m THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JUNE 23,'l THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY. JUNE 23. -,...... ,.. .... y .s ... ... . ,,, QUer Atritatt Baill Sixty-Fifth 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 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. Someone Cried 'Wolf', But One Lamb Didn't Run "See If You Can Find Somebody Named Davy Crockett" What Kind of Wehrmacht? By JIM DYGERT 4 OBSCURE Associated Press dispatch a few days ago announced that Marie Natvig been sentenced to eight months to two s in prison for lying under oath as a gov-. nent witness. It's very obscurity leads one suspect that such an event has become ewhat commonplace. or a long time, we have been convinced that g under oath by a government witness was ,sual game in which the score depended on could be more fantastic. But a conviction sentence for the same seems more like ething a newspaper should banner in pre- ation for an old-fashioned crusade against cially inspired perjury. Not yet are the con- ions commonplace, but only the lying. here was certainly a generous offering of it he case involving Mrs. Natvig. Her convic- on three charges of perjury stemmed from testimony as a Federal Communications zmission witness during an inquiry into the kground of Edward Lamb, Toledo lawyer, lisher and broadcasting executive. nyone not up-to-date on the Lamb case is ing out on a rewarding drama of a man refused to. bow to the awesome power of uasi-judicial administrative agency. The , as Lamb has claimed, was "out to get" rals in broadcasting. Lamb had never had difficulty getting a renewal of a, broadcast- or television license until the Republicans rged into office dedicated to the nation's ation. Then the FCC reappraised the for- ity of license renewal procedure and came with the decision that Lamb was a Com- :ise. ven a. complete and competent stable of er liars could not convincingly demonstrate Lamb was a Communist. Finally the FCC ted from the straight power-play to some cal razzle-dazzle and claimed Lamb "may e at one time been associated with a Com- iist." This, evidently, was still sufficient on for refusing a license renewal for Lamb's Pa., television station, though President nhower is admittedly more guilty of that WHEN SPEAKING here at the University in May, Lamb told how he could have avoided the mess "by acquiring the services of a cer- tain Republican law firm in Washington at a fixed fee." He called it,"blackmail," which was no doubt quite apropos. Lamb also told about Mrs. Natvig and her story of having had an affair with him when she was a Communist. Lamb said he had never seen the woman until! the FCC hearing. And now Mrs. Natvig is in prison for perjury. Lamb told about several other professional liars who testified against him, and later tes- tified before the FCC that they had lied. One even admitted having been given a script to memorize by investigators. Yet, undaunted, and unimpressed by public revelations that its own evidence was false, the FCC goes on with its case against Lamb. The public, meanwhile, which acquires a remarkable excitability when someone shouts "Red," maintains an even more surprising nonchalance when that someone is proven a liar. Of course, no one is shouting "Liar." That is the proverbial catch. No one is shouting "Liar." Almost no one, anyway. Lamb has stood up and proclaimed to whomever it may concern that the FCC is "lying" and po- litically "framing" him because he has been prominent in civil rights cases. But no one seems concerned. It seems perhaps natural that people jump when someone shout' "Red" and play dead when Lamb shouts "Liar.'. A Communist seems more obviously a common danger, while a liar hurts only his immediate victim and does not seem a public menace, notwithstanding the fact that he is just that. One of America's greatest needs is an aware- ness of its real dangers, such as professional lying before groups of men who have the pow- er to destroy without due process of law. Their power to destroy can be removed by men like Lamb who fight back regardless of the odds. The trouble is that not many who are picked in the witch-hunt have the time, resources and determination of Lamb. GENERAL Gruenther has con- stantly declared that with the twelve divisions, the 1,300 aircraft and the light naval forces which Federal Germany is to contribute to Nato, the Russians can be pre- vented from overrunning Western Europe. The implication is that Marshal Zhukov could drive to the Atlantic at any time he wished during the next three or four years, if the Soviet leaders liked to court atom bombs on their own strate- gic centres. General Gruenther may be underestimating the tim it will take to set up the full Ger- man contingents. According to estimates in Bonn, it will be at least four years before much is seen of the highly-mecha- nsed German defence forces. In fact, eight years will be needed, ac- cording to Colonel von Bonin, the former head of the planning de- partment of the "-Blank Office" (the embryo Minister of Defence). The Colonel had a strategic plan of his own which he and his sup- potters think much better than Nato's and he was dismissed for spreading it round political and military circles outside the Blank Office. His views are accepted by some German politicians who ar- gue that there are still a few years in which to come to an agreement with the Russians on German re- unification. This is the background against which to judge the significance of the-news that the first military bill has been passed by the Federal German cabinet and sent to the Upper House in Bonn. The Social- Democrat opposition has been pressing for all measures to be sus- pended until Russian offers are ex- amined at the next four-power meeting, but last week the Bun- desstag voted against their propos- al by a large majority, and action has gone forward. The bill is a stop-gap, which will allow the first volunteer cadres to be formed be- fore the whole corpus of laws is passed. The first of the 150,000 men who will train the army will them- selves soon start training with American assistance. But a great deal has still to be done. Federal Germany has to start from scratch in the defence field. About twenty laws will have to be steered through the committees in two houses in the coming months. They willdecied vital questions,,such as parliamentary control of the new forces, the means by which the in- structors and higher ranks will be screened, the period of service, pay and other conditions, and the eco- nomic powers of the new defence minister. Somewhat surprisingly, a semi- official article in Bonn has just declared that it has not yet been decided whether the Federal Re- public will have a volunteer or a conscript army. The question is a basic one, and the officers in the Blank Office, who have planned themselves stale in the last four years have not left it unsolved for want of time or thought. If it is really not settled, the reason is to be found in the widespread opposi- tion to an army of any kind which has been fostered by the govern- ment's political antagonists. They are largely responsible for the fact that it will appear to be patriotic for Germans to shirk mil- itary service, as the reason can always be given that rearmament hinders reunion. To change the at- titude of the young men, the gov- ernment sorely needs the support of the Socialists and the Trade Union Federation. Without it, So- cialists boast, a new German con- script army would have such poor morale that it would be worth lit- tle to Nato. To rouse its fighting spirit, say the champions of "reunion first," it would be necessary to indoctrinate it with hatred of fellow Germans in the Soviet Zone-a task which its instructors will not undertake. This problem of morale is real, and the government will certainly go slow before introducing conscrip- tion, in the hope that the Sbcialists and trade unionists can' be per- suaded to join the Ministry of De- fence and the sejection board. There they could al do valuable work in keeping army leaders of the future from developing the power complex of a General von Seeckt or his predecessors. -The Economist J *' , $ *+rE ,.Loe k WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Hobby Won't Get On Her Horse KINGDOM FOR A HAIR: Of Barbers & Prosperity 'HERE WAS A time back in the good old days when, for fifty cents, one -could get half-hour political lecture, advice on how to t to heaven and, incidentally, a haircut. But ire in Ann Arbor, at the present, the newly- orn finds himself at the cash register fork- g over a buck, seventy-five before the barber n get from Truman to Eisenhower. Barber's tes, alas, are up again. We were giving our grass shears a critical are the other day and thinking that if some nd soul would loan us a sharpening stone- ell-we,too, might leap on the gravy train. it, then, it suddenly occurred to us that it es take a certain amount of training to be- me a scalp surgeon.', A lot of rumors have been circulated as to just why barber prices were hiked. One of them has it that there is a critical shortage of bar- bers in Ann Arbor. From our observations there are probably more barbers than professors in this town, and they are no doubt making more money.- Another rumor says that barbers need money for a retirement fund. Frankly, at $1.75 per head, we can't see any sane barber retir- ing until they close-and tightly bolt-the lid on his casket. At this pace, it's almost a certainty that the barbers, if not the meek, shall inherit the earth. -Roy Akers INTERPRETING THE NEWS: The Russians at the Summit By DREW PEARSON W ASHINGTON - Now that the GOP National Committee has greased the skids for Secretary of Health Oveta Culp Hobby and even picked her successor, it can't get the obstinate lady to resign. Her patient replacement, Mar- ion Folsom, is waiting like a gen- tleman for her to make the first move. But she won't budge. . Though she originally threaten- ed to resign over the Salk mix-up, she has exercised her feminine prerogative to change her mind and now seems determined to see the Salk battle through to the end. Mrs. Hobby first spoke to the White House about resigning be- fore the polio problem hit the headlines. She gave her husband's ill health as her excuse. Then she suddenly found herself in the mid- dle of the Salk whirl. After a Presidential scolding for her handling of the problem, she burned to a crisp and threatened to go back to Texas. Her advisers warned, however, that it would loon bad for her to resign under fire. So she stuck to her desk. But every time she opened her mouth, the politicians at GOP headquar- ters winced. "She blandly belittled the Salk problem when the papers were re- porting children dying from bad vaccine," complained one top Re- publican. "Now she associates those who are against socialized medicine with the whole Salk mess. Before you know it, she'll have people believing maybe socialized medicine is a good thing." Meanwhile, she is brushing off the polite suggestions from Re- publican headquarters that she ought to resign right away for her husband's sake. CHEESE SCANDAL IT HASN'T been advertised as part of the GOP farm program, but Secretary of Agriculture Ben- son has been paying cheese sub- sidies not to the dairy farmers but to the cheese manufacturers. This novel "farm support" pro- gram has enriched a few big pro- ducers, while the farmers have collected next to nothing. Yet the whole idea of price sup- ports is to help the farmers. The great cheese scandal was uncovered by House investigators, who have been mousing around in the government's cheese. As an example of what has been going on, they reported in a confiden- tial memo to the House Govern- ment Operations Committee: "During March, 1954, the Com- modity Credit Corporation pur- chased approximately 180 million pounds of cheese at 37 cents per pound. In April about 90 million pounds of this cheese was resold to the original manufacturers at 34% cents a pound. Thus the loss to the Gonvernmeant onnthe nr - the cheese program was adopted with a minimum of advice from farmers but after careful consul- tation with the cheese industry. In other words, this plan to en- rich the cheese manufacturers came largely from the manufac- turers. One of those consulted, for example, was Carl Berst, whose big Wisconsin Cheese Company promptly sold 5,275,116 pounds of cheese to the government, then bought it back for more than $150,000 profit. RIPE PROFITS BORDEN AND Kraft executives were also consulted in advance about the cheese subsidy program. Afterward, investigators report, these two cheese giants together made over a million dollars on one transaction. For example, Kraft Foods sold 29,164,860 pounds of cheese to the government in March, 1954, then immediately contracted to buy it all back. Lakeshire Martin Co. of Plymouth, Wis., a Borden subsidiary, pulled the same deal, for 11,189,248 pounds of cheese. Other. Kraft and Borden subsidi- aries also turned a neat profit at the taxpayers' expense. Still other companies that col- lected huge farm benefits include: W. S. Pope and Sons, Philadel- phia; Pauly Cheese Co., Green Bay, Wis.; L. D. Schreiber and Co., Carthage, Mo.; Land O' Lakes Creameries, Plymouth, Wis.; Cen- tral Cheese Co., Marshfield Wis.; Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co., Green Bay, Wis.; Superior Cheese Co., Green Bay, Wis.; and Tillamock County Creamery As- sociation, Tillamock, Ore. For the one month alone, 108 companies sold the repurchased 86,639,277 pound's of cheese. Each pound cost the taxpayers three cents and, incidentally, raised the price of cheese so the same tax- payers will have to pay more for their cheese at the corner grocery. WASHINGTON PIPELINE CENSORING OF news by govern- ment agencies will be investi- gated by a House subcommittee to be headed by Congressman John E. Moss, California Democrat. Joining Moss in the probe will be Rep. Dante Fascell, Democrat of Florida, and Rep. Clare Hoffman, Republican of Michigan. Chair- man William L. Dawson of the House Government Operations Committee has designated the three legislators to look into grow- ing charges that federal depart- ments are suppressing and distort- ing information about their oper- ations and are hampering news- men in their work of keeping the American people informed . Government doctors are experi- menting with medicines they be- lieve will counteract the effects of atomic radiation .... U.S. inter- national legal experts have found mittee reveals how millions of the taxpayers' dollars have been was- ted on how storage bins for sur- plus grain were bought at un- necessarily high prices in an ef- fort to "spread the business" around among political friends. The report was written by Har- ris H. Huston, chief investigator for the House committee. House Democrats took no action on it, however. They went along with their party's then policy of "get- ting along" with the Eisenhower Administration. Today that policy has shifted somewhat and the report may fin- ally be acted upon. Meanwhile, this column has ob- tained a copy of this revealing report and can disclose that Hus- ton tells how one company got a contract to erect 1,750 grain- tor- age bins-though another firm had offered to put them up faster and for $250,000 less cash. When asked, about this, a Department of Agri- culture auditor agreed that "be- fore this thing is ended, many heads will be lopped off." Huston also explains how the cost of grain-storage bins drop- ped mysteriously after he began his investigation. "This was indicated," he says, "by the fact that for approximate- ly the same bushel capacity, one procurement cost the Commodity Credit Corporation $20,250,000. The difference between the two pro- curements, therefore, reflects sub- stantial savings of approximately $2,250,000." A company with connections in- side the Department of Agricul- ture got special treatment when it bid on a contract for ventilating machinery to be used in storage facilities, according to Huston's report. After all the bids were sub- mittted, the favored company was called on the telephone and allow- ed to change its offer "so as to supply the fan and motor assem- blies with 16-gauge steel instead of the .24-gauge contained in its offer." DRIED-MILK WINDFALL MOST DAMAGING revelation in the confidential document con- cerns a special deal Whereby the Commodity Credit Corporation al- lowed manufacturers of animal feeds to buy dried milk for three. and a half cents a pound. The CCC had paid sixteen and a half cents a pound for the milk when acquired under the price support program. ' The feed manufacturers reaped windfall profits, since, in spite of the money they saved when they bought the dried milk from the CCC, the price of animal feeds didn't drop later. On the contrary, it went up. Huston learned that the three- and-a-half-cent price "was set following an informal conference with representatives of the Amer- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN By J. M. ROBERTS T HE BIG THREE will be in a position to give Premier Bulganin a hard time in at least one respect without half trying. They are reported to have arranged a topical division of the work among themselves, to avoid duplication. *There are strong indications that unity on policy has made this possible. The United States could, for instance, present the entire allied view on the future of Germany. France might come up with the case for collective se- curity in Europe, with Britain handling eco- nomics. Bulganin, on the other hand, being the sole spokesman for the Communist bloc, would have to spread himself over the whole field. Western observers are strongly of the opinion, also, that Bulganin will not always be able to speak with assurance before consulting with Communist party boss Nikita Khrushchev. In other words, Bulganin may at any point be faced with the necessity of asking for time before discussing some allied position. This may be why the Russians objected to the original allied attempt, inspired primarily by President Eisenhower's desire not to stay The Daily Staff- away from his country too long, to limit the "summit" meeting to a few days. Bulganin, in his one public -ppearance in the West, his visit to Yugoslavia, did not im- press observers with any fast footwork. His mentor, Khrushchev, gave indications that his personal habits are not always conducive to calm consideration of grave affairs. There may be intervals at Geneva when these fac, tors stall the whole business. The allied representatives will be further reinforced in their unity by. pre-Geneva con- ferences with their smaller partners in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. The gen- eral tenor of the conferences in New York last week indicated unity already had been achieved with Chancellor Adenauer of Ger- many, who will be present, though in the back- ground, at Geneva. There still will be room for individual ap- proaches to methods after the first round of presentation of views. Anthony Eden, in par- ticular, is a man who knows how to trim sail to take advantage of prevailing winds. There is every indication, however, that the Allies are better prepared to act as a team at Geneva than at any other important confer- ence in the last 10 years. Free Elections Every once in a while a real demagogue runs for office-and sometimes gets elected. Whenever this happens the democratic sys- tem is sure to come in for some pretty hard 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 Uni- versity. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3553 Administration Building before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication (be- for 10 a.m. onrSaturday.) Notice of lectures, Concerts and organization meetings cannot be published oftener than twice. THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 1955 VOL. LXVI, No. 3 Notices P'resident and Mrs. Hatcher will hold an informal, reception for, all Summer Session students at their home Thurs., June 23 from 8:00 to 10:00 p.m.' President and Mrs. Hatcher will hold an informal reception for Summer' Session faculty members, both resi- dent and visiting, at their home Fri., June 24 from 8:00 to 10:00 p.m. Any Veteran who expects to receive education and training allowance under Public Law 550 (Korea G.I. Bill) at the University of Michigan for the FIRST TIME must report to Room 555 of the Administration Building with tuition receipt between 8:30 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. by June 24 if he has not already done so. Law School Admission Test: Applica- tion blanks for the Aug. 6 administra- tion of the Law School Admission Test are available at 110 Rackham Building. Application blanks are due in Princeton, N.J. not later than July 27, 1955. PERSONNEL REQUESTS: Niagara Falls Council of Girl Scouts, Niagara Falls, N.Y., has openings for an Executive Director to work as Pkrofes- sional Administrator of local Girl Scout- ing, and for a Field Director to work as an assistant to the Executive Director. U.S. Department of State announces positions open with the Govt. of Sudan,. Sudan Medical Service. SUDAN GOV'T. openings are for the following: Dental Mechanic, Analytical Chemists, Lab. therapists, Medical Pathologists, and Tech., Nurses, Bacteriologists, Physio- Male Physicians, Specialists, Surgeons, and Gynaecologists, and Medical Ento- mologists. Library of Congress, Washington, ,D.C., has an opening for a cataloger of materials in the Turkish language. With one year of cataloguing experience the position starts at GS-7, otherwise starts at GS-5. For further information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., Ext. 371. EMPLOYMENT REGISTRATION WITH THE BUREAU OF APPOINTMENTS The summer placement meeting of the Bureau of -Appointments will be held at 3:00 p.m. on Wednesday, June 29, in Auditorium B of Angell Hall. All seniors and graduate students who are interested in registering with the Bu- reau in either the Teaching or General Division or both for employment after graduation, after military service, or for further promotions in the fields of edu- cation, business, industry, government, Academic Notices Business Education Get - Together, Thurs., June 23, Rackham Building, East Conference Room. 7:00-9:00 p.m. Mathematics Colloquium, Thurs., June 23, at 4:00 p.m. in Room 5011 Angell Hall. Dr. Kurt Hirsch, of the University of London and the University of Colorado, will speak on "Associative Operations on Groups." Sociology 101, Sociological Principles and Problems. Sec. 1 will meet in Room 414, Mason Hall at 11:00 M-F. Sec. 2 will meet in Room 451, Mason Hall at 1:00 M-F. Industrial Education .Get-together, students and faculty of the Department of vocational and Practical Arts Edu- cation. Thurs., June 23, 7:30 p.m., West Conference Room, Rackham. Refresh- ments. Seminar in Mathematical Statistics. Organizational meeting for all interest- ed at '12:00 noon, Thurs., June 23, in Room 3020 Angel Hall. Concerts Carillon Recital by Percival Price, 7:15 p.m. Thurs., June 23, first of a series of summer recitals. The All-Mozart pro- gram will include selections from operas "The Magic Flute," "Don Giovanni," "Cosi fan Tutti,"."The Marriage of Fi- garo;" "Ave verum," "Ein Veilchen auf der Wiese stand," Romance, from "Si' klein Nachtmusik," and a Mozart waltz. Events Today Meeting for the chairmen of the ju- diciary of all undergraduate houses at the League Thurs., June 23 at 4:00 p.m. in the Judiciary room. The judiciary progran will be run the same as it does in the fall and spring semesters. If there are any questions, contact Cynthia Krans, (NO 2-9882) chairman of the summer Women's Judiciary Council. Lane Hall Lunch. "Legal Aspects of Church and State," Prof. Paul Kauper. First in a series of 5 discussions'- on "Religion and Education." Thurs., June 23, 12 noon-1:45 p.m. Reservations. Cercle Fmiancais. First meeting of the summer session atthe Michigan League Thurs., June 23 at 7:30 p.m. Slides on France and a short film on Paris; plans for the session will be discussed. The International Center Teas will be held at Madelon Pound House at 1024 Hill Street on Thurs. from 4:30-5:30"p.m. Duplictae Bridge Thurs., June 23 at the Michigan League at 7:30 p.m. Coming Events Principal Frederick Greeves, Didsbury College of Oxford, will speak- on "Eng- lish Life and Tendencies" Mon., June 27, 8:00 p.m. Lane Hall Library. Square Dancing Lessons every Man. night at Palmer Field at 7:30 p.m. Ad- mittance Free. Spanish Tertulia. Rumpus Room of Editorial Board Pat Roelofs Jim' Dygert Cal Samra NIGHT EDITORS , Mary Lee Dingier, Marge Piercyi Ernest Theodossin Dave Rorabacher ..........................Snorts Editor