Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSrY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 "Go Ahead-Don't Wait Around For Any Medals" I 'When opwous Are Frets Truth WID] Prevafl A S. R M yT' E CU N c7R Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, JULY 31, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: LEE MARKS Two Views on the Egtian Crisis -Nasser and the West AT THE MICHIGAN: 'Somebody' Sure Must 'Like' Mr. Graziano "SOMEBODY UP THERE LIKES ME" is the latest in a series of Hollywood gut-and-gutter biographies of famous personalities. in this instance Rocky Graziano. Like "I'll Cry Tomorrow" (Lillian Roth's rise and fall and rise), "Somebody" suggests no message of meaning: it simply states the facts, in sharply edited black-and-white images. And like Miss Roth's story, Graziano's tale is told with what Hollywood calls "sincerity and integrity," but what is better labelled as an emphasis on smut. Whether this is entertaining depends upon how well one enjoys watching individuals scrape the scum off themselves. "SOMEBODY Up There" must like Mr. Graziano, for as he is portrayed by actor Paul Newman and screenwriter Ernest Lehman, he is a kind of low-order primate, whose strong point is definitely not a . , , __s=. , -.-, ., t amp -%W-- NASSER'S SEIZURE of the Suez Canal was only the first of many moves that can only with one possible exception, spell loss to the Western World. It now remains for the West to play its rather weak cards correctly in the hope that the one possibility might happen. The most violent move Britain or France can make would be armed intervention to regain physical control of the canal. Undoubt- edly, either country possesses the necessary strength, but such action would give rise to several odious side reactions. First, France could ill afford the capital out- lay necessary. It also faces the possibility of alienating the newly won truce with her North African colonies. On the other hand, Britain could easily overrun the Suez but again, it has important reasons for not wanting to do so. British inter- vention could only serve to unite the Arab countries in a more violently anti-British bloc than they are now. Actual outbreak of violence in countries like Saudi Arabia could threaten vital British installations there. Intervention by either country would make a martyr, of Nasser. A PROPOSED alternative to armed interven- tion is the establishment of an international commission to govern the operation of the final. Such a commission would probably dlude the signatories of the Constantinople Cohvention of 1888, guaranteeing the unre- stpi&ted transit of merchant vessels through the canal. This would include Russia. The success of such a commission would be dubious. The Egyptians would never agree to it unless they were promised the lions share of the canal's revenues. But under these terms, Britain and France would never join. More- over, Egypt would refuse to join unless the Arab bloc plus the Communist Bloc constituted a majority. Again, the other two would never agree. The key to unfolding the situation in the West's favor lies in wise economic moves against Egypt. Britain and France have already frozen what amounts to half a billion dollars in Egyp- tian credits. However, it must be realized that if Egypt can successfully collect canal revenues at the rates it proposes, it will remain ahead in spite of the recent credit freezes. On the other hand, revenues from the canal will not be a panacea for all Egyptian financial matters. Egypt must still import the vast majority of the goods it needs for everyday subsistence. Until now, these goods were largely purchased from Britain and France with those recently seized credits. It must now find itself a new source of industrial goods as well as a market for the cotton that constitutes its major crop. It is not unlikely that a few uninvolved Euro- pean countries will take up some of the vacuum left by France and England. Though these countries have the ability to take up a part of the slack, Egypt will still have to turn to Communist nations for the greater portion of its trade. Most probably, as astute a politician as Nas- ser did not make his move without realizing that it would invilve extremely close ties with the USSR. Just how close the Egyptian pre- mier will dare to move remains to be seen. It is in this ever increasing tie to the East that lies both the hope and despair of the West. If the economic pressure upon Egypt can be made heavy enough, perhaps the Egyptian government can be driven into the untenable position of not wanting to lose its autonomy to the Kremlin and not being able to keep its economy going without doing so. Under these conditions the Egyptian Government could be forced to take a more pro-Western stand. --DAVID GELFAND - j L y t~ r x -O WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Ike Gave Stassen Go-A head By DREW PEARSON I -Nasser and the Neutrals NAWSER'S r REGENT diplomatic entangle- ments may serve as warning to other pro- ponents of "neutralism" that in playing both ends against the midde there is the risk of being left, as Nasser was, high and dry. Specifically, it may induce Tito and Nehru to play less coy and delicate a game. It is unlikely either will abandon "neutralism" but at least the dangers of walking a tight rope, namely falling off, have been emphasized. Nasser was in an enviable position when both East and West bid for the privilege of helping him build the Aswan Dam. His attempt to capitalize on the fears of both areas, however, flopped when Dulles withdrew United States support and Russian followed suit. While future consequences of his Suez Canal coup are largely a matter for speculation, Nasser's diplomatic position now seems pre- carious. He cannot back down without losing the prestige he has spent two years building up. With more than half the Suez Canal Co.'s assets frozen in foreign countries, an arms embargo on his military shipments from Britain, and that country's freeze of the war debt to Egypt, he does not appear to have scored any significant economic victory. IF HE ATTEMPTS to retaliate by raising canal rates or preventing free passage he will almost surely invite military action. At any rate, his position as a leading neutral with a lot of weight to swing is at stake, and the stakes may be too high. So far the seizure has appeared to be a con- sequence of his failure to get help with the Aswan Dam. At least he claims he was moti- vated by the desire to build the dam. His failure to get help is the result of trying to get something for nothing, a usually unsuccessful venture. NASSER is not alone among the large neu- trals in trying to play East against West. Tito probably plays the game more frequently. So far both Tito and Nehru have run the diplomatic gamut without falling. But their game is dangerous. Nasser's diplomatic flop may cause them to reconsider. -LEE MARKS P RESIDENT EISENHOWER may yield to pressure from the po- litical harmony advisers around him, but when he first talked to Harold Stassen about Nixon, there was no doubt whatsoever that he knew expressly what Stassen was doing. He gave the ex-Governor of Minnesota permission to announce his anti-Nixon drive whenever he wanted to, made it clear he ha never believed in preventing the Republican Convention from mak- ing up its own mind on his Vice- President running-mate, and told Stassen he had a perfect right to propose anyone he wished just as long as he spoke as an individual, not as a member of the "team." Stassen was telling the absolute truth when he said that Ei en- hower would be pleased to have Herter on the ticket. Ike thinks highly of Governor Herter, also realizes Nixon will be a drag on the ticket. But the last thing Ike wanted to do was take the lead in dumping Nixon. He knew it would infuriate the Taft Republicans. * * * THE MAN who was sorest about Stassen's bombshell was Press Sec- retary Jim Hagerty. Jim, who is the most skillful public relations man ever to guide the publicity course of any President, had helped to plan the Panama Trip to show the American public that Ike was well and vigorous. However, Eisenhower himself spoiled this by confiding that he didn't have much strength, which of course took top headlines. Then just as the President was homeward bound, Stassen dropped his "Dump Dick" firecracker which took all the headlines away from Ike's Washington arrival. As he landed at Washington airport, not one question came from newsmen about the Panama Conference. * * * S'ENATOR LYNDON Johnson, Texas Democrat, has by no means always agreed with Senator Wayne Morse, the new Democrat from Oregon. But he showed tact, charm and humor in paying trib- ute to Morse at a big $50-a-plate luncheon held to raise money for the Oregon Senator. "I'd be willing to come to Oregon to campaign either for him or against him," s a i d Johnson, "whichever would help him most. "When Wayne was a Republi- can," Johnson continued with a sly grin, "he came to Texas to campaign against me. He remind- ed Texans that under the Consti- tution they were entitled to two representatives in the U.S. Senate, but had none. "'On* of your Senators, Price Daniel', Wayne told them, 'repre- sents the oil companies. The other Senator, Lyndon Johnson,' Wayne said, 'represents only himself.'" Johnson went on to pay a sin- cere tribute to Senator Morse and his importance to the Democratic Party. THE QUESTION of duck-bait- ing and duck-shooting always makes the sparks fly in Congress, and the closing days of the 84th Congress were no exception. As the House of Representatives swung into a finish, GOP Congressmen Gross of Iowa and Pillion of New York made charges of malfeasance against Albert Day, former Chief of the Fish and Wildlife Service, on the ground that he participated in baiting duck blinds. They were given a unique an- swer by Democratic Congressman Reuss of Wisconsin, who invited them to repeat their charges oft the floor of Congress where they had no Congressional immunity. Said Reuse: "This matter can i'eadily be disposed of within five minutes after the conclusion of our remarks by the gentleman from New York and the gentleman from Iowa accompanying me to the hallway opposite the Speaker's office, where the privilege of Con- gressional Immunity no longer ob- tains, and in the presence of the press, which I shall be delighted to convene, let them repeat any charges of criminality on the part of Albert Day. After the session adjourned, Reuss stepped out to the hallway opposite the Speaker's office and waited for his two Republican col- leagues. Pillion and Gross did not show. (Copyright 1956, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) conceptual thought: he learns some of life's hard lessons (e.g., courage, humility, temperance and honesty) only by having them literally beaten into him. Graziano began as a juvenile delinquent, spent time in some of the best reform schools, was draft- ed into the army, attacked an offi- cer, was dishonorably discharged and sent to prison, where he learned to fight. His rise to fame in the boxing world was aided by the faith and patience of his wife, played by Pier Angeli. Everything, however, apparently worked out all right: in the last reel he de- feats Tony Zale for the world's m i d d le e i g ht championship, proves worth his wife's love and sets his long-suffering parents right. * * ,* NEWMAN as Graziano and Eileen Heckart as his mother act with a great deal of enthusiasm and those passionate, psychoanaly- tically-derived mannerisms of the Actor's Studio, which are all the rage on Broadway and in Holly- wood today. There are times, when without the quietly sus- tained performance of Miss An- geli, the screen might have blown up like an overheated bottle of beer. -Ernest Theodossin LETTERS to the EDITOR Good Edit . . To the Editor: THE lead editorial in the July 21 issue, "What they Can't Take With Them, Republicans Give Away," is one of the best I have ever read in any newspaper. It so hits the nail on the head as to what is basically wrong with the Republican Philosophy of Gov- ernment-everything for the big business boys, nothing for the little fellow. Eisenhower, this year will be running on his record in office, not on his record as a glamorous General of the Army. The true facts are that Eisen- hower in his campaign speeches promised to extend public power, just as he promised the farmers "not 90% of parity but 100". Once he got into office surrounded by his millionarie cabinet, it was a different story. Thanks to the young man who wrote this editorial, I would surely to shake his hand. It is going to, take more than Nixon and his dog Checkers to put the "Great Crusade" over in 1956. - William H. Merrill, '31 Ed. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN from the Room 3553 Administration Building before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. TUESDAY, JULY 31, 1956 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 255 General Notices Veterans who expect to receive edu- cation and training allowance under Public Law 550 (Korea G. I. Bill) must submit instructors' signatures form for June-July to Dean's office before 5:00 p.m. August 3. MONTHLY CERTIFICA- TION, VA Form 7-1996, may be filled in between 8:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. In. Office of Veterans' Affairs, 555 Adminis- tration Building, August 1 2, 3, and 6. Lectures Patterns of American Culture: Con- tributions of the Negro. "The Economo Position of the Negro since the 1930 Depression." Abram L. Harris, profes- sor of economics, University of Chicago. 4:15 p.m. Tues., July 31, Aud. A, Angeli Hall. The "Music for Living" series of dem- onstrations and lectures will continue with "Creativity, the Spark In Music Education" by Mary Tolbert of Ohio State University, 3:00 p.m. today, in Aud. A, Angell NMI. The Soviets in World Affairs, auspices of the Inter-Departmental Seminar in Russian Studies. "The USSR and Com- munist Movements in the Near East William D. Schorger assistant profe- sor of anthropology and of Near ast- ern studies. 8:00 p.m., Tue., July 8, West Conference Room, Rackham. Linguist Forum Lecture, Rackham Amphitheater, 7:30 p.m. Prof. E. Ade- laide Hahn, Hunter College on "Por- titive Appositive." Lecture in Social Psychology. The 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. Concerts Stanley Quartet Concert. The third and final program by the Stanley Quar- ted for the summer session at 8:30 Tuesday evening, July 31 in the Rak- ham Lecture Hall. For this program the group will be joined by Louise Rood, guest violist from Smith Col- lege, in the Mozart Quintet in 0 m- nor, K. 516, and Quintet in E-flat ma- jor, K. 614. Open to the general public without charge. Student Recital Cancelled. Bonnie Glasgow, mezzo-soprano, whose recital has been announced for Wed. evening, Aug. 1 in Aud. A, Angell Hall, ha "an- celled her recital. Academic Notices Doctoral Prelimilary Examinations for Students in Education. All appli- cants for the doctorate who are plan- ning to take the August Preliminary Examinations in Education, Aug. 20, 21, and 22, 1956 must file their names with the Chairman of Advisors to Grad- uate Students, 4019 University High School Building, not later than Aug 1, 1956. Classical Studies Tea: The Depart- ment of Classical Studies will give an informal tea for its students on Tue., July 31, in the East Conference Room of the Rackham Building, at 4 p.m. Any- one interested in the Classics is invited. La Socledad Hispanica, Department of Romance Languages, weekly meeting, Wed., Aug. 1, at 7:45 p.m. in the As- sembly Hall, Rackham Building. An- thony Pasquariello, assistant professor of Spanish and Italian who has just returned from a year in Spain, will speak in Spanish on "Espana: Ciudad moderna, cudad de provincia, un con- traste." his lecture will be illustrated with slides. Open to the public. Le. Circle Francais, last meeting Thurs., Aug. 2, In the Vandenburg Room of the Michigan League. A pro- gram of skits and music will be fol- lowed by informal conversation, etc. Doctoral Examination for Althea Helen whitney, Education; thesis: "The Contribution of the Factors fo Experi- ence and Individual Attention to the Improvement of Motor Skills among Elementary School Children of Tested Low Motor Ability," Tues., July 31, East Council Room, Rackham Building, at 1:00 p.m. Chairman, P. A. Hunsicker. Doctoral Examination for Julia Bader Leonard, Psychology; thesis: "A Study of the Organization of Self-Percepts through their Susceptibility to Change," Wed., Aug. 1, 7611 Haven Hall, at 1:00 p.m. Chairman, M. L. Hutt. Placement Notices t INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Egypt's Daring Key Fact SUMMER MUSIC, THEATRE: Stratford Has Arrau, Jazz, Shakespeare, Films 1By 3. M. ROBERTS * Associated Press News Analyst O KEEP perspective on the Suez dispute it must be kept in mind that the physical position of the Allies now is not much different from what it would have been in 1968 anyway. The suggested physical solution, too, is about what could have been expected if the original agreement betwesen Egypt and the Suez com- pany had been permitted to run its course. It is for an international control board with Egypt participating, as she has not since Britain bought the Khedive's share of Suez stock so long ago. The suggestion for a control board is directed at the matter of assuring that the canal will be kept open to international trade-instead of being used by one country as a lever in its in- ternational policies. Talk of the use of force in this corwiection is premature until the Big Three have cast an accurate account of their real interests. THE MILITARY value of the canal is prac- tically nil. During the last war it was out Editorial Staff LEE MARKS. Managing Editor Night Editors Dick Halloran, Donna Hanson. Arlene Liss. of operation for long stretches. Like the British military base at Singapore, it did not turn out to be vital. In another war the canal might not last a day. The real value of the canal today, then, is in shortening the route from the West to the Persian Gulf oil depots and to Britain's Com- monwealth associates in the East. As long as it remains open, as Nasser has promised, and as long as he does not seek to impose prohibitive charges, as he might have to do if he pursues his idea of making the canal pay for the Aswan Dam, there is no major effect on international trade or Western access to oil. IN THAT CASE, if Nasser keeps his promise to pay the stockholders, the physical effect of nationalization is negligible. The real furore of the moment, then, despite all the talk about keeping the canal open, is political. Britain and France are deeply insulted. They know Nasser needs the canal income for the dam, which he promised Egypt to build when he thought he had the Western powers trapped into paying for it. But they also know that if he succeeds in twisting the tails of the big powers it will add greatly to his stature in the whole Middle East, of which he hopes to gain unchallenged leader- ship. T. . .-....--1. STRATFORD, Ontario, is about five hours' distance by car from Ann Arbor, driven at a scrupu- lously law abiding pace. Being less than 200 miles one can drive there in half a day, and with good plan- ning and stamina, attend the afternoon and the evening's events. The trip can be made with rela- tively little expense. The play tickets are priced from a dollar to five dollars; the film tickets are fifty cents, with the music tickets ranging in between. Overnight lodgings depends on ones tastes too. I don't know what the hotel rates are, but rooms in private homes average three dol- lars; and the YMCA has beds for $1.25. So one can actually pick and choose. Meal costs can't help but be low. Anyone who has travelled at all knows that food in provincial Canada is edible but untouched by inspiration. * * * ASIDE from the Shakespeare plays (sumptuously elegant, both in delivery and costuming) there is concurrently a jazz series, a classical music festival, a film series and an exhibition of theatre designs. Inge Borkh, the soprano who ap- peared in Ann Arbor's May Festi- val and her husband, Alexander Welitsch, are scheduled for a num- unusual films as Kamaradschaft; Marcellino, Pan y Vino, (a Spanish prize winning film); the new So- viet film Romeo and Juliet with Ulanova; The Life of Private Brov- kin; the Japanese neo-realist film The Living; and numerous short subjects of high quality. * * * THIS accounts for the essentials, except the assurance that Strat- ford is a placid, cheerful town, un- hurried and refreshingly devoid of that commercialism that takes the form of little banners, balloons and bauble all marked "souvenirs" which we cannot avoid on football afternoons. The Avon River meanders; there are swans, canoes and swimming pools; and for those who are able, a bowling green, where the old- sters of the town gently try their skill and catch the culture mon- gers hurry toward the Festival Concert Hall. Here in an afternoon recital at the Festival Concert Hall, Claudio Arrau performed two Mozart and two Beethoven Sonatas. Of the many contemporary pian- ists, I find Mr. Arrau to be nearly the most satisfying, for he com- bines a high degree of technical competence with intellectual in- tegrity and honestly felt emo- tions; and he plays the piano with well controlled fireworks and tem- of seeing that the veneer of sound, often faultily constructed, is fre- quently the padding for a vacuum. This is true, at least in his ap- proach to Mozart, Bethoven or Bach, for Ruvinstein's perform- ances of Chopin and Liszt are dazzling. In his heyday, Rubinstein's tech- nique used to be diabolically elec- trifying: today, his piano tone is marmonial and chiselled. Mr. Arrau's tone is warmer, more vi- brant; yet in passage work, it is clear and transparent. Where he wants to, he can create hotly glow- ing fortissimo tones; and yet bring it down in scale and warmth to suit Mozart. * * * THIS description I think accur- ately fits his performance of the two Beethoven sonatas; of the "Waldstein" (Op. 53) and the "Apassionata" (Op. 57). Both were expansively projtcted, extroverted readings. The Waldstein sonata can easily turn into a display vehicle. Mr. Arrau, fortunately, is a sensitive musician, and a man of taste. His Waldstein, while largely spanned and moody, with sudden dynamic bursts, was still honestly felt-and its emotional correlate was con- vincingly delivered on the key- board. The sonics, to use a metaphor, There seemed to be some unau- thorized retards in the slow move- ments, and in the final movement, the left hand seemed almost inar- ticulate for the deep and hurried rush of feeling. But in either case, if these be faults, the results were convincing and wholly romantic. * * * THESE SAME characterizations, even more gloriously graced the "Apassionata" sonata. This sonata seems to be more substantial than the "Waldstein"; but it still offers a pianist occasion for brilliant dis- play. Mr. Arrau was fully up to this, but at all times the procedure was rigorously controlled. Mr. Ar- rau's conception of this work is a grandiose one; yet the second movement was the essence of quiet intellection, limpid and cool. The rest was all fire and manly tem- per, reinforced by self respect, making this "Apassionata" the most impressive rendition I have experienced. The Beethoven works were pre- ceded, each by a Mozart sonata (K. 570 and 576), both rendered with appropriate reserve and fin- ish. The readings were virile and sometimes eruptive. Thus, one hesitates to call it delicate. In both sonatas, the slow movements were played romantically, fre- quent with retards that one won- dered about. (Not having the 4