s Sixty-Eighth 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 exp ress the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. JNDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN WEICHER Federal Aid to States Strengthens Whole Nation T HE NATIONAL GOVERNMENT recently announced an addition of 1,102 miles of roadway to the original 40,000 mile plan for superhighway construction throughout' the United States. Financing will be the responsi- bility of federal and state governments in the ration of 9 federal dollars to one state dollar. This announcement will be the cause of many furrowed brows and disgruntled remarks from those who feel federal aid is a crutch to many states which are becoming increasingly depend- ent on the national government for finances. Disgruntled observers also argue that national funds are a combination of taxes from all forty- eight states. Federal aid usually results in less wealthy states, because of economic need, re- ceiving more benefit from their tax share than do the most prosperous states. Critics ask, is this fair? Why should the citizens of New York, Michigan or Illinois subsidize highway building in Louisiana or Arkansas. Wouldn't equity demand that New York receive equal shares with Louisiana when federal aid funds are distributed. They hold that aid to these states becomes a perpetual crutch and that these states will become increasingly dependent on "the handout." STATES WHICH DEMAND more aid are those in which natural resources are relatively poor, industry is notably absent and marginal agriculture is the main source of income. These states are unable because of lack of resources and industry to compete economically with the rich industrial states of the central Atlantic coast and Midwest. Economic salvation for these states lies in increased industrialization. They are in need of some means to attract industry which in turn will increase economic standards. Private agencies have realized the plight of these states and have come to their aid in attracting industry. One example is the multi- million dollar expansion undertaken in Arkan- sas under the guidance of businessman Win- throp Rockefeller where 194 industries were either imported or expanded in 1956. These states are helping themselves by lower- ing state property taxes which also proves an incentive'to industrial expansion. The federal government can aid these states in their attempt to expand economically by granting them funds for the building of high- ways and generally increasing the potential attraction of the state to industry. IT SEEMS these states are in no sense willing to sit back and allow only federal funds to flow into their coffers. They have proven they are willing to carry a share of the financial load. The combination of federal aid and state funds will result in the strengthening of these states economically. The federal road building program, as well as school and housing aid plans, is in no sense leading us into state economic deterioration but in exactly the opposite direction. The increased strengthening of individual states will benefit both the national economy and the national defense. Citizens of present wealthy states, as well as present pauper states, will benefit by the strengthened state of our nation. --CAROL PRINS Associate Personnel Director "We Have A Kind Of Outer Space Problem Too" 91/ * * - S - CHANNEL VIEWS: TV 'Spectaculars' Pour It On that he was a professor of organicc Germany. This is the reason he was given the job. I was moved by his story be- cause I feel that maybe the Uni- versity is losing sight of people such as this because of its vast size. I am not a literary person, but I feel that there is a question of responsibility he e. Where does this man come from? Why was he fired? Was any thought given to what he might do without a job? If the man spoke only Russian and was 60 years of age, could he be expected to make great strides in learning English in a month? I know that I have not ex- pressed myself very well, but at least I have told you that I feel that there could be something for people to think about in this news item. -Helen Klemm INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Unions and Corruption To The Editor Letters to the Editor must be signed and limited to 300 words. The Daily reserves the right to edit or withhold any letter. Point To Ponder . . . WAS WONDERING if the death of Alexander Kobilansky can be dis- missed as shortly as it was in The Daily. My only connection with the man was about third or fourth hand, but I have a feeliing that'such a death could have been avoided. My husband is a graduate student in the chemistry department, and I can remember his telling about this man when he was hired. It seems chemistry in Russia before going to I By NORMAN WALKERD WASHINGTON (P)-The corruption scandals haunting some labor unions come to roost next week in a giant, pre-Halloween boo for the united labor movement. But there is every indication the rulers of the 15-million-member parent body, the AFL-CIO, won't scare. They seem ready to mete out tough punishment to their rackets-tainted problem children, including the Teamsters. LEADERS OF THE TEAMSTERS and several other AFL-CIO unions have been accused of raiding the cookie jar-their union treasury tills. Most of the rest of-organized labor seems to realize public spankings are in order if unions in general are to avoid punitive legislation by Congress and state legislatures. George M. Harrison, president of the Railway Clerks Brotherhood, an AFL-CIO vice president and one of its most influential leaders, said: "The federation is determined to clean its own house." This is the theme voiced by George Meany, AFL-CIO president, and such other key federa- tion leaders as Walter Reuther. They maintain the nation can rely on labor to rid its ranks of racketeering and corruption without help from Congress or other outsiders. But this discounts the fact that Chairman McClellan (D-Ark.) of the Senate Rackets Committee, which has leveled most of the cor- ruption charges against the Teamsters' and other union officials, has along with a number of colleagues called for legislation to guard against union wrongdoing. THUS THE PARENT AFL-CIO itself will be on trial next week when its powerful 29- man Executive Council meets to weigh the fate of the Teamsters, the Bakery Workers and the United Textile Workers unions. All have been labeled corrupt by McClellan's committee. Much depends on what happens here tomor- row befor'e Federal Dist. Judge F. Dickinson Letts in a -"rank-and-file members' lawsuit challenging legality of the recent Teamsters convention election of James R. Hoffa as new ,Teamsters president. Pending this hearing, Letts has issued a temporary restraining order against Hoffa tak- ing over the Teamsters helm from the retiring president, Dave Beck. Both Beck and Hoffa have been tagged by McClellan's committee and the AFL-CIO itself as corrupt. Beck is staying in office pending the outcome of the court challenge of Hoffa's election. It is charged that delegates to the Teamsters con- vention in Miami Beach, Fla., were hand-picked by Hoffa and Beck, in violation of the Team- sters' own constitution, to rig the balloting for Hoffa. BUT IT APPEARS that so far as the AFL-CIO is concerned, neither Hoffa nor Beck is acceptable. So an AFL-CIO suspension of the Teamsters from federation membership is re- garded as a virtual certainty at the council meeting here next Thursday. The only possible out seems to be if Judge Letts puts the Teamsters under a court-ap- pointed receiver, as asked by the plaintiffs. In ing. The Teamsters also will plan what they will say when they go before the AFL-CIO council for their spanking Thursday. AT THE TEAMSTERS convention which elected Hoffa overwhelmingly despite the corruption accusations against him, officials of the truck union said they wanted to stay in the AFL-CIO but if the federation leaders ruled otherwise they could "all go straight to hell." So a grim and rough organizing and raiding war between rival unions may be in the making. Hoffa, charged with associating with a rogue's gallery of hoodlums has been hoping he could woo enough AFL-CIO Executive Council members to avoid the two-thirds council vote needed to banish the Teamsters from the fed- eration. The Hoffa forces evidently hope to wangle a probationary status instead of ouster. But from all indications Hoffa, kept busy by court proceedings since his convention election, hasn't got very far in winning council members to his side. Whatever punishment the AFL-CIO Execu- tive Council decides upon will be subject to ratification at the federation's own conven- tion, scheduled for Atlantic City in December. T IS INDICATED that the 140,000-member Bakery and Confectionary Workers Union, some of whose officers are also under corrup- tion charges, and the United Textile Workers Union, with 40,000 members, may escape ban- ishment at next week's AFL-CIO meeting. Unlike the 1% million member Teamsters, largest labor union in the country, which has continually thumbed its collective nose at rackets charges and refused to initiate any cleanup, the Bakery and Textile unions have promised reforms. In addition, AFL-CIO leaders quite likely want to avoid ousting too many unions. They want to keep the Teamsters in the penalty box by themselves in hopes that, one way or an- other, Hoffa will be ousted and the Teamsters, regarded as the biggest labor corruption prob- lem, can be cleansed. Ouster of the Teamsters means the AFL-CIO will be cutting off about one tenth of its revenue. The Teamsters have been contributing about $750,000 a year to the federation. The action of the AFL-CIO recently in cutting off its regular nationwide radio programs is being viewed as a belt-tightening move. BUT AN OSTRACIZED Teamsters union, acid subsequent raiding and picketing wars with AFL - CIO unions, would spell considerable troubles and production delays for employers. That, in addition to further labor corruption disclosures, could stir the nation's legislators into drastic new rules against labor. Top labor leaders are hoping that if they really throttle the Teamsters and any other corruptions the sentiment for tougher labor legislation stirred by the McClellan committee disclosures will blow over. They rely on the fact that next year is a campaign year and politi- cians will be looking for favors from unions once again. But more than that, responsible labor leaders feel that given a little time they can correct most of labor abuses. They say that legislative By CHARLES EWELL Daily Television Writer ENOUGH MONEY went into last weeksdeluge of "spectaculars" to support a symphony orchestra for 500 years or finance a De Mille biblical farce. Ed Sullivan's variety show was replaced by Bing Crosby's variety show, minus animal acts, Coast Guard Chorus and baseball players bowing from the audience. Crosby, joined by Frank Sinatra, Bob Hope, Louis Armstrong and Rose- mary Clooney retained enough of the dated concept that entertain- ers need to- do something more entertaining than stand around and be admired, to demonstrate that the banter and ballad routine can be pleasant when well han- dled. Another lavish presentation, in- volving Mickey Rooney as Pinoc- chio, moved me to new apprecia- tion of the Disney version. * * * THE OPENING of the Canadian parliament by Queen Elizabeth was a windfall for the producers, offering top celebrities at a mini- mum cost. Even if the observance of the English ceremonial forms of regal etiquette had little more significance in one of the do- minions than it would at the open- ing of our world series, it was in- teresting from an historical point of view. The fiction of the Queen com- manding her commons and in- structing her ministers in Canada is hard for an American to swal- low, if not a Canadian. Not even Elizabeth seemed entirely con- vinced of her role. The Speaker of the House of Commons prefaced his address with such a tedious discussion of his inadequacy to render it that I wondered why they hadn't sent someone along who could do the job. Despite his expressed conviction that the Queen would think him wholly unworthy of the honor, she loved him, and showed him how tiresome a speech could be with a redundant anthem on his great land; enumerating its resources down to the fishies in the brook, with the last few stanzas devoted to the familiar strain of "pulling together." s. s * « THE QUEEN'S visit was eclipsed by the gala social event of the season, the Mike Todd anniversary party for his picture, Around The World In 80 Days. If you have never heard of Mike Todd, it's not his fault. With all the crust and none of the bust of Jayne Mans- field (his Witless wife, Liz Taylor, fills that department), he has relentlessly thrust himself into the public eye like a profane gnat. The "party," an indescribably t a s t e l e s s affair, replete with horses, elephants and Elsa Max- well, was telecast by CBS for the benefit of those not fortunate enough to be included in the 18,000 elite at Madison Square Garden. As the announcer carefully pointed out, everything was flown in from somewhere. Champagne from F r a n c e, Mummers from Philadelphia, cowboys from Texas, and cats from Siam. The only thing not flown in was Sputnik, yet the party was still in full swing when the televised portion of the bedlam mercifully ended, so who knows? A rogue's gallery of celebrities whom I would like to believe were flown in from Mars were intro- duced. They all agreed that it was the biggest and most expensive, and therefore the best party they had ever attended. Hedda Hopper, who is only a jot less repulsive than Louella Parsons, was particularly ghoulish in her admiration of the great man's feat. Senator Hubert Hum- phrey of Minnesota managed to relate Todd's movie to a gust of politicalbombastia b o u t world unity which was worthy of the occasion. THE PUBLICITY pageant for Todd's forthcoming Don Quixote featured an appearance by the fine French comedian, Fernandel, who couldn't conceal his impatience to finish his prance around the arena. He broke away from an intermin- able buss from Todd and raced for the exit, the only one involved in the entire proceeding with the good sense to be embarrassed. The high champagnemark of assininity was reached with the filmed sequences of Todd, the en- trepreneur, at work. Here words fail me. Where the profile wasn't idiotic and inane, it was loath- some; making capital of Todd never having read the books from which his films were adapted-ap- parently very humorous. I have rarely seen a more in- solent flaunting of perverse values and degenerate humanity. (Editor's Note: Alexander Kobi- lanski, to whom Mrs. Klemm refers, was an immigrant from Germany employed as a laboratory assistant in the chemistry department until his recent dismissal. His death last Sunday is believed by police to have been suicide. (According to Prof. Leigh Ander- son ,chairman of the chemistry de- partment, Kobilansky was employed on a trial basis only. frhough he was given the services of two inter-' preters, he was reported unable to perform his duties satisfactorily, which was the reason for his ulti- mate dismissal.) Waterloo . To the Editor: THE OTHER DAY I was walking to class but never got there. On the way, I was summoned into a dark alley and informed that I would most likely soon have a ren- dezvous with a cunning, beguiling Oriental "flower" who would at- tempt to destroy me. I immediately started for the "armory" to get prepared for the coming encounter. Enroute, I was viciously am- bushed from the rear-She clutch- ed at my throat until I coughed. Then I was stabbed in the back. I can still feel the dull pain in the small of my back. Before leaving me to die, she hit me over the head mercilessly. The battle had begun, and it seemed over almost before I could make a move. * * * THE END was not yet, however. I began to muster strength and forces for a counterattack. Since I had been shown no mercy, I would give none. I fought back with everything at hand, but my gains were slow.,My weapons were unorthodox for a battle, but they were effective because of the sur- prise element. I fought with blrket and sheet, with pills and nosedrops, with heat and cold, and with kleenex and sleep. I was winning! Victory was soon to be mine. With one last terrible struggle, the Oriental "flower" died in my arms with a sad smile of predatory love on her lips. Meanwhile, her accomplices has retreated and would attack on an- other front. Are You to be the next battleground? -James W. Hamilton Old Warhorse . . . - To the Editor: I WAS JUST thinking last Tues- day how that old warhorse about the Truman Administration's loss of China seemed to be finally put out on pasture-and for good rea- son-when I picked up The Daily and saw a little item called "Re- trospect." Itwas quoted from the National Review, a periodical from, which The Daily sometimes takes short pieces. I don't know why The Daily does it-it may be for laughs, or an attempt to give opposing views, or even just to fill up a few odd inches on the editorial page. Anyway, the National Review, which may or may not be the world's least read journal of opin- ion, brings a statement Truman made recently. * * * HE SAID that it ought to be clear now Communist rulers are more concerned with keeping in power than with peace, and the Review seized on the "now," as if Truman's eyes had just been open- ed, after taking the Communists at face value during his presi- dency. I think it is more important that we, a pragmatic and practical people, try to get out of the mess in which we find ourselves, rather than indulge in recriminations and heavy-handed humor, but I think more and more people are now (thank you, National Review) con- vinced that under Truman we had an excellent foreign policy. The Communists were stopped cold in Greece, Turkey and Korea. There was determination then, and realism, and no vague Eisenhower Doctrine. Truman would never have allowed a Suez Retreat or a Syrian-Egyptian buildup. Never mind the blame, let us see what we can do before it is too late. -John Neufeld, Grad. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin ie a official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3518 Aministrationl Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for unda Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1957 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 29 Lectures Department of Journalism lecture at 3 p.m. Mon., Oct. 21 in the Rackham Amphitheater. William Stoneman, Chi- cago Daily News foreign correspondent, whose topic will be "Clarifying Complex World News." The public is invited. The fifth lecture in the. Thomas Spencer Jerome lecture series will be given by Prof. Sir Frank Adcock on Monday, Oct. 21 at 11:00 a.m. in 25 Angell Hall on "Augustus Princeps." The sixth and concluding lecture of the Thomas Spencer Jerome lecture series will be given by Prof. Sir Frank Adcockc on Tues., Oct. 22 at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre on "The Development of the Principate." U. S. SENATORS JOHN BRICKER and ALBERT GORE TO DISCUSS ATOMIC ENERGY. Senator Bricker, Republican, Ohio, and Senator Gore, Democrat, Tennessee, will give a bipartisan dis- cussion on the control of at4mic en- ergy Tues., Oct. 22, 8:30 p.m. in Hill Auditorium as the second number on the University Lecture Course. Tick- ets for this number as well as for all attractions on the series are now on sale (Mon. through Fri.) at the Audi- torium box office. Concerts Carillon Recital: 7:15 p.m. Sun., Oct. 20, by Sidney Giles, Assistant Univer- sity Carillonneur. Jef Denyn's Prelude in° B flat; Kamiel Lefevere's Rondo, Menuet No. 2, Theme with Variations, "Alfred Bells;" G. V. Handel's March (From Ode to St. Cecelia), Sarabande; Josef Hayden's Rondo, Serenata and The Heavens are Telling (from The Creation). Organ Recital: 4:15 p.m. Sun., Oct. 20, 20, in Hill Auditorium. Prof. Noehren will continue his series of Bach te- citals with the following works: Pre- lude and Fugue in C major,. Chorale Preludes 1) If Thou but Suffer God to Guide Thee, 2) Hark! A Voice Saith: "All is Mortal" and 3) O How Cheating, O How Fleeting; Eight short Preludes and Fuges; Chorale Preludes: All Glory be to God on High, in Thee Lord Have I Put My Trust and Jesus. My Chief Pleasure; Fantasia and Fugue in C mi- nor. Open to the general public with- out charge. Academic Notices Faculty, College of Literature, Sci- ence and the Arts: The freshman five- week progress reports will be due Wed., Oct. 23, in the Faculty Counselors Of- fice for Freshmen and Sophomores, 1210 Angell Hall. All Teacher's Certificate Candidates: The Teacher's Certificate Application it p i /I 0' t I3 t Barrage z ON A South Dakota cornfield, Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson rose on the speaker's platform, drew a barrage of half a dozen eggs (their peeve: Benson had not answered their letters). After seeing the whites of the farmers' eggs, Benson said grave- ly: "This doesn't represent the feeling of the people of South Da- kota." --Time ;y HIS GUIDING PHILOSOPHY: Know land Dedicated to Political Conservatism (Editor's Note: This is the second of two articles on William F. Know- land, as a man and A politician.) By BERT R. SUGAR DATINGBACK to his school Aayslaameda High School, when he organized a Conservative Party with the crusading slogan, "Economy, but not false econo- my," presidential aspirant William Knowland has been "a man pos- sessed" with the political ideology of conservatism. The senior senator from Cali- fornia has preserved this guid- ing philosophy and has projected it into his present campaign against Governor Goodwin Knight for the impending Republican gu- bernatorial primary. The subject matter appears to be that which Knowland has carefully, cautious- ly and competently selected: that of labor. ' * * * TO WAGE campaign on a platform of unionism could well be disastrous for Knowland, for "Goodie" Knight has the back- ing of labor in his corner. Never- theless, Knowland, with firmness exuding from every speech made fit greatly from public sentiment demanding a union house-clean- ing. Knowland has extended seven proposals to the California elector- ate concerning the ultimate "de- mocratizing" of labor unions: 1) Unions should elect by secret ballot. 2) Officers should be subject to recall by secret ballot. 3) All strikes must be approved by a majority of the membership after secret ballot. 4) Rank and file membership to be protected on union welfare funds, as insurance holders are protected on their company funds. 5) Initiation fees and dues money to be strictly accounted for. 6) Union membership should have power to overrule unfair ac- tions of their officials, -without fear of retaliation. 7) Union officials should not be able to perpetuate themselves in office for long periods with gen- uine approval of the membership. Through the presentation of these seven considerations to the California voters, Knowland hopes to pre-empt the deluge of politi- cal sages and spokesmen who will all be attempting to upstage the Senator Bill has attached an even more startling addition to his conservative doctrine towards labor in advocating "right-to- work" laws in California. "Right- -to-work" laws are the chief ab- horrence of labor, calling for the abolition of closed shops, a situa- tion where only union men are allowed to work in a given place of business. Under the recommended "right- to-work" laws, the establishments would be able to hire outsiders in addition to their union help. La- bor unions stand in complete soli- darity against the institution of any such laws. This is the sole point on which unison may be found among labor leaders. The step taken by Knowland is not a surprising one in the light of his outspoken support of the 1948 Taft-Hartley Act and his vote to override President Tru- man's subsequent veto of the bill. His stand is consistent with his former steadfastness on other la- bor problems and calculated to carry the fray, both to the voters and to Governor Knight. WHETHER THE SENATOR had contemplated assistance from the ondary points will emerge in the heated campaign that is promised by the potential warmth of the climate and of the contenders. Knowland's pretended cham- pionship of the Civil Rights Bill, regardless of the defeat the bill suffered, will undoubtedly garner some precious additional votes for him. He emerged in that jumbled battle the leader of a coalition of liberals and Republicans. How- ever, this line-up should not harm his prestige any. Knowland must not only defeat Governor Knight in the primary, but must also face the strong po- tential Democratic candidate, the attorney-general of the Golden State, Pat Brown. With 900,000 more registered Democrats in the state than Republicans, strong party organization could bring a crushing blow to the hopes of both Knowland and the GOP. RUDYARD KIPLING called politicians "Little Tin Gods on Wheels," in his treatise called "Public Waste." Knowland, per- haps one of the best candidates for this dubios title, must get his wheels in motion soon, for he I- A I