It 3ielnt kgau Bt 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 "And With The One That Can Blow Up The Entire World We Get Trading Stamps" hen Opinions Are Free Trutb Will Prevail" , ~: y f J,' is K Y! III lJ 1 Y 4 w' IN DISREPUTE: The Fifth- Protection Against 'Third Degree' By The Associated Press "I MUST DECLINE to answer that question because of my rights and privileges as granted by the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution ..," And so another witness joins the long parade of those who have sought refuge in the Fifth Amendment over the last eight years. Most often the witnesses have used the amendment to avoid answer- ing questions by congressional committees investigating spy rings, Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. As URSDAY, MAY 9, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: DAVID TARR Drinking Regulations Out of Tenor with Times ABOUT A YEAR AGO, a group of fraternity men'on their way to a pledge formal were involved in a head-on collision. Everybody in both cars, except the driver, was killed. The group had been drinking. Saturday night a University student appeared at the door of his fraternity, badly battered and bleeding. According to the police, he had been drinking heavily. Both of these students point up an incredibly near-sighted University regulation. "The use or presence of intoxicating beverages in student quarters is not permitted." The University regulation, of course, exists because of state age limitations, and the law which prohibits alcoholic beverages in state- owned property. S HERAMIFICATIONS of this ruling are great and harmful. It seems to have been compiled by someone who has not had much contact with students. To begin with, students will drink, no matter what the regulations. The University can' make regulations to fill several books, and students will drink.I If a student gets caught, he and his com- panions will take care not to make the same mistake, so they won't get caught again. They aren't going to stop drinking. But where are they going to drink? They aren't permitted to do so in their own quarters. So perhaps they'll go out to the Arb. Students who have been drinking in the Arb get beat up by Ann Arbor youths almost every year. Or maybe they'll all pile into a car with a case of beer, and go out on some lonely road to drink. Or maybe they'll drive to some place out of town, or away from campus so they won't get caught. Unfortunately, in both cases, they have todrive back-drive back after they have been drinking. SO IN ONE SENSE the University ruling encourages students to go off some place to to their drinking so they can be a danger on the roads, to others and themselves. The ruling has several other failings. 1) The regulation forces students to set aside special occasions for drinking. Special days, for which elaborate planning takes place, so the student can get 'bombed" or "stoned" or whateter the term happens to be. But what- ever it is ,it means drink until one can't func- tion any 'more. 2) The University cannot help to educate students about sane drinking, because this would assume students do drink, and the regulations say they can't. 3) It encourages disrespect for the Univer- sity and its regulations. This is one rule that can hardly be enforced, and students most strongly don't want it enforced. Violate this ,ule and why not violate others? THERE REALLY seems to be little positive reason for the regulation. A New York state legislative committee re- cently made a study of this area to learn whether it would be advisable to boost the state's drinking age limit to 21. It is now 18. The committee found there was not any reason change the law. In fact, it found there were advantages in the present set-up. The three-man committee noted, "Experience has shown that young people from 18 to 21 have quite enough energy, ingenuity and freedom of action to circumvent any prohibitory statute of this kind." The committee found it was able to enforce the present law quite well. FURTHER, and this is most important, the committee found arrests and convictions resulting from abuses of the 18-year-old mini- mum "have always been relatively small." The small number of violations points up the value of education. New York State has, a compulsory high school course, where prob- lems of this sort are dealt with. The University regulation is absolutely use- less. It doesn't work, and has definite negative effects. It's only purpose is to proclaim to the world, "'We hold to a standard of morality, which few really believe." We suggest the University recommend that the State Legislature study the problem and. at least, try to come up with an answer less incredibly superficial than the one now in effect. -RICHARD TAUB ' LJ '. . r X } = '2, w {, ' 2 " -"fa 3 ..-yY .r j'£ , 1 1-.; . s 1' vL ."' 6 .. i M. .., . p 3j . ; . ! f 36 Li-Lj a "Aft "rb 44, 1 ift SIG-WAR WEAPON4S I AR~E MOR~E ECONJOMICAL THA rLE.WAR WEAPOAIS I ! .- l I ,. ...- ,. , a I, _\ L z t7 iS { y . 4 1;. ~1 a i '' y i _ s. . . , : , r :- 3 r , . , y i l. tr" amgis. I I. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Ike Fights Toughest Battle By DREW PEARSON' A Blocked Drive CAMPUS CHEST'S far-reaching goal of one dollar a student has been revised and dropped by the Chest board to $6500 - less than thirty cents a student. This is really disheartening news, particu- larly as it comes so early in the week of the first Campus Chest drive. The original goal was perhaps too much out of line - it sug- gests that many would have to give more than one dollar to make up for the inevitable ones who refuse to give - but at the same time, a dollar a student was a worthwhile aim at which to drive. Moreover, the one dollar total would not have been entirely out of reach - not with the successful auction that saw several ex- penseless items hit the block for many times their worth, or with the coming solicitations across arnd even beyond campus. But it was perhaps the soliciations that con- tributed most to dropping the drive goal. The men's dormitories have placed themselves as a block in front of a successful fund drive. Fifteen - perhaps more now - of 23 men's houses have forbidden personal solicitation of their residents. This move stems from a rule against quadrangle soliciting made by the Residence Halls Board of Governors some time ago. THE ACTION of the individual houses, how- ever, is a thoughtless, self-centered one. With the concept of a single, once-a-year char- ity drive, all students should be anxious and eager to contribute to its success, both to.help the individual charities involved and to do away with the endless bucket collections and tag days. These quadrangle houses by making nearly 4000 studentsinaccessible to sensible, direct solicitation, have seriously impaired the suc- cess of the first Campus Chest drive for funds. Fortunately, sororities and fraternities, as well as the women's dormitories, are more, broad-minded in these matters. We hope Cam- pus Chest is at least successful with its new goal. -VERNON NAHRGANG Citizens Voted Against Children Also THE FAILURE of Ann Arbor citizens to approve the increased tax for the schools will be regretted by those of them whose child- ren may wind up in half-day sessions. Despite warnings about the necessity of this increase if Ann Arbor schools are to expand to meet enrollments, the voters turned down a levy of approximately seven dollars per $1,000 of assessed valuation. Perhaps the voters feel they have been taxed too much lately, what with the millage for the new jail addition. But certainly the education of their children is at least as important as the jail. Or the objection may be that art, music, and vocational education have no busi- ness in the schools and might just as well be eliminated as the school board has said may be necessary. This is more valid, but still full- time sessions and kindergarten are being elimi- nated, which do belong in any curriculum. Indications are the school board will try again, with a decreased mill tax. This is to be hoped for. An honest effort has been made to trim the budget as much as possible, but extra money must be rased from somewhere. If the citizens want to keep their schools operating at any sort of decent standard, they should realize that they must pay for it. -JOHN WEICHER A BUSINESSMAN of the United States Chamber of Commerce variety got a taste of his own budget medicine from Congress- man Wayne Hays of Ohio the other day. William J. Hull of 'Cincinnati, representative of the Ohio Valley Improvement Association, called on the Ohio Democrat on behalf of Ohio industrialists and cham- bers of commerce to urge more money than the budget allows for the Pike Island Dam. He wanted to triple the money in the budget for study of the dam in order to get the dam started sooner. "YOU'RE THE PEOPLE who are writing me letters about econ- omy," replied Congressman Hays after listening carefully. "You're the people who want to cut out sewage disposal. You want to cut out all funds for cancer research and for the cure of heart disease. Yet now you come along when something is going to benefit you and your companies and you want the budget increased. "I'm tired of people who want economy for others but more money for themselves," continued Hays. "I've got stacks of mail on my desk from your people urging economy. And I'll vote for it where I can. But I'm not going to cut everyone else and raise you." The Pike Dam would replace three dams on the Ohio River with one dam, hereby saving naviga- tion time to those using the river among them Wieron Steel. Con- gressman Hays said he favored the dam, but did not favor spend- ing extra money to speed it up. Mr. Hull picked up his hat and walked out. * * * THE BATTLE of the budget is shaping up as a bigger problem for President Eisenhower than the Battle of the Bulge was for Gen- eral Eisenhower. In the Battle of the Bulge, crack Nazi SS troops infiltrated the Ar- dennes Forest during the closing days of 1944 and routed Ike's 106th: Division. But General Eis- enhower, though taken by sur- prise, did not have to cope with disloyalty from his own troops. In the Battle of the Budget, President Eisenhower's chief problem is disloyalty from with- in his own ranks. He has trouble not only with his own top Cabinet officer, Sec- retary of the Treasury George Humphrey, but rank-and-file Re- publicans supposed to fight for him. , 4 IT'S SUPPOSED to be a strict secret, but the Republican con- gressional committee has actually hired a research director, Harley Reiter, to fight against the Eisen- hower budget. His job is to dig out facts and figures aimed at undercutting the budget sub- mitted by the head of the Repub- lican Party. Yet he is paid by one segment of the Republican Party, by Republican money raised by Republicans to keep Republicans in office. It is unprecedented for this money to be used against a Re- publican president. In addition, right-wing Repub- lican congressmen have set up a super-secret task force to battle against their own President. Heading the secret task force is Congressman John Ray of New York, former vice-president and general counsel of American Tele- phone and Telegraph. Working with Ray are Congressmen Bob Wilson of Calforma, John Byrnes of Wisconsin, Gerald Ford of Michigan, John Rhodes of Ari- zona and Melvin Laird of Wiscon- sin. Wilson was active in Vice- President Nixon's previous cam- paigns. Rhodes is a water-boy for Arizona's Barry Goldwater, pro- bably the most outspoken anti- Eisenhower Republican in the Senate. Curiously, Laird formerly worked for Wisconsin's Gov. Wal- ter Kohler, supposed to be a strong Eisenhower Republican and a former critic of the late Senator McCarthy. The existence of this group has been carefully concealed, not only from the press, but from "Modern Republicans."sAnyone who pries too closely is told that the group's official function is to prepare an expose of the nation's "fiscal policies for the past 20 years." This research will blast past Dem- ocratic budgets, of course, but it is really aimed at the Eisenhower budget and is part of the conser- vative bid to capture party con- trol from Ike's Modern Republi- cans. - S THE MAN caught in the middle is Vice-President Nixon, who is obligated to defend the Eisenhow- er budget and also hopes to be the liberal Republican candidate for the presidency in 1960. Nixon, however, doesn't want to antag- onize the powerful chamber of commerce crowd. As a result, he has been doing political contor- tions, trying to keep on both sides of the budget fence. Though he's reported to have given secret encouragement to the conservatives, in all his public pronouncements he has weakly defended the Eisenhower budget. When General Eisenhower fought the Battle of the Bulge he was able to throw in troops from the continent of Europe, even rush extra divisions from the U.S.A. But in the Battle of the Budget so far, he has been able to use only his own White House staff, plus his own voice. With a few exceptions, Republican con- gressmen aren't battling for him. They are afraid first, he might change his mind regarding the budget and leave them out on a limb. Second, cutting the budget is too popular at home. Third, Ike has not gone to bat for those, like Senator Wiley of Wisconsin, who have gone to bat for him. (Copyright 1957 by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Communist operationsand assort- ed criminal rackets. One result of this almost whole- sale resort to the protection of the Fifth has been to bring the amend- ment itself into disrepute. WHEN A WITNESS pleads the Fifth Amendment the public tends to assume he is guilty of some- thing. Even President Eisenhower said at a news conference March 27, "I must say I probably share the common reaction if a man has to go to the Fifth Amendment there must be' something - he doesn't want to tell." The President made the com- ment when asked about Teamsters Union President Dave Beck, who had invoked the Fifth on more than 100 questions put to him at a Senate subcommittee hearing on labor racketeering. But there is another interpreta- tion of the Fifth. It is outlined in a leading treatise on evidence by the late Prof. John Henry Wig- more, dean of the law school at Northwestern University. Said Wigmore in an oft-cited passage: "The simple and peaceful pro- cess of questioning breeds a readi- Ness to resort to bullying and physical force and torture. If there is a right to ask a question, there soon seems to be a right to the expected answer; that is, a con- fession of guilt." * * *S IN BRIEF, the Fifth is your pro- tection against the so-called third degree, the rubber-hose method of extorting confessions used by some police. In case you have forgotten, the Fifth Amendment reads in part: "No person. . . shall be compelled In any criminal case to be a wit- ness against himeslf . . Wrapped up in the full amend- ment is your guaantee against continuous persecution, arbitrary arrest, outright confiscation of your property, forced confessions. One of the outstanding consti- tutional lawyers of the past 50 years David K. Watson of Colum- bus, Ohio, once wrote: - "This is the greatest of the original amendments. It secures to the citizen certain rights without which society could not endure, nor the state survive.", The Fifth is an individual pro- tection. The right to refuse to self-incriminate exists only for natural persons, not for corpora- tions. Further, the United States Supreme Court has held it is a purely personal privilege. A wit- ness may not take the Fifth be- cause some other person might be incriminated, * " * IN ADDITION, the Supreme Court has held that the Fifth does not automatically protect a wit- ness in matters which incriminate. If a witness wants the protection of the Fifth he must claim it spe- cifically. During the investigations into crime by the Senate special sub- committee headed by Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn) one racketeer after another resorted to the Fifth. At face value the Fifth is a vital protection for the innocent, yet somehow it has become a haven for those who would duck questions concerning public wel- fare and national security. Undoubtedly the present parade bf Fifth Amendment users will continue, particularly as Congress probes deeper into the rackets which plague the nation. LETTERS to the EDITOR (Editor's Note: Letters to the Edi- tor must be signed, in good taste, and not more than 300 words in length. The Daily reserves the right to edit or withhold letters from publication.) Sallade... To the Editor: G EORGE SALLADE unequivo- cally expressed his opinions on several items of intense interest to taxpayers and the citizens, ii a small meeting of the Young Re- publican Club on the University campus, Thursday, May 2. + One - He was strongly in favor of a state corporation tax. Two - Sallade recommended a personal income tax in this state, if the corporation tax was not passed. Three - Sallade was flatly op- posed to any form of "right to work law" and said he would vote against such a law as long as he was in the State Legislature, and if he were governor he would veto such a law. Four - Mr. Sallade also said that as long as he was a member of the State Legislature he "would not vote to the Right." Unfortunately, his position on these issues was r ot reported i the press. He was so positive in these statoments that it was clear they were considered stands. As one of the people present, I believe that his sttitude should te spread on the puLlic record. -Walter C. Laubengayer Tennis, Anyone? ,. To the Editor: IT SEEMS to be typical of this institution that midway be- tween the world's largest univer- sity-owned football stadium and one of the finest modern varsity swimming pools in America sits a row of pitted tennis courts with moth-eaten nets over which hang a sign, "For the use of the Fac- uity and Student Body of the Uni- versity of Michigan." It seems strange that although it is possible to spend 500,000 dol- lars for a new press box for the football stadium, it is not possible to even duplicate the tennis fa- cilities of University of Chicago, which does not even have a foot- ball team,' but which "supports all minor sports." It seems that $10,000 per year will provide well-cared-for and at- tended tennis courts, and I am sure that the personnel of the University would much rather have good tennis facilities for the next fifty years than more press boxes with dining rooms. -Ken Appel, Grad. 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 fornm to Roam 3519 Administration Building, be- fore 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday THURSDAY, MAY 9, 1957 VOL. LXVII, NO. 155 General Notices Hearings on the Student Driving Regulations will be held by the Office of Student Affairs at 8 p.m. on wed., May 8 and at 3:30 p.m. on Thurs., May 9 in Room 3529, Student Activities Building. The purpose of the hearings will be to solicit and record from individuals and groups any suggestions regarding possible modification of the present driving regulations. Following the hear- ings the Office of Student Affairs will carefully review all comments and sug. gestions offered before establishing the student driving regulations for the school year 1957-58., - Individuals and groups are urged to submit written briefs to the Office of Student Affairs if for any reason per. sonal appearance at either hearing is .impossible. Urgent Notice to all ushers who signed to help at Skit Night! You are hereby reminded that the Skit Night show starts at 8:00 and that you should therefore report. at the Auditorium at 7:00 p.m. on Friday, May 10. Attention all Seniors: Order your caps and gowns for June graduation at Moe's Sport 'Shop on North University i 4 r 2 t1 PREMIER OF SOUTH VIET NAM: diem Proves One of Strongest Asian Leaders INTERPRETING THE NEWS: German Question By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst P RESIDENT Eisenhower's reference yesterday to the possibility of a neutralized zone in Europe is tied directly to the question t of Ger- man reunification, whether or not he intended it that way. Discussing the limited Russian acceptance of the principle of his two-year-old "open skies" proposal, he said it was being considered very carefully, and that any agreement might lead to something better. Regarding last year's proposal by Anthony Veipan fnr. a nn'i. f. nA nn,a in Vriirnnn lhp limited areas can be enforced, then it will be possible to broaden the areas and end the arms race. RUSSIA has already made the neutralization of Austria a peg for' proposals to extend a neutralized zone from the Adriatic to the Baltic. But Russia wants to include a Germany reuni- fied by means which would give the Communists a chance to take over the whole country. She also wants a troop withdrawal arrange- ment which would remove British and Ameri- can forces from the Continent, while Russian forces would remain in easy striking distance By The Associated Press WHEN AUSTERE, scholarly lit- tle Ngo Dinh Diem took over as his country's premier three years ago, the wise money was stacked against his political sur- vival for more than a month or two. It seemed a safe bet. Diem -- who once intended, becoming a Roman Catholic priest and has continued a life pledged to chas- tity even after he decided against the vocation - faced a formid- able phalanx of troubles. Across the 17th parallel divid- ing the Communist-ruled North from the free South Viet Nam, the Reds were waiting smugly for the effects of their flourishing sub- version campaign below the bo - der. IN SOUTH Viet Nam, private armies bedeviled the fledgling public Oct. 26, 1955, he aligned his government squarely with the democratic West. In order to sur- vive, he said, "all democracies. need . . . solidarity with regimes which have common ideals." For many Asian listeners, Diem's record as a foe of French colonial rule in Indochina adds resonance to his anti-Communist pro- nouncements Diem has spoken up often and sharply. So last November, after the Russian suppression of the Hun- garian revolt, he declared: "The tragic plight of the heroic Polish and Hungarian peoples so cynically massacreddby the most virulent form of modern colonial- ism - Communism - not only must unite all Asian countries into a common and courageous soli- darity against imperialism in all its forms, but also remind us Viet- namese of the compelling neces- at State Department doors and tracking down elusive congress- men to urge a change in American policy . toward Indochina. He wanted the United States to stop supporting the French, who were fighting to preserve colonialism by battling the Communists. He had to bide his time until the French lost the war. In the black June days of 1954, the little ruddy-faced politician could hardly find enough men to form a cabinet, so sure were most of the experienced hands that his government was doomed to fail- ure. His adversaries included an anti-Diem army of 200,000; nu- merous questionable political and religious private armies; French obstruction and a formidable Red underground. Gradually, Diem whittled away DISGUSTED by the French re- fusal to grant him some indepen- dence in office, he resigned in 1933 and spent the next 20 years in political oblivion. He carried on a private campaign of resistance to the French, rallying around him supporters who are with him to- day. One of his most impressive achievements since taking office is the restoration of security in a country physically and mentally broken by Japanese occupation and eight years of civil war. Many residents of Viet Nam had never left their home towns, so danger- ous was it to travel in the coun- try. Now the situation is reversed, though it took full-scale military campaigns against rebellious sect armies to do it. A tourist or.busi- nessman in 1957 travels without s