E TWO THE MIICHIGAN DIAiW. WIit1A V WITT w 1 inir& a:vaaavEai aftaaa a .. __ 1 i+'1 WZAY, JULY 1A, 1955 5> fi~r liripjan 4hi1lj Sixty-Fifth Year 4 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. e 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. ATTIMORE CASE: Individual Rights More important Than Face-Saving "Hey - Watch That Shoving, Will You? I .m - ,'.-.,'s LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Modern Schools... To the Editor: REFERRING TO the article, 'Public Content with Schools' -Trow, by Marge Piercy, in Wed- nesday, June 29th, Michigan Daily, I agree with Dr. Trow's belief that the majority of Mr. and Mrs. Pub- lic are quite content "with mo- dern schools as a whole," and "it's the small minority who cause the occasional school fights." Contrary to Dr. Trow's line of thought, how- ever, I am wondering if it could also mean that the present major- ity are too preoccupied with earn- ing money with which to meet their current materialistic ideals to be much concerned with what goes on regarding such a secon- dary matter as education for their children. --Louise Dunworth, '54 A Born Is Star.. . To the Editor: THANK YOU, Mr. Arp, for your review of "The Fourposter." You state, "Miss (Nancy) Born is an actress . . . and it has about become time to ask her why she stays in this area when there are lofter pinnacles to be scaled." You do make a good point but, Mr. krp, it is heartening to know that an actress considers you and .me an audience worthy of her best efforts. Would she find sweeter rewards sca'irg another pinnacle than tha. t kle one of bringing good theatre to an ap, 'at:ve audience? -Kathleen Armstr; ng 'Destry' . . To the Editor: JN REFERENCE to your "movie critic's" review of the film, "Destry," currently playing at the Michigan, I quote,: ". . . he can- ing up another war to insure his not act, and out to consider hunt- reputation." Regardless of the questionable acting talents of Murphy, he has a tremendous war record and this record of a mili- tary figure shouldn't be made use of by a flip coment from a rather inept reporter. --Tony Templeton By JIM DYGERT THREE DAYS AGO, the United States gave up its attempt to prove that Owen Latti- more had perjured himself before the late Sen- ator Pat McCarran's subcommittee on Internal Security. The news dispatch reporting the de- cision by Attorney General Herbert Brownell Brownell as seeing "no reasonable likelihood of a successful prosecution." So comes to an end what posterity will no no doubt judge a fantastic tale of viciousness, irresponsibility and prolonged face-saving. Senator McCarthy began the whole thing by naming Lattimore the "top Soviet espionage agent in this country" because of his opinions on what should have been done about China. McCarthy's idea of a sound China policy, and that of his friends, the China Lobby, were in direct contrast to those of Lattimore and the Institute of Pacific Relations, of which Latti- more was a member. Lattimore's approach hap- pened to be the same as that taken by many "liberals" and Communists. That his prediction for China turned out to be more correct than the China Lobby's only added fuel to Senate committee fires. Lattimore testified before McCarran's com- mittee, which lead to a seven-count indictment. for perjury. The gvernment's main charge was that Lattimore lad lied in denying he was a "sympathizer or promotor of. Communist in- terests." ' EDEmAL JUDGE Luther W. Youngdahl re- mained unimpressed by McCarran's en- thusiasm and threw out four of- the seven counts. Concerning the main charge, Young- dahl said, "It seems to the court that this charge is so nebulous and indefinite that a jury would have to indulge in speculation in order to arrive at a verdict." The government ,remained unimpressed by Youngdahl, issuing another indictment and asking that Youngdahl disqualify himself on the ground that his decision had shown "per- 'sonal bias and prejudice." Youngdahl refused, sharply criticized the Justice Department, and subsequently threw out the key counts of the second indictment, again because they were "indefinite." It is hard to believe that the original accu- sation of Lattimore and the subsequent in- dictment were anything other than politics. A charge of Communism, or following the Com- munist line, was then a fashionable one for use on political enemies. Those who saw this and protested the danger to personal liberty that was involved were either silenced or ren- dered impotent by being grouped under the same charge which the public, in its hysteria, accepted at face value. Recently the hysteria has been dying out, the McCarthy-type revelation is no longer mean- ingful to most, and the country as a whole is becoming more sensible. Youngdahl perhaps was a key figure in bringing America to the realization that a charge of following the Com- munist line is indeed a nebulous one that can be supported only by emotions and supersti- tions. Yet, the government resisted to the end. Even:now, its indictment dropped, it will not admit it was wrong about Lattimore. It will not admit that it let itself get carried away by the hysteria which its right wing thrust upon it. It will remain for a Democratic return to power to bring an apology for the bungling. In the meantime, Senators and the Justice Department might re-examine its policy of stubbornly ignoring individual rights in favor of saving their own faces. a4 Hoover Commission Critical of CIA 000000 I' ttc "14 oy 4,, WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: McCarthy, Welker Split 4ND THEY BABBLED O' GREEN FIELDS: Birth of a 'University' BIRTH, LOVE and death-these are the themes upon which a few writers make a living, and the rest starve to death. Since this is July 1, a momentous occasion, we ought per- haps to limit our discussion to death. There was a time when we struggled for a few months as an under-paid coolie and flunk- ey extraordinary to a mortician. We say for a few months because death-while lucrative- is downright depressing. One can learn a lot about the living, though, while working with the dead. There are, for instance, the ring- siders who--while having felt little or no emo- tion toward the lately deceased in life-try to prove it by splattering both the carpet and the casket with tears. Our sympathy went mostly toward the dogs at funerals. For, wheth- er the dog was yelping happily or laying with his head buried mournfully in his paws, we always felt his eiotions were sincere. We hadn't thought too much about that job lately; not until last midnight, that is, when Ann Arbor went into a period of deep mourn- ing. In every bar we tried there were more tears in the pitchers than suds. It was a sad and try- ing experience. For at the stroke of midnight, Michigan State College kicked up her heels and died. In her wake was born a new uni- versity-Michigan State University. It is not at this point certain whether Presi- dent Hatcher and the learned members of the Board of Regents will send flowing messages of congratulations to East Lansing. But this writ- er, for one, would like to welcome the baby university to the community of educational in- stitutions. Perhaps someday MSU will earn its newly-found place in the sun. -Roy Akers By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-Joe McCarthy made many trips from the Senate floor to the Senate cloak- room during the debate which crushed him with a 77-4 vote against tying the President's hands at the Big-Four Conference. Joe was nervous, shaky, upset at the criticism of his old friends like Capehart of Indiana and Hickenlooper of Iowa. He had to go to the cloakroom to let off steam. What crushed him most, however, was the desertion of the Senator who had been called the "Little McCarthy"-Herman Wel- ker, Republican of Idaho. Welker had used tactics that have out-McCarthyied McCarthy, is one of Joe's closest friends. Yet in the showdown over forcing the President to discuss the satellite countries at the Big-Four meet- ing, Joe's old pal from Idaho join- ed the 77 who voted against him. Reason is both simple and in- teresting: Welker is scared to death of his re-election chances. He knows that the Idaho Power Company is getting ready to dump him and nominate William Hold- en of Idaho Falls instead. Idaho Power wields potent influence in Republican politics in his state, and although Herman faithfully parrots the company line in op- posing a government big dam at Hell's Canyon, Idaho Power does not approve of Herman's other ac- tivities embarrassing to Eisenhow- er. That's why Herman deserted his old friend Joe. Joe has been embarrassing to Ike and today Herman doesn't want to be in the same category. That's also why when Holden testified against Hell's Canyon, Welker hovered obsequiously over him like a hen with one chick. That finally is the inside reason why McCarthy is telling friends: "Welker and I are not on speaking terms." Note-Labor leaders in Idaho" have notified Democrat Glen Tay- lor, the one-time comboy Senator from Idaho, that if he runs again they'll not support him. They feel he forfeited his professional poli- tical standing when he ran for Vice-President on the Henry Wal- lace ticket eight years ago. HIGHER GAS RATE SEVERAL MILLION housewives would have been interested in the by-play which took place re- cently behind the closed doors of the House Rules Committee over the Harris bill, which would over- ride the Supreme Court and take away the Federal Power Commis- sion's right to fix the-price of nat- ural gas. For that bill, if passed, will cost northern and mid-western house- wives around $400,000,000 a year. As a result, there's been so much opposition to the bill that it was Krishna Menon's Paradox F KRISHNA MENON'S participation on the panel discussion of the American Forum of the Air last Sunday night pointed up anything at all, it was the Indian Foreign Minister's thorough-going nationalism. Every question put to him by the members of the panel was carefully answered in terms strictly reflecting the point of view of India. The problems of East-West co-existence, of Red China's mem- bership in the United Nations, and of the strug- gle over Formosa were all discussed by him with a view of the position and security of his own government. According to Menon, each country pursues its foreign policy in the direction that will most benefit its security and well-being. India, sug- gests Menon, is camped neither East nor West, but she is working toward what she believes to be a solution of the problems of world peace. Paradoxically, however, when the question concerning international communism and sub- version was put to him, the Foreign Minister abandoned his extreme nationalism in favor of theoretical democracy. "We are a democratic government," argued Menon, "and if they (the communists) persuade the people to vote for them, they can get control of the Indian gov- ernment." The next question, of course, was what then? Doubtlessly, if the Communists gained control The Daily Staff of the government, there would be no chance of their losing it by peaceful means. It is sim- ply the same question being asked by all free and democratic governments today-what are you going to do about people who use freedom to destroy it? Krishna Menon evaded this ques- tion. One can safely assume, however, that Mr. Menon, with all his energetic nationalism, would probably be the first to strike down ane' serious domestic threat to his government's security. --Howard Walker RuHssian Smiles Puzzle western Dip lomats By JAMES MARLOW WASHINGTON, UP)-Guessing why the Rus- sians have changed from growl to grin Etas become a kind of international parlor game which anyone can play, with or without facts. A little wishful thinking helps. Latest guesser is Gen. Carlos P. Romulo of the Philippines. At the United Nations' anni- versary in San Francisco last week, during a television interview, he said: The Kremlin leaders are having trouble among themselves and want a breather. This was hardly an original contribution. It's a guess that's made whenever there's a major change in Moscow, like the demotion of Georgi Malenkov from the premiership. CURRENT- MOVIES almost defeated inside Harris' own Interstate Commerce Committee. At first the vote inside committee was 13-to-13 and Congressman Harris had to beat the bushes to find one more vote to beat the tie. Appearing before the Rules Committee therefore, the Con- gressman from Arkansas, Harris, long-time stanch friend of big utilities, seemed despondent. He was definitely not happy. He asked for a resolution to investigate the pipelines and the big utilities that sell gas to the housewives in nor- thern cities. But he did not want to probe the gas producers. His hand was immediately trumped by Congressman Wolver- ton, Republican of Camden, N.J., where live thousands of the house- wives who have to buy gas. He demanded a resolution which in- vestigated the gas producers -- the oil and gas companies that drill, extract the gas and sell it to the pipelines. WHY SO LATE? SPOKE CongressmanRay 4Madden, Democrat of North- ern Indiana, whose housewives also burn plenty of gas. "I don't understand the reason for your resolution," Madden told his fellow Democrat from Arkan- sas. "You've been considering this bill for weeks, and now suddenly you ask for an investigation of the pipelines and the gas distributors. Why didn't you file this request last January? Then you would have had had more information on which to base your bill." "Well it wasn't done," snapped Harris, obviously in no mood to argue. "What made up your mind to start this investigation now?" pressed Madden. Harris hesitated, hemmed and hawed. "Is this investigation you pro- pose going to be a smokescreen to confuse the public?" asked the Congressman from Indiana. "No, these are two separate bills," replied Harris.' "Don't you think it's unusual to hold hearings on a bill for months and then at the last minute come in here and ask for an investiga- tion?" persisted Madden. Harris couldn't answer. "I'll go along with you," con- tinued Madden, "if you'll amend the Wolverton resolution to in- vestigate also the new Federal Power Commission. "All the gas producers have to do these days is go down to the new Eisenhower Power Commis- sion and ask for a price increase and they get it. They get any- thing they want. So let's investi- gate the FPC. Let's see why they get all these price increases." 17 COMPANIES BENEFIT MADDEN WENT on to point out that although Harris claimed his bill removing price regulation would help the 4,300 gas producers, actually it would chiefly help on- ly 17 producers. For, he pointed DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN At the Michigan«... STRANGE LADY IN TOWN with Greer Garson LIKEALL REALLY capable re- viewers, I habitually write my reviews before attending the movie. As every seasoned reviewer knows, one's critical faculties can become dangerously clogged if he submits them to an actual performance with all its attendant distractions and details; consequently, the bet- ter sort of reviews are written on the basis of newspaper advertise- ments and the previous week's Previews of Coming Attractions. For the movie currently on dis- play at the State. I prepared my first paragraph several days in ad- vance. It read: "The sad truth is that we have lived to see a Marxist prophecy come true. First "The Magnificent Matador," then "Love Me or Leave Me," and now "Strange Lady in Town. "Surely this is the prophe- cied withering away of the State." It struck, I felt, exactly the right note of wistful reproach at the de- cay of the motion picture art, the note so essential to a really first class review. So it was with a light heart and a closed mind that I attended the Town" was a good picture, you un- derstand, but it really wasn't as bad as some .. . that is. . . I mean it didn't actually drag or anything but it wasn't exactly a fast picture either. It was more what you would call a half-fast picture, if you know what I mean. Just the same I w .. . Take Greer Garson now. I mean she's a pretty good actress and all that and here they have her play- ing this lady doctor in this western town. I don't know, though; if they had written the part better, they probably could have gotten a bet- ter actress than Greer Garson to play it. One thing I will say, though. This movie didn't have much sym- bolism in it. I like a movie should have symbolism. As a matter of fact, I didn't even notice any ar- chetypes. How are you supposed to criticize a movie that doesn't even have archetypes? I think I'll go lie down. --Don Malcolm TWENTY-ONE citizens from 17 states journeyed to Washing- ton recently to speak up for pub- lic-library development in the hearing on the Library Service Bill. This is a piece of terminal legisla- tion sponsored by the American Library Association. It is designed By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst MILITARY EXPERTS have de- duced from recent atom- bombing exercises conducted by the North Atlantic Alliance in Eu- rope that, actual strength being equal, the aggressor will defeat the defender every time. A Hoover Commission report says the United States' Central Intelligence Agency is not produc- ing sufficient information about what Russia is up to. Taker together, those state- ments are shocking, but less of a condemnation of CIA than they may sound at first. CIA is, to oversimplify, two things. It is the nation's "cloak and nagger" corps, and it is the assessor and coordinator of intelli- gence obtained by the armed services and the FBI. It is re- sponsible for giving the President, the National Security Council and other executive agencies enough information about what's going on in the world to let them do the job of national defense propertly. The most serious charges by the commission are not against the agency, but against the atmos- phere in which it works, especial- ly that part of the atmosphere provided by the State Department. It has been accepted that .espi- onage into Russian affairs is ex- tremely difficult and, in some par- ticulars, practically impossible. The commission report makes a point of how much better the to- talitarians d e f e n d themselves against espionage than does the United States. But there is one thing which I think most Americans felt. It was that the last war cured the squeamishness with which the United States approached spying. The value of Britain's great in- telligence service, and the dangers of being without one, had become too obvious., But the squeamishness Isn't gone, the report says in effect. The CIA still has to operate against diplomatic holdbacks. The inference is that the United States is relying more on. kid glove -and top hat.operations than on cloaks and daggers. The fur- ther inference is that, at: least partly because of this, the Job isn't being done as well gs it could be, even allowing for all the other difficulties. Only a part of the commission's report has been made public. Se- cret sections have gone to the President. There is bound to be wonderment whether this section contains even more disturbing statements than those published. For one thing, however, the re- port commends as well as. con- demns Allen Dulles, the agency's director, and proposes an assist- ant for him so that he can dele- gate some of the detailed work. Briefly, the recomemndations are to give him more money for a bet- ter organization, and take off his handcuffs. i, 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, JULY 1, 1955 VOL. LXVI, No. 7S Notices Late permission for women students who attended the Speech Play, "Ring Round the Moon" at the Lydia Mendels- sohn Theater will be no later than 11:00 p.m. PERSONNEL REQUESTS: U.S. Civil Service, Home Loan Bank Board, announces exam for Savings and Loan Examiner-GS-7 and GS-9. Re- quirements include experience in book- keeping or accounting, or with a sav- ings and loan association or banking in- stitution. The Luella Cummings Home, Toledo, Ohio, has an opening for a housemother to work with teen-age girls. PERSONNEL REQUESTS: For further information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., Ext. 371. 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. I. for Research, Design, & Develdpment.1 Thurs., July 7 Dorr-Oliver Inc.-Engineers, Stamford, Connecticut-BS. & M.S. in Metal., Civ- il1 (Sanitary Option), and Chem. E. for Testing, Development & Sales. For appointments contact the Engrg. Placement Office, 347 W. Engrg., Ext. 2182. Lectures Department of Astronomy, 'Visitors' TTirh r idst-yl,.4n,, TZ_,I 8. .mThp Wl a. (; Concerts Faculty Concert: Emil Raab violinist, and Benning Dexter, pianist, will pre- sent the first School of Music recital of the summer session at 8:30 p.m. Tues., July 5, in the Rackham Lecture Hall. Schubert's Duo in A, Op. 162, Sona- tina, (1942) by Charles Jones,; Sonata' (1917) by Debussy, and Sonata in D Op. 11, No. 2 by Paul Hindemith.'Opea to the general public without charge. Exhibits Museum of Art. "Michigan Art Through Fifty Years" (through July 31). Alumni Memorial Hall. Open to pub- lic. Events Today International Student Association will hold a picnic-supper-dance at German Park, on Pontiac Road, 6% miles from Ann Arbor. American and foreign, stu-v dents invited. Total fee 75c. Free'trans- portation from the International Cen- ter, 5:30 p.m. Ring Round the Moon, by Jean Anou" ilh, with an English adaptation by Christopher Fry, will be presented at 8:00 p.m. in Lydia Mendelssoh The- atre. All seats are reserved at $1.50. $1.10-75c. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Box Office is open from 10:00 a.m.-8:0Q p.m. Lane Hall Punch Refresher-Fri., July 1, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. Principal and Mrs. Frederick Greeves, Didsbury Seminary, Oxford, will be guests of honor. Hillel Foundation Services for students Fri., July 1, at 7:45 p.m. in the- Small Chapel. The Fresh Air Camp clinic will be held at the Main Lodge of the Camp on Pat- terson Lake, Fri., July 1, 8:00 p.m. Stu- dents with a professional interest are welcome. Dr. Ralph Rabinovltch will be the psychiatric discussant. Coming Events Graduate Outing Club meets every Sun. at 2 p.m. at the north entrance to I Y } I. Editorial Board Pat Roelofs Jim Dygert Cal Samra NIGHT EDITORS Mary Lee Dingler, Marge Piercy, Ernest Theodossin Dave Rorabacher......................... Sports Editor i