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, MIC-I. * 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 21, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: WILLIAM HANEY All-Campus Elections A bungled Affair LL-CAMPUS ELECTIONS this week was a bungled affair from the beginning. Veteran elections workers and Student Gov- ernment Council members were quick to call it the worst election procedure they had ever seen.' Some have claimed the elections were doomed from the very beginning because the appoint- ment of the elections director was made only four weeks prior to balloting instead of the usual six to eight weeks. Others insist the weather was most to blame, keeping personnel from showing up to man balloting tables. Count night officials yesterday found further shortage of personnel and were forced to appeal to the audience for help in counting ballots. Still other officials laid the blame directly on the elections committee. HAT THERE were inexkusable errors and difficulties in election procedures is un- questionable. Four printing errors on ballots and another on the SGC candidates' composite were un- pardonable and subject to easy correction. Loss of keys to balloting boxes and lack of ballots at rush hours can be attributed to some lack of competence. Placing of a polling table near meal lines in South Quad during the lunch hour was a major indiscretion that, multiplied in seriousness, might have affected the outcome of the vote. More important, a South Quad polling table represented an advantage.in voting for a small group of persons who could vote and eat at al- most the same time. The personnel problem was another serious one. Council members and officers found them- selves doing committee work over the weekend and early this week. ALL THE ELECTIONS difficulties cannot be be blamed on the weather this year. We hope the Council will take the proper steps with personnel next semester to prevent this semester's elections from being anything but a one-time affair. ,-VERNON NAHRGANG "We've Got To Stop All This Spending On Essentials" // rr t 1 ryry2 ry OfAsrc rt adAab Panel t e ,AI t I e j ::-i..tOe-.m LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Nasser's Judgment Day IjHUS says the Lord God: When I gather the house of Israel from the peoples among whom they are scattered, and manifest my holiness in them in the sight of the nations, then they shall dwell in their own land whic h I gave to my servant Jacob. And they shall build houses and plant vineyards. They shall dwell securely, when I execute judgments upon all their neighbors who have treated them with contempt." -Ezekiel 28:25 FLEDGLING STAGE: Peacetime Atom Power To Take Major Stride AMERICA'S PEACETIME atomic energy program, still in the fledg- ling stage of development, is slated to take a major stride into the future sometime this year. The same awesome force unleashed in the atomic bomb is to be har- nessed for large-scale production of electricity for homes, shops and factories. Duquesne Light Co. is nearing completion of its pioneer nu- clear power station on the outskirts of this little western Pennsylvania w village 25 miles northwest of Pitts- burgh. Originally, it was hoped the plant could begin operating in mid-1957. But the complexity of the project has set back the tar- get date until possibly next No- vember or December. MANY YEARS of intense re- search and millions of dollars have gone into the historic project. Electricity from atomic energy is an established fact. The Shipping- port plant is unique because: ARCH. AUD.: Old Movie Enjoyable I WOULD HESITATE to recom- mend this to anyone who limits his theatre-going to memorable ar- tistic achievements. :But if you are willing to relax your standards and get in the spirit of it, A Double Life at the Architecture Auditor- ium, should provide a satisfactory diversion.. Ronald Colman cozily portrays an actor of the John Barrymore variety who throws himself into the part of Othello so industrious- ly that he finds it increasingly dif- ficult to shake off at the final cur- tain. He develops an unfounded jealously over his wife (Signe Has- so), who conveniently plays Des- demona, you'd think conviently, but after several half-hearted at- tempts to do her in at the ap- propriate point in the play, he loses his orientation and throttles a poor drab (Shelley Winters) whom he loved not wisely nor well. I suppose this was designed to jolt us out of our complacency. ALL OF THIS may sound a lit- tle phony, but Mr. Colman's sin- cerity and ardor make a plea for credibility that is sufficiently dis- arming. Beyond this he displayed his customary dash, distingue and lack of ability (most apparent in the Shakespearean passages). His flailing arms and rolling eyes con- veyed his psychotic disorder far more melodramatically thanclin- ically, unless we are to suppose that a ham goes mad hamilly. As you can imagine, the Othello motif saw yeoman service.. When this was inoperative, the tech- niques and trials of the theatre were lovingly reviewed. Why the mechanics of stage craft should be the object of entertainment, any more than furnace cleaning, per- plexes me. The . direction was fast paced and the camera employed with dexterity. Shelley Winters was en- tirely engaging in coarse juxta- position to Mr. Colman's suavity, although the part was not par- ticularly difficult. Edmund O'- brien performed well as an off- stage Cassio, and Signe Hasso knew her lines. -Charles Ewell 1) It will be the first in the United States to use nuclear ener- gy for production of large quan- tities of commercial electricity. 2) It will be the first such plant in the world operated by a private company and devoted exclusively to commercial power. The world's first full-scale atom- ic power plant was opened last October at Calder Hall, England. However, the primary purpose of the facility is production of plu- tonium-an atomic age element not found in nature-for use in Great Britain's nuclear weapons. * * * PLUTONIUM will, be made at the Shippingport plant, too. But it will be used as added fuel. Duquesne Light, a Pittsburgh area utility, began constructing the Shippingport plant Sept. 6, 1954 in cooperation with the Atomic Energy Commission and Westinghouse Electric Corp. Westinghouse is building the nuclear part of the station under contract with the AEC. Cost of the project is estimated at some 55 million dollars. Dui- quesne pays about 15 million; the AEC the remainder. Duquesne Light will operate the entire plant when it's completed, feeding the electricity produced into its regular system serving Al- legheny and Beaver Counties Pa. Allegheny County includes Pitts- burgh. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin Is an official publication for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRI'TEN form to Room 3553 Administration Building, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1957 VOL. LXVII, NO. 121 General Notices The Alice Crocker Lloyd Fellowship with a stipend of $750 is being offered by the Alumnae Council of the Alumni Association for 1957-58. It is open to women graduates of an accredited col- lege or university. It may be used by a Universtly of Michigan graduate at any college or university, but a gradu- ate of any other university will be re- quired to use the award on the Michi- gan campus. Personality, achievement, and leadership will be considered in granting the award. Application may be made through the Alumnae Council Office, Michigan League, and must be filed by April 1. Award will be announced by the end of the current semester. The Laurel Harper Seeley Scholar~- ship is announced by the Alumnae Council of the Alumni Association for 1957-58. The award is usually $200.00 and is open to both graduate and un- dergraduate women. The award is made on the basis of scholarship, contribu- (Continued on Page 8) 4. T IS TIME for Gamal Abdul Nasser to be judged. The Middle East will be filled with recurrent crises as long as there is an Israel, as long as there is an influential Nasser and as long as Nasser is uncompromising. One doesn't have to be prophetic to predict that Egypt, whom Nasser has committeed to the annihilation of Israel, will soon fortify Gaza and begin again fedayeen attacks. While Israeli soldiers were in Gaza, Nasser had a reason not to come to terms. Now, the soldiers have withdrawn and Nasser still won't budge. Gazawill soon be militarized. No Israeli ships will use the Colonel's canal. It is doubt- ful the Jews will have access to the Gulf of Aqaba once Nasser's soldiers man the'artillery pieces at Sharm el Sheikh. This is where things all began last summer. THE COLONEL has had opportunities to show his good faith and hasn't. How is this poorman's Hitler to be handled? Our govern- ment should at least reach the conclusion that something different must be done than has been done since the Suez invasion - appeasing Nasser. The next question our government should face is: Who can handle Nasser? Those who say the United Nations should be convinced by now that the UN can only do what Nasser and the Arab-Asian-Soviet bloc allows. This means no sanctions and no permanent police force2 are possible. Now is the.time for the United States to vc4- ture some independent action in handling tld. Colonel. By a combination of moves Nasser could be brought to his knees. The present situ- ation being what it is, a new three-pronged venture is worth a try. FIRST, we can apply considerable economic pressure as a nation. We have 40 million dollars of the Colonel's money frozen now. Our allies have many times this much. We can sus- pend our aid programs indefinitely. We can forbid any goods or tourist trade with Egypt. And we can dump our cotton. But Nasser is a patient man and he has Communist friends who would support h.:.. Thus, economic pressure is not enough by it- self. Second, we must minimize his importance. An anomaly of a powerful man, the president of a country without an army or an economic base, Nasser controls a vital canal and he leads the Arab world. The indispensability of the Canal can be cir- cumvented by reliance upon a major oil pipe- line from Elath on the Gulf of Aqaba through Israel. His leadership among the Arabs can be undercut by wooing Ibn Saud, something which is not impossible. Saud could likely lead Jor- dan, Lebanon and Iraq into a non-Nasser league. Third, we should make it clear to Nasser this country's Middle Eastern policy is premised on the permanence of the state of Israel; that we believe the Israeli's should be allowed to "dwell securely", planting their vineyards and buliding their houses without fear; and lastly that if he doesn't come to peace terms with Is- rael, the United States wouldn't stand in the way of Israeli General Dayan's army, which could blitzkrieg Egypt in a couple of days. -JAMES ELSMAN (Letters to the editor must be in good taste and should not exceed 300 words in length. The Daily re- serves the right to delete material for space considerations.) Abstract Art . . . To the Editor: JHE COINCIDENCE was ironical, that in Sunday's Daily appeared an item on the front page, date- lined Paris, announcing the death of Constantin Brancusi, while on the editorial page Mr. Thomas Bernakey discussed art and fresh air. But Mr. Bernakey was not clear, and on several points. He wrote, "Good art must have, the discipline of a philosophy if it is to have the efficacy of a religion." Must art have a religious efficacy? The art to which Mr. Bernakey objects has long had not a philos- ophy but several philosophies, among them those of Ozenf ant, Apollinaire, Arp, Motherwell, Mon- drain, and Herbert Read. Further, any number of prac- tising philosophers might take ex- ception to his statement. Artists fregently make things and worry about aesthetics later, if ever. Few artists are philosophers; fewer philosophers consider themselves artists. Nor is all philosophy dis- ciplined. Theologians might take excep- tion, too. Who knows an articulate religious who would say that art has the same efficacy as religion? An artist might say his work is his religion; indeed, some have, but they may have been confusing the mind of the maker with the Mind of the Maker. There is, of course, a way of say- ing that all art is abstract. To use the word "abstract" as though it summed up definitively what has been happening in studios for the past half-century is too gross a simplification. Can one say Picasso or Braque are more abstract than Leonardo or Piero della Francesca? It can be argued that just as all art is abstract, so is it the conscious cul- tivation of enigmas. So is philos- ophy. So is science. In fact, a man might be distinguished from other human animals by the kind of enigmas he cultivates. To object to an artist's technique is like objecting to apples because they don't taste like oranges. One can not object to artistic tech- niques, albeit "spewing paint over the canvas," without at the same time objecting to the rather ap- palling but wonderful range of man's curiosity and expression. To so object is the first sign of totalitarian thinking. Art and life. Life and art. About the only sure thing that can be said is this, that the artist of a given picture picture, poem, or sonata, was not dead at the time he made it. How much relationship life has to art or art to life be- yond that can be called, and safely, irrelevant. -R. C. Gregory Arab Panel . . To the Editor:.. ON MARCH 13, 1957 the Arab Club held a panel discussion on "Arab Unity." No coverage of that discussion appeared in The Daily although seven University students participated in the panel from the the U.S.A., the United Kingdom, Pakistan, and the Arab world. Since it is our objective to be given the opportunity to partake. with our American hosts the views and beliefs we hold, we would ap- preciate a listening ear and a co- operative host. Most of us are liable to be asked upon return home about our im- pressions and notions of the Amer- ican press, student body and pub- lic in general. We welcome cordially American students to become members of our club and take part in our ,ac- tivities. We are not exclusivists or isolationists and we never like to be considered as such. We hope that The Daily will do us more justice in the future. -Ibrahim Hazimah 1 TODAY AND TOMORROW: Vast, Undefined Responsibilities Forced Upon U.S. in Mid-East INTERPRETING THE NEWS: UInderstandings at Bermuda By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst UNDERSTANDINGS rather than agreements will be the chief product of the Bermuda conference. Former Prime Minister Eden seriously mis- judged President Eisenhower's reaction when he decided to use force in the Middle East last fall. The chief objective of the President's meet- ing with Prime Minister Macmillan is to pre- vent the repetition of such misjudgments. Other matters to be discussed are tactical. 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.-.,x.... ,.........Sports Editor RICHARDCRAMER........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 KILTON GOLDSTEIN ... Associate Business Manager WILLIAM PUSCHT. ............Advertising Manager CHARLES WILSON ,, ...._.... Fnnc Mnae A renewal of confidence and complete resump- tion of intercourse between Britain and the j United States, which was so badly disrupted, are major long-term requirements. Macmillan and Eisenhower have collaborated well before, in wartime. They are reported to have great respect for each other. But, as im- portant as they were, they didn't carry the re- sponsibilities then that they do now. CHIEF among them is the protection of the world's one great, wholly natural, alliance. Macmillan is reported ready for a coldly frank discussion of Britain's problems and how she intends to approach them. The President is expected to reply as to where these approaches gibe with American policy, and where they will have to be compromised if they are to have American support. This should serve to save both countries from future surprises, and enable them to present the world with a more solid front even at times when they are in disagreement. One thing that does need to be settled now is Britain's role in approaching Middle East negotiations. For the moment, it may not be wise for her to show her face there. Yet she has inter- ests in the area which are facts of life and which cannot be ignored. BRITAIN has made it clear that she does not intend to clear out and let the United States become the sole representative of Allied military power in the area. The way Britain clings to festering Cyprus, continuing to devel- op her military base there, is sufficient evi- By WALTER LIPPMANN H AVING TAKEN off a bit of time before starting on a short trip abroad, I, have spent quite a little of it wondering about the Middle East and the turn in our affairs. We have had forced upon us vast but undefined responsibilities in another great region of the globe. There are some who think that by the role we have played in the United Nations since the Egyptian crisis last autumn we have won the esteem and the confidence of the Afro-Asian nations, and that they will no waccept us as being uncontaminated with "colonial- sm., Our optimists think we have achieved a position in the uncom- mitted world of Asia and Africa which is at once anti-Communist and purged of historic grievances and suspicions against Europe. I do not share this view. It seems to me naive and wishful thinking. Our connections with the West are inseverable. The Com- munist competition is very stronk. And a new accommodation be- tween the East and the West will not come easily. It is perhaps the greatest and. most difficult task which lies before us. * * * I THINK rather that the events of the past few months have made this difficult task much more dif- ficult. For we have fallen into what may prove to have been an irreparable error in the way we took our stand on the Anglo- French-Israeli intervention. body - from Nasser, from Krishna Menon, or from the Soviets - that this would not bring about a return to the status quo ante from which the explosion erupted. The result is that on the great issues of the regime of the Suez Canal and of the pacification of Palestine, our policy has meant that before negotiations are to be- gin, we have restored and in fact aggrandized Nasser's bargaining power. We have provided him with the big trumps before the diplomatic game is played. Unless we make it our business, which we could do if we were reso- lute and resourceful, to restore the greatly diminished bargaining pow- er of the United States and of the Western nations, we shall be nego- tiating from weakness. The Soviets are against us. Chi- na is against us. Nasser and the Arabs are against us. India is un- der the influence of their com- bined pressure. So in fact, also is the United Nations. * * * SINCE THE Second World War we have entered a new epoch in the relations between East arId West. We are at the end of the centuries which began with the great European voyages and were followed by the imperial conquest of so much of Asia and of Africa. Though there are pockets of die- hard imperialism, it is no longer debatable whether imperialism and colonialism are to be liquidated. They are to be liquidated. The questions everywhere, be it in Cy- prus, Algeria or Goah, are how the Neither the he wnations nor the old nations can live in isolation from one another, and they must therefore work out an order of re- lationship which they can accept. They are interdependent, as we can see clearly in the cast of the Suez Canal and of the oil of the Middle East. Europe needs access to the oil, and the Arab countries would be sorely stricken if they could not dispose of their oil to the West. They cannot dispose of it to the Soviet Union. But if this East-West interde. pendence is to be stable and dur- able, there must be a reasonable equality of bargaining power in working out the principles and the details of the new relationship. Since Nasser's seizure of the canal, since the miscalculations of the two London conferences, since the fiasco of the intervention, and since our own mistaken policy in the United Nations, the balance of bargaining power has turned dras- tically against the West. This is reflected in the fact that the Nnited Nations and the United States are not negotiating with Nasser. They have been appeasing him, finding themselves so short of negotiating power. * * * IN NASSER, both as a political figure and as a symbol, we are bound to recognize, it seems to me, a radical opponent of an accom- modation between East and West. Nasser's rebellion against the West has a momentum and a direction which, if it is not contained and restrained will carry him beyond Intends against Israel to keep on waging war, as hot a war as ap- pears to him a safely calculated military risk. The crux of the Nasser problem is that his position in Egypt and his in/uence in the Arab world would soon collapse if he agreed to negotiate and to abide by set- tlements with the Western nations. He must remain in rebellion against them, never for long, al- lowing the con/ict to subside. He needs the tension of inter- national, indeed of inter-racial, struggle. He needs it to maintain among the Arab masses the image of himself as their champion. He needs the tension also for his po- litical survival at home, to divert his rivals who conspire against him, and as a distraction for the people. THE EFFECT of Nasser's move- ment extends far beyond Egypt, the canal and Palestine. By his example, through his agents and his propagandists, he is making it very dangerous, perhaps impos- sible, for moderate leaders of the Afro-Asian peoples to arrive at settlements with the West. He is identifying moderation with trea- son and settlement with betrayal. This makes it for all practical purposes impossible for any other leader in North Africa and South Asia to come to terms with the West. This applies even to India where, unhappily, Nehru is now de- clining the role in which he had cast himself, the role of mediator. For many months past it has the West as long as our policy, or at least our practice, is to acqui- esce in our weakness and to ac- cept appeasement. * * * THE ENLIGHTENED leaders of the Western nations have hoped and believed that the old imperial system could be liquidated in peace and good will by a wise and friend- ly acceptance of Eastern national- ism, by education and technical assistance, and by generous con- tributions of capital for the de- velopment of the new nations. But as things stand at the mo- ment, there is no ground for think- ing that Nasser, who is astride the strategic center of East-West re- lations, believes in or wants or will permit such a peaceable evolution to take place. It is not easy to make peace when only one side wants it. Nasser thinks he has the upper hand, having obtained control of the access of the Western nations to the oil of the Middle East. He thinks it has been proved at the British-French failure last au- tumn that his paramountcy can- not be challenged. He thinks that the United States will not refuse to coerce him but will in fact ap- pease him. All this will now be put to the test. It will be put to the test over the regime of the canal, over whether Gaza becomes again the base of a guerrilla war, and over the right of innocent passage in the Gulf of Aqaba. The United States has been heavily committed by the Presi- dent. and if he cannot or does not -, wI