TWO 'YKE MICHIGAN .DAILY TUTTlIZ.Qlr*iAv Iftlkit TH---CIIGA-JJIL UIVT UK6MA WV AUUUST4, 95 TI4r MrI143Uf Eu4 Sixty-Fifth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHTT-N UNDER AU'T'HORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 "Stand Back, Please - Lefs Keep The Aisles Clear" r c 5;- --l 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. at's Good for the University Is ood for Ann Arbor inmmmm _ I i -~ WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Barkley Complains Texas Favored by Ike, Rayburn I ( By JIM DYGERT 'EARLIER THIS WEEK, Mayor William E. Brown, Jr., told the City Council that a scheduled meeting between University and city officials to settle street probleimas involved in the former's development plans for the main campus area would not be held for several weeks. The request for the meeting arose from the University's request that S. Thayer St. be- tween E. Huron St. and E. Washington St. be closed to allow the building of an addition to the Ann Arbor High School building. A bitter dispute was almost touched off by the University's letter to the Board of Sduca- tion specifying that S. Thayer be closed be-- fore the University bought the building for $1,400,000. Rather than get into a heated con- troversy on this one issue, both city and Uni- versity officials decided to examine the prob- lem in a long-range perspective, taking into account the University's plans for the future. The University, of course, had made a thor- ough study of the high school building and had found that it would not be worth buying un- less an addition could be constructed on the structure's east side, which would necessitate the closing of S. Thayer St. It does seem a bit mysterious, however, that the University wait- ed so long to tell the city that S. Thayer St. would have to be closed. The deal for the building was tentatively completed and funds were obtained, not without difficulty, from the, Legislature before the condition of the street closing was announced. The city's problem is traffic. Any motorist in Ann Arbor finds it easy to sympathize with this problem. Streets are not wide enough, and there are not enough streets to efficiently ac- commodate the city's automobiles. Closing S. Thayer St. would further aggravate the prob- lem, police traffic bureau statistics show. Mayor Brown does ont want to close S. Thay- er St., but is probably aware that he eventu- ally will see it closed. The University is bigger than Ann Arbor-it's a state institution-and Ann Arbor would not be nearly so big and prosperous without the University. To prevent the University from growing is to stifle Ann Arbor's growth. At the same time, the University is con- scious of the city's traffic problem. As Uni- versity President Harlan Hatcher has said, the University intends to keep expansion in the main campus area to an "absolute minimum" to meet only "basic commitments." There seems to be, on the surface, a conflict between University growth and Ann Arbor's well being. Actually, (to copy a well-worn e ts pression) what's good for the University is good' for Ann Arbor. The increase in traffic problems brought about by University develop- ment can be eliminated by the city, in the man- ner suggested by President Hatcher. The president claimed Ann Arbor's traffic situation "needed a major operation." He sug- gested that the city overhaul traffic routes completely, and keep through traffic out of the main campus area. This would make the campus a campus, instead of just another part of the city. This would also remove the diffi- culty now involved in closing a street. As such, it seems to be the best long-range solution to both the city's traffic problem in .the campus area and the University's expansion require- ments which will continually increase as en- rollment continues to soar. If such a long-range solution were planned. the answer to the present S. Thayer St. issue would be a routine closing. I 4: - I ,t-.0W-- Three Who Dominated Congress Problem of Money Snags Plans for 'U' Television (Continued from Page One) IN MANY respects, U-M TV has been a pioneer in educational television since 1950. The University's "TV Hour," over the past five years, has offered 27 telecourses over WWJ- TV onsuch subjects as child psychology, math- ematics, physics, photography, medicine, per- sonal finances, geology, political science, par- liamentary procedure, speech and engineering. This program has a regular audience in the Detroit area of about 500,000, according to a recent survey. U-M TV also sends out more than 30 kine- scoped programs a week to 13 stations around the state. The University's kinescope facilities have been utilized in recording several films for national distribution through the Educa- tional Television and Radio Center, located here in Ann Arbor. Additionally, U-M TV, in cooperation with WPAG-TV, Ann Arbor, broadcasts "live" sev- eral programs over that station, including "ateline Ann Arbor," a tri-weekly summary of local news, and "Storytime" for the kiddies. As presently conceived, the studio also serves as a "laboratory of the air," a kind of TV work- shop for students enrolled in Speech Depart- ment TV courses. There is a divisio nof opinion, then, as to whether the University should expand its pre- sent program, placing the emphasis on kine- scoped programs for distribution state-wide, or persist in its efforts to establish a TV sta- tion. Ideally, of course, University officials would like to do both, but this would probably entail a considerable expansion of equipment and staffs. An alternative proposal suggests that the University abandon its plan for a non-commer- cial educational station and enter, instead on an agreement with a commercial TV station to cooperate in the presentation of educational programs. But ad hoc committee, which was chaired by Arthur Brandon, Vice-President of Univer- sity Relations, felt that the FCC's grant of a non-commercial license to the University auto- matically precludes commercial broadcasting. There is, too, a hesitancy to accept advertising on educational programs. Whatever is finally agreed upon, however, the important point is that educators, more and more, are placing their trpst in the -value of television as an educational tool and as a means of reaching the public. It is believed that educational TV, with all its potential as a medium, will counteract the leveling ten- dencies of commercial television, whose pro- grams are often whittled down to imbecilic norms-to the delight of the imbeciles. "Basically," says Prof. Garrison, "television has offered educators itself with its atom-like explosive potentials for influencing attitudes, stimulating drives to learn and changing radi- cally the accepted patterns of teaching." (NEXT: What kind of station?) By JAMES MARLOW WASHINGTON (A)-Every ses- sion of Congress produces at least one dominant figure, domi- nant in the sense of being effec- tive or being in the spotlight. This year's session produced three do- minant men who were outstand- ingly effective. All three were Democrats: 77- year-old Sen. Walter George of Georgia; 73-year-old Sam Ray- burn of Texas, speaker of the House, and Sen. Lyndon John- son of Texas, 47-year-old Demo- cratic majority leader of the Sen- ate. Democrat George was Republi- can President Eisenhower's chief reliance in Congress on foreign af- fairs. George is chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Commit- tee. " Johnson and Rayburn, as bosses of their respective houses, ran Congress. They got less public at- tention than George but were highly effective in a far wider field than George's specialty. They more than anyone else in Congress, sterred through to pas- sage the year's bundle of legisla- tion of all kinds with a minimum of fuss and feathers. This was one of the least talkative sessions of Congress. That these three men-ail quiet, undramatic, unsensational-should be the outstanding men in the Capitol in 1955 is the best evidence that this was a peaceful and busi- nesslike year in Congress. All three were creative in the sense that they were for some- thing: They backed programs. Very often it's the men who make a record for being against something - like Sen. McCarthy (R), Wis., who cheerfully attack- ed both the Truman and Eisen- hower Administrations-who are dominant in the sense, that they monopolize the spotlight. The spotlight's full glow was on McCarthy last year as it was ever since 1950 when he began making his charges of Communists in gov- ernment. Lust year, however, he had to share the center of the stage with the two men who put the skids under him: Flanders of Vermont and Watkins of Utah, both Republicans. This year McCarthy, Flanders and Watkins all disappeared back into the comparative obscurity from which the yhad emerged. George's influence and prestige on the side of Eisenhower came at. a handy time for the President whose own Republican Senate leader, Knowland of California, was frequently critical of his ideas on foreign affairs, As George, without bluster, took full control in the foreign field in the Senate, Knowland had less and less to say and disappeared further into the background. George went down the line for 3isenhower and at least once seem- ed to provide the nudge that push- ed Eisenhower into actson. It was George who first suggested thI-e President meet with the Russians a few weeks before Eisenhower, ::greed to it. Johnson and Raybuney are as fine a pair of profes4onals-in getting legislation passej or block- ed-as Co :egress has seen in at least a generation. Both work quietly behind the scenes lining up votes and agreements. Under Johnson's guidance the Senate astonibed itself with the amount of work it got done with a minimum of argument. Geneva Meet me at the summit, dear,. High above the clouds, Meet me where the gods consort Far above the crowds. * * * Meet me at the summit, dear, Fearfully to see Whether in that godly court Mortals can agree. -The Reporter By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON - Two of the most distinguished members of Congress are Senator Alben Barkley of Kentucky, better known as the Veep, and Speaker Sam Rayburn of Texas, known af- fectionately to many as "Mr. Sam." Both came to Congress 42 years ago when a new Democratic Pres- ident, Woodrow Wilson, took con- trol of Washington in 1913 after almost sixty years of post-Civil war Republican rule. Both men snce then have risen to great heights of power and prestige in the Democratic party and the na- tion. But they do not always agree. The other day, Barkley remark- ed a bit plaintively: "I am getting awfully tired of passing legislation chiefly for the benefit of Texas and Oklahoma." What he referred to was the ramrod tactics used to pass the Harris bill through the House and the proposal to jam it through the Senate - a bill of great help to Texas and Oklaho- ma because it exempted natural gas producers from federal regu- lation when shipping gas north in interstate commerce. That bill, rammed through the House of Representatives by a narrow 209-203 squeak, was a great personal triumph for Sam Rayburn. But as his friend, the Veep, hinted, it almost split the Democratic Party in two. This, together with the school bill, which Sam Rayburn would not pass, exposed to the public in ugly detail the basic cleavage within the Democratic Party. BASIC DEMOCRATIC CLEAVAGE T'S A CLEAVAGE its leaders don't like to show and some- ,imes won't admit. But when "Mr. Sam" throws the weight of his great prestige into the well of the House and asks fellow Democrats to stand up and be counted for or against him and Texas, while simultaneously sidetracking the school bill, then the cleavage real- ly stands out. It was a cleavage that had the Democratic leader of the House, John McCormack of Massachu- setts, voting against and working against the speaker of the House, Sam Rayburn. And it's a cleavage that the Democrats will have to do some- thing about if they even begin to think about electing a President in 1956. RAYBURN BUCKS COURT TO GET the whole picture, you have to go back to the Supreme Court decision in the Truman Ad- ministration that the Federal Power Commission had the right to regulate the price of natural gas when transported in inter- state commerce. It was not too long ago that Sam Rayburn vigorously opposed his chief, President Roosevelt, whein FDR, frowning on certain Supreme Court decisions, tried to pass a bill superseding the court. But last week, Sam had forgotten that. This time it was Mr. Sam who didn't like the Supreme Court decision, and this time it was he who tried to pass legislation over- ruling the court. For quite a while Sam had waited, hoping to get Eisenhower's support. But Ike was cagey. The Republicans had made commit- ments to Texas gas tycoons, who contributed so heavily to Ike's campaign, but even so, Ike made a statement putting himself on both -sides of natural gas regulation. So Rayburn in the end had to go it alone. Despite the absence of Eisenhower support, and despite the frowns of his old contempo- rary, ex-Vice President Barkley, Mr. Sam threw his powerful pres- tige behind the gas bill even though it split the Democratic Party right down the middle. Northern Democrats, led by Mc- Cormack and Torbert MacDonald o f Massachusetts, buttonholed Congressmen, persuaded seven who were going to vote for nat- ural gas to vote "no." But Sam was busy on the other side. And what they didn't know was that Rayburn simultaneously persuad- ed eight Congressmen who were going to vote against natural gas to be absent. So he won by the slender mar- gin of six votes. One day later the housing bill was up for debate. Mr. Sam pre- sided. The housing bill provided for 35,000 public housing units to relieve slums in the big cities. But Mr. Sam was not particularly in- terested. Instead of buttonholing1 Conggessmen he sat placidly pre- siding. The public housing units were thrown out on their ear. "When the peanut amendment is up for debate, it becomes a1 party matter," remarked one bit- ter Northern .Democrat, "Peanuts is the oil tycoons' threat to change Rayburn's district. Ray- burn comes from' one of the small- est congressional districts in the country, just north of allas, pop- ulation 227,736. Just below Ray- burn, allas bulges with a Congres- sional district of 614,799, now Re- publican . . . The Texas legisla- ture, and especially the gas-oil tycoons who control it, have been threatening to add part of Dallas' huge population on 'to Sam's dis- trict-which would probably de- feat him. But as long as Sam shoves through what the gas-oil tycoons want, he has nothing to fear-even if it does raise the price of gas to northern house- wives. ..It will be interesting to see what if any campaign contri- butions from the gas-oil crowd find their way into the campaign of Congressman Sam Friedel of Baltimore next year. It was Frie- del who broke a tie in the House Interstate Commerce Committee to let the gas bill out. Mayor D'Allessandro of Baltimore had testified energetically against the gas bill, and the people of Blti- more certainlyhdon't relish higher gas prices. Nevertheless, Friede, who represents Baltimore, moved to reconsider the 14-14 tie vote, thus giving the Reyburn-Republi can forces time to bring in two extra votes. HAPPY- GO -ROUND HAPPY CHANDLER, ex-czar of baseball, ex-governor of Ken, tucky, and ex-Senator from Ken- tucky. is trying hard not to be an ex anymore. He's staging a cam- paign in Kentucky this week end to come back as Governor, but how successful he will be is doubt- ful . Happy, who loved the limelight of the baseball arena, started out bragging that his op- ponent for governor wouldn't carry a single county. Now admit. tedly he isn't so sure. Neutral po- liticos are even less sure . . . It was in 1938 that Happy, then gov- ernor of Kentucky, whipped his potent political machine into try- ing to defeat Alben Barkley, but failed. FDR toured all through Kentucky to support Alben later Happy finally made it 'to Washington, and had the time of his life.vIe was a familiar figure around the Mayflower Hotel at cocktail time, got a free swimming pool from a Kentucky contractor, took Bob Hope ith a party of touring Senators to see Prime Minister Churchill, lost ten pounds by going without second helpings, and remarked, when seen on the outskirts of Dewey's headquar- ters: "I lust wanted to see the man who will run against me next time." . . . But as for concrete achievements in Washington well Happy added a lot of humor but that was about all . . . When he announced for governor this year, Happy was considered a-sure bet. But young Judge Bert Combs, whom Senators Barkley and Clements are supporting, has been making terrific headway, and may win when the votes are counted on Saturday. BULGANIN Glorified cop - In less peaceful days, the present Premier of So- viet Russia was just as bloody as other Soviet comrades. A member of the dread Cheka, firse secret police of the Kremlin, he was so tough in failing and executing enemies of the regime that Stalin promoted him to be Mayor of Mos- cow . . . It was Bulganin who pi- oneered Moscow's trolley buses, started the famed subway, now a show piece of the capital, and put white - gloves on Moscow's traffic cops . . . More important, it was Bulganin who organized the civil- ian defense of Moscow when Ike's wartime. friend, Marshal Zhukov, commanded the military defense. Drafting men and women alike, Bulganin sent them into the front lines to defend the city. They died like flies, but Moscow was saved . Bulganin's chief job during the war was as a political com- missar, watching the army to make sure it didn't drift away from Stalin and Communism. His colleague commissar at that time was one Nikita Khrushchev, who was attached to Marshal Kon- iev's army. Bulganin was attached to Zhukov's . ,. Significantly, dur- ing the war both Koniev and Zhu- kov wrote Stalin that Khrushchev and Bulganin were undermining Army discipline and must be re- moved. Stalin did so . . . Today Koniev and Zhukov are the top leaders of the Red Army, but un- der the two political leaders they once caused to be removed. MOLOTOV AND McCARTHY JOHN FOSTER DULLES and Vyacheslav Molotov, neither re- nowned for a sense of humor, have become reasonably chummy since their UN talks in San Francisco. "Chummy" is not a word easily bb ;4 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Is Dulles Opening UN Door to Chinese Reds? By J. M. ROBERTS AP News Analyst SECRETARY DULLES, by saying Red China could clear the way for negotiations on major issues by renouncing the use of force, seems to be telling Peiping that the door to the United Nations and other concessions by the West is not permanently barred. The secretary, however, may have to be satisfied with something less than the formal renunciation he seems to have in mind. The Daily Staff Managing Editors -.. .......................Cal Samra Jim Dygert NIGHT EDITORS Mary Lee Dingler, Marge Piercy, Ernest Theodossin What has happened so far at Geneva sug- gests that Peiping and Moscow are following the same tactics to an amazing degree-back- ing away from their former aggressiveness for purposes of their own, but making no hard and fast commitments. It looks like a play for time, probably for regrouping o ftheir forces for a return engage- ment of some undefined type. The real reasons may not be known for a long time. However, if Chinese reactions can be gauged by the record to date, they are making their sweetness and light play with imprisoned Am- ericans in order to start the ball rolling toward broader negotiations. The Russians got their negotiations going not by saying they would not shoot, but by saying they didn't want to. Peiping is likely to follow a very similar course. 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. THURSDAY, AUGUST 4, 1955 VOL. LXVI, NO. 31 Notices Veterans who expect to receive edu- cation and training allowance under Public Law 550 (Korea G. I. Bill) must fill in VA form 7-1996a, Monthly Certification, in the office of veterans' Affairs, 555 Administration Building. between 8:00 a.m. Mon., Aug. 1 and 5:00 p.m. Fri., Aug. 5. Use of MIDAC Computer. To support faculty use of the MIDAC for research, a fund of $10,000 has been set up in the Graduate School. Initial alloca- tions will be made immediately and applications for funds should be made to Prof. C. C. Craig, Room 106, Rackham Building, telephone 2128. Law School Admission Test.: Candi- dates taking the Law School Admission Test on Aug. 6 are requested to report to Room 100. Hutchins Hall at 8:45 a.m. Sat. PERSONNEL REQUESTS: Farmers Insurance Group, Detroit, Mich., is looking for men, 27-37 years of age, for Sas and Manament. lic Health Dentists II, Public Health Nurse I & II, Sanitary Engr., Serologist I, X-ray Tech. I, Elem., Kindergarten, Music, and Cec. Teaching; as well as in the fields of Pharmacy, Medicine and Accounting. Residence rule waived for most. For further information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., Ext. 371. Lectures Dr. Charles Issawi of Columbia Uni- versity will speak on 'Economic Trends in the Modern Near East' Thurs., Aug. 4 at 4:15 p.m., Aud. A, Ankell Hall, auspices of the Department of Near Eastern Studies. Open to the public. Linguistic Forum. MacCurdy Burnet of the State Teachers College, Salisbury, Maryland, will speak on "English Structure as an Aid in Rhetoric" Thurs., Aug. 4, 7:30 p.m. in Rackham Amphitheater. Summer Session on Digital Computers and Data Processors. "General Elec- tric's IBM-650 in Schenectady," Ru- dolph Haberman; "The CRD-102 Com- puter at Gulf Research and Develop- ment," D. Hoffman. Thurs., Aug. 4, 7:30 p.m., Aud. C, Mason Hall. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Robert Firestone Emery, Economics; thesis: "~Governmental Accounts for Econom- ic Planning in Burma," Thurs., Aug. 4, 105 Economics Bldg., at 3:00 p.m. Chairman, R. A. Musgrave. Geometry Seminar will meet Thurs., Aug. 4, at 7:00 p.m. in room 3001 Angell Hall. Dr. Buchi will speak on "An Axiom System for Elementary Geom- thesis of 9,10-Dihydro-9,10-Methanoan- thracene," Fri., Aug. 5, 3003 Chemistry Bldg., at 1:30 p.m. Chairman, W. R. Vaughan. Doctoral Examination for Phil H. Rogers, Electrical Engineering; thesis: "Large Signal Analysis of Disturbed Amplifiers," Fri., Aug. 5, 2084 East Engineering Bldg., at 1:30 p.m. Chair- man, H. W. Welch. Concerts Student Recital. Marilyn Joyce Rop- er, pianist, and pupil of Ava Com Case, 8:30 Thurs., Aug. 4, in Rackham Assembly Hall, works by Kuhnau, Poulenc, Hindemith, and Mendel, in partial fulfilimen of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music. (Music Literature). Open to the public. Carillon Recital by Percival Price, University Carillonneur, 7:15 p.m. Thurs., Aug. 4; carillon compositions by Prof. Price: Prelude 5, Fantaisie 4, Andantes 3 and 7, Sonata for 43 Bells, Air, and Ballet. Student Recital by Kenneth Whitby, tuba, 8:30 p.m. Fri., Aug. 5, in Aud. A, Angell Hall, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music (Wind Instruments). Compositions by Galliard, Bach, Mozart, Barat, Morel, Hindemith, Brahms, Williams, and Lebedev. Open to the general public. Whitby is a pupil of Glenn Smith. Events Today The International Center Teas will be held at Madelon Pound Home at 1024 Hill Street on Thursday from 4:30-5:30 p.m. t,