THE MCHIGAN DAILY I M..Q'nAY IrTIV ' , THE MICHIGANA Y flA V Y 1; : 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. Doing Very Nicely, Thank You LETTERS TO THE EDITOR DEP R EN First Ten Years NEq TN Of UN HaveBeen Fruitful DUCgrIoN By JIM DYGERT IVERYONE SEEMS to have taken upon him- self the task of appraising the first ten, ears of the United Nations, for this week iarks the tenth year of appraisal, criticism nd despair. One can hardly resist, having read arious commentaries, the notion that the ten ears were wasted, not by the UN but by its ritics. The pundit's acusation that the UN has allowed in a decade of failure does not sur- iye a -careful second thought. The UN was stablished to maintain what peace there was z 1945. We cannot justifiably criticize it for ot making that peace more secure, even iough we had hoped it would. Except for one instance when it fell back nto the old, impossible way of a war to stop ggression in Korea, the UN has maintained ze peace, though precarious. It has provided means by which the United States and 'Rus- a can vent their rage via the veto rather ian the hydrogen bomb. It halted Communist :pansion in northern Asia with its interven- on in Korea, thus checking the hostile inten- ons of the Reds. It never got a chance in Zdo-China. There can be no counting of the sputes resolved with words only because the N existed. The UN has been called a failure because of e endless quibbling in its sessions and the any unsolved problems it carries into its sec- ond decade. But this is not failure. Indeed, the very purpose of the UN was to change deadly bullets into hot words, determined generals in- to crafty diplomats, wars into arguments. The UN has been called a failure because the Security Council veto has allowed Russia and the United States to prevent effective action on many issues. Again, this is not really a fail- ure, but perhaps a blessing. Where might Rus- sia or the United States have turned for ef- fective action if they could not have checked each other with a veto? Standing as a stern reminder to men that what they really want is peace, the UN directs its members along the proper paths toward it. Providing a harmless outlet for belligerence,, the UN keeps the passions of the moment from pulling them- irrevocably from those paths. After a while, this continuing process may bring men to the conviction that after all, war is rather silly. Considering this, the UN is not the failure it might seem. On the other hand, to say the critics wasted ten years is certainly tenable. They criticized for the wrong things; they expected the im- possible, and despaired when it was showed to be impossible. They should have been thank- ful, instead, that the UN avoided the probable. . These critics have .failed to destroy this or- ganization, for the UN still lives in the major- ity's hopes. It has withstood the minority's despair, which, in itself, is a certain achieve- ment. I WfLARE if h I .x. r C :,4 C \ qty' wry . s.. ' " re's V ,sb :; : =;; .: _ That Udder 'U7'.. . To the Editor: NO BULL Whether it's State or M.S.U. It's the same old cow, with the same old "moo" To Michigan men it will always be That "udder" University! STATE'S REPLY Lay off our cows, be generous, brudders All that we have we owe to "udders"! -J. Fred Lawton (EDITOR'S NOTE: Mr. Lawton is the author of "Varsity.") My Love for U.., To the Editor: OH, HOW I MICH. U Dear old former College, Can U. of late (Land) Grant more knowledge Than in your former State? "A rose by any other name"- But is this quote too natural? Not fitting to your new found fame, It sounds so agri-Cultural. May I suggest a new school song, Like "My Love for U. Was Never False," Perhaps "Hail to the Vectors Strong," Or maybe "Hannah Varsity Waltz." -Charles Stephen Lewis * * * Soapy's Plums .. . To the Editor:. IN WEDNESDAY'S Daily Gover- nor Williams is quoted as fol- lows in regard to his candidacy as President: if they throw any plums my way, I'll be there to catch them if I can." This contemptible statement is another demonstration of Wil- liam's attitude towards high pub- lie office. If he would co-operate with the Legislature and really try to do something for the people of this State instead of sucking his present plum as he has been do- ing for the past six years, he might earn the right to seek the most important job and the greatest honor which our nation has to offer. --Clan Crawford, Jr. The Informer System . . To the Editor: IN HIS otherwise excellent edi- torial on the Ed Lamb case, Jim Dygert left an erroneous impres- sion concerning the perjury con- viction of Mrs. Marie Natvig. Mrs. Natvig was convicted, not because she lied as a government witness, but because she later retracted her lies. She was convicted because she swore in an affidavit that repre- sentatives of the U.S. government urged her to lie. To date, the agency going under the misnomer of the Department of Justice has not seen fit to ask for perjury indictments against a singles one of its many lying wit- nesses. It has not even dared to move against Harvey Matusow for fear of having to re-open every case in which he has appeared as a witness. No perjury indictment has been sought against Paul Crouch, Manning Johnson, Louis Budenz (who refused to sue the Alsop brothers for libel when they called him a liar in several maga- zine articles), Elizabeth Bentley (whose tales sent William Rem- ington to his death), Milton Sant- wire (a Detroit FBI agent who ad- mitted lying as a witness in the Michigan Smith Act Trial) and a host of others. The failure of the Department of Justice to act against these individuals contrasts sharply with its zeal in hounding Prof. Owen Lattimore, who has already been twice vindicated by the courts. The Department of Justice is unwilling to move against its paid liars because such action will ex- pose as a hoax the administra- tion's contention that the Com. munist Party is trying to over- throw the U.S. government by force and violence. All the con- victions against the Communist leaders were based chiefly on the testimony of these professional witnesses. Aside from the Marxist classics (which are readily avail- able at most public libraries) no other evidence was introduced in these trials. Yet, the administra- tion has been so successful in per- petrating this hoax that the fun-. damental right of dissent for all Americans has been seriously un- dermined. It is indeed high time that the informer system be ex, posed. -Ed Shaffer * * * Tankye, Ma'amt.,. To the Editor: THE DANCE and mixer held at the League Friday, June 17, was a big success. It was an en- joyable evening for me and I thank the League's social director for sponsoring this event. I also thank Al Townsend's orchestra for their good dancing music; and Alice Jans, Lucille Vollmer, Anne San- tafanny, Carlene Chelgren, Doro- thy House, and Betty McGregor for dancing with me.- -Harley Ristad Paganini's Fate.., To the Editor: WHAT'S WRONG with Ann Aiv. bor? This question was answered Wednesday in the Daily, "the price of haircuts." The bleeders are again agitating inflation to such a point that. it will be cheaper to buy a violin case and walk the streets with shaggy hair. Who, cares if little boys remark, "look mamma, there goes Paganini." --Tom Herron I 1' ! B ravado mpgrl zgbt. 2555,Theoutte? I'ubisbfur M 3t LouiI. Pant-t'l-"" LTHOUGH I HAVE never truckled to the type of journalism which finds sly humor ni the trappings ladies strap across their hests, I now succumb with a tired sigh and ecognize the *female bosom as being firmly in he public domain. There was a time when ladies' busts were nerely functional portions of their anatomy nd not a focus for advertising writers, radio agmen or Hollywood exploiters. But mer- handisers have robbed woman of her mys- ery, to, the point where the bo-zoom is now' s much of our daily reading life as the weath- r report. I can now speak freely of falsies, alf-cups, uplifts, separations, cleavages, plung- ig necklines and the thousand saucy. trade ames such as Baseball Bra and Bosom Friend iat archly proclaim their superiority in con- rming the female facade-to accentuate it or the maximum result. Recently, an advertisement heralded the 'onders of a new harness, one of Lady Mar- ne's "plunging, popular, Low-Nuff bras cov- ered with real Americanbroadtail and frivous- ly named the 'Heart Warmer,' which costs only $15 and no fur tax." Just how low Low-Nuff is I will not say, since I mislaid my slide rule in a burlesque house, but competent scientists have told me off the record that any girl whose middle is not clearly visible on a foggy day is an old spoilsport and will probably die an embittered maiden lady. This brings us to falsies, a triumph of mo- dern engineering designed, as someone put it, to make a mountain out of a molehill. I have a bitter letter here from a lady decrying the use of these delusions as an infringement of the Fair Trade Act. She describes falsies as "fake bait," and blames a rising divorce rate on them. I've no idea where this ultrafrankness will lead us, unless it's to consummate boredom with the whole business of the well-stuffed sweater. Don't dip your neckline at this kid, girls. To me it's just costume jewelry. -Robert C. R ark United Features Syndicate WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Cracks in the, Iron Curtain r r r CURRENT MOVIES By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON - The contrast erinbetween V. Molotov, the glow- ering, ill-mannered Russian for- eign minister who antagonized ev- eryone at San Francisco 10 years ago, and the obliging, mild-man- nered, western hat-wearing Mo- tov who charmed the diplomats at San Francisco this week follows a carefully laid out pattern of So- viet policy which has caught the United States napping. For approximately 10 years we have been complaining about the iron curtain. But now the iron curtain is being lifted-just a crack-and wendon'td knowwhat to do about it. It isn't much of a crack to be sure. Though when you compare it to the days when Russian soldiers who had come in contact with the West in Austria or Berlin were not allowed to min- gle with their own families when they went home for fear they'd describe the wonders of the capi- taiist world, even that crack is significant. This summer, a whole slew of visas is being issued to Americans to visit Russia. They range from ex-Senator Benton of Connecticut to Claude J. Desautels, a legisla- tive assistant to Congressman As- pinall of Colorado, to Vincent J. Greenfield, of Sears, Roebuck in Washington. The visas are being issued sim- ultaneous with the visit of Soviet farmers to Iowa, plus the free and open chance given to Bill Hearst to visit Russia, and with the pro- posal of Soviet University editors to visit the United States. MRS. SHIPLEY SAYS NO BUT INSTEAD of taking advan- tage of this crack in the cur- tain, we have reacted as if shot. When Soviet University editors wanted to come to the USA, the unimaginative Mrs. Shipley, State Department Czarina of passports, put her unobliging foot down. The editors did not come. When the Des Moines Register- Tribune proposed bringing Soviet farmers to Iowa, the Red-tape ar- tists in the State Department, who happen, incidentally, to be friends of Joe McCarthy, raised finger- print technicalities. Finally fin- gerprints were made unnecessary by appointing the farmers as of- ficials. When a Russian Orthodox bish- op overstayed his passport by a couple of days inhNew York, Mrs. Shipleyhyanked him out of the USA, thereby causing the Rus- sians to remove Rev. Georges Bis- sonnette, the only Catholic priest in, Moscow, in retaliation. So it has gone. Instead of taking advantage of the new crack in the curtain, we have missed all the cues. We have completely lacked imagination. We have built up our own iron curtain instead of rea- lizing that we have far more to sell than Russia, far more to show if we can get Russians to visit us. MOVIES TO MOSCOW I WOULD like to suggest, there- fore, that since the State De- partment is so stodgy about peo- ple-to-people friendship; the Am- erican people themselves concoct some ideas on how we can win friends behind the iron curtain. As a starter, here is an idea from John B. Elliott of Los An- geles, who writes: "I suggest that the United States, through the Voice of Am- erica, offer to furnish Russia mo- r11 I At the State . . LOVE ME OR LEAVE ME, with Doris Day and James Cagney. THIS, ADVERTISED as one of the most "un- usual" musicals to be filmed, does depart from the stock situations and run-of-the-mill acting which most of them get, but there have been more unusual ones. The virtues of the picture seem mostly to be Cagney's acting and Miss Day's singing, and neither is precisely a rare item. The story is supposed to be a biography of Ruth Etting, nightclub, radio, and screen star of yesteryear. Miss Etting, so the movie goes, is raised from a dime-a-dance hall to national stardom through the efforts of a Chicago mob- ster named Marty ("The Gimp") Snyder. His motivation is not altruism, and Miss Etting suffers through most of the picture trying to rationalize her way out of obligation to him. And suffer is an apt word. Miss Day, who sings charmingly but rather unlike Miss Ett- ing, spends a very large part of the film sob- bing into a handkerchief while Cagney (as The Gimp) browbeats her into obedience to his way of doing things. Miss Day, for all her inability ,to bring off a tragic scene, does a very good job of the role-mostly because when she is not sobbing she is singing. The number of songs involved in the picture is phenomenal, and it is amaz- ing that very few of them are boring. Cagney does the most to make the film un- usual, and director Charles Vidor is aware of usual, and director Charles Vidor is aware of it. He's tough and nasty, and it's a good thing. No musical should be without its share of characters who can be despised.-Tom Arp The Daily Staff Editorial Board Jim Dygert Pat Roelofs Cal Samra NIGHT EDITORS Mary Lee Dingler, Marge Piercy, Ernest Theodossin Dave Rorabacher .......................S ports Editor At Architecture Aud. THE TREASURE OF SIERRA MADRE I HAVEN'T the statistics in hand, but I'd wager an ounce or two of gold dust that Treasure is the mose revived movie that ever came out of Hollywood. And, despite the fact that the print seems to be a little bit shabbier each time it comes around, one has to admit the picture as a whole wears well. , Perhaps this is due largely to the locale; the mountains loom very large throughout the whole movie. The prospectors scramble up and down them, dig holes in them and seal the holes up again. Without any character stopping to wipe the sweat from his brow and remark ponderously on the nobility of the mountains, and without zooming panorama in SuperVision, one still feels the enduring- ness and the grandeur of these mountains. But if part of the picture's attraction is due to its epic setting, another and larger part is due to Fred C. Dobbs, and Dobbs is just as common and familiar as dishwater. Humphrey Bogart makes another Babbitt of him: the common man, not particularly greedy, just looking after Number One. The foolishness of his death at the hands of these comic-opera Mexican bandits is touching and ironic an- swer to his uneasy boast that "No-one's gonna make a fool outa Fred S. Dobbs." TIM HOLT has a less rewarding role as Bo- gart's partner, an equally common but ex- ceptionally good man. But where we have Bogart's posturing and alibis and fidgeting to convince us of his evilness, we have only Holt's candid face to convince us of his good- ness. He is such a perfect physical contrast to Bogart, however, one is inclined to forget his shortcomings as a character and get on with the drama. tion picture films of American life to the value of $25,000,000 for ex- hibition in theatres throughout Russia, in exchange; for like value in films of Russian life for similar exhibition in this country." Mr. Elliott goes on to point out that such a project would require some good faith and some safe- guards, but that an assortment of pictures showing all interesting phases of American life, and also of Russian Ife, would go a long way toward breaking down mis- understanding and helm attain the long-range goal of peace. i agrec with him. The Russians -mi.-ht "!k at first But they, seem in a mood to be conciliatory. So now is the time to take advantage of it, notsit back and glower as Molotov did 10 years ago and as certain McCarthyites in the State Department tire doin gtoday. EXIT MR. STEVENS ROBERT STEVENS, who now steps down as Secretary of the Army, is one of those sincere, hon- est businessmen who really want to serve, their country but just don't understand the seamy side of politics. His family founded the giant J. P. Stevens Company which oper- ates textile mills around Green- uvile. S.C., and though it's one of the biggest in the textile business, the Stevens firm hasn't engaged in the price-cutting of its big competitor, Burlington Mills, in order to knock out certain weaker companies. Stevens himself will go back to head that company.-He has a son now working from the bottom up, getting no favors, learning the trade. Probably Stevens would have left the Washington scene an ef- ficient hard-working unknown had it not been for Senator McCarthy, who at first he 'shunned and fear- ed. It was later when he decided to stand up to McCarthy that he got into trouble. How definitely toat era has passed is now illustrated by the man who takes Stevens' place, Wil- ber Brucker, ex-governor of Mi- chigan. Brucker came to Wash- ngton a strong McCarthyite. When appointed to the Defense Depart- ment as general counsel he was, still a McCarthyite. But one day he had to go up to see McCarthy to explain why Joe's two gumshoes, Don Surine ani. Tom Lavenia, were security risks. McCarthy gave him the dressing down of his life. He bawled him out unmercifully. By the time he left, Brucker was the most anti- McCarthy man in town. (Copyright, 1955, Bell Syndicate, Inc.) IT HAS long been the fashion DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN _a Optimism Mounts in Europe 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. on Saturday.) Notice of lectures, concerts and organization meetings cannot be published oftener than twice. FRIDAY,JUNE 24, 1955 VOL. LXVI, No. 4 Notices 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.L 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: U.S. Govt., Hdq. Fourth Army, has op- enings for young women between 23-35 and unmarried for the following posi- tions: Recreational Assistant -- GS-5, Progrom Director-GS-6, and Service Club Director-AS-7. Requires degree in Recreation, Physical Education, Music, Drama, Sociology, Home Ec., Radio & Television, or other related subjects. Titanium Corp., Grass Lake, Mich., is looking for a woman to work in the experimental research lab. She should have done work in chemistry to the level of being able to do quantitative analysis, but it is not necessary that she has a degree. Wyoming County Community Hospi- tal, WarsawN.Y., h*as acnv o 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, or in the technical fields are invited to attend. Registration material will be given out at the meeting. Students who have previously regis- tered with the Bureau and who are still in Ann Arbor or on campus for summer school are urged to bring their records up to date as to current address and summer class elections. Academic Noties Sociology Coffee Hour, FrI.,. June 24. in the Sociology Lounge (5th floor Hay. en) at 3:00 p.m. All new and old stu- dents and faculty in the department in- vited. Topology Seminar. First meeting: Fri., June 24, 3:00 p.m., Room 3010, Angell Hall. Meeting time to be arranged then. Proposed topic: "Manifolds and Poin- care duality; Alexander-Pontryagin di- ality" Events Today Film Forum on International Educa- tion series. "Passion for Life," featurf length French documentary with En lish sub-titles. Open to public free [ charge. Fri,, June 24, 8:00 p.m., Aud .,. Angell Hall. Spanish Tertulia. Rumpus Roor of the Michigan League at 3:00 p.m., fri., June 24. Punch Refresher. Lane Hall. Meet old and new friends. 4:30 to 6:00 1'.m. Michigan Christian Fellowship. Fri. June 24, 7:30 p.m. Lane Hall. Hymn sing and "get acquainted" meeting. Sun., June 26, 4:00 p.m., Lane Hall, Bible study led by The Rev. WAilliami By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst AFRIEND of mine recently re- turned from a series of official and unofficial interviews in Eu- rope with the feeling that "things look almost too good." The spate of optimistic remarks about the possibilities of peace which have come from world lead- ers this week 'sound almost too good. One cannot help recalling Chamberlain's "Peace in our time" and Hitler's promises of no more' demands against Europe. There has been an obvious at- tempt by some, especially on the Allied side, to warn about the dif- ficulties which will attend nego- tiations with the Soviet Union. All this talk has to be taxen against the background of the un- spoken Allied estimate of what the Russians are up to. And that es- The Allies will try to make the Russians see that they can have security without control. They will try to test how much her attitude is the result of fear, and how much it is a part of Communist expan- sionist determination. Reports keep cropping up that the Allies will have something con- crete to offer in the way of dis- armament and collective security, even though they don't expect Russia to be willing- to.pay the price at any early date. The price would be reunification of Germany through free elections, an end to- Russia's, divisive tactics and her fight against German rearmament, and some token that she would not merely use a period of peace to prepare for further conquest. There is not even any hope for an immediate curtailment of the arms race, although that is some- 1i st #