Sixty-Seventh Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 "When Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: DAVID TARR Pro-Con: USIA Budget Cut Largely Just1fied Yes . .. IVE CONGRESSIONAL trimming of the United States Information Agency's budget request for fiscal year 1958 is largely justified. USIA, almost since its inception, has shown itself incapable of coming up with an effective propaganda program which will successfully sell the United States abroad. USIA has not contributed its share to America's winning of friends or influencing of people. In its movies, press releases, bulletin boards, libraries and other assorted endeavors. USIA has concentrated on showing the "average #pan" abroad what a wonderful place the United States is, implying all the while "why don't you be like us?" What USIA has consistently failed to realize is that other people neither are, nor want to be like Americans. Movies depicting four and six-lane highways have little meaning to the rice farmer who has spent his entire life within ten miles of the one-lane dirt road beside which sits the house where he was born. Books on the great American ideals have little significance to the fisherman who is more con- cerned with how he is going to feed his family next week, to say nothing of this week. More- over, the book is useless as he probably can't read in the first place. THE United States wants to win friends among the underprivileged people on this .earth, it would do better to spend its money on water pumps with which' the rice farmer can irrigate his land or put to use land where now there is no water. If Americans would be known as the bene- factors of the needy of the human race, they would do better to spend their money putting surplus grain in sacks with a short label "A gift from the American people," and distribut- ing these to the world's starving. In the cold war, as in most other facets of life, actions speak louder than words. USIA has been wasting its time and the taxpayer's money on futile words when it could have been under- taking valuable projects with tangible results. Cutting the USIA budget is not only a justi- fied but a commendable step. Not until that Agency' or any other comes up with a practical plan based on sound knowledge of the condi- tions of the area in which it is going to operate should the Congress appropriate to it one red cent of the American taxpayer's money. -RICHARD HALLORAN Editorial Director No . . THE UNITED STATES Information Agency is coming out on the wrong side of the ledger in the current Congressional consideration of the 1957-58 budget. Senators and representatives lopped off as whopping $105 million dollars from the $140 million dollar request of -the agency. By this action, the brunt of the blame for the ap- parently less than successful United States' propaganda efforts in the Mid-East, Southeast Asia and other uncommitted areas seems to be placed squarely on the Agency. What the congressional budget snippers fail to realize is that the Agency can not be blamed for the lack of coordination, and hence, the lack of success of the Administration's propaganda program. The Agency is being placed in a situation in which they are being undercut by other departments of the Executive Branch who con- stantly make pronouncements on their own and ignore the coordinating agency. These pro- nouncements often directly contradict the Department and the USIA. Consequently the propaganda objectives set out by the State propaganda program falls fiat on its face. START in the right direction was made by giving the head of the agency, Arthur Lar- son, a seat in Cabinet meetings and meetings of the National Security Council, where major policy decisions are made. A more total coordi- nation must be effected to bring about a suc- cessful propaganda program. The Agency is balancing on a very precarious edge. It is responsible for the total propaganda effort, but yet is not able to command enough authority to fulfill its responsibility. The only way to patch up the tattered shreds of the Agency's effectiveness is to increase its influence over the other departments, enabling it to control propaganda releases issued from these branches. In this way the Agency can become an effective body. Congressional budget cutters might seek the underlying causes of the Agency's ineffective- ness and take positive action to counteract this ineffectiveness rather than punishing the Agency, by cutting funds, for a problem which is not the Agency's fault. -CAROL PRINS e "Uh Huh-Up Here It Looks Like Thunderstorms" _ . t }I a r E=- c' , ~L$I4T - TODAY AND TOMORROW: Presientia Disability: Two Schools of Thought By WALTER LIPPMANN I AM WRITING this article on a plane from Palermo to Tunis, and and having lost touch for the time being with immediate events, I have been thinking about one of our own domestic problems, what to do about a disabled President. There are really two schools of thought on the problem. The one holds that if a President is disabled, there should be a clear and accepted way by which the Vice-President can assume the powers but not the office of President. If the President recovers, the.Vice-Presi- dent steps down again. The other school holds that as long as the President is alive, it can cause only confusion and trouble if there are two Presidents - the elected President who holds the office and the Vice-President who exercises his power. As Mr. Joseph C. Harsch has explained recently, those who take the second view believe that when the President is disabled, his powers r { 6 WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Doodling Top Secret By DREW PEARSON UNCLE SAM'S security system is now so strict that even doodl- ing by high officials is checked to make sure their subconscious scribbling doesn't reveal any sec- rets. The doodles usually are burn- ed if they are drawn during a secret conference. Washington's champion doodl- er, Secretary of State Dulles, draws complex geometric designs as he thinks. It isn't likely these abstract patterns would give away any secrets. But on the chance a psychologist might get a clue to Dulles' secret thinking from them, aides scrupulously gather up his doodles and stuff them into a brief case after each meeting. SECRETARY of Defense Wilson also doodles at his desk. He may jot down a word or figure or curli- cue but his staff doesn't bother to pick up after him. They are con- vinced his doodling would only confuse enemy agents. Sensitive agencies, such as the Atomic Energy Commission and Central Intelligence Agency, auto- matically destroy all doodling or scribbling that has anything to do with secret work. Atomic Energy Chairman Lewis Strauss does not doodle, but he scrawls notds on tiny white pads and stuffs them in his pockets. He even keeps a pad by his bed- side in case he should get an idea in the middle of the night. But he always empties his pockets in his office and is careful to destroy notes that contain security in- formation. Central Intelligence Chief Allen Dulles scribbles notes on sheets of long, lined yellow paper. His security-minded staff takes no chances and simply incinerates all his waste paper. INSIDE WORD from Wisconsin is that the White House won't be able to purge Sen. Joe Mc- Carthy in next year's Republican primary. It is no secret that President Eisenhower would like to rid the Senate of McCarthy. The unoffi- cial White House candidate for McCarthy's seat is ex-Gov. Walter Kohler, who is considered more popular than Joe in Wisconsin. An unannounced hitch has de- veloped, however, in Kohler's plan to challenge McCarthy in the primary. Kohler has always en- dorsed the state GOP convention and has said he wouldn't run without the convention's support. The party bosses, who control the convention, are now swinging behind Joe. They are disgruntled conservatives who believe Mc- Carthy will help save the party from Ike's "Modern Republicans." Their feelings have been intensi- fied by the social snub the White House handed Joe. EARLIER, GOP boss Tom Cole- man had passed the word to his organization that McCarthy was through. But it now looks as if the convention will give Joe the nomination anyhow. It's all part of the Republican revolt against Ike that is sweeping congress and pervading the rest of the country. The only other candidates who might whip Joe in the primary, Gov. Vern Thompson and Glenn Davis, don't want to buck the party organization. This meansno prominent Republican will be in the field against McCarthy. It also means the Democrats will have their best chance since 1932 to pick up a Wisconsin seat. G OP Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona is lining up conserva- tive Republicans to support Sena- tor Knowland of California for President in 1960. Goldwater is boasting privately that right-wing Republican Senators are certain to take control of the party during the last two years of Ike's term, and their candidate will definitely be Knowland. GOP members of the Senate Rackets Committee almost walked out last week over counsel Bob Kennedy. They were so irked at the way Kennedy has been pop- ping off to 'the press that they had a secret protest meeting, and served notice on Chairman Mc- Clellan of Arkansas that some- thing had to be done about Ken- nedy. McClellan agreed that Ken- nedy should clear all future press statements with him. (Copyright 1957 by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) can most faithfully be exercised by a kind of informal regency con- sisting of the senior members of his own Cabinet and of his White House staff. This was in fact what happened when Woodrow Wilson was ill, and it happened again when President Eisenhower was ill. IN DEALING with this prob- lem, the first thing we have to realize is that there is no such thing, indeed that there can be no such thing, as a happy and en- tirely satisfactory solution. It is a calamity when the President be- comes disabled, and no statute or Constitutional amendment can do more than to mitigate some of the consequences. But on the whole the best of the solutions is, it seems to me, the one proposed by President Eisen- hower. This rests on two basic principles. One is that the Presi- dent himself should be the judge of his own disability. The other principle is that while the President is alive, the Vice- President shall not assume the office of President, and shall exer- cise the powers of the office sub- ject to the President's unques- tioned right to take back the powers if he feels able to do so. This seems to me to avoid any suggestion that some kind of tri- bunal or commission of eminent men should sit in judgment on the President's ability to exercise his power. It is better to leave it to the President himself to judge whetherehe feels well enough to administer his office, and in case he is unconscious, to have the Cabinet act in his behalf. It is possible, of course, to ima- gine a condition of affairs which would not be met by this solution. The most obvious example which comes to mind would be the case of a President who gradually be- came mentally incompetent with- out realizing the fact or being will- ing to recognize it. My own view of this possibility is that as we can- not foresee and prepare for all eventualities, it is the part of wis- dom to say that if and when such a situation arises, the remedy should be worked out by those who know all the facts of so un- usual and so peculiar a situation. * * * IF WE are going to amend the Constitution to deal with this problem, we ought at least to con- sider restoring what was almost surely the original intent of the founders. This was, so I have always understood, that if the Vice-President succeeds, it shall be not for the remainder of the President's four-year term but only until in the normal course of things new elections can be held. 1957 New York Herald Tribune Dulles Not Stubborn Enough 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. THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1957 VOL. LXVI, NO. 143 General Notices Regents' Meeting: May 23, 24, and 93. Communications for consideration at this meeting must be in the President' hands not later than May 14. Phi Beta Kappa. Initiation Banquet, Mon., April 29, Michigan Union, at 6:30 p.m. Prof. Charles H. Sawyer, di- rector of the Museum of Art, will be the speaker. Reservations should be made at the Office of the Secretary, Hazel M. Losh, by Sat., April 27. Mem- bers of other Chapters are invited. 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 events are approved for the coming weekend. April26: Adela Cheever, Alpha Phi Omega, Alpha Xi Delta, Delta Theta Phi, Phi Gamma Delta, Public Health Club. April 27: Alpha Kappa Kappa, Alpha Sigma Phi, Delta Chi, Delta Tau Delta, Delta Theta Phi, Hawaii Club, Gom- berg House, Huber House, Martha Cook, Michigan House, Nu Sigma Nu, Phi Epsilon Pi, Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Kappa Tau, Phi Sigma Delta, Reeves House, Rumsey House, Sigma Chi Sigma Nu, Sigma Phi, Theta Delta Chi, Theta Xi, Phi Delta Theta, Theta Chi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Trigon, Van Tyne House, Williams House, Zeta Beta Tau, Zeta Psi, Chi Phi. ..April 28: Alpha Omicron PI, Betsy Barbour, Chi Omega, Couzens Hall, Delta Theta Phi, Stockwell Hall, Lectures Lecture. Dr. R. S. Shane will speak on "Chemical and Chemical Engi- neering Aspects of Nuclear Power Re- actor Design and Construction" at 8:00 p.m. on Thurs. April 25, in Room 1300, Chemstry. Mathematics Lecture, A talk will be given on Fri., April 26 at 4:10 p.m. in Room 3011, Angell Hall by Hans J. Bremermann of the Institute for Ad- Ivanced Study entitled, "On a Gener- alized Dirichet Problem for Plurisub- harmonic Functions and Pseudo-Con- vex Domains." Refreshments at 3:45 in Room 3212, A.H. Catholicism Looks at Birth Control. Fr. Bradley of St. Mary's Chapel will speak informally on this topic at the Friday afternoon coffee hour of the Of- fice of Religious Affairs, Lane HaIl, 4:15 p.m., April 26. This is the first of a two week series; the second program will look at the Protestant viewpoint on the same subject. Astronomy D e p art m en t Visitors' Night. Fri., April 26, 8 p.m., Rm. 2003, Angell Hall. Prof. Fred T. Haddock will spak on "Radio Waves from the Solar System." After the lecture the Student Observatory on the fifth floor of An- gell Hall will be open for inspection and for observations of Jupiter and double stars. Children welcomed, but must b accompanied by adults. Concerts Student Recital Postponed: The reci- tal by Joyce Noh, previously announced for Thurs., April 25, in the Rackham Assembly Hall, has been postponed. The new date will be announced later. Student Recital: by James J. Ed monds, pianist, previously announced for Wed., April 24, Will be performed this evening at 8:30 p.m., in the Rack- harmesAssembly Hall. It is being per- formed in addition to his thesis for the Master of Music degree in Theory, and will include works by Bach, Cho- pin, Bartok and Liszt. Edmonds studies with Helen Titus, and his program will be open to the general public. Carillon Recital by Percival Price, University Carillonneur, 7:15 p.m Thurs,. April 25, the first in the annual spring series. The program of 18th Cen- tury carillon repertory will include compositions by G. F. Handel for Clay's Musical Clock, repertory of J. De Gruyt- ters, Antwerp, for keyboard playing, and carillon compositions by M. van den Gheyn. Student Recital Postponed. The reci- tal by Neva Vukmirovich, pianist, pre- viously announced for Fri., April 26, has been postponed until Sun., May 12. School of Music Honors Program, 4:15 Fri., April 26, in Aud. A, Angell Hall. Presentation of student honor awards and speech by Prof. Garnet R. Garrison, Dirctor of Television, "Television in the Modern World." Open to School of Mu- sic students, faculty and friends. Academic Notices Doctoral Preliminary Examinations for Students in Education. All appli- 4 SECRETARY OF STATE John Foster Dulles appears finally to have admitted defeat in his attempt to solve the Suez Canal problem by direct United States negotiation with Egypt. Secretary Dulles announced Tuesday the problem would be handed back to the United Nations this week, thus signaling an end to the futile month-long struggle to win Egyptian acceptance of the United Nations formula for administering the Canal. There would be no great cause for concern if Secretary Dulles had requested further United Nations action on the problem, but he did not. He emphasized instead the United States would request no United Nations action, but simply file a report and wait for a final Egyptian an- swer to the efforts of American negotiators. In addition, Dulles said the United States has "no objection" to American ships entering the Canal, provided they pay tolls under pro- test. With these ~ developments, American policy toward Egypt and the Suez appears to have taken a definite turn toward defeatism and inaction, a course which is hardly effective in world politics, particularly when one's antagon- ist is as stubborn as Egypt's President Nasser. THOUGH Nasser's determined resistance to compromise on the ownership and adminis- tration of the Suez Canal is frustrating and angering, it's success cannot be denied. The United States, in this case, could take a lesson from Nasser. Only by being equally as stubborn and persistant can we hope for suc- cess. When two equally determined antagonists meet, the greater force must eventually win out. Determination alone cannot or should not be enough to secure the victory. The United States and the United Nations definitely hold the greater power, if they could find the courage to use it. Action taken against Nasser, other than futile talk, has so far been insignificant. The assets of the Suez canal company in the United States, Britain and France have been frozen, but little else has been done. Now that negotation has apparently failed, the time has arrived for action, not admission of defeat. Continuing, progressively increasing pressure should be applied on Egypt, with eco- nomic sanction as the primary tool, and force as a last resort. Nasser's bravado has. proved impervious to persuasion; it must be broken down by more drastic measures. -EDWARD GERULDSEN 41 ARMY-McCARTHY HEARINGS: Lawyer Welch Remains in Public Eye a INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Arab Opinion Volatile By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press News Analyst THERtE is a valuable lesson in last week's Middle East developments. Once again it has been demonstrated that Arab public opinion is something which can be shaped and changed almost overnight, and thus often becomes a ready tool for those seeking to use it for their own profit. The Eisenhower Doctrine is being credited in some quarters with turning countries like Jordan and Saudi Arabia away from a path which might eventually lead them into involv- ment with the Soviet bloc. Some credit may be due to the Doctrine, but it would be unrealistic to give it too much. The basic cause of the beginnings of a revulsion against Egypt's Nasser among Arab leaders lies in the worry of the Eastern rulers them- selves .Naser'rctivitie s. inchrked. might notice. But they know, too, if the forces seeking to cause the explosion can be held sufficiently in check, Arab opinion can be directed into less dangerous channels. They have had a number of striking demon- strations of this. One came only a few days ago when pictures of Nasser began disappearing from the coffee shops and windows in Jordan, replaced by pictures of young King Hussein. O THE Western mind it seems absurd and even fantastic that a man so violently ad- mired could be so easily replaced. But it hap- pens frequently in the Arab world. Not long ago American had a rough time jn, the Middle East. But one gesture by President Eisenhower during the aggression last fall was sufficient to turn suspicion and mistrust into effusive admiration of all Americans by the Arab public. That is changing back again now By ROGER GREENE Associated Press Staff Writer "LIZZE BORDEN took an ax Adgave her mother 40 whacks; when she saw what she had done; she gave her father 41." Boston lawyer Joseph N. Welch says the jury was right in acquit- ting Lizzie, subject of this old ' jingle, on the basis of the evidence presented in the celebrated Fall River, Mass., murder trial in 1829. Welch made that summation as narrator in a recent televised pro- ducton of "The Trial of Lizzie Borden." HIS APPEARANCE recalled a 36-day drama of whacks, counter- whacks and verbal blood-letting which opened on Capitol Hill just three years ago this week. That was the celebrated Army-McCar- thy ruckus in which Welch figured as Army special counsel. Almost alone of all the- key fig- ures in the Army-McCarthy furor, Welch has kept in the public eye in the intervening years. In addi- tion to his role in "Lizzie Borden,'' he has appeared in several other TV productions. And last year he was named American "Father of the Year," partly for his efforts in championing the United States Constitution. EVEN Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.) has faded into the back- ground from the limelight which blazed around his Communist- hunting forays in the early 1950s. tation to attend Mamie Eisen- howers' spring luncheon for Senate wives. What has happened to other headliners in the 1954 hearings? Where are they now? FORMER Secretary of the Army Robert T. Stevens, who bitterly argued McCarthy's charges of "Communist coddling" by the Army, resigned from his Pentagon post in June, 1955 and returned to his old job as president of the big J. P. Stevens Textile Co. in Plain- field, N. J. Ray N. Jenkins, the jut-jawed Knoxville, Tenn., lawyer who serv- ed as special counsel for the Sen- ate subcommittee in airing the Army-McCarthy hassle, has fig- ured in speculation as a possible candidlate for the United States Senate in 1960. He calls himself an Eisenhower Republican. JENKINS z:en+t] was appoint- ed assistant ;:efense counsel for the court-martial of Col. John Nickerson Jr., guided missiles ex- pert, who is accused of leaking secrets of the Army's hush-hush Redstone Arsenal at Huntsville, Ala., to members of Congress and the press. Maj. Gen. Kirke B. Lawton, 62 years old, retired from the Army in August 1954, two months after the books were closed on 80,000 pages and two million words of testimony in the Army-McCarthy drama. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bible.r 3. tj't Af Y1MY 19$( '.(IZ 2 ~f ti ts eXU# V4 EAf WM' MY MAJOR Z f,( 9T IN f+(G0 5i4 -} WE WtAf Vo%10DP fVI P VAY( OAJV flf L a} AT "IT Mi/ tp i joined the Washington law firm of Ford, Allder and Adams. .Roy M. Cohn, now 30 years old, McCarthy's legal adviser during the hearings, resigned his $11,700- a-year job as chief aide in McCar- thy's Red-hunting investigations in July, 1954. McCarthy called him "the most brilliant young fellow I have ever known."" COHN subsequently accused the press in clamping down a "news blackout" on McCarthy in the wake of the Senate hearings. He is now practicing law in New York City. G. David Schine, 29 years old, known as "the most publicized private in the United States Army" during the Army-McCarthy clash, completed his two-year serv- ice hitch as a corporal in October 1955 and has since resumed his job as president of Schine Enterprises, Inc. His wealthy Russian-born father, J. Myer Schine, operates a chain of plush resort hotels and movie theaters. a