TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY TW__ _ICIfiN flf.V 1 UC 11AY, Au"Ua 1. Z, 1956 Sixty-Fifth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OP MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. This must be noted in all reprints. The Governor and the Goon GRINNING BOYISHLY above the polka dots, Michigan's Gov. G. Mennen Williams has dmitted, more than once, that he wouldn't urn down any chances for the 1956 presiden- jal nomination. "If any plums come my way," he has said, I'll be there to catch them." But, for the Democratic Party to toss any lums, however minor, in Lansing's direction rould be foolish. Proof of the governor's in- dequacies for higher office-if any is needed-- as developed as a sidelight of the Kohler, Wis- 'nsin strike. The governor's involvement in the strike has nderstandably, from his viewpoint, been sub- ued. For more than a year he has sheltered a etroit labor goon, John Gunaco, who is want- i by Sheboygan, Wis., authorities on two 'arges of assault with intent of great physi- al harm. For more than a year Gunaco has raded a Wsiconsin trial-courtesy of Gov. rilliams. On July 4, 1954, Gunaco accosted and beat p two Sheboygan laborers. He returned to etroit, and crawled under the governor's pro- ctive wing, which has since kept him safe om a maximum prison penalty of three ears. Gov. Williams has stubbornly ignored at- mpts of Wisconsin officials, including Gov, ralter J. Kohler (who isn't related to the con- oversial plant) to have Gunaco extradited and returned for his trial. A recent formal re- quest by the Wisconsin governor made no dent in Gov. Williams' stand. Shaky, at best, Gov. Williams' grounds for sheltering Gunaco rest on the contention that a fair trial would be impossible in the inflamed labor sentiments of the Sheboygan area. For any public servant to base such an eva- sive stand on a mere hunch about the relative justice of another state's courts is preposter- ous. The governor was not elected to protect criminals, even when in his judgment a fair trial for them would be unlikely. Fairness of any trial must be proven in the course of the trial itself-not thwarted by the bigoted logic of an outsider. Clearly Gov. Williams should extradite Gun- aco. Clearly he should base all his actions on sound theories. But his refusal in both respects marks another incident in a long career of "ig- noring" unpleasant obligations. His interest in labor, to which he owes his re-elections, is com- mendable in itself, but at a certain point it becomes absurd. The Kohler incident is such a point. Hope- fully, the Democrats will aim elsewhere when next summer's national political plums are thrown. And we may also hope that the gover- nor's fumbling and disastrous techniques can eventually be checked where they started-on the Michigan level. -Jane Howard This Sure Beats Cleaning Up After A War" \ , '--, -t I T 14S Tf'iL Uhw~S..*6't'o Po "'a '.u.-". r )U TAKES YOUR CHOICE: The New Military Reserve Plan Offers Aiternatives LETTERS TO THE EDITOR WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Dulles Frowned on Early Russian Visit to Nation -r By JAMES MARLOW WASHINGTON - OP) - This is an ABC on the military reserve bill just passed by Congress to build up a pool of trained men. President Eisenhower is expected to sign it into law shortly. It will go into effect at that moment. It has significance for those now in the armed forces, those going in after the new law becomes effective, and for teen-agers who wis i to join the reserves or the National Guard and thus avoid the draft. To see what the new law means, first look at the reserve program as it stands under a law passed in 1951. Under that law everyone discharged from the armed forces, unless he served eight years, must then go into the reserves so that his to- tal active and reserve service is eight years. There are three kinds of reserves: 1) Ready reservists who train. They drill one night a week, from 12 to 48 weeks a year, and spend 17 days a year in camp. They get paid, according to rank, for the days and nights they drill. 2) Ready reservists who don't do any train- ing. They get no pay. 3) Standby reserves. They, like the second group of ready reservists, do no drilling. Both groups of ready reservists, in case of war, would be called into active service ahead of the standby reserves. Who, under present law, goes into the ready reserves and into the standby reserves? 1) Anyone with less than five years in the armed forces must, upon his discharge, go in- to the ready reserves. But whether or not he takes reserve training is voluntary. He can choose to go into the non-training reserves. If he doesn't take the reserve training, however, he must stay in the ready reserve forces and the trained ready reserves, and transfer into the last-to-be-called standby reserves until his eight years are up. That's the way it is now. It will remain that way for all those who enter the armed forces before Eisenhower signs the new bill: they have a total obligation of eight years on active serv- ice and in the reserves. For those who enlist or are drafted after the new bill becomes law, the total obligation will be six years instead of eight. They will have to put in combined service of five years in the armed forces and the trained ready reserves, and one year in the standby reserves. They won't have a choice as exists now-of choosing to go into the non-training ready re- serves when they get out of the armed forces. They'll have to go into ready reserve training. Congress made a special provision for men already in the* armed forces. When they get out. Since they're covered by the old law, they can choose to go into the nontraining ready re- serves. But Congress said the government-in ligtit- ed numbers and only until July, 1957-could offer them this deal, which they could take or reject:r A man in active service for 12 months can be discharged provided he agrees to go into the trained ready reserves for a period which, when added to his active service, would total four years. Then, since under the old law he still has an eight-year obligation, he could serve his remaining four as a standby. Or a man who has filled out his enlistment or draft term, if he volunteers to go into the trained ready reserve, will have to serve only one year in that group. Then he'd serve out the rest of his eight-year obligation as a stand-! by. On Poetry . To the Editor: IT IS ALWAYS amusing to see what the explicators in the English Department at O.S.U. read into the writing of their young female poets. If they had talked with their colleagues on third floor, I am sure they would have learned the poem was not one expressing fear but one of precontrolled thought. PhD's in the History Department can read symbolism too. Then if the young graduate stu- dent working on his PH.D had had the forethought to visit the Psy- chology Department and talk with the explicitors there, he would have learned that emotional shock in a sensitive, reflective mind may often have a delayed reaction, namely, "Psychoneurosis with con- version hysteria." My own interpretation of the poem is as follows: "Humpty Dumpty sat on the wall, "Humpty Dumpty had a great fall. "Now all the King's Physicians "Can't put Humpty Dumpty to- gether again." --E. A. Schmidt The Drama Critics .,. To the Editor: DONALD YATES' appreciativej review of Walter Kerr's con- troversial How Not To Write a Play is a fine recognition of an important book, but perhaps does not fully indicate the far-reaching scope of Kerr's attack on con- temporary theatre. Kerr, probably the best of the Broadway critics, believes that current drama is too heavily the- matic and not truly dramatic. It lacks insight, imaginative language and dynamic movement. It does not attempt to establish an emo- tional rapport with the audience, instead relying on an intellectual appeal, which is not really appeal- ing. Kerr claims that playwrights are actually hostile to their own audiences and that they don't really enjoy their own plays, which are for the most part slow-moving mood studies of frustration and loneliness. Many of today's playwrights have taken a pseudo-realistic ap- proach by portraying only the duller aspects of our lives. Their concern is with the kind of people whom we avoid in real life-may- be because the playwrights, with a few notable exceptions, are those kind of people. In the perspective of today's avant garde, which is not really as avant as it thinks, this is in es- sence a philistine viewpoint. Kerr wants people to like the theatre- even the kind of people that Shaw' locked out, the instinctive dolts who seek pleasure and excitement. These days we dolts are finding more stimulation in the movies. Contrary to Ernest Theodossin rap on the screenwriters on the same page as Yates' review, the box office tells the story. And, as Kerr points out, if dramatists con- tinue to scoff at movie-goers in- stead of analyzing why it is theyj have rejected the theatre, thej screen-writers will grow increas- ingly, and justifiably, wealthy. -Al Connable Handbill Rule,. To the Editor: A N ARTICLE in Friday's Daily headlined "Marshall Tests Handbill Rule" suggests some fur- ther comment from the "tester." My original intent in preparing, printing, and distributing leaflets advertising my store's Bargain Day specials was strictly business . . . the only thing I was "test- ing" was the pulling-power of an unusual leaflet with an original built-in "gimmick." Because all cities have leaflet- controlling ordinances of one sort or another I naturally checked with my attorney first. We were quite certain our distribution com- plied with local ordinances. As I understand the ordinance cited its purpose is to prevent the littering of our streets. This is worthy and necessary. Therefore as a regular part of our distribu- tion one employee, and at times myself, picked up any leaflets dropped by pedestrians. There just was no litter. Viola, we are complying with the law, we are doing some good advertising. But about 10:30 we were or- dered off the streets by the police. After a lot of phoning we re- turned to the distribution about 11:30, again were ordered off. More phoning, and then back to complete the distribution. As a result of this experience it ap- pears fair to state that the police -though acting in a very cour- teous and friendly manner-are prepared and are trying to pre- vent any leaflets from being dis- tributed, using the anti-litter or- dinance to do this.' It was in this connection that I was prepared to be arrested, so that a court ruling could be ob- tained. (Your article is not at all correct when it stated that "Faced with arrest, Marshall said he would pick up any leaflets dropped on the city streets." We had been picking up dropped leaflets for well over an hour before we had the slightest notion that the po- lice felt we were violating any or- dinance, before there was the slightest thought that it would be necessary to "test" any ordi- nance.) The police did consider making an arrest but decided eventually not to do so. I maintain any individual or firm has the right to circularize or distribute handbills saying just about anything save libel or sedi- tion. Like all our rights this one must be tempered . . . in this case in terms of courtesy and litter. Certainly my initial motives in this instance were mundane and profit-seeking. But the principle remains. Recognizing the problem of keeping our streets clean, there is still a more basic concern-the constitutional guarantee of free- dom of speech. The issue vis-a-vis leaflet distribution in Ann Arbor is still cloudy, but I believe that in a calm and non-cantankerous manner we have established a vi- able precedent. -Bob Marshall W ASHINGTON - Eisenhower would have invited Premier Bulganin and Marshal Zhukov to Washington during the Geneva talks, if Foster Dulles had let him. It was definitely discussed and the Russians were itching to come- right away-but Dulles said no ... Ike got irritated at times at his Maginot-minded Secretary of State. Reason behind the current, his- toric talks with the Chinese Reds was -a repeated warning from Al- len Dulles, head of Central Intel- ligence that the Reds would begin a devastating bombardment of Quemoy-Matsu immediately after the Geneva Conference. Ike decid- ed it was better to talk than re- treat . .. Hitherto any intimation that we would talk to the Chinese Reds without Chiang Kai-Shek being represented has brought screams of anguish from the Knowland wing of the Republican Party. Its members are still irate but less vocal . . . State Depart- ment advisers have raised Cain with Chiang Kai-Shek's trigger- happy public relations men who have published stories about Chi- nese Red planes piloted by Rus- sians diving on Nationalist planes. A lot of these incidents didn't really happen, and the State De- partment is trying to tone down inflammatory news stories. You've seen a lot less of them lately. POLITICAL SIGNS AND SIGNALS [UST BEFORE he was stricken with a heart seizure, friends of Senator Lyndon Johnson planned to launch a Presidential boom. The friends included Russell of Georgia, Smathers of Florida, and Symington of Missouri. They were all set to make a public announce- ment when Lyndon felt the ef- fect of his gruelling work and was carried to the hospital.-, Arrow-tongued Senator Bob Kerr of Oklahoma, one of the few who took on Douglas MacArthur, is "willing" to take the Senate lead- ership if either Johnson or Clem- ents don't want it next year. (He's both willing and eager.) . . . The big shambling hill-billy from Ten- nessee, Estes Kefauver, has taken terrific stride stoward the Demo- cratic nomination without exert- ing any noticeable effort. He's one of the few Democrats who know how to fire political shots like Sergeant York of Tennessee -to kill. And unlike some of his colleagues he's not afraid to fire. . Carmine De Sapio, head of Tammany and the political gen- ius behind Governor Averell Har- riman, isn't wedded to Adlai for the nomination as is his friend Averell. De Sapio.is for any good Democratic campaigner. . . . Re- publican leaders arenowsfeeling much happier about prospects that Ike will run again. If they can keep him absorbed with in- ternational affairs and not wor- ried about Talbottism or Dixon- Yatesism they figure he'll be ready and willing for '56. . . . George Bender, the singing Sena- tor from Ohio, hasgot hissignals crossed again. Usually he takes them from his good friend, Secre- tary Humphrey, who comes from Bender's home town, Cleveland. But while Bender has been Secre- tary Talbott's chief defender in the Senate, Humphrey has been Talbott's chief critic in the Cabi- net . . . Once before, Bender got his signals crossed on the St. Lawrence Seaway. After vigor- ously opposing it, he found that Humphrey was its chief pusher. So Bender switched pronto. After all Humphrey has been his big- gest campaign contributor. NIXON SCORES ON KNOWLAND RUMORS PERSIST that Vice President Nixon won't run again, will retire voluntarily to practice law. All outward indica- tions, however, are to the con- trary. It was Nixon himself who sold Ike on letting him hold a cabinet meeting in Ike's absence --a pure public relations stunt. Almost never are cabinet meet- ings held by Vice Presidents, and never in the memory of Washing- ton observers have pictures been taken of vice-presidential sessions. But Nixon not only held a mee inr, but got a photo to prove it. His grandchildren will be happy. ... Nixon's public relations build- up last month was gall-and- wormwood to the other young man from California. Bill Know- land came down to the airport in the rain to welcome Ike home from Geneva, but didn't look hap- py at seeing Nixon in charge of welcoming arrangements. Knowland is expected to resign BENSON GOES INTO REVERSE BACKSTAGE reason why Secre- tary Benson suddenly modified his plans to dump surplus cotton on the world market was a story released by this column on July 14, disclosing that Benson's assist- ant. James A. McConnell, had met secretly with five Southern Sena- tors at the Raleigh Hotel and Re- vealed his plan to dump cotton. Economic repercussions from this story were such that Benson re- versed himself. He got some tough warnings from political leaders to go slow. . . . Congratulations to Senator Jimmy Phillips of the Texas legislature- for his expose of Texas Commissioner Bascm Giles for rooking veterans on land deals. Phillips' crusade forced Giles' tri- al and conviction. . . . If the Kremlin is really sincere about its smiles, Hungary might be a good place to start. Last week, Communist Hungary deported ap- proximately 800 relatives of Hun- garian exiles who had been work- ing for Radio Free Europe. One exile, Lajos Hajddu, is former Vice President of the Hungarian Peasant Union. Fifteen of his rel- atives, including cousins, aunts, and in-laws, were corralled, load- ed into trucks, and shipped off to Rumanian border. . . . Other rela- tive of other exiles have been picked up without notice, loaded into police trucks, and told to find their own transportation at their own expense to Rumania. They can take with them only what they can carry. . . .It's one of the most brutal recent cases of Com- munist persecution, and took place while Bulganin was smiling at Ike in Geneva. BATTLE OF THE COLORADO AFTER HOUSE leaders agreed to drop the Administration's controversial Upper Colorado Riv- er reclamation project, someone asked Colorado's Democratic Con- gressman Wayne Aspinall whether he thought the issue was dead, "No," replied the optimistic As- pinall. "I think it's still breath- ing." Aspinall was one of the hardest workers for the Upper Colorado project, which would have been of great benefit to the parched state of Colorado. So he was op- timistic. However, few measures before the 84th Congress have aroused more spirited attacks, and a more amazing coalition of ene- mies. Groups with nothing at all in common joined together to spike the big reclamation project to develop the waters of the Up- per Colorado River at federal ex- pense to benefit the sparsely pop- ulated arid areas of Utah and Colorado. Here is the unusual line- up that helped stall the bill: 1-Conservationists in both par- ties, who fear that the proposed Echo Park Dam in Dinosaur Na- tional Monument, although elimi- nated from the bill by a House subcommittee, might ultimately be brought back in. - 2-Pseudo-conservationists like Pennsylvania's Republican con- gressman John P. Saylor, who have nightmares over the high dollar cost of the project, but who disguise their opposition by stealing the more seductive argu- ments of the true conservation- ists. 3-Californians of both parties, like Democrat Chet Holafield and Republican Craig Hosmer, who fear their state might suffer if the Colorado River is diverted before it reaches the west coast. 4--Crop-support opponents and farmers, who both dislike the idea of more land being brought under cultivation. 5-Private power enthusiasts in the GOP, who automatically stand in the way of any proposal that might encroach on private utili- ties. 6-Public power enthusiasts in the Democratic Party, like Illi- nois' Senator Paul Douglas, who calls the Upper Colorado the "big- gest boondoggle in history" and who refuses to go along with cost- ly projects like the Upper Colo- rado until Congress passes more economical public reclamation proposals like Hell's Canyon. With such an imposing array of foes lined up against the bill, House Republican leaders agreed at a recent caucus to let it sleep until fall. Colorado Republicans William S. Hill and J. Edgar Che- noweth fought hard for the proj- ect, even circularizing fellow members of the GOP policy com- mittee. But in the end, minority I, -41 CURRENT MOVIES At the Michigan ... NOT AS A STRANGER, with Olivia de Havilland and Robert Mitchum. THERE ARE a few things about this film which are different, and for those I suppose we ought to be grateful. But these things are not of proportions which warrant the "stands alone" advertising that the picture has re- ceived. The Innovations are easily recognized -- there are shots, rare in commercial films, of internal films, of internal organs during surgi- cal operations; and there is an obtrusive tendency to treat the medical profession with the utmost frankness. These, of course, have become almost cliches on television's Medic program, and over-careful editing makes the Not as a Stranger version seem even a bit squeamish. It's all very well known what goes on in a university medical school - if the events and attitudes portrayed here do actually exist-but the attitude of the film itself in- clines toward startling revelations motivated by sensationalism. T1HE STORY wrapt in these shock waves is slightly less substantial. As in Marty the characters specialize in being just folks with normal capabilities and weaknesses. Here they are in a situation which relies pretty heavily upon professional activities, and producer-di- rector Stanley Kramer has to work hard to keep their humanity to the fore. Perhaps for this reason, though there may be others, the non-professional part of the plot falls easily into well-established melodramatic routine, Anger leads to sviolence, disappointment to tears, and inebriation to brutal revelation of truth. Robert Mitchum plays the role of Lucas Marsh, an idealistic medical student who develops himself into a successful small-town doctor. Marsh is a very odd sort, dividing his psyche pretty evenly between unrealistic idealism and super-realistic opportunism, ruthlessly using his acquaintances to achieve high moral goals. Mitchum has some difficulty being young, and a great deal of difficulty being a wholesome-minded dreamer. He is most convincing when dissipating a la Jekyll. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Publication in it is construc- tive notice to all members of the University. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3553 Administration Building before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication (before 10 a.m. on Saturday). Notice of lectures, concerts and organization meetings cannot be published oftener than twice. TUESDAY, AUGUST 2, 1955 VOL. LXVI, NO. 29 AT _-e talk to men for sales, anywhere in U. S. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institu- tion, Woods Hole, Mass., needs several Marine Scientists, men with degrees in Physics, Geophysics, Biophysics or Math. Physics. City of Detroit announces exam for a Junior Art Curator. For informationcontact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., Ext. 371. PERSONNEL INTERVIEW: A representative from the following will be at the Bureau: Tues., Aug. 2. Mich. Bell Telephone - Women for Lectures Special Summer Session on Digital Computers and Data Processors. "Three Years of Operation of the MIDAC (Michigan Digital Automatic Com- puter)," Dr. John W. Carr, associate research mathematician, Willow Run Research Center; Boyd T. Larrowe, research associate, Willow Run Re- search Center; and Ralph W. Johnston, research assistant, Willow Run Re- search Center. 7:30 p.m., Tues., Aug. 2, Aud. C, Mason Hall. Linguistic Forum. Prof. William G.+ Moulton of Cornell University will speak on "Linguistics in the Teaching The Daily Staff Managing Editors.....................Cal Samra Jim Dygert NIGHT EDITORS Mary Lee Dingler, Marge Piercy, Ernest Theodossin Dave Rorabacher...............SorsEitnr i I