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 9oYou Tik e.'e -ttcAur Qosm? y t . ., } -. - "When Opinions Are Free Trutb 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 28, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: WILLIAM HANEY .L .L. ii WiW../+-+as i.f a a.. .aav v+. r -' The Military in America: Influential But Controlled --Y-- a: !, # 7 .,, ' . j . ,. '. .: " . . ; , .. , t ' "r {. f ' 1 wq - 1 AT THE CAMPUS: 'D iabolique' Magnifique, Delightful French Crime "DIABOLIQUE" at the Campus Theater is "magnifique", and if the Campus exhibitors plan to let it run-as scheduled-only until Fri- day, then that's "tragique". The 9:00 line Wednesday night was long enough to fill the theater, and it must represent only a small fraction of the people who are going to want to see this rare vintage French import. "Diabolique" unravels the story of the meticulously plotted murder of a boys' school headmaster by his wife and his mistress. It is, fortun- ately and unfortunately, in French dialogue with English subtitles. For- tunately so because dubbed-in English unquestionably would have ruined the carefully prepared and controlled mood of this shocker; .un- fortunately, I say, because with subtitles to contend with it is near agony I I THE EFFECT of the military on American life is a vitally important problem which has received all too little attention in recent years. In the course of modern American history, however, civil-military relations are becoming increasingly important to the average citizen. The military is no longer simply a relatively small group of government employees-profes- sionals who are given a task to perform when the need arises, then inconspicuously set aside until their services are required again. E In recent years, the military has become more and more intimately bound up in the very fabric of our society, exerting an influence on virtually every aspect of our lives. The young American male and the taxpayer are most acutely and directly affected by this trend. Every able-bodied American male now faces a required eight years of military service, in one capacity 'or another-the active service, the reserves or the National Guard. Besides the time out from the ordinary conduct of his life required by this obligation, military service or the threat of it has far-reaching secondary con- sequences. The young man asks himself if he should enter the service before or after college? Should he get married now or after he is re- leased from service? Should he join one of the active services or fulfill his obligation by spend- ing the next few years in the Guard or the active reserve? THESE ARE choices. Many of the other problems facing the draft-age man are not. One is the launching of a career. No matter whether he enters the service immediately or not, the attainment of his vocational objectives will be considerably delayed. Employers are usually hesitant to hire and train even the most promising young man when faced with the threat of his being inducted into service and not returning afterwards. The labor and ex- pense of the training then go down the drain. The older, settled man with his military serv- ice behind him, or the man who is ineligible for the draft is much preferred. The militarily eligible young man also faces problems in his social and family life. Many are hesitant to marry and face impending sep- aration. But then, if he delays marriage, he must face the threat of losing the girl of his dreams to an older man or a 4-F. THE TAXPAYER, now more than ever, is acutely affected by the growing prominence of the military. When he has to foot the bill for national defense to the tune- of 38 billion dollars-nearly 53 per cent of the total national budget-the impact of the military on his life is hardly trifling. Largely because of the ever-present threat of all-out war, military institutions are gaining unprecedented significance in the conduct of of our everyday affairs. Military leaders are similarly constantly gaining in prestige. People are becoming increasingly aware of the impor- tance of the military to our very survival-in deterring war by its very existence or protecting us should war come. Whether this trend is good or bad, one can only observe that it is necessary. It has its implicit evils, but they are necessary evils be- cause of the present world situation. To con- demn or do away with powerful military institutions because of the hardships they work upon us or on moral grounds is to court dis- aster. WHAT, THEN, is to be done? What civil- military relations are right and proper? The most important relation to be maintained is the dominance of the civil over the military. The military must be maintained as a tool of the civil authority, not vice versa. We must avoid what Prof. Morris Janowitz recently called "anticipated militarism," where the military machine is glorified and maintained for its own sake rather than out of necessity. Under "anti- cipated militarism," military institutions and military men take pre-eminence in the govern- ment and the society. When this situation arises in American society, the traditional fabric of our culture is threatened, and the time has arrived for drastic corrective measures. So far in the United States, despite the rising importance and influence of the military, that trend is not in evidence. -EDWARD GERULDSEN 41 <'1 -4415- 'ti ±s r- rt - WA 0 . WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Early Hoffa Probe Stopped Harmmarskj old Talks No Failure UNITED NATIONS Secretary Dag Hammarsk- fold is back in New York, returned from conferences with Egyptian PresidentG Oamal Nasser. Some are bound to call the series of talks a failure, but they are wrong. This patient, hard-working man of peace is, step by step, getting closer to eventual dissolution of the problems clogging the Suez canal. While righteous shouts from Washington, Paris and London have continued to descry Egypt's "unforgivable, immoral" actions, his quiet voice has persuaded, placated and won concession after concession from the naturally inflexible Nasser. Two of the biggest questions remain un- answered. There is no sign that Mr. Hammarsk- jold has pinned Cairo down to an agreement on the question of free international shipping through the Gulf of Aqaba, nor that he has been told what the UN can expect regarding its control of the strait leading to the gulf. BUT THIS does not diminish the importance of the new, more rational plan for operation of the canal, nor does it dim the hope that the role of the United Nations Emergency Forces in the Gaza strip has been more clearly defined. Any firm understanding realized in that area was doubly won, since Israel's snub of the, Secretary General is said to have "severely handicapped" the negotiations. Egypt"has quietly agreed to allow food for Arab refugees inyGaza to be trucked from Israel. Just last week officials said she would "never" allow the United Nations relief group to bring the supplies from Haifa to Gaza. And, because of the absence of any new mis- understandings, the tugboat Edgar Bonnet, bearing the inevitable "Kilroy Was Here" slo- gan has been lifted from the bottom of the canal, a salvaged symbol of the "political ob- stacle" which had formerly held up clearance. IT IS TOO EASY to say that these things, and many more, are just what "should be hap- pening," even that they are unimportant con- cessions by a despotic ruler who ought to be boiled in his Egyptian oil. We must not forget just who is running the show. Nor must we forget that any concession by Colonel Nasser is exactly that-and that unless we wish to unite with Britain and France to renew the invasion, a plodding, slow and painful path to success is the only one open. Mr. Hammarskjold seems to believe this, and, as far as we can see, his policy has not been challenged by any triumphs from other dis- senting parties. -ALLAN STILLWAGON ONE of the most significant backstage developments in the Teamster probe is that scandal- ous facts had been unearthed re- garding Teamster Czar Jimmy Hoffa by the House Government Operations Committee in the early days of the Eisenhower Adminis- tration. Then suddenly the probe was stopped. Postmaster General Summer- field stays he didn't stop it. The Republicans at that time con- trolled Congress. They stopped the probe. The individual GOP Con- gressmen in charge of the probe didn't want to stop it, complained bitterly and publicly about the stoppage. But they were stopped anyway. Here is what they had discov- ered at the time they weic stopped. JIMMY HOFFA, together with the Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, placed almost $20,000,000 of welfare funds with the Union Insurance Agency, Inc., between 1948-52. The partners operating this agency were Rose and Allen Dorfman, wife and son of Hoffa's intimate friend Paul Dorfman, who in turn is boss of the waste material Handlers Union in Chi- cago. The insurance agency, in turn, placed its business with the Union Casualty Co. and the Union Pub- lic Service Co., organized by Leo Perlman, a refugee from Hitler, ,whose business, thanks largely to the Teamsters' welfare funds, mushroomed overnight. His companies, in turn, paid Rose and Allen Dorfman and their agency "in excess of $1,000,000" in "commissions and service fees be- y DREW PEARSON tween October 1949 and June 30, 1953," according to the official finding of the House committee headed by Congressman Clare Hoffman, Michigan Republican. It was disclosed that approxi- mately $101,000 in checks pay- able to Allen Dorfman were not deposited to the agency's bank accounts," the committee also re- ported. * * * WHEN THE Congressmen asked Dorfman if he had paid this or any part of it to Jimmy Hoff a, he re- fused to answer. Time after time le pleaded the 5th Amendment. It was also disclosed that Perl- man's insurance company made fees of $1,200,000 from the Team- sters' and Brotherhood of Electri- cal Workers' welfare funds. These were funds which individual dues- paying members in Michigan and the central states had entrusted with Hoffa and with the IBEW for investment. But suddenly, as the Congres- sional Committee was striking pay dirt, its operations were mysteri- ously and abruptly suspended. Said committee counsel William F. Mc- Kenna: "We were silenced before we could make public certain im- portant financial-legal aspects of the Teamsters' operations." Note-All this was known as early as 1953, yet no action was taken to suspend Dorfman's Waste Materials Handlers local charter in Chicago. * * * WHILE the public is watching next week's special Senate election in Texas, the temporary Senator from Texas has been using his po- sition to try to block an investi- gation into his private insurance business. He is William Blakely, appointed by outgoing Gov. Allan Shivers last January to keep the Texas seat warm until the April election. Blakely is a soft-spoken Eisen- hower Democrat who owns mil- lions in real estate and professes no political ambitions beyond his three-month Senate term. He has behaved like a model stopgap Senator, keeping discreetly in the background-with one curious ex- ception. His only significant act has been to harass the Federal Trade Commission over its insur- ance investigations. What makes this interesting is that Blakely's own company is un- der investigation .as one of the worse alleged violators. In fact, Blakely personally was named a defendant, because of his past habit of dissolving corporations that got in trouble. Blakely is chairman of the Girardian Insurance Company, which the Trade Commission al- leges has been using phony adver- tising to 'sell insurance policies. The company deliberately misled policyholders into believing they were enttled to insurance benefits that the fine print in the contract didn't allow, according to the FTC. "Any examination of Girardian's advertising when contrasted with the actual terms of the policies," charges the FTC, "can lead only to the conclusion that the adver- tising is false, deceptive, and mis- leading." (Copyright 1957 by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) to force yourself to tear your eyes from the arresting faces of the completely fascinating group of French people who get caught up in the whirlpool of thoroughly tragic events. The entire picture Is hypnotic in its power. Michel, the Headmaster, is a successful lover with both a wife and a mistress under the same roof-that of his fairly respectable boys' school. But he is, unhappily, as nasty a lover as he is a head- master, so the two women decide he must die. Simone Signoret and Vera Clouzot as the wife and mis- tress are an enchanting pair of criminals. As I said, you don't want to take your eyes from them. The crime is pulled off in de- lightful French fashion-as the plotters run the "murder" tub full of water downstairs, the ten- ants upstairs bitterly bemoan the fact that the sound of the plumb- ing is drowning out the broad- cast of "The 64,000 Franc Ques- tion" program. The audience's sympathies are with the women all the way. First of all, the husband was a heel; and in the second place the two make a remarkable pair-the mistress admirable for her "finesse" and "savoir faire", and the wife for her conscience. * * * THE CAMERA efficiently and humanly records the adventure. The photography throughout is sharp, distinct, severe, and at times the camera zooms in on an object or a fleeting expression asnif the eye of the viewer were squint- ing up to catch a disturbing de- tain, examine it, contrast its reali- ty against its terrible impossibility. And the camera also catches along its journey clear, sometimes AT HILL: St. Matthew Passion THE ST. MATTHEW Passion, performed last night with many cuts, nevertheless main- tained a dramatic continuity and power. What resulted was a high- ly expressive realization of a cer- tain kind of religio-esthetic emo- tion. This religious element cannot be ignored-and while this perform- ance was not a specifically reli- gious observance, still the fact that this is the Lenten season, the sub- ject matter of the music (with its large sections of recitative, dia- logue and hymn tunes) is about the crucifixion of Jesus Christ, in- fluences an evaluation. One is willing to sacrifice a cer- tain amount of smoothness for fervor and roughness in highly charged choral passages; and for the sake of pointing out certain key words and passages in the text, one accepts questionable re- tards and distortions of musical phrases. But one expects, in re- turn, clarity of diction as well as expressive treatment of the text. We got this from most of the solo- ists, but seldom from the double chorus. *R*R*R stark impressions of the common, humble little waiting places of hu- manity-a street curb, a chipped and crumbling corner of a school- yard, a dusty corridor in a morgue -all things that say as the mad drama moves on. The faces of every person in the film will charm you, and they will challenge you to think that the nerve-racking episode of a cold- blooded murder and a disappearing corpse is any less real and con- vincing than they are. Faces of a crusty old retired police inspector, of the eccentric upstairs tenant and his wife, of an overtly ogling doctor, of the headmaster's male teaching colleagues. They're all so real, and they're in the midst of the insane business. So you don't have a chance. You're caught too, Things get a little melodramatic at the end, but if you think about it, it's all planned that way. But the melodrama gives away the fin- ish, and when the terror starts in the closing minutes, you ought to be on to the "secret." Even if you're not, you've got a good excuse. You've been taken in by some pros. -Donald A.Yates DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Oficia Bulletin Is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3553 Adminsitration Building, before s p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 195 VOL. LXVII, NO. 127 General Notices Regents' Meeting: Friday, April 19. Communications for consideration at this meeting must be in the President's hands not later than April 10. The Queen's University, Belfast, Ire- land, again offers through a reciprocal arrangement an exchange scholarship for a graduate from the University of Michigan. The Scholarship will provide fees, board and lodging for the next academic year, but not travel. However, application for a Fulbright travel grant may be made. Economics, Geography, Mathematics, Medieval History, Philo- sophy, Political Science, and Romance Languages are suggested as especially appropriate fields of study. Further in- formation'is available at the Office of the Graduate School, and applications should be filed with the Graduate School before April 3. Edgar Schwabold Senior Prize in Ger- man ($100), awarded annually to a se- nior concentrating in German and cur- rently taking at least one senior course in German literature in an essay com- petition. The contest (one English, one German essay on topics related to course work) will be held Thursday, Ap- ril 4, from 2 to 4 p.m. Students wish- ing to compete should make out appl.- cation forms at the German Depart- ment Office by Monday, April 1. Junior College - University of Michi- gan Conference, Friday, March 29, 1957. Registration, 9:15-10 a.m., Michigan League. 10-12 a.m. Discussion sessons, case visitations, individual conferences 16lr Junior College faculties with University faculty. 12:10 Luncheon, Michigan League Ball- room. 2:00-3:30 Departmental conferences. Astronomy Department Visitors' Night Friday, March 29, 8 p.m., Rm. 2003 An- gell Hall. Dr. Freeman D. Miller will speak on "The Nature of Comets." After the lecture the Student Observatory on the fifth floor of Angell Hall will be open for inspection and for telescopic observations of the Orion nebula, dou- ble stars and Jupiter. Children we - cored, but must be accompanied by adults, Marshall Scholarships at British Uni- versities have been announced for 1958- 59. Twelve awards are offered every year to American graduates, men and women under the age of 28. The scholarships are tenable for two years, and each has an annual value of 550 pounds, with an extra 200 pounds for married men. The deadline for the applications is Octo- ber 31. Information on where to write for applications may be obtained from the Offices of the Graduate School. The following student sponsored so- cial events are approved for the coming week end. Social chairmen are reminded that requests for approval of social events are due in the Office of Student Affairs not later than 12 o'clock noon on the Monday prior to the event. March 29, 1957 Delta Sigma Delta, Delta Theta Phi, Phi Delta Phi, Sigma Alpha Mu, Zeta Beta Tau. M arch 30, 1957 F__ ii 6 4 '5- tI S U i. {. Ii THE STATE OF ISRAEL: Persecution Fills Jewish History 4 INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Plain Old Trouble Making By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst HAVE YOU NOTICED that Bulganin and Khrushchev have been staying home quite a bit lately and Russian's campaign to win the world has, for the time being, deteriorated into plain old trouble making? Troublemaking is, of course, a routine tenet of the international Communists. But it is usually accompanied by some sort of act, such as the provision of arms for Egypt or the trade expansion which Russia sought in con- nection with the Geneva sweetness and light effort. Now it is just talk, directed primarily at stir- ring up doubts among NATO members. First came the continuing campaign against West German cooperation with the West. Then came a general warning that nations . which permitted foreign bases on their soil faced annihilation in case of war. Now this is directed specifically at Norway, THERE IS growing evidence that Russia was trying primarily to stir up trouble in the Middle East, rather than trying to take it over, when she encouraged Nasser last year. Experts argue that Russia has enough trouble in Eastern Europe without acquiring direct responsibility in troubles of the Middle East, which are expected to fester for years. Russia's adventures with Nasser brought her, and the rest of the world, to the brink of what would have been a cataclysmic war. It may be that she was frightened by the lengths to which she had been carried by her troublemaking accompanied by acts. At any rate, she joined with the other na- tions which moved to stop the fighting in the Middle East. Her threat to use guided missiles on Britain and France was a desperate effort. There is a fairly general belief, though not provable, that Russia's actions in Hungary have made it more difficult for her to deal directly with the noncommitted nations with which she has sought to create an entente through trade and "aid." COMMUNIST CAPTURE of one of the state (Editor's Note: The following is the second of three articles on Israel. To- day's article deals with the begin- nings of modern Zionism.) By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press Foreign News Analyst H AVING been dispersed by the Romans and forbidden to come within sight of Jerusalem, Juda- ism persisted stubbornly in exile through oppression which reached a furious peak in the ghettos of medieval Europe. The land they considered home fell, meanwhile, to the followers of the prophet Mohammed, the European Crusaders and finally to the Ottoman Turks, who kept it four centuries until the end of World War I. For Jews the American and French revolutions brought hope. In free countries they could inte- grate themselves. The idea caught on. By 1869 they had won full equality in Austria, by 1871 in Germany. But foundations of anti-semit-, ism were rooted in ages-old super- sittutions. Frgihtful programs erupted in Russia and Poland. reform movement was born, seek- ing to fit ancient tenets with mod- ern conditions. In 1885 at Pitts- burgh, Pa., a group of rabbis adopted the "Pittsburgh Plat- form," renouncing the idea of a Jewish nationality. "We consider ourselves no long- er a nation but a religious com- munity, and therefore expect nei- ther a return to Palestine nor a sacrificial worship . . . nor the restroation of any laws concerning the- Jewish state," the platform read. Where there was persecution, Jews still looked to Zion. A lawyer-journalist named The- odore Herzl, tall, black-bearded and looking like an ancient pro- phet,began60 years ago this sum- mer to assemble the first World Zionist Congress in Basle, Swtiz- erland. Its aim: a Jewish state in Palestine. Herzl died in 1904. But immi- gration into Palestine and land purchase there by Jews already had begun. By 1918 about 30.000 made their way from Russian and Polish ghettos to new kibbutzin settle- ment. Lord Balfour, British for- eign secretary, wrote Lord Roth- schild, a leading Zionist, that Brit- ain sympathized with Zionist hopes. Chaim Weizmann, a chem- ist, helped gain this support by his wartime scientific aid to the British. The 1917 Balfour Declaration was a great boost for Zionists. But simultaneously. Britain was spon- soring an Arab kingdom in the Middle East under Emir Feisal, son of Sherif Hussein of Mecca. Arab nationalism was rising with the fall of the Ottoman Empire. Arab riots erupted against the Jewish settlements. * * * AFTER World War I, Britain assumed control of Palestine. Jews poured in from Middle Europe, but Bolshevik Russia forbade emi- gration. By 1923, the Jewish population in Palestine reached 100,000. New halutzim pioneers bought land, began improvements, introduced health measures and started mak- ing a long-abused land flourish. But anti-Zionist Jews saw ca- FOR ALL ITS ups and downs, the performance was highly mov- ing. The burden of the evening's work lay on Mr. Harold Haugh. He sang the evangelist, a part which contains passages with cru- elly high tessitura. His was a sen- sitive, scrupulous reading, and vo- cally very satisfactory. The other soloists, faculty mem- bers as well as students of the music school, discharged their duties with credit. The orchestra was excellent except the strings of the second orchestra. The oboist that accompanied Miss Mattfeld's fine delivery of the contralto aria "Have Mercy, Lord, On Me" deserves special mention for lovely tone and ele- gant phrasing. The double chorus on the stage, singing the turbae parts with much abandon and vigor, fre- quently failed to sing together. But somehow their enthusiasm and the brevity of such choral parts forces one to overlook their own rhythmic re-syncopation of what Bach wrote. The soprano section, though, offended by un- pleasant tones. The work of the chorale choir, made up of high school students, was the rmost.im-oressive of the 4 I1 * 4 A