I 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 "It's No Bunny" "When Opinions Are Free Trutb Will Prevail" z z" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: JAMES ELSMAN Dorm Solicitation Vital To Campus Chest Success YM Iq 3 v% ^ ': " .. qq '} _ N >.j - 3 / -L t y f . t -':i -.1 1: y. i:/ f R . Y wnr.w .' / J _ 6 ! , LILIES ON HEAD? Easter Hat Madness Hits Operatic Star By HAL BOYLE Associated Press Feature Writer THE EASTER HAT madness has an unusual victim this year - Blanche Thebom, the only girl in grand opera who can stand onl her own hair without bending her knees. I feel like I had dived into a lily pond, and came up with a lily on my head," said the springly Metropolitan Opera star as she put r ,, F:. _ t , 4 l r j/rtj(} Ky f 1 ria.R s. RECENT ACTION of the Board of Governors of the Residence Halls may have placed the success or failure of the Campus Chest drive in the hands of dormitory House governments. The Board has told promoters of the drive they may make door-to-door solicitations in any House where student government approv- al has been obtained. The drive, which might be described as a student Community Chest, will combine the several bucket drives con- ducted each year. Traditionally, the Board has prohibited so- licitations in Residence Hall units on the grounds it invades students' privacy. But it can be claimed with equal validity that this consideration is negligible compared with the financial assistance a successful drive would give to the participating organizations. The groups participating in Campus Chest - FIresh Air Camp, World University Service and Free University of Berlin - are charitable groups deserving support either individually or collectively. These organizations have taken a sizeable risk in backing a new drive, which has moder- ate chances of success. The week Campus Chest planners have allotted for the drive, scheduled for next month, is longer than the two days most campus bucket drives last. But it would be too hopeful to believe these extra days suf- ficient to increase the contributions through the usual methods of a bucket drive to a level where the participating groups would receive as much as they collected in individual cam- paigns. T HE NOVELTY of campus drives probably wears off after three days leaving any short period of time thereafter relatively useless for soliciting money. Only by approaching organ- ized living can the drive ever be successful enough to give the groups more than they have collected individually in the past; and it is quite possible this method of solicitation is also the only way to enable the groups to equal their collections of past years. If Campus Chest succeeds, it will, in time, develop into an organization with the pres- tige and appeal to draw large sums of money not possible even by the cumulative efforts of many separate campus groups. It will be able to coordinate distribution of money from the many charity fund raising events 'every year and direct it to the most needy and deserving areas of the community. But if the drive is a failure in this, its first year, it is doubtful that its full potential will ever be developed. THE CONCEPT of a united community serv- ice, inherent in an undertaking such as Campus Chest, is sufficient reason for a com- munity to take active steps to assure its reali- zation and success. While members of the community may reject the concept, to prohibit the most natural method by which they can express their approval indicates a short-sight- edness - often founded on good intentions - from their leaders. Allowing Campus Chest in the Residence Halls would not be a 'precedent for other in- dividuals or groups to solicit there because: (1) The Board of Governors will never al- low commercial products to be sold or infor- mation for private use to be collected in the dormitories; (2) charitable drives on campus are required to be part of Campus Chest, (3) Campus Chest is a once-a-year, charitable drive. ONE MEMBER of the Board of Governors said he believes "Campus Chest is going to fall flat on its face." While we genuinely hope ' he is wrong we must subscribe to the ultimate failure of the drive unless solicitation is per- mitted in the Residence Halls. We strongly recommend that this solicita- tion not only be allowed but encouraged. -DAVID TARR _, +.. - z . ,::'. s _ v / 1 toi - :... , WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Norman Case Complex By DREW PEARSON on the first hat she had bought in 14 years. The beautiful mezzo-soprano gave up hats about the time she started letting her hair grow long. Now it is over six feet in length and the singer, who is about 5 feet 7 inches tall, actually can let it down and step on it. Miss Thebom, who usually gets along by sticking a flower or a jeweled ornament in her hair, went on a bonnet buying spree this season because she is going to England soon. It wouldn't do to bump unexpectedly into Queen Elizabeth with nothing but a vin- tage orchid in her tresses. No, in- deed. BLANCHE isn't a girl who goes in for half-way measures. She de- scended on the hat shop operated by Mr. John, the noted chapeau designer, with the enthusiasm of a pirate raider. Her enthusiasm was matched by that of Mr. John, weary at the moment of decorating girls who affect short bobs or even crew cuts. "I also hate those tortured curls -those French-fried curls," he murmured. "A woman with long hair is a pleasant challenge. "For a long-haired woman, the hat simply must be in proportion. Hat design, after all, is basically architecture, which after all is basically proportion." Mr. John, whom Napoleon is said to resemble, tosses off bon mots like this all day long on a six-day week. Sunday he practices. He came into the trying on room with half a dozen colorful wide-brimmed hats. They bore such romantic titles as "visiting butterfly," "royal garden party," "meeting in mayfair," "brunch with a beefeater" and "teawith a total stranger" * * *, MR. JOHN is indeed a veritable madcap - whether working in prose or satin. One hat which was two feet wide and named "windsor after- noon" - or was it "nightcap with a knight"? - caught Blanche's eye. "This is a black palace portrait hat," murmured Mr. John, "made of layers of summer black taffeta with a black petticoat brim sure, hats wear petticoats, caught with a single summer rose, also black." Intoxicated either by Mr. John's haunting creations or his haunted descriptions, Miss Thebom wound up with about a dozen big- brimmed hats, including "fascina- tion," "trooping of colors," and "spring in London." "If you're going to wear a hat," said Blanche stoutly, "you might as well wear a mad one, so that a man can look at it condescend- ingly. That's one of the reasons for wearing a hat-to give a man something to feel smug and su- perior about." SGC Enrollment Study ITHOUT a word of comment, Student Gov- ernment Council last night passed what may prove to be the most important motion of its history. The Committee on Increasing Enrollments is the first move by student government to seriously consider the future of our bloated institution. In a University where apathy and the pros- pects of electronic educators grow more dis- turbing each year, the added burden of swell- ing enrollment intensifies the responsibility ac- corded to thinking students. These students, equipped with the machinery to forcefully present their viewpoint, can and must assume a larger role in the constant re- view and consideration of contemporary edu- cational problems. We must seriously question the security that comes from expanding facilities as en- rollment bounds. Steps toward a greater use of education television must be anticipated and studied closely by students, concerned with the best use of their time and that of their instructors. O TRY TO list the areas which should quickly come under the careful considera- tion of student government is obviously im- possible. And this impossibility itself should serve to warn the committee of its greatest danger - that of thinking too small, or too quickly. The study initiated last night could well continue as long as there are students. A vir- tually unlimited service to the University is about to be undertaken. --ALLAN STILLWAGON THE COMPLEX maze of state- ments, Senate speeches, and diplomatic notes fired back and forth in the case of the Canadian Ambassador's suicide make it ex- tremely difficult to know just who is telling the truth. Truth in this case is particularly important because it involves rela- tions with two important nations- Canada, perhaps our most vital neighbor; Ireland, another strong friend, to which Scott McLeod had just been appointed ambassador. McLeod is in charge of the State Department office which allegedly OK'd release of the data on Cana- dian Ambassador Norman, as a re- sult of which some opposition to his appointment has arisen in Ire- land. Sen. Neuberger (D-Ore.) has asked for an investigation.. One question is whether McLeod and his State Department Security Division have been cooperating with the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee in conducting a Mc- Carthy-type witch-hunt. IN ADDITION, Canada charges that we were meddling in her af- fairs by trying to decide whom she should have as Ambassador to Egypt. Just what is the truth? Denial No. 1-Sen. Eastland of Mississippi denies the above. De- fending his Internal Security sub- committee on the Senate floor, he said: "Thererwere two hearings held. They were not investigations of Ambassador Norman, but of per- sonnel in our own State Depart- ment." The truth-The record does not bear this out. It shows that State Department personnel, namely John K. Emmerson of the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, was questioned for the sole purpose of embarrass- ing Ambassador Norman. Counsel Robert Morris gratuitously read into the record the derogatory FBI report against Norman, then pro- ceeded to ask Emmerson question after question about Norman, when he last saw him, what friends he had, whether he ever criticised the U.S.A., whether he criticized U.S. policy in the Mid-east. Sen. Jenner (R-Ind.) joined in the heckling. It was a star chamber proceed- ing similar to an official finding by a committee of the British House of Commons that our Am- bassador to Egypt, Raymond Hare, was a Communist. * * * DENIAL NO. 2 - The Stat Department denied that it had ever OK'd publication of the re- cord on Ambassador Norman, claiming only the testimony of John Emmerson was released. It's difficult, however, to see how the two could be separated. Denial No. 3-The Senate Se- curity Subcommittee issued a statement: "The transcript was cleared for publication by the State Department." Later, Sena- tors withdrew this statement. The truth-When the Senators issued this statement, Robert Cart- wright, Assistant to Scott McLeod and acting Chief of the State De- partment Security Division, phon- ed committee counsel Morris to say he was being put on the spot. Morris was very consoling. He as- sured his friend he was doing all he could to stop the subcom- mittee's statement. The statement was then with- drawn. but not stopped. Cartwright was with the FBI 21 years. He left the FBI to come to the State Department four years ago, about the time McLeod be- came Security Officer He is the brother of Monsignor Cartwright of St. Matthews Cathedral, is a close friend of both McLeod and Morris, was even present when the Senate testimony on Ambassador Norman was taken. * * : (Copyright 1957 by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) 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 for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1957 VOL. LXII, NO. 138 General Notices 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 wish to 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. Attention all Seniors! Order your caps and gowns for June graduation at Moe's Sport Shop on North University as soon as possible. The following student sponsored so- cial events are approved for the com- ing weekend, April 19: Phi Delta Phi, Tau Delta Phi, April 20: Adams, Alpha Epsilon Pi, Alpha Tau Omega, Beta Theta Pi, Delta Upsilon, Gomberg,Nu Sigma Nu, Phi Delta Phi, Phi Delta Theta, P1 Lambda Phi, Phi Rho Sigma, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Delta Tau, Theta Xi, Zeta Psi, April 21: Phi Delta Phi. Student Government Council Sum- mary: Action taken at meeting of April 17, 1957. Approved: Minutes of previous meet. ing. Activities sponsored by student or- ganizations as follows: Aprila20, Thai Association, Cultural program, Lane all. April 22, 23, Indian Student Asso- ciation, movie, "Chandra", Arch. Aud. April 27, Turkish Club, Turkish Ball, Rackham, 9-12 p.m. May 3, Barristers, Crease Ball, Law- yers Club, 9:30-1:00 a.m. Extended petitioning for Council po- sitions to Friday, April 19, 5 p.m. petitioning for South East Asia will close April 25. Received report of recount of J-Hop ballots: Sally Klinesteker, Jo Anne Beechler, Liz Hoffman, Mike Adell, Bob Arnove, Jim Champion, Tom Greed, Dan Jaffe, Bob Stahl, Lynda Genthe. Delegated to Executive Committee re- sponsibility for coordinating with the Administration on revision of the booklet "University Regulations Con- cerning Student Affairs, Conduct, and Discipline." Appointed: Maynard Goldman, Jean Scruggs, Nelson Sherburne to the SGC Housing policy committee. Heard report on Student Bookstore. Granted recognition to Delta Phi Al- pha, honor society in German. Adopted following motions: Increasing Enrollments. Student Gov- ernment Council shall establish a committee on Increasing Enrollments. The duties of this committee shall be to plan a course of action for the Council to follow with regard to the particular areas which should be considered, the best methods of working In these areas, and the way In which the various elementsof the University community can be in- volved in the problems of increasing enrollments. The Committee shall consist of four SGC members, to be appointed by the ExecutiveCommit- tee with the approval of the Coun- cil. They shall report to the Student Government Council no later than May 15. Amended statement on Human Re- lations Board to read "The Human Relations Board considers cases and areas involving discrimination against students In the University commu- nity or the Ann Arbor community. The Board will work in a positive manner to encourage better human relations in the University and Ann Arbor community" for "The Human Relations Board considers cases in- volving discrimination against stu- dents in the University community or the Ann Arbor community." Adopted following statement: "Student Government Council strongly maintains its position as the only organization recognized by the Regents to express student opinion. The Council realizes, however, that it is difficult for eighteen persons to represent the opinions of the many diverse groups present on a campus of 22,000 students. In order to en- courage expression of student opinion and imaginative thinking in the area of student government, Student Gov- ernment Council urges all student organizations and groups of students to discuss issues and express opinions concerning student government. "It is considered against the best in- terest of Student Government Coun- cil for the ex-officio members to rep- resent the feeling of the special in- terest group with which they are af- filiated. This is true because it lim- its the members' objectivity and grants special representation to a few major groups. Because the League Senate and the (proposed) Union Representative Body, together and ideally represent no special interests, it is felt that this is an excellent source of opinion. The strongest in- centive for worthwhile discussion is given by placing recommendations from these groups on the Student Government Council's agenda of meeting procedure. These items would be scheduled, as is present i V 4 t Playing Nasser's Game THE UNITED STATES may have found a way to play Nasser's game of using internal na- tional assets to gain control over other coun- tries. Nasser's big asset is, of course, the Suez Canal and America's trump card is money, something equally obvious but not as effectively-handled as Egypt's geographical advantage. In drawing up its program to present in the United Nations "before Easter," the State De- partment has mentioned a plan to "freeze" about thirty-seven million dollars worth of Egyptian funds located in this country. The United States is also reported ready to release the "advised" ban on American ships passing through the Suez Canal. Merely giving American ships the go-ahead to pay Suez tolls would show silent approval for Nasser's blustering, but so-far successful at- tempt to maintain complete control over the canal. HOWEVER, if the lifting of the shipping ban is accompanied by the freezing of Egyptian funs, we might be able to convince Nasser that America is not conceding victory but is catching on to his methods. This attempt to combat Nasser with his own kind of weapon may be belated, but perhaps not too-late. -JAMES BOW SGC SIDELIGHTS: Council Trending Toward Internal Reevaluation INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Friendly Russian Talk? By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst IN THE MIDST of a great arms race, Soviet Russia is always in the best position to make propaganda hay out of her talk of banning bomb tests and atomic weapons. Even in the totally unrealistic disarmament talks which go on sporadically, as they are now going on in London, other nations are forced to confine their talks to slight limita- tion of conventional weapons, in consideration of their own security. That doesn't have much effect on people throughout the world whose great fear is of radiation from the tests and possible means of destruction by atomic war. When the Kremlin's Valerian Zorin evades all Western suggestions by returning to the shopworn talk of atomic bans, he sounds like the friend of all peoples. INDEED, his statement in London yesterday was almost simultaneous with one by India's so-called neutralist, Nehru, and almost iden- tical in meaning - on the surface. Both in- veighed against nuclear tests and atomic war. To be fair to Nehru, it must be said their motives were by no means similar. Nehru wants India, with himself as her leader, to emerge as the moderator of world troubles and as the beneficiary of the East- West struggle for her support. There is no question of his sincere desire for peace. Zorin, on the other hand, is conducting a cold-blooded maneuver for position in advance of a possible war. In a war with modern weapons, a small na- tion with adequate atomic force is almost the equal of a large nation, regardless of man- power. In a war without atomic weapons, the Com- munists could produce more men armed equally as well as those of the West. Even if Russia abided by an atomic ban a nonatomic world would be at her mercy. By VERNON NAHRGANG Daily Staff Writer STUDENT Government Coun- cil meetings for the past month have shown a definite trend on the Council's part toward intern- al reevaluation and greater in- terest in University and student affairs. This week SGC provided for resolutions coming from the League and Union Senates to be placed on the SGC agenda and also established a Committee on Increasing Enrollments. Last week SGC decided to look further into honor systems, worked to set up a delegation to Southeast Asia for summer, 1958, andprovided for a Housing Policy Committee. Previously, the Council added a fourth cabinet officer, decided to give committee chairmanships to Administrative Wing members, and took definite steps in the health insurance area. These recent actions show in- terest and attention in several fields: SGC-student relations, SGC internal affairs, student edu- cation and welfare, University- student problems and relations, and international cultural affairs. * * * SEVERAL of the accomplish- ments were called for by President Joe Collins in his post-election "state of the union" remarks - a comment on the effectiveness of the newly-elected executive com- motions, they are being defeated. SGC seems ready to spend four hours a week for a meeting. Coun- cil members seem prepared, with capable leadership, to dig into areas only touched on in the past. It is encouraging. -* * * GREAT concern was shown at Wednesday's meeting over SGC's rights and responsibilities as rep- resentatives of student opinion. Representation of student opin- ion is just one of those areas in which there are no answers -- but which has to be reviewed and reconsidered again and again. This week it was reconsidered in light of Union President Roy Lave's proposals on expression of student opinion through League Senate and Union Representative Body (still to be formed) and placing of resolutions from those groups on SOC's agenda. In part, the final representation statement of the Council reads: . . The Council realizes . - it is difficult for 18 persons to represent the opinions of the many diverse groups present on a campus of 22,000 students. "In order to encourage expres- sion of student opinion and imag- inative thinking in the area of student government, (SGC) urges all student organizations and groups of students to discuss is- sues and express opinions con- eerning student government . "Because the League Senate and the Union Representative LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibier' of working in these areas, and the way in which the various elements of the University community can be involved in the problems of in- creasing enrollments," A four-member committee, it is nesday, SGC established a Com- mittee on Increasing Enrollments. "The duties of this committee," the resolution reads, "shall be to plan a course of action for the Council to follow with regard to the particular areas which should scheduled to report to the Coun- cil no later than May 15. A LONG-AWAITED report on bookstores came to SGC this week. The committee made two rec- ommendations, that "possibility of a student bookstore on North Campus be investigated" and that "present SBX be continued and enlarged, so that . . . it could evolve into a real student book- store." The report also noted: "Also, University officials and local mer- chants are highly opposed to the idea, and they seem to have the final say in this matter." ai i !,4 I ,. l/f lllt cep j(_... " ' x 4 A. I