1. Sixty-Sixth 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 "Everything's Under Control. I've Got Him On A Leash" 'When Opinions Are Free, Trutb Will Prevai' AT THE MICHIGAN: Too Much Frankie; Not Enough Joinny "JOHNNY CONCHO" has Frank Sinatra for both star anrd producer. Also seen occasionally are his co-stars Keenan Wynn, William Conrad and Phyllis Kirk. The movie begins with Johnny slowly walking down a deserted street with a look of determination in his eye and a stalk of hay in his mouth. The background music is strangely reminiscent of "1 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: DICK HALLORAN 4. The Sudden Death Of The Andrea Doria THE WORLD this morning' mourns the PRAISE IS also due to those who provided the passing of a beautiful and gracious lady, aid which prevented disaster from becoming When the Andrea Doria dove beneath the agonizing tragedy. Passenger liners, freighters, Coast Quard vessels and helicopters, military calm seas of the Atlantic yesterday, one of the transports all had a hand in the greatest res- newest and most luxurious ocean liners was cue operation in modern times. lost. We have cause to wonder how the collision Yetin this catastrophe,. there s much for took place, whether it was due to mechanical or Yet n tis atasrope,.ther s uchfor human error. With seasoned crews and service- which to be thankful. The loss of life was merci- ableamernnaigaonequipenwhrti fully slight, vastly different if the sinking able modern navigational equipment, why this ofu thesiaslydifficirent alflted.siin happened will be the subject of the closest of the unsinkable Titanic Is recalled. While scrutiny. In this day of hydrogen and atomic scores are seriously injured, the alertness and pw r ocktsdandojetsoespae atli speed with which rescue operations were power, of rockets and jets, of space satellites efectedundoubted ihaesuedpetinsw and deep-sea exploration, an occurrence of this effected undoubtedly has saved the lives of nature serves to rpmlnd man of his limitations. many, and the limbs of more from permanentn injury. THE SEA, like the sky and even the earth, Certainly, the world will acclaim the courage holds a majeste power wth which man can and calmness of the captain, officers, and men do, battle, sometimes turn to his own ends, of the stricken vessel for their disciplined partially control, but never totally conquer. action in an hour of trial. -RICHARD HALLORAN Inaction on Civil Rights f- - A k/c ri Y v Y f 3 - WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Behind the 'Dump-Dick' Movet By DREW PEARSON "Man with the Golden Arm." After things begin to happen and people begin talking-anid never stop. The plot, naturally, centers around Concho who is the kid brother of big Red Concho, the terror of the West. Johnny is living in the reflected glory of his brother's fame, or rather infamy and asserts himself as the town's boss. Then to his chagrin, Johnny is told that his brother has been shot; the reflected power is shut down and he is treated like a com- bination dustmop and punching bag. The bearer of these unfortu- nate tidings is big Red's murderer himself who immediately assumes the role of town dictator and tells Johnny to either run or shoot it out. He runs. The gal, Phyllis Kirk, runs after Johnny but ultimately leaves him because of his cowardice. The "chicken," as Concho is affection- ately called by his "friends" doesn't see the error of his ways until Keenan Wynn, who plays the part of a retired gunslinger turned min- ister and appears for a total of five minutes, shows him the light. Johnny returns to face the music, which is still curiously similar to "Man with the Golden Arm." The ending is obvious. The movie isn't like other west- ern "pitchers" only because it lacks the hustle and bustle of a "typical" western town. The dialogue, how- ever, is typical, the characteriza- tion is typical and the plot is typical-only Sinatra "ain't". The billboard outside the theatre describes this movie as the "Screen's hottest star turns on the heat in his first western." Let's hope it is his last. -Donna Hanson N THE last few decades, Congress has become more and more chaotic and disorganized. No one looks to it for much leadership in matters of national consequence. For example, a few days ago, the Senate sent a bill to the House for authorization; it's one on a five- year study of jellyfish and sea nettles. No doubt it will go through. But on civil rights, Congress was incapable of accomplishing much. The President, who has been called a repre- sentative of American people in one, therefore not chaotic or disorganized, is depended upon for ramification of significant affairs. Yester- day Ike performed a keen, fabulous feat in appealing to the Senate for action on the civil rights bill. Never spontaneous like Truman was in this, Ike amazed most of us. The piteous fact is, the Supreme Court passed civil rights rulings two. years and two months ago, at a timey when Ike was spending just eight hours a day flat on his back and had no excuse for not doing something posi- tive. He could have done much more, or at least his cohorts could have. RUE, he has personally done a few things. For instance: E. Frederic Morrow, who spoke on this campus, is administrative head of Ike's special projects group (which, as some will slyly say, includes disarmament man Harold Stassen) in the White House, and is a Negro. He's a man well qualified for his position, and extremely loyal to Eisenhower. There are a few other Negroes appointed by Ike, too. But however noble this seems, few people will know about it-until Ike's time as President is written and chronicled in our grad- children's history books. And we hope by then that something positive will have been done about civil rights. CERTAINLY when civil rights becomes a cam- paign issue this fall, what Republican will have the nerve to say, "Look here, Dwight D. Eisenhower has so-and-so working under him. He knows Negroes aren't inferior to white people; he employed their abilities; he doesn't think depressed minority groups should be left out of a democracy. He gave them jobs. Be- sides, Washington itself is almost completely integrated." To appoint Negroes to sub-administration positions is fine, but it's a behind-the-scenes accomplishment and it is hidden in the morass of federal government activities. If Congress can do things for jellyfish, Ike must do things for people. --ADELAIDE WILEY The Union's Front Steps IN THE shadows behind Harold Stassen and his "Dump-Dick" movement are such powerful Re- publicans as Gen. Lucious Clay, Ike's intimate friend; Sidney Weinberg, the Wall Street banker; Paul Hoffman ,the ex-Marshail Plan Administrator; Jack McCloy, head of the Chase Bank and for- mer High Commisisoner to Ger- many. They don't dislike Dick, but they do consider him a drag on the ticket. With repeated attention focused on Ike's health, they know the public will be voting not alone for the President, but for the man who would replace him-If these backstage bigwigs wanted someone to break the Nixon ice. Henry Luce's potent publications fired two shots which had the earmarks of an artillery barrage in preparation for the Dump-Dick movement. Life Magazine carried a penetrating, not too friendly diagnosis of Nixon. Time carried a devastating diagnosis of Ike's medical history, stating that the heart attack lessened his life ex- pectancy 30 Oper cent, that re- currence of ileitis was 50 per cent. Though Eisenhower didn't encour- age Stassen, inside fact is that he didn't discourage him. Ike was quite willing to have a trial balloon launched by others with no respon- sibility by him. Stassen has shown courage in various moves around the White House. He was the first to tangle with McCarthy. But he doesn't go out on such an important political limb without a green light from Mr. Big. Chris Herter, Jr., son of the Massachu- setts Governor whom Stassen is booming to replace Nixon, was once administrative assistant to Nixon. After that he became counsel to Stassen's Foreign Operations Ad- ministration. * * * TEXAS TANTRUMS-The Lone Star state goes into its big election battle Saturday with some inter- esting candidates on the ballott. Warren G. Harding is running for State Treasurer against Jesse James. Two men are running who are under indictment. J. Roy Ram- sour, under indictment for murder and facing trial, is running for Justice of the Peace in Edinburg. George Parr, who has served time for income-tax evasion and is now under a new federal indict- ment, is running for Sheriff of Duval County. Last week he was arrested for threatening a county official with a rifle. In Browns- ville, Senator Roger Kelley, law partner of county political boss J. S. Looney, is being opposed by Hubert Hudson, scion of Okla- homa-Texas oil mililons. It's hot in Texas! Cautious Ike-Careful exam.na- tion of Eisenhower's Nixon state- ments shows that he personally never went overboard for Dick. His first statement was that he had told Nixon to "chart his course-not exactly a. warm em- brace for a running mate. * * * NIXON then phoned various GOP state leaders, said he was taking soundings to see what course he should chart, wanted their opinion. Flattered, most said they favored him. Nixon kept a score-sheet, let it come to Ike's attention. Suddenly, just before Murray Chotiner, his campaign manager, was scheduled to appear before a Senate committee, Nixon rushed into the White House for a late- afternoon, unscheduled visit. He had not been on the calling list. He told Ike he had charted his course, would like to run. Nixon's friend Hagerty said Ike was "de- lighted." But there was no personal state- ment from the President, no posing together for photographers, as is customary. After the second, ill- ness, word came from Len Hall that the ticket would be the same. But there was no statement from Ike himself. He did not deny, but also did not affirm. His State Department- McCarthy row, have been to let those around him battle things out. Len Hall's strategy has been to avoid a nomination dispute, keep a united front at San Fran- cisco and before. Len was never personally en- thusiastic about Nixon, but he has been Nixon's best political friend because he believes in unity. * * * ' ADLAI STEVENSON had to choose between Mrs. Mahoney and Mrs. Moroney the other night after the Senator George dinner. Mrs. Florence Mahoney had in- vited him to a reception after the dinner. Mrs. Mike Monroney, wife of the Senator from Oklahoma, invited him to meet a distinguished group of Senators, also after the dinner. He chose Mrs. Mahoney. At her party were George Killion, Presi- dent of the American President Lines, who raised many thousands for Adlai's campaign in California: also Tom Finletter, who will be Stevenson's Secretary of Defense if elected. (Copyright 1956, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) A FINE OLD Michigan tradition was buried in the pile of rubble at the side of the Union while the new addition was being erected. Although the Union has risen from the contrac- tor's debris with many added features, in- cluding a wide side door, the old addition of "no women on the front steps" seems to have fallen by the wayside without even' a decent obituary. , Some one has described a traditional act as one which "no one in his right mind would do" and that "the more senseless the tradition, the better." The old unwritten law of the front steps was one of these traditions. It certainly made no sense whatsoever to walk a date around to the side of the building through the typi- cally miserable Ann Arbor weather. Yet it was a tradition which survived for many years and one which should be revived. OF COURSE, there is no reasonable basis for this revival. This would defeat the whole idea of tradition. Still, after the old snack bar has been changed from the darkest, drabbest and yet best place on the campus to an imitation Howard Johnson's and since the comfortable plush chairs in the lobby have been replaced by instruments sof torture which would be a credit to a Mohawk torture master, it would be nice to have something around the Union remain unchanged. Perhaps the change comes from the great American ideal of equality of the sexes, an idle dream at best. We can no longer debate whether or not women should ever have been taught how to read. That battle has been lost and the battle that followed, when women were admitted to the universities (where their admitted contri- butions to the pleasantness of college life almost counterbalance their ill effects on the academic standards) has also been lost. However, we can still fight for one last stronghold, the male right to the front steps of the Union. If men can hold the front steps, it will be a* small but symbolic victory. In these dark days, any victory is heartening. --KEN JOHNSON LETTERS to the EDITOR Letters to the Editor must be signed and limited to 300 words. TheDaily reserves the right to edit or with- hold any letter. Foolproof .. . To the Editor: THE University's misfortunes in attempting to obtain sufficient authority for their newfound traf- fic cops has deeply touched my sympathies and set my thinking to the task. Fortunately, I have been able to hit upon what seems a foolproof solution, one that will solve addi- tional problems at the same time. It is simply this: the University should enter into an agreement with the city of Ann Arbor by which the city would deed over to the University all the property upon which the streets in the campus vicinity lay, in return for the University's promise to pay a fair share of the city taxes, subsi- dize the city's police force and/or convert the business administra- tion building into a municipa4 carport. This would produce thendesired result of allowing the University to police the streets (now its own property) in any way it saw fit. It could even build anti-aircraft installations to enforce the stu- dent flying restrictions that are sure to be one of the nightmares of the future's dreamworld. Of course, the University would then face the responsibility of maintaining the avenues, which it might~ easily do by establishing City Maintenance 51 and City Maintenance 52 as compulsory courses, possibly in place of the language requirements, thereby providing some much needed mod- ernization for its curriculum. The cost of this could easily be handled by raising the driving regulation fee from $7 to $10, elim- inating Student Government Council and silencing the Daily. -Jim Dygert Self-Inc rimination? * * To the Editor: FREQUENTLY it is implied that individuals are guilty when they take the "fifth amendment" and refuse to answer questions on grounds of possible self-incrimin- ation. On July 11, it was reported that the USA neither confirmed nor denied Japanese reports that the USA was continuing the nuclear bomb tests. In effect, the USA was taking the "fifth amendment" against self-incrimination. Yet, re- gardless, these tests violate inter- national law concerning freedom of the seas and disregard world- wide opinion against such tests. However, all the people of the. i 7 e this brief few minutes of silence, DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial respons- bility. Notices should be sent In TYPEWRITTEN from the Room 3553 Administrdft ion Building before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1956 VOL. LXVIII, NO.235 General 'Notices Golf Clinic, auspices of the Office of the Summer Session and the De- partment of Physical Education for Men. Conducted by Bert Katzenmeyer, golf coach. 7:00 p.m., Thurs., July 26 and Fri., July 27, U-M Golf Course, Lectures Astronomy Department Visitors' Night Fri., July 27, 8:30 p.m., Room 2003 An- gell Hall. Prof. William Liller will speak on "Electronics in Astronomy." After the talk the Student Observatory on the fifth floor of Angell Hall will be open for inspection and for tele- scopic observations of Saturn, a double star, and the Hercules cluster. Chil- dren welcomed, but must be accom- panied by adults. Lecture in Social Psychology, Th first of a series of four public -lec- tures on social psychology will be given by Prof. Fred Strodtbeck, associated with a.research project at the Univer- sity of Chicago Law School, Mon., July 30, at 4:00 p.m. In the Rackham Amphi- theater. Title: "Factors Which Impede the Growth of Social Psychology." Suc- ceeding lectures later in the week will be announced. Play The Wayward Saint, Paul Vincent' Carroll's comic-fantasy, will be pre- sented by the Department of Speech at 8 p.m. tonight in the Lydia Mendels- sohn Theatre. Concerts Student Recital. Jean Miller Bur- roughs, soprano, will present a pro- gram in partial fulfillment of the re- quirements for the degree of Master of Music at 8:30 p.m. Fri., July 27, In Aud. A, Angell Hall. Compositions by Mozart, Schubert, Rachmaninoff and Ravel. Open to the general public. Mrs. Burroughs is a pupil of Chase Baromeo, Student Recital: Laura Smith, so- prano, will present a recital Iin partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Music degree at 8:30 p.m. Saturday July 28, in Aud. A, Angell Hall. Miss Smith is a pupil of Frane* Greer, and herprogram will include works by Schubert, Wolf, Gounod, Sam- uel Barber, virgil Thomson, Sergiis Kagen, and Ned Rorem. Open to the public. Student Recital Postponed. The re- cital by June Howe, soprano, previous- ly announced for Sunday evening, July 29, in Aud. A, Angell Hall, has been postponed. The new date will be announced during the first semester 1956-57. Memorial Recital in honor of the late Harvey Spencer M. D., Associate Psychiatrist of University Health Serv- ice, former Carillonneur of Welesley College, and Past-President of the Guild of Carillonneurs in North America, will be heard at 5:00 p.m., Sun., July 29, on the Baird Carillon in Burton Tower. The program has been planned and will be performed by his carillonneur friends at the University of Michigan, Percival Price, University Carillonneur, and Sidney Giles, Assistant University Carillonneur, and students Beverly Brehm and Julia Hollyer. Compositions by Chopin, Dvorak, Curry DeGruytters, van Hoof, Percival Price, and J. B. Dykes. Student Recital: Eleanor Tibbals, flute, will present a recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Bachelor of Music degree at 8:30 p.m. Mon., July 30, In Ad. A. Angell Hall A pupil of Nelson Hauensten, Miss Tibbals wiiI play compositions by Han- del, Roussel, Guarnieri. Dutilleux Mo-. zart, and Piston, assisted by Linda Reck, pianist, John Mohler, clarinetist, and Robert Quayle, bassoonist.Open to the public, Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Earl Eu- gene Mosier, Education; thesis: "Con- sultant ServicesuFurnished to Super- intendents of Schools by Nine State Universities and Land Grant Colleges in the Midwest." Fri., July 27, East Conference Room, Rackham Building, at 2 p.m. Chairman, H. C. Koch. Doctoral Examination for Samuel Shozo Komorita, Psychology; thesis: "Probability Learning as a Function of Data7Collection Methods." Fri., July 27, 7611 Haven Hall, at 10:00 a. Chairman, J. D. Birch. Placement Notices The following schools have listed va- cancies on their teaching staffs for the 1956-1957 school year. They will not send representatives to the Bureau of Appointmentseto interview candi. dates at this time. Battle Creek, Michigan - Teacher Needs: Debate/English; Physics/Chem- istry; Elementary. Dixboro, Michigan - Teacher Needs: Elementary (2nd/3rd combinatalon). .k 4? A DAM NOT PANACEA: Nasser Faces Internal Problems INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Man and Nature By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst MAN HAS begun to think he's pretty good, In a thousand ways he converts the powers of nature to his own use. He flies far faster than birds, and defies the oceans in ships. But every now and then his foot slips, and nature strikes back in retaliation. Thursday morning the wipds of the North Atlantic were heavy with the echoes of more than forty years. Editorial Staff LEE MARKS, Managing Editor Night Editors ONCE AGAIN the fogs had rolled in, and a great ship was dying with more than 1,700 people aboard, her modern compartmentation nullified, her lifeboats useless. "Titanic, Titanic," whispered the winds. Man's system had slipped. The vaunted radar didn't work or wasn't working. The Atlantic lanes are busy this year, busier than ever. More than 10,000 people sailed from New York alone in one 24-hour period recently. Two ships got too close together in the fog, and one of them killed the other. Four weeks ago two heavily laden planes did the same thing in the crowded air. But the very crowding of the seas also proved merciful. Rescue vessels converged within min- utes. Few died. MAN HAD escaped greater disaster again. But nature had again tapped out her mes- sage, that man is not the be-all or end-all of this world. By DAVE GELFAND Daily Staff Writer WHILE everyone is contemplat- ing the long-range effects of the State Department's refusal to finance Egypt's Aswan Dam, it is time to take a good long look at the Egyptian government and the man who heads it. Undoubtedly, the ousting of Farouk replaced torpor with youth and energy, and regardless of the soundness of its policies, no one can deny that the new Egyptian dictataorship is far more active and aware of the possibilities for Egypt economically and in world affairs. The greatest support for the new regime undeniably comes from its promise to provide the traditionally destitute Egyptian peasant with his own land, Toward this end, about 600,000 acres of former royal estates and large landholdings are to be dis- tributed to landless farm laborers. But this action remains largely promise. In three year, only a ANOTHER promise that sup- ports the three-year-old military junta is the prospect of an indus- trialized Egypt with a high dam at Aswan. This dam is to give the land-starved country one third more irrigated land and increase its electrical power production eightfold. But to build the dam now is technically unsound. What good is a tremendous flow of electri- city if you don't have the factories to use it. By the time the dam is completed, population will have increased by more than one third. Certainly, if Egypt can barely finance the dam with U.S. aid, it won't have capital to build the factories to make it worthwhile and foreign firms don't build heavy industries in lands without resources or skliled labor. Nod is Egypt trainipn its peasants on the modern methods necessary for agricultural self-sufficiency. But Nasser is not blind. There is a huge steel mill planned at Hel- mwa1, o-n the Nil However- mev police, efficiency which the de- posed Farouk never-had the en- ergy to impose on his people. This police rule combined with not too satisfactory expedition of promised reforms has promoted Nasser to the level of villain. No one dares cheer his picture when it appears on a movie screen for fear of unseen blows falling from behind. THUS IT is no surprise that foreign powers are reluctant to finance a project that will serve little purpose other than the per- petuation of a basically unsound government. Undoubtedly, both Dulles and Shepilov had this in mind when they announced they would not finance the dam at Aswan. Where does this leave Egypt? Both at home and abroad, the Nasser government stands to lose both prestige and material power. Without the Aswan dam and its attenant industrie s.vE t can- a ,