'TuVw THE THICH1GAN DAILY THURSDAY. UNIR 211. 19914 THE MICh~i~i~ AILYasFuIVrolAr v iI h.T~' 241OiE Oh4 £fr4igazn Baitij Sixty-Fifth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF tOARD WN 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. Demise of a Demagogue By CAL SAMRA THERE IS, perhaps, nothing so intriguing as the rise and decline of a demagogue. The demise of Senator McCarthy's influence was certainly a political phenomena that merits serious examination. Two years ago, the Wisconsin Senator was in top form, popular, a man of immense in- fluence throughout the country. His sonorous monotones blanketed the nation with desultory accusations, defamations, villifications, attacks on individuals high and low. Ranking bureau- crats trembled before his thrusts. Day in and out, his bombastic investigations were splashed on the front pages. Around him he assembled a loyal, devoted-if not significantly large- clan of supporters, and "McCarthyism" took on the appearance of a political religion. Swinging de- liberately, recklessly, with no regard for pro- tocol, McCarthy had ammassed power, and in 1953, at least, it was questionable whether he could be stopped. Today, McCarthy is hardly a croak in the District. After successively tangling with the President, the Army, his Republican colleagues, and the Senate, his political influence has sharply declined. He has lost his supporters in the Senate, including Senators Knowland and Butler. Last week, the Senate defeated 77 to 4 a Mc- Carthy resolution that would have dictated the agenda of the "conference at the summit," ty- ing President Eisenhower's hands. In defeat- ing the resolution, both Republican and Demo- cratic Senators roundly rebuked their fellow Congressman. Only Senators Jenner, Langer and Malone went along with him. What happened to McCarthy? Why the turn- about? The more obvious reason is that the Senator overextended his tongue and after scalding the liberals, turned his attack on the conservatives. In his own dogmatic, radical way he succeeded famously well in alienat- ing those he depended upon for support. N THE END, it was not the liberals, but the conservatives who destroyed McCarthy. The liberals perhaps initially awakened the nation to his bigotry, but the fact that they heatedly denied his every charge and soft-pedaled- while McCarthy himself was magnifying-the internal Communist situation contributed to his popularity. It was men like Eisenhower, Welch and Wat- kins who dealt McCarthy his greatest defeats. It was the solidly conservative element in Con- gress who, nurtured in the long tradition of classical liberalism,,-effectively turned on Mc- Carthy for flouting the orderly processes of democratic institutions. These conservatives could no more tolerate McCarthy's brand of radicalism than the radicalism of leftists. Though the liberal illuminati shook McCar- thy with their irrepressivle attacks, it remain- ed for the conservatives to push him into ob- livity. Where once an anti-McCarthyite was a suspect, it is now fashionable to be anti-Mc- Carthy. McCarthyism, of course, has left behind it a small, vociferous band of disciples. But po- litically, these disciples are harmless, unless some sort of national disaster-perhaps a de- pression or a war-falls upon the country, pre- cipitating a situation that breeds extremists. Perhaps someone owes an apology to that large, independent, conservative segment of our society that will be pushed neither to the left or the right, that doesn't want things as they were or as they ought to be, but only as they are. Though they may often be pig-headed and stubborn, they really can't be called re- actionary. And, after all, they usually manage to save more than one liberal neck. "There Feel More Comfortable Now?" .?:awlz .D;r . t- '2 .. 1/ ti t European Balance of Power By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst SECRETARY DU L L E S has thrown cold water on the widely prevalent idea that, if a balance of military power could be established in Europe, the Uni- ted States would follow through by entering a new nonaggression arrangement. This is a position of long-stand- ing for the United States-that members of the UN already are firmly committed against aggres- sion, and all they need to do is live up to it. Dulles says there is a possibility that some disarmament and bal- ance of power could be arrived at through the Big Four negotia- tions which will begin next month. But everything, he seems to say, depends upon a sincere Rus- sian desire to do something about the reunification of Germany, a Germany which would be truly free to set up its own relationship toward the contesting blocs of Eu- rope. This is merely an acceptance of the axiom that, until the position of Germany is established, no sta- ble agreements can be reached on European problems. There is, however, something disheartening about the current Allied emphasis on establishment of a balance of power. Not so much because they feel forced in- to it for safety's sake, but because it means they have been unable to find a -newer and better ap- proach. Balance of power has alwaW peen the only thing the nations have been able to think of, and it has never worked. Al i w A Few Puzzling Items t WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Molotov and Hobby Goofed By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK-()-Some things an average man finds hard to understand: Why pretty girls wear sunglass- es to work on cloudy days? (Do they really think anybody will mistake them for visiting movie stars?) People who stud their boring conversations with the expression, "You know what I mean?" It keeps waking you up. Women who can't stand a dog in the house-then get themselves a pet monkey. Short stout ladies who wear big floppy summer hats on crowded buses. Sports fans by hearsay--guys who know all the statistics in the baseball record books, but never never take the trouble to go and watch a live game. Men who root for the Brooklyn Dodgers merely because they think it is a quaint sign of intellectual superiority. Bermuda shorts. (Yes, even in1 Bermuda). Wives who keep telling a fat husband he looks slimmer in a single-breasted suit, when he knows better. Girls who wear no stockings in the summer, and girls who wear stocking so thin you can't tell for sure-even after looking twice-- whether they are bare-legged. Girls who paint their toenails a pearl color. How anyone with a sense of fit- ness and proportion can eat a hot dog without mustard? Whatever happened to the won- derful game of marbles? They still have a national tournament, but you rarely see city kids lugging a sack of marbles-now that most playgrounds are paved. People who think television is a waste of time-but don't mind spending three evenings a week playing gin rummy. Folks whose ancestors went in covered wagons but now thing life isn't worth living without air-con- ditioning. How poison ivy and the common cold manage to survive in a world in which everyone you meet knows 10 sure ways to cure them? Why, since parking spaces have become so valuable in this civili- zation they aren't made heredi- tary so someone could leave you one in his will? Where can a father sell a see- ond-hand, Davy Crockett hat? (The cat has taken to sleeping in the one in our house), Cashiers who, when you hand them a. $5 bill, count out change for $1 then pause-hoping youl walk away and forget the other $4. Why many movie houses still go on showing double feature pro- grams after all these yearas? Has- n't science found a better way to solve the problem of insomnia? How airplane stewardesses man- age to stay looking so cool and neat during a long flight, when the passengers always reach their destination feeling weary and rumpled? Why there are so many charm schools for women and so few for men? Is the male sex just natur- ally more charming? Whether a fortune couldn't be made if someone found a method of making catsup in different col- lors? At present all it goes with is a red necktie. On the Indian Memorial FOR YEARS the American Indian was char- acterized in books, movies and radio pro- grams as a very bad kind of creature. The gen- eral assumption was that all Indians are bad, but there may be a few good ones, the most notable of which was the Lone Ranger's pal, Tonto. Some sort of transitory movement has been underfoot in recent years to dispel this former impression and awaken Americans to the fact that Indians are human beings and not oddi- ties, It is no doubt this notion which underlies the thinking behind proposed projects of the Memorial to the American Indian Foundation. Most likely people connected with the busi- ness of memorializing the American Indian feel that the best manner to prove that these once-abundant people are not really all "bad" is through some sort of permanent structure that will recall the period of Indian glory. In such a spirit the foundation is planning to erect ,the world's largest statues.(of an Am- erican Indian) and an amphitheatre of native stone in the Valley of the Memorial, a square mile segment of the Western plains. This all seems very lovely at first glance. But when one recalls the recent reports of In- dian illiteracy, of deaths caused by tuberculo- sis, and of the generally impoverished condi- tions under which these proud people live, it appears that memorials and recreations of the past are of little consequence while people are suffering in the present. Surely, the hundreds of thousands of dollars being put into an amphitheatre and statue could better be used to raise the Indian's stan- dard of living, to provide more schooling, or to facilitate increased medical supervision. An even more exasperating proposition, how- ever, is the plan to use Indians to help finance the memorial, by exhibiting regular daily In- dian dances and crafts. Under such conditions, the Indian becomes a kind of circus freak, or a cheap side-show entertainer whose main function is to amuse travellers with his quaint cultural customs. The buffalo and the lush green forests are disappearing, and the Indian can no longer return to the life his ancestors once lived. He needs above all to adjust to the complexities of modern life and to find his place in a world previously completely hostile to his very exis- tence. It seems somewhat unethical to build statues and landscape seven hills to depict in life-size diarama the life and times of the seven great Indian nations, when the Indians themselves are in need of financial, educational, and medi- cal help. The United States government has only begun to aid the Indian, and historical projects are not the kind of aid the Indian de- serves. The present memorial foundation, housed in Ann Arbor, had best use its resources to bring real assistance to the Indian, and not to pro- vide American vacationers with another round of entertaining amusements. Memorials can come later. -Ernest Theodossin By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov stir- red up national indignation when he refused to submit to free ques- tioning on a TV program last week. But unknown to the public, America's own Secretary of Health, Oveta Culp Hobby, pulled the same trick and almost got away with it. In fact,. Mrs. Hobby even out- did Molotov, who was willing to appear on CBS's "Face the Na- tion" program if all questions were submitted in advance. Mrs. Hob- by went so far as to hand report- ers a prepared script, telling them what questions to ask. The lady cabinet member agreed to be interviewed on the MBS ra- dio program, "Reporters' Round- up," by veteran newsmen Jim Lu- cas of Scripps-Howard and Clark Mollenhoff of the Des Moines Reg- ister and Tribune. At the last min- ute, however, she sent over a pre- pared script and an ultimatum. She would not appear on the program, she sent word, unless the reporters stuck to the script. They were to ask her the questions she wanted to be asked, then waiting for her prepared answers. In oth- er words, the reporters would ap- pear as straight men, giving her the cues for her lines. Of course, Lucas and Mollen- hoff flatly rejected her ultimatum. They sent back an ultimatum of their own. If she refused to sub- mit to free questioning, they said, they would announce it on the program and interview, they said, they would announce it on the pro- gram and interview her severest critic, Oregon's Senator Wayne Morse, in her place. Mrs. Hobby thought this over for 15 minutes, tore up the pre- pared script and meekly showed up for a no-holds-barred inter- view. She may have regretted it afterward, for it was on this pro- gram she made her famous state- ment that the Salk vaccine pro- gram had not been mishandled but that, in any case, it was all Surgeon-General Leonard Scheele's fault. Note: When Molotov refused to face free questioning, CBS Vice- President Sig Mickelson announ- ced: "The right of free question- ing by the press and free and open discussion is the cornerstone of international understanding." W a s h ing t o n correspondents would say the same is true of do- mestic understanding, though too many administration officials, like Mrs. Hobby, have adopted the philosophy that the government knows best what the public should be told. LATTIMORE CASE REAL VICTOR when the Justice Department decided to drop the case against Owen Lattimore was former Judge Thurman Ar- nold and his two associates, Abe Fortas and Paul Porter. They form the law firm that took the Dr. Pe- ters case up to the Supreme Court, battled the Dorothy Bailey case, defended Lattimore and have done more than any other three lawyers to fight for civil liberties. With them in the Lattimore case was Senator Joe O'Mahoney of Wyo- ming. n none of these cases did they take a fee, and in the Lattimore case they even had to pay the ex- pense of the appeals. The Lattimore case, incidentally, was brought not by Brownell but in the final month of the Truman Administration by retiring Attor- ney General James McGranery as the result of a pledge he gave the late Senator Pat McCarran of Ne- vada, that if confirmed by the Sen- ate he would prosecute Lattimore. McCarran, then chairman of the Judiciary Committee, had held protracted closed-door hearings in which Lattimore was cross-exam- ined for days at a time. It was on the basis of a memory test as much as anything that Lattimore was indicted, namely, whether he perjured himself when he testi- fied regarding the use of Laugh- lin Currie's office and the answer- ing of certain mail some ten years before. NEW GOVERNOR OF TEXAS? IT MAY be denied, but outgoing Undersecretary of Defense Ro- bert Anderson will return to Tex- as to run for governor. He has been sounded out by some of Gov- ernor AllanShivers' most power- ful supporters, who are tired of Shivers and would like to see An- derson in the Texas executive mansion. This is the real reason Ander- son is quitting the Pentagon be- fore becoming too closely identi- fied with the Republican Admin- istration. Though Texans vbted for President Eisenhower, they are traditionally D:nmocratic and their sensibilities might be offended by a gubernatorial can,-"' te wearing a GOP Sabel. Anderson did sv ch a capable job, first as Secretary of the Navy, then as Undersecretary of Defense, that he was considered in line for Char- lie Wilson's job as Secretary of Defense. However, the soft-spoken Texan, who has a heart of gold, prefers to go home to Texas poli- tics. (Copyright, 1955, Bell Syndicate, Inc.) i ;f ' DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN i ir rir.rr rr rr r i r. r a i a CURRENT MOVIES Rng Round The Moon' At the Michigan DESTRY, with Audie Murphy HERE SEEMS to be very little reason why anyone at all should want to see this pic- ture. It is neither good enough to be enter- taining nor bad enough to deserve ridicule. It is mediocre, and there is no distinction whatever in this sort of mediocrity. Mr. Murphy, a noted war hero of a decade past, has been unable to distinguish himself in the films throughout his career, and "Des- try" provides no unexpected changes. He is mild-mannered during every one of the ninety minutes it takes to tell the story, and he reads The Daily Staff, his lines badly. He cannot act, and ought to consider hunting up another war to insure his reputation; as matters stand now, he is liable to be remembered, if at all, for his parts in movies like "Destry." The situation in which Mr. Murphy appears here is one which he has known before. Briefly, a meek young man (in this case, the son of the real Destry) is called upon to clean up a wild west town. As a stanch law-observers he wins the love of the honest little people and incurs the fury of the bad guys; his meekness is wrenched off by the insidious murder of a close friend, and he sets his jaw and fumigates the local saloon. And wins the hand of a good rancher's niece. There are several minor characters of mild interest. Mari ("Son of Sinbad") Blanchard appears as a hardened dance-hall queen with a heart of gold and a bare back designed to re- ceive the fatal bullet with Destry's name on it. Lyle ("The Sea Chase") Bettger is the crime boss who cheats at cards, has land-grab schemes, and laughs once too often at the soft- spoken deputy sheriff. 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. THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1955 VOL. LXVI, NO. 7 Notices The General Library and all the Di- visional Libraries will close at 6:00 p.m. Fri., July 2.and reopen at 8:00 a.m. Tues., July 5. Books needed for study over the long week-end may be charg- ed out on Fri. under the usual over- night regulations. PERSONNEL INTERVIEWS: Representatives from the folowing will be at the Engineering School. Wed., July 6 U.S. Govt., Army Ordnance Corp., De- troit Arsenal, Center Line, Mich.-B.S. & M.S. in Mech., Elect. & Metal. E. for Research, Design, & Development.) Thurs., July 7 Dorr-Oliver Inc.-Engineers, Stamford, Connecticut-B.S. & M.S. in Metal., Civ- 11 (Sanitary Option), and Chem. E. for Testing, Development & Sales. For appointments contact the Engrg. Placement Office, 347 W. Engrg., Ext. 2182. PERSONNEL REQUESTS: Mich. State Civil Service announces exams for Building Trades Itinerant Teacher 1V, Mobile X-Ray Unit Opera- tor I, and Mechanical Engineer, III. ALLISON CO. (a division of American Chain and Cable Co.), Bridgeport, Conn., is looking for a Sales Engr. Should have training in Mech. E. or some mechani- cal aptitude, and some sales experience. Service experience is helpful. Between 25-35 yrs. of age and preferably married. This company manufactures abrasive cut-off wheels and is the largest com- pany in the country in that field. For further information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., Ext. 371. Lectures Recorder of the Graduate School by Fri., July 1. A student will not be recom- mended for a degree unless he has filed formal application in the office of the Graduate School. Seminar in Applied Mathematics will meet Thurs., June 30, at 4:00 p.m. in Room 247 West Engineering. Gilbert Be- guine will speak on "The Plane Strain Problem for the Infinite Sector." Concerts Carillon Recital. Percival Price, Uni- versity Carrillonneur, will continue his series of summer recitals at 7:15 p.m., Thurs., June 30, with a program of folk songs of. Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Syria, Israel, Italy, and the United States. Exhibits Museum of Art. "Michigan Art Through Fifty Years" (through July 31). Alumni Memorial Hall. Open to pub. lie. Events Today Ring Round the Moon, by JeanAnou- ilh, with an English adaptation by Christopher Fry, will be presented at 8:00 p.m. in Lydia Mendelssohn The- atre. All seats are reserved at $1.50- $1.10-75c. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Box Office is open from 10:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m. Hillel Foundation presents "Music Under the Stars." Concerto in F by Gershwin and Appalachian Spring by Copland, recorded, at 8:00 p.m. Thurs., June 30, at the Hillel Foundation. The International Center Teas will be held at Madelon Pound House at 1024 Hill Street on Thursday from 4:30=5:30 p.m. Film Forum on International Educa- tion, second program. Evening on Educ- cation in Mexico, including the UNESCO documentary film "World Without End" and "Mexico Builds a Democracy." Thurs., June 30. 8:00 p.m., Aud. A, An- gell Hall. Open to public. French Club, Thurs., June 30 at 7:30 pm. in the Michigan League. Discussion of French education by Elizabeth Jan- vier, Alfred Du Bruck and Jean Cardu, ner. Sailing Club meeting Thurs. in the At Lydia Iendelssohn Ring Round the Moon, by Jean Anouilh, adapted by Christopher Fry, THE SPEECH Department opened their summer season last night with light fare con- trived by Jean Anouilh and gar- nished by Christopher Fry. For those of us who had supposed that Fry's hand in the proceedings en- sured at least effervescence and style, the evening was somewhat of a disappointment. Ring Round the Moon is a poly- glot play, opening as a comedy of errors, passing through various stages of unreasonable and only sometimes amusing intrigue and ending up in a burst of socially "conscious" drama. Fry, on his own, has handled similar shifts in tone with great delicacy and amusement, he imports a little French ballerina to impersonate a lady of quality and steal the rich girl's thunder at the ball. THE LITTLE ballerina is lovely and sensitive out of all propor- tion to her need for such qualities in this situation. When her finer feelings spill over, Hugo has to keep reassuring her that the fun is worthwhile. Played by Norm Hartweg, Hugo is able to do this with grace and verve, so much so that his own personal contribution constitutes what is best in the play. He ex- hibited a winning ease of move- ment in a role which demanded clarity and style, and the fact that he also played the meek twin Frederic convincingly and dis- tinctly increase my respect for an unflaggingly vigorous per- actors play together. One really wishes they'd had more to work with than Ring Round the Moon. -Ruth Miisheloff Red Critic Likes 'Marty' IT APPEARS that "Marty," the movie made from Paddy Chay- evsky's TV love story of a Bronx butcher and highly praised by The New York Times, The Herald Tri- bune, Variety and almost every- one else at home, has now receiv- ed a rave notice in the Commu- nist Party organ, Pravda. "It truly depicts the life of sim- ple folk in America pronounced Pravda's chief critic on May 31 without attempting to show that it depicts that life as being down- 'I 1°, r Editorial Board Pat Roelofs Jim Dygert Cal Samra NIGHT EDITORS Mary Lee Dingier, Marge Piercy, Ernest Theodossin Dave Rorabacher..........................Sports Editor =,