine serves. You initiate sto- ries, interview for the facts, and write the complete story. You must become equally at home in a mine, a factory, a technical laboratory, a top execu- tive's office. As an editorial staff mem- ber, you work with experienced bual- ness and engineering editors and jour- nalists. You become part of a team of pros. Opportunity for advancement de- pends solely on your individual merits on the job. Fri., March 22 The Upjohn Company, Kalamazoo, Michigan. - Men with B.A., BS., In Biological Sciences, Physiology and Chemistry; Pre-Medical or Pre-Dental for Pharmaceutical Sales. Detailing and -sellin gto Doctors, Hospitals and Drug selling to Doctors, Hospitals and Drug Stores. Location of work: Michigan and Northwestern Ohio. General Electric Company, Employee Relations Development Program, Sche- nectady, N.Y. - Men with degrees in Liberal Arts or Business Administration for Employee Relations Development Program. The Employee and Plant Community Relations field in the G.E. Company' comprises the following areas: Salary Administration, Wage Ad- ministration, Employee Benefits, Edu- cation andtTraining; Personnel Prc- tices, Health and Safety, Employee Communication, Union Relations and Plant Community Relations. This is an on-the-j qob training program. You will be given an opportunity to get practical experience in related fields as well as in various phases of Em- ployee and Plant Community Rela- ttons. Even before you obtain your first E and PCR job you will receive "grass roots" experience in each of the other major operating functions of the Com- pany in order to orient you in the background of G.E. and to give you an understanding of the problems en- countered in Marketing, Engineering, Finance and Manufacturing. Addition- al information can be found in their booklet. Standard Oil Company (Indiana), Grand Rapids, Mich. - Location of work: Grand Rapids and Western part of Michigan. Men with A.B. in any field for Sales. Additional information can be ob- tained from the Bureau by coming into the office or calling extension 3371, at the University. Material is also avail- able on many of the companies inter- viewing during the week of March 18, 1957. Appointments for these nterviews must be made by 4 p~m. of the day pre- ceding the interview. This is done for the convenience of the office, the stu- dents and the interviewer. It facilitates getting the records ready for the fol- lowing day's interviews. Some inter- viewers adjust their arrival plane to fit the schedule as it appears on the day preceding the interview, and stu- dents who wait until the day of the In- terview to make appointments must sometimes be turned away because there is no more room on the schedule. Also, if you fail to keep two appoint- ments without canceling you will no longer be allowed to interview through our office. Cancellations must be made by 4 p.m. of the day preceding the in- terview unless in case of sickness, etc. Representatives from the following will be at the Engrg. School: Thurs., March 14 The Trane Co., La Crosse, Wis. - B.S. or M.S. In Aero., Ch.E., Elect., Ind., Mechi, Engr. Mech.; B.S. in Civil, Met- al., Physics and Science for Research, Development, Production and Sales Fri., March 15 Allen-Bradley Co., Milwaukee, Wis.- all levels in Ch.E., Elect., Ind., Instr., Math., Mech., Metal., and Physics for Summer and Regular Research. lDvAi- ti .4 .r DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN A. FOR GRADS, FACULTY: Getting a Middle-Aged Spread? Dulles, Gilbert and Sullivan SECRETARY OF STATE Dulles' repeated statements on non-recognition of Communist China are tiresome, Nowhere in the contem- porary sphere of international affairs can less imaginative and less positive thinking be found. Mr. Dulles, attending the Canberra meeting of the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization rep- resentatives, reaffirmed United States intentions Q''r itrurtgalt Data Editorial Staff RICHARD SNYDER, Editor RICHARD HALLORAN LEE MARKS Editorial Director City Editor GAIL GOLDSTEIN ................,Personnel Director ERNEST THEODOSSIN............. Magazine Editor JANET REARICK ...... Associate Editorial Director MARY ANN THOMAS................Features Editor DAVID GREY.......................Sports Editor RICHARD CRAMER......... Associate Sports Editor STEPHEN HEILPERN......... Associate Sports Editor VIRGINIA ROBERTSON Women's Editor JANE FOWLER .......... Associate Women's Editor ARLINE LEWIS ............Women's Feature Editor JOHN HIRTZEL.................Chief Photographer Business Staff DAVID SILVER, Business Manager MILTON GOLDSTEIN ... Associate Business Manager WILLIAM PUSCH ..............Advertising Manager CHARLES WILSON............ ... Finance Manager of withholding diplomatic ties from the govern- ment of Communist China. United States attitudes on this question are taking on a resemblance to Gilbert and Sullivan comic opera. "Will the United States recognize the Peiping government? "No. Never. "What? Not ever? "Well, hardly ever." IF THE SITUATION wasn't so serious and of such importance to the national security, Mr. Dulles' pronouncements could be amusing. But his intransigence, his refusal to propose any sort of solution to a problem staring America right in the face is truly discouraging. How long will the American government and people conceal from itself that a hostile govern- ment controls a vast potential powerfully coun- try with whom we must have diplomatic rela- tions if we are to continue functioning in a world system of nation-states? One of these days, and it may not be too far off, the Secretary of State, be it Mr. Dulles or a successor, will be forced to the point of mutter- ing reluctantly "well, hardly ever." At that time, the United States will have lost a good portion of its prestige for not having been the initiator of a move toward recognition, By HAL BOYLE Associated Press Writer O YOU KNOW how to tell whether you have "middle-aged spread?" A woman always seems able to, but a man can't-or else his vanity won't let him. If a friend tells him at lunch, "Joe, you better cut down on the cheesecake, you're getting middle- aged spread," he simply doesn't believe it. At home that night Joe pulls in his stomach until his face gets purple, looks at himself in the mirror, and says, "Not bad. That guy at lunch must've been trying to kid me." But there is one thing that doesn't kid anybody unless it's made of rubber-and that's a tape measure. * * * DOCTOR Thomas K. Cureton, a director of the physical fitness' research laboratory, has figured out an easy way to detect middle- aged spread. This is it Simply measure yourself around the abdomen. Then measure your- self around the chest while it is expanded. If you belly girth is larger, brother, you've got it - middle-aged spread. And Dr. Cureton, who also acts as a health consultant for Cooper's Inc., makers of men's knit under- wear they want to keep middle- aged men alive longer because dead men don't buy underwear, warns see how men and women above 40 years of age have been able to improve their fitness by taking up physical training," he adds. * * * BUT Dr. Cureton feels that the ordinary social-recreational types of casual exercise obtained in a few casual games of bowling, golf, volley ball, table tennis, or shuffleboard won't do the trick. Here are Dr. Cureton's sugges- tions for getting rid of middle-aged spread and restoring lost muscle tone: "Reduce starchy and fried foods in the diet, and eat more fruits, vegetables and protein foods. "Breathe more deeply, try to stay untensed, move parts of the body frequently, even while sitting. "Fifteen to 50 full knee bends are excellent. As you breathe deep- ly, draw the abdominal muscles in toward the spine as far as you can with each breath. "Walk two miles each day with a swinging stride . .. or swim 200 to 400 yards ... or cycle five to 10 miles." In a month your middle-aged spread should be gone. But if you quit and your diet and cease exer- cising, in another month that tire around your tummy will be right back again. 4 LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibles ..., I ii-I Y I Ia1 THE LINDEN AFFAIR by Martha Albrand, House. Random MARTHA Albrand writes a rath- er nice espionage tale. Albeit it is somewhat less romantic and entrancing than the Graham Greene or Eric Ambler sort of story, it has its special merits. Miss Albrand's intrigue deals gen- erally in human problems, in the genteel emotions. "The Linden Affair" is typical of what she does well. Kenneth Ward, outwardly a reporter for the Munich News, secretly a se- cret service agent, becomes in- volved with the Linden family under tragic circumstances. Professor Linden's wife Tilly and his daughter Lisa are about to be united with him after his 1nn c iTm.ricnnma y he + 0.Yv.. al A