04r f ir~tigan Bally 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 "See Any Other Of Us 'Modern Republicans' Around?" "When Opinions Are Free Truth Wi 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, APRIL 18, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: JAMES ELSMAN Which Direction For Strategic Jordan? UPPERMOST in the attention of world dip- power our way? Or will she unite with Syria lomats is the latest sore spot in the ever- and Egypt on the other side? turbulent Middle East - the governmental This decision is of prime importance to both crisis in the strategic little nation of Jordan. sides. Should Jordan take the latter course, Jordan is small, backward and impoverished, the tension in the area would almost certainly with little on the surface to make its internal be heightened. Israel would be placed in an affairs of any deep concern to the great world even more precarious position than presently. powers. And when Israel feels that position has be- The present delicate balance of power in come overly threatening, the slightest spark the Mideast, however, makes the outcome of could set off a full-scale war in the area. the current crisis in this materially insignifi- The course of action of the presently friend- cant Arab kingdom crucially significant to ly Arab nations also hinges to some degree on the entire world, and particularly to the two the fate of Jordan. A return to power of Na- great antagonists, the United States and the bulsi or his cohorts would give a definite boost Soviet Union. to Egypt's President Nasser, and may put the Jordan is boxed in on four sides by four am- entire Arab world under his unholy influence. bitious nations, each of which is ready and waiting to march in and sieze what territory IN THAT EVENT, Western and particularly it can. Three of these, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, and American influence in the Middle East would Israel are nominally pro-Western, but still ba- be nonexistent, and another huge chunk of sically nationalistic. The fourth and most ag- the globe would be lost to the Western camp. gressive, Syria, is decidedly inclined toward If, on the other hand, youthful King Hussein Russia and openly in league with Egypt. wins out as he seems to be doing, and continues his present policies, there is hope that the sta- THE STRUGGLE in Jordan is between op- tus quo, unsavory though it is, will be main- posing political philosophies in the long tained, if not improved. run, but more immediately over what role Jor- This seems the best we can hope for. It at dan is to take in current world affairs. Will she least leaves us a basis for continuing the war join Iraq, Arabia and Israel in a loosely pro- for peace. Western policy and thus swing the balance of -EDWARD GERULDSEN A New Club and Old Fear ONE OF THE healthiest and most interesting ing over the campus. Prof. Kenneth Boulding of the myriad student groups at the Uni- told the club Tuesday that it is the people who versity is the newly-formed Political Issues cling doggedly to their beliefs in the face of Club. Recognized in December, the club has put opposition that preserve liberty. on two excellent programs so far this semes- Perhaps the Political Issues Club is such a ter and there is promise of at least one more. group. Both programs - discussions of the ef- -TAMMY MORRISON fects of a militaristic society and the pro- tection of the individual in a group-directed Wilson Fellowship society - have been, for the University, well- r attended. Moreover, they have been attended Hel Fill Teacher Gap by people who ask questions and argue among P themselves, something that has become all too rare in the current student generation. IN THESE TIMES, when a shortage of college Strangely enough, although the group's teachers looms as a serious threat to the avowed purpose is to interest students in poli- quality of higher education in America, Wood- tical affairs and issues on a non-partisan ba- row Wilson fellowships assume a tremendous sis, it has met with opposition or at least dis- importance. trust when it tried to obtain speakers. Faculty Established to encourage students in prac- members, on being asked to speak, have sub- tically any field to continue their work and jected the club president to intensive quizzing consider the teaching profession, the program on his political beliefs and affiliations and will aid 302 men and women next year. made careful inquiry into the nature of the The recent Ford grant of 25 million dollars group, to extend and develop the program is a positive It would seem that post-Nickerson-Davis hy- step towards reducing the threat posed by the steria has permeated the faculty, possibly the prospect of spiralling enrollments. one campus segment which should be expected The seven University students who were to assume leadership in interesting our all-too- awarded these grants deserve congratulations uninformed generation in political affairs. and commendation. It is heartening to note that they come from the humanities and social HOPE the Political Issues Club will con- sciences, two areas sorely hit by the faculty tinue to aim at its admirable goal of stir- shortages. ring up interest, despite the cloud of fear hang- -L. R. M. INTERPRETING THE NEWS: No U.S. Policy on Jordan ~. t I '""'" , y . , G T /_. CIVILIAN GENERAL: Militar Reserve: A Delinquency Cure? By HAL BOYLE Associated Press Feature Writer A MAN here who wears two hats feels he has a simple cure for the nation's juvenile delinquency. "It would be cut 75 per cent if every boy in America went through military reserve training," said Alfred G. "Tubby" Tuckerman. When he puts on one hat, Tuckerman, who started his business N, Tosrr ,{? 957 -rN~l a~s+rr.1'Cr)f4 p Sr - WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Behind The Sewage Scene By DREW PEARSON career as a clerk, is a partner Manhattan management consult- ant firm. When he puts on his other hat, Tuckerman, who began his mili- tary career as a private, is the two-star general who commands the 77th Infantry Division. It is one of 10 "ready reserve" divisions in the United States equipped for almost immediate combat duty in the event of mobilization. 4' * * WHY SHOULD a boy of 17 or 18 join the Army reserve? Wouldn't it be better to wait and gamble on the draft? Tuckerman, who enlisted him- self in 1918 and feels his own business success springs largely from the results of military train- ing, says no. He points out that, if drafted, a youth has to serve a full two years on active duty, plus four years in the reserves. The same youth, if he enlists in the reserve program, has to spend only six months on active duty, can work out the rest of his obligation to Uncle Sam by spend- ing one night a week at a reserve training center and attending two- week summer drills. "It really does the kids good," he said. "It often provides them a career incentive at a period of life when they are unsure of them- selves and uncertain of their future goals. "They can elect their specialty, and get a basic grounding in such fields as administrative routine, radio, electronics, radar, atomic energy, or motor maintenance. "They also learn other things they don't pick up on the streets- such things as discipline, respect for property, law and order, pride in themselves, and a devotion to duty. "A boy who learns these things isn't likely to wind up a juvenile delinquent." UNLIKE many reserve officers, Tuckerman doesn't soft-pedal the military aspectsofareserve train- ing. He feels that, even in the event of atomic war, trained ground troops will always be es- sential. And he stresses the sur- vival benefits that proper training gives in combat. "A trained man is five times as likely to escape death or wounding as an untrained man," he said. On this point Maj. Gen. Tuck- IN THE CURRENT scramble to cut the budget, the House al- most chopped off the annual $50,- 000,000 grant to American commu- nities to keep waste and sewage out of their drinking water. Be- hind the close vote is an untold story of industrial lobbying and pressure direct from the White House. Opposition to the grant came from the powerful chemical, pulp and paper manufacturers which dump their factory waste into the nation's streams. Federal aid to clean up municipal pollution, they feared, would eventually focus at- tention on industrial pollution. As a result, these firms launched a. virtual let-them-drink-sewage campaign that reached all the way into the White House. No less than Assistant to the President Sherman Adams pulled strings to kill the anti-sewage ap- propriation. Adams used to be manager of the Parker =Young Co., now the Franconia Paper Co., one of New England's important pulp and paper producers. He is also a life director of the Northeast Lum- ber Manufacturers Association, be- fore which he spoke in Boston last week. * * * ADAMS worked through Repub- lican leaders on Capitol Hill to line up a majority of Republicans against the $50,000,000 matching funds whicn the Federal Govern- ment would extend to cities to help them build sewage-disposal plants. It's interesting to note that during the 1956 campaign, Republican literature took credit for this 50,- 000,000-a-year program "to purify streams and other water sources which o t h e r w i s e," they said, "might endanger the health of the public," Actually, the program was au- thored by Minnesota's Congress- man John Blatnik, a Democrat, though many Republicans voted for it. Thanks to White House pressure, however, a large majority of Republicans went back on their campaign boast and voted in fa- vor of continued sewage cumping in the nation's rivers. The victorious amendment to kill the appropriation, however, was not introduced by Republicans but by two Texas Democrats-O. Clark Fisher of San Angelo and Omar Burleson of Anson. Ironically, their districts are collecting almost half of the federal money allotted to Texas right now to clean up drink- ing water. In Burleson's district, the Sweet- water Sewage System was so anti- quated and overloaded that raw sewage seeped into a tributary of the Brazos River. This supplies drinking water for Abilene and Dyess Air Force Base. In Sweet- water, itself, the water is no longer sweet but contaminated by the town's own sewage. *' * * HOWEVER, this is now in the process of being remedied, thanks in part to funds voted for Texas by the Federal Government. Water is so scarce in Fisher's district that his constituents want to irrigate with the discharge from the San Angelo sewage treatment plant, Of the $1,700,000 allotte to Tex- as for sewage treatment this year, Burleson's district is receiving $500,000 and Fisher's will get $266,200. However, their pollution problems are on the way to being solved by the program the two Congressmen fought so hard to sabotage in Washington. These two Texans, fronting for the GOP-Democratic "economy" coalition, succeeded in defeating sewage disposal on an unrecorded or teller vote. This is a vote where- by Congressmen merely file past a teller, who records the number voting but does not record the names. Later, Speaker Sam Rayburn, who has been doing more to pass important items in the Eisenhow- er budget than any Republican, required a roll-call or recorded vote. This time, Republicans did not want to vote for sewage-pub- licly. Enough switched over to the Democrat-Eisenhower side to rein- state the $50,000,000. AS A PROTEST against the "rubbish" that comes in the mail, Congressman Glenn Cunningham (R., Neb.) brought a box full of typical "waste mail" to a meeting of the House Post Office Commit- tee. After the meeting, Congressman Bob Corbett (R., Pa.) started rum- maging through the box. .; "Hhhmmm," he mumbled. "Lot of good stuff in here." Then he nonchalantly pocketed some sample pills and walked off. (copyright 1957 by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) in William E. Hill & Co., a top erman can speak with considerable authority. He commanded a regi- ment in the Pacific in the last war, won the Combat Infantryman's Badge, the Aid Medal, the Bronze Star with two clusters, and the Silver Star for bravery. This is his summary of the civil- ian benefits of military training: "It teaches you to analyze a problem, organize a Aoluton, sell that solution to other verbally, and get it carried out. "It also teaches you how to get along with other people, the fine art of human relations and"-here General Tuckerman grinned - "something you need to know in business and warfare: when to take proper evasive action." DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michi- gan Daily assumes no editorial re- sponsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3553 Administration Building, be- fore 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices forpSunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. THURSDAY, APRIL 18, 1957 VOL. LXVII, NO. 137 General Notices Urgent notice to all Hill Audtoriunt ushers - Choral Union, Extra Series, Lecture Series, and Burton Holmes Se- ries. All ushers in the above men- tioned series are urgently asked to hlp usher at the Dr. Ralph Bunche lec- ture which has been postponed twice and which will now be given on Sat., April 20 at 8:30 p.m. Please make an effort to help and be there no later than 7:30 p.m. as usual. Your assis- tance will be greatly appreciated. Come whether you have your usher card or not. Blue Cross Group Hospitalization, Medical and Surgical Service Programs for staff members will be open from Ap- ril 1 thru April 24, 1957, for new ap- plications and changes in contracts now in effect. Staff members who wishto include surgical and medical services should make such changes in the Per- sonnel Office, Room 1020, Admin. Bldg. New applications and changes will be effective June 5, with the first payroll deduction on May 31. After April 24, no new applications or changes can be accepted until October, 1957. Selective Service Examination: Stu- dents taking the Selective Service Col- lege Qualification Test on April 18 are requested to report to Room 130, Busi- ness Administration at 8:30 a.m. Thurs Lectures Insanity as a criminal Defense - a Report on Experimental Jury Trials will be given by Visiting Prof. Fred Strodtbeckvand Prof. Harry Kalven Jr., from the University of Chicago in Aud. B, Angell Hall at 4:00 p.m. Thurs., April 18. Prof. Edward Devine, Ann Ar- bor City Prosecutor, will preside. Co- sponsored by Sociology Undergraduate Student-Faculty Committee and by the Law School. Concerts Student Recital: Sara Scott, student of piano with Marion Owen, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Music degree at 8:30 p.m. Thurs., April 18, in the Rackham As- sembly Hall. Works by Mozart, Beetho- ven, Schoenberg and Debussy. Open to the general public. Good Friday Concert: University of Michigan Symphony Orchestra, Josef Blatt, Conductor, assisted by members of the University Choir and student soloists June Law, soprano, Mary Matt- field, alto, Jerry Langenkamp, tenor, James Berg, bass,.and John Ze, bass- baritone, will perform Beethoven's 9th Symphony, and Wagner's Prelude to Act I, and the Good Friday Spell from "Parsifal" at 3:30 p.m. Fri., April 19, in Hill Auditorium. Open to the gen. eral public without charge. Academic Notices Applicants for the Integrated Pro- gram in Liberal Arts and Law: Appli- cation for admission to the Integrated Program in Liberal Arts and Law must be made before April 22 of the final preprofessional year. Application may be made now at 1220 Angell Hall. ..All students planning to meet the Directed Teaching requirements for the Secondary School Teaching Certificate during the Fall Semester 1957, must ile their applications in Room 3206, Uni- versity High School before the end of the.present semester. Applied Mathematics Seminar Thura., April 18, 4:00 p.m., Room 246, W. Engi- neering. Prof. John Carr will speak on "Generalized Functional Round-off Er- ror Analysis." Refreshments at 3:30 in Room 274, W. Engineering. Interdepartmental Seminar on Ap- plied Meteorology: Engineering Thurs., April 18, 4 p.m., Room 307. West Engi- neeringBldg. James J. B. Worth will speak on "Air Conditioning as a Factor in Attaining High Rates of Industrial Production: Personnel Efficiency" - Chairman: Prof. Floyd N. Calhoon. >. r t 4. I I ETTERS to the EDITOR .1 (Editor's Note: Letters to the Edi- tor must be signed, in good taste, and not more than 300 words inslength. The Dauy reserves the right to edit or withhold letters from publication.) Ruts? . . To the Editor: TO THE MEN who dispose of money for the continuing con- struction of North Campus: before you decide to overla, the north campus "boulevards" with some- thing smooth, perchance a pave- ment, how many wheels must be rutted out of alignment? -Walter L. Meagher By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst P RESIDENT EISENHOWER has promised to help Jordan against either Communist or Israeli aggression without getting down to the most likely dilemma in the Middle East. At the time of the fighting last fall many people In Washington were obsessed with the idea that Israel had attacked Egypt instead of Jordan only because France and Britain sought an opening wedge to the Suez.. They thought Israel would turn on Jordan, with British and French approval, as soon as the Sinai campaign was cleaned up. World reaction against the Anglo-French- Israeli attack on Egypt- put the brake on any further adventures at the time, if they actually had been contemplated. Now many observers believe Israel would move promptly,,.at least to eliminate the /"Jor- Editorial Staff RICHARD SNYDER, Editor RICHARD HALLORAN LEE MARKS Editorial Director City Editor GAIi, GOLDSTEIN .........Personnel Director ERNEST THEODOSSIN .........Magazine Editor JANET REARICK ...... Associate Editorial Director MARY ANN THOMAS..............Features Editor DAVID GREY : .............. ....Sports Editor RICHARr CRAMER ........ Associate Sports Editor STEPHEN HEILPERN........Associate Sports Editor JANE FOWLER and ARLINE LEWIS............... Women's Co-Editors JOHN HIRTZEL ................ Chief Photographer Business Staff DAVID SILVER, Business Manager MILTON GOLDSTEIN ... Associate Business Manager dan Bulge" into her border, if Jordan collapses and appears about to be absorbed into the Nasser-Syrian bloc. Or if there is a Syrian- Iraqi-Arabian race to fill any vacuum created in Jordan. IT IS HIGHLY DOUBTFUL that anything the United States could or would do for Jor- dan in that case would go much beyond what she did for Egypt last fall. Armed American assistance to Israel's ene- mies is politically unthinkable, despite the somewhat surprising Eisenhower reference to the continued existence of the long-discounted tripower guarantee of 1950 against aggression in the Middle East. Where the blanket of American policy is shortest is where the dilemma is most likely to develop. The biggest part of Jordan's popula- tion consists of Palestinian Arabs whose coun- try was divided by the world powers in order to create Israel. They provide most of the pro- Nasser feeling in Jordan, If the pro-Egyptians call out the street mobs and overthrow the Hussein element, Jordan would take herself into the Nasser-Syrian bloc. The likelihood of this depends upon the de- gree of loyalty which the King can command from the army. He seems to have it now, but the skirmishes which have occurred do not encourage too much optimism. That the King is not as strong as he has looked in the last few days is well-indicated by the fact that he was forced to accept top Nas- serites to get a new government., THE NASSERITES in both Jordan and Syria cannot be called Communists, though they certainly are not anti-Communists. Even Sy- rian aggression against Jordan could not be se- curely labeled as Communist aggression so that the Eisenhower Doctrine would clearly apply. I DETECTIVE FICTION: Gory Murder, Policeman's Personality Described y I MY KINGDOM FOR A HEARSE By Craig Rice Simon & Schuster CRAIG RICE'S celebrated law- yer, John J. Malone, and his two equally famous sidekicks,dJake and Helene Justis, are back in business in a typically unconven- tional, if somewhat gory, murder case. It's all about a beautiful dish called Delora Dean who at a very crucial. moment disappears. Craig Rice's trio sets out to clear up the mystery, but immediately sees it get more and more complex. You see, there are more than one "Delora Deans"-at least part of them, anyway. Then some of these parts, surgically detached from their owner, begin to circu- late in the mails Well, at least you see how it s going. This is Craig Rice, here inimitable, though on the basis of plot, not at her best. *4' * THE BIG FRAME By The Gordons Doubleday kEFF BAKER, police lieutenant, shad a good job and a loyal and loving family to come home to when be left that job each day. Then came the murder of Janet niakin a millin- tha +1-. n p- down at the last moment as a re- sult of an unfortunate resume-' like denouement based, in turn, on several disputable deductions. * *' * THE BLACK MIRROR By Ben Benson Morrow w BEN BENSON, whose tales of the Massachusetts State Po- lice have rightfully earned him a reputation as one of today's most accomplished and consistently en- tertaining detective fiction writ- ers, combines his State Police dra- ma with a drama of nature in his very readable new novel, "The Black Mirror." Trooper Peter Bradford is assigned as an under- cover "plainclothes" man in the small Massachusetts resort town of Belleview. The police are plan- ning a purge of the corruption in Belleview, and young Bradford's job is to gather evidence against the big racketeers. In the process of doing this, Bradford falls in love with the daughter of one of the principal suspects, and the drama of their situation is highlightea by a dra- matic flood which engulfs the town and sets up the effective climax of the story. Benson at his best, mahihs +, i ss icih nmmann - is a good and typical "English" " detective novel of twenty-five years back. I am, I must say, generally unmoved by the "tradi- tional" English detective tale - a category into which "No Friendly Drop" snagly fits. An interesting feature of the novel, however, is its lengthy dis- cussion of the science of toxicolo- gy. This was a fresh and intriguing subject at the time the book was written. However, at least one au- thority on poisons has challenged the effectiveness of the method employed by the poisoner of the beloved Lord Grayle. * * * , THE STAG PARTY by William Krasner Harper THIS is a fast-paced novel about the problems detective Sam Birge encounters in discovering the truth behind the plunge of a young, pretty, scantily clad girl from the apartment where a stag party was being held to the street below. The young victim lingered a few hours, then died. And that was where Captain Sam Birge, Homicide, stepped in. His investigation is conducted along believabe lines, and believ- a - ahl onl no nn'a +, - rr orful because the detective, Peter Clancy and his "man," Wiggins, refuse to be bound by convention. The couple show some imagina- tion and, in general, make for a pleasant few hours of reading about their efforts to clear up the mysterious death of an old ac- quaintance of Clancy, Cecil Jer- mayne. All sorts of skullduggery is turned up in the Jermayne house- hold - including a case of meth- odical arsenic poisoning -- and it is the job of Clancy and Wiggins to sift the evidence through for the facts leading to the solution of the case. This is all managed in a light and entertaining fash- ion, which reflects favorably one school of the "modern English de- tective novel." THE BURNED BAN by Christopher Monig Dutton MONIG is a pseudonym for pro- lific crimewriter Ken Cros- sen who has an impressive list of credits under his own name. "The Burned Man" is a story of an in- vestigation of a fire, and of the f A