& cbrmSir4igatt at Sixty-Seventb 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 "When Optnions Are totee Truth wU Prevaul Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all refprints. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: RENE GNAM Concern With Atomic Tests Merely Seasonal Activity W ITH THE seasonal series of atomic weapons that there can never be a solution to it with- tests has come an equally seasonal flurry out a violent reappraisal and reorganization of activity directed to improving, regulating of beliefs on the part of today's hostile nations. and halting those tests. There is not even the real cooperation and Now that last November's political manoeu- trust today to make the United Nations a truly vers have been at least temporarily subdued, effective organization-although, to be sure, politicians in both corners can be more sincere it accomplishes many important things. with the public and slightly less tied down to the opposite of what their opponent said first. UNFORTUNATELY, all this conflict is re- Scientists, too, are now able to make more flected within our own borders. For some sincere efforts toward solving the radiation time, scientists found it embarrassing to favor problems with which the world is most con- anti-atom-weapons-tests ideas simply because cerned. Moreover, these scientists are making Stevenson proposed a halt to tests and Eisen- achievements, both in improving atomic and hower did not. hydrogen weapons for tactical warfare, and Yet everyone may feel comfort in remember- more important, in solving some of the radia- ing that the present activity is only seasonal; tion problems.ithtothe end thery"ol prob, At the same time, statesmen are engaged it will soon fade behind other "world prob- in the usual fruitless negotiating over ways lems" as the schedule of atom tests thins out and means of halting the very tests on which for the season. their countries are working so hard. Then talk of humanitarian considerations will also be shoved aside for another year, left THERE CAN BE little real doubt about what to gather dust while statesmen and politicians the world actually wants: an end to atomic turn to more weighty problems and scientists and hydrogen tests and weapons, an end to begin work in new testing laboratories. the endless arms races that keep some nations Indeed, the attitudes of scientists and poli- constantly fearful of their closest neighbors. ticians within the country are just like those The problem, of course, is how to accomplish of statesmen between countries. A greater this peacefully and orderly and permanently attempt at cooperation would prove much more in a world worn with mistrust and violently rewarding. conflicting ideologies. -VERNON NAHRGANG But the very nature of this problem is such Editor Security Recommendations Poor T ORDER TO HALT "leaks" of secret infor- to federal projects such as the Tennessee Valley mation, the 12-man Commission on Govern. Authority, emergency relief funds, budgetary ment Security has recommended that Congress problems, policy decisions. In all these areas, make it a crime for newsmen and other private as in most other areas, the public has a right citizens to disclose such information even if to know what's going on, and this knowledge they had no intent to harm the national cannot be conceived of as endangering national interest. security. The Commission further recommended that a maximum penalty of five years imprisonment RIGHT OF PRIVACY is another American and a $10,000 fine be imposed on individuals doctrine which the Commission would re- publishing or passing such information. In duce to a meaningless term. The Commission addition, the report hinted that newsmen had suggests that legalizing wiretap evidence in been "stealing" secret information, cases involving national security would be good Two areas of major importance and concern for the country, but it seems to overlook the are involved in the Commission's recommenda- fact that once such a recommendation be- tions: the public's right to know and right of comes law, the police, government officials, privacy, or any citizen would have the legal right to wiretap any conversation. There would be no T E FIRST Amendment to the Constitution privacy on the telephone. says no laws shall be passed by Congress As for the implications of stolen informa- restricting freedom of the press. This refutes tion, the Commission should first determine the Commisson's recommendations. The how such information is received. A reporter Amendment was passed in recognition that does not break windows or break locks on safes people of a democracy must be informed of to get his information. The usual procedure government proceedings, everyday occurrences, followed by capitol newsmen when they need news events, and other happenings of national restricted information is to contact a Congress- concern. man or two with whom they have established This is. a necessity if the people, who ideally considerable confidence and rapport. are the ultimate authority, are to make intelli- Often these Congressmen are only too happy gent, well-founded decisions at the polls and to provide the needed information, and, on if they are to have sound opinions on and occasion, it is the Congressmen who contact understanding of government. The Commission the newsmen and offer information. Yes, these on Government Security would restrict and/or are 'leaks," but it is seldom that such "leaks" abolish this right, provide newsmen with information deemed of There are, to be sure, special instances when primaroy concern to national security, and were it would not be 'safe" for the public to have such information "leaked" it is the rare news- certain information. Such an instance involves paperman who would submit it for publication. data on military matters. But this does not Ike's Commission on Government Security appear to be the major concern of the Com- has issued a blanket indictment of the Ameri- mission. can press. This could conceivably result in legis- All indications are that Ike's Commission is lation which might blot out access to even worried about publication of information re- non-sensitive information. garding the almost innumerable Congressional The Commission's recommendations should committees having "secret" files. Contents of be discarded. these files? Dates, names, and events pertaining -RENE GNAM INTERPRETING THE NEWS: I Ike and the Governors Today and Tomorrow ' By WALTER LIPPMANN AT THE TWO ends of the Com- munist world, in Poland and in China, the same question has now been posed. Is it right or is it wrong, is it wise or is it unwise, to open up intercourse through the Iron Curtain? With Poland we have decided to open It up, and have gone so far as to negotiate an agreement to furnish economic aid. In China, our policy is still one of non-intercourse, and for our part to maintain an embargo and a boycott. But in this we are now alone among the leading powers of the world. In fact, the President has said that personally, though not yet as President, he was in favor of at least some freedom of trade with China. There are in all this two main schools of thought. The one holds that rather than open up we should close down, that the best way to deal with Communist states is, as nearly as it is possible to do so, to put them in quaran- tine. The less contact with Com- mfunist regimes, the better. Inso- far as there is trade, it is the Com- munists who benefit. Insofar as there is diplomatic and cultural intercourse, it is the Communists who will seduce and subvert the non-Communists. THE OTHER school holds that Russia and China, instead of being weakened, grow stronger in the long run insofar as they are quarantined. The real effect of the trade restrictions and the em- bargoes has been equivalent to erecting around them an enor- mously high tariff wall which compels them to develop their own industries and to make themselves self-sufficient. This is costly. But once the price has been paid, the quaran- tined country is in a very strong position. We contend also that while an embargo on the China trade does slow up somewhat the industriali- zation of China, it does not slow it up very much. On the other hand, whatever good that slowing up does, it is more than offset by leaving China with no alternative except to lean wholly upon the Soviet Union. It is important to say, I think, that neither policy, that of re- striction or of openness, will have quick or dramatic results. Re- strictions and embargoes may have troubled the Russians and the Chinese. But the Communist power in the world continues to grow. It has not declined. On the other hand, we must not expect that opening up trade and cultural exchanges will have the kind of spectacular results which the Vice-president, in his other- wise excellent speech on Polish aid, seemed to mean when he spoke of "the explosive power of freedom." What we might hope for is an attrition through exposure to freedom, a gradual wearing down of the totalitarian character of the Polish regime, and the heal- ing effects of more light and more air. 1957 New York Herald Tribune Inc. I "Anybody Tihiiik Tlhis Road Is Too Steep?" X 4T WashEington . . r (o. By DREW PEARSON 4 4 /}t , ,- . f' + . II r , _~ + "' Mh.T ; . AT THE MICHIGAN: 'Young Strangr Poses ema ORR0 TOR''T OBS02 7G disbe- WASHINGTON -- A Colorado W official who waited two months without an answer from Sen. Dennis Chavez (D., N.M.) has finally learned why Chavez didn't answer his letter. It's probably the greatcst postal merry-go-round In Summerfiel htstory. The state cificial, Ival V. Gos- lin, of the Upper Colorado River Commission, had written March 12, asking permission to testify be- fore Chavez .ublic wo s om- imuee on a bill to create a federal outdoor recreation commission. Two months later, Goslin's bad- ly battered letter finally turned up on the desk of Sen. James E. Merray (D,, Mont.) one m.nute after Murray had convened the hearing. Here's what had happened to Goslin's two-month-old letter: 1 - It arrived in Chavez' office on March 19, was then forwarded tia the Senate post office to Mur- ray. whose interior committee had been assigned the bill. 2 - By mistake, the Senate post office sent the letter to for- mer Illinois congressman James C. Murray in Chicago. 3 - Realizing the error, the ex- congressman marked the envelope fo. return to Senator Jm'cs E. Murray of Montana at the U S. Capitol in Washington. But in some mysterious way it wound up in the Montana state capitol in Helena. 4 - The state capitol read- dressed it to the U.S. Capitol in Washington, but by error wrote -congressman' James E. Murray instead of "senator." 5 - For the second time, the senate post office in Washington sent the letter to ex-Illinois con- gressman Murray in Chicago. 6 - Ex-congressman Murray again readdressed the envelope to Senator Murray in Washington, But for the third time the senate post office returned it to ex-con- gressman Murray in Chicago. 7 - Finally ex-congressman Murray made sure that the let- ter would get to the senator. He placed the letter in a new envelope and addressed it to Senator James E. Murray, Room 111, Senate Of- fice Building, Washington, D.C. Senator Murray finally got It on May 15 - two months after it was written, and just one minute after the hearing at which noslin wanted to testify had begun, REPUBLICAN senators aren't advertising it, but before they de- cided to reprove Sen. Wayne Morse of Oregon for comparing President Eisenhower with Dave Beck, they hld a policy commit- tee meeting. The White House had phoned to ask that Morse be an- swered, and leading GOP senators met to decide what to do. Among others, they queried Sen. Alexander Wiley of Wiscon- sin, stanch supporter of Ike's for- eign policy. "Do you think I'm crazy?" re- plied Wiley, when it was suggested that he make a speech. "You're a bunch of jackasses. You're ust giving Morse an opening. He'll hang this right around your neck." True to Wiley's prediction, Morse has now scheduled one full- dress senate speech a week on "The Morality of the Eisenhower Administration." (Copyright 1957 by Bell Syndicate Inc) #< x t JUVENILE delinquency, its causes and its effects, has in recent years provided ample sub- ject material for several powerf it motion pictures. Such films as "Rebel Without a Cause" and "Blackboard Jungle" seem to ex- pose a pitiful weakness in the highly praised ;et of sociological principles that we call tne Ameri- can Way of Life. "The Young Stranger," the movie eurrently playing at the Michigan, successfully contributes its two cents to the rich fund of popular theoies about the "teen- age probl, +m." Who kfluws how delinquency arises ) Some claim society at large is the culprit, some prefer to blame the school system or the church. "The Young Stranger," in its turn, seems to imply that the basic lack or fault in the matter may be found instead within the family and the home. The hypo- thesis is u r one, bit it is, neverthelt ss, refreshingy treated here and finally made pj.iy fully plausible. * $ * THE STORY concerns, of course, a boy, his family, and the police. The boy (James MacAr- thur) hits a pompous theater op- erator as he is being thrown out of a show foramaking uncalled for remarks to a gentleman in the row ahead of him. Angered, and tletrmined to make ani example out, of young MacArthur, the manager decides to press assault and battery charges against the boy and galls the police. MacArthur pleads self defense, but no one believes him. Treated s a h~OtL: an. he decides to act like one, thereby incur ro the animosity of iflN everyone con- cerned. His father, an eminently suc- cessful movie producer, refuses even to lI". to his son's side of the story and punishes h ft fr telling i truth The charges are dropped; the father has too much money, too much presic to allow his son to be punished by the law. It take- a family crisis, seeral out- bursts of temper, and eventually another black eye to clear the boy and to sl-ow" the father ve weak- nsses in his own perspective. TE 1OVIF is a good one. Competent acting is evident in- stead of merely present. James MacArtiur, the son of actress HelenHayes, does a especially notable job a nd aes to have ineirited sen of l mother's inimitable abjihy to crtare the sympathies of the a. ,cnce,. His performancei 1 almost al- ways convincing a the usual gap between . crecn aColescents and the more or 's aolescenc occupants of the theater seats is rarrower than one 1-i texpect. Only in the last iew rmn ttes does emotion become cloyinrgand in a movie concerned with family as wvell as sociacl r,'laticraslups, n is perhaps forva.Ie It ishard frar os everyone to realize honesty rray ,ometimes be pounished whi le cshopesty pronises a reward. Euc., the boy is the movie., tries to pi his no- tions of right .d rng against the world imd is r, er for his ,rouble only i u:t and lief. , , I His relationship Il his father hinges on his honesty but the man, too busy to kr ew his son, merely counters the boy's plea for belief with an act oi* dishonesty on his own part: the iranipulation of the law. A teenager can hardly be held responsible for the mistakes of is parents. Parents in their turn, however, can conceivably be caught in a web of social values that is not their own creation. -Jean Willoughby DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily official &illetin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michi- gan Daily assumes no editorial re- sponsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Building, be- fore 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1957 VOL. LXVII, NO. 2 General Notices Ia'gistration of Social Events: Social events sponsored by student organizations at which both men and women are to be{ present must be ap- proved by the Office of Student Af- fairs. Application forms and a copy of regulations governing these events may be secured in the Office of Student Af- fairs, 2011 Student Activities Building. (Continued on Page 4) 4 t r;, r _,._ - - _ __ v _. _ _ ASKS RESEARCH ON 'OKINAWAN SITUATION': Editor Urges Change in U.S.-Ja pan Security Agreement By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press, News Analyst EVER SINCE he has been in office President Eisenhower has been nibbling at the idea of decentralization of government. Now he wants the states and the federal government to- cooperate in a study of ways to divide responsibility and authority to eliminate expensive dual activities. The President thinks the states should re- sume full handling of some services in which the federal government now shares, and so eliminate some of the double overhead involved. Toward this end, he would have Congress relinquish to the states certain fields of taxa- tion. The Governors' Conference at which the President broached the subject Monday ex- pressed little immediate enthusiasm. Editorial Staff VERNON NAHRGANG, Editor JOHN HILLYER ..... .. ..Sports Editor R~ENE ONAM ..................... Night Editor The states, in the last 25 years, have become accustomed to calling on Washington for al- most anything they want. They help set up "mathing" programs, under which both stte and federal government raise money and estab- lish bureaus for handling it. Everybody pays, and in the long run it is some relatively small pressure group which gets most of the benefits. President Eisenhower thinks federal over- head on such programs could be cut more than state taxes would have to be raised if dupli- cation of effort could be eliminated. He thinks it would enhance the chances of reduced federal taxes. He also put it into the field of a return to the exercise of states rights. After thinking it over, the governors put aside some of their original coolness. Recogniz- ing the popular appeal of such an approach, they gave signs of going along, at least to the point of cooperating in the suggested study. It's going to be a very interesting thing, however, to watch a state-federal task force trying to get Congress to relinquish any tax field into which it has entered. New Books at the Library Editor's Note: The following article is a plea for further research into what its author calls the "Okinawan situation." Tatsuro Kuinugi is editor of the Tokyo University News, the leading Jap anese student-faculty weekly newspaper. He will study next year in America tinder the Foreign student Leadership Project.) By TATSURO KUNUGI Editor, Tokyo University News OKYO -- Recently many criti- cisms urging revision of the United States-Japan Security Agreement have been seen in vari- ous newspapers and magazines. A nationwide movement for a revi- sion has gradually been formed. As to jurisdiction on Okinawa, most critics or citizens of Japan insist there are some disputable and ambiguous points in the Peace Treaty as well as in the Agree- ment and that, in the light of' such confusion, jurisdiction should be returned to the Japanese gov- ernment. How ever, from the tenor of argu- ments heard in Japan, the Ryu- kyuans' desire concerning a re- turn of jurisdiction and eventu- ally a return of Okinawa itself, to Japan seems to us auite different in character. Their desire is a seri- ous one. Very often we have the opper - tunity to meet Ryukyu University graduates and students who visited Although about 95 per cent of the school budget is accounted for by the educational branch of the Ryukyu government - as a part of the national budget-the school administration is actually con- trolled by the American Civil Gov- ernment through the defense de- partment. The Civil Government dominates the University Board of Directors, which is responsible for school administration. A study of the Second Ryukyu University Event of last year shows how American Civil Government controls the school. The only reason given for the expulsion of students at that time -that a July 27 student demon- stration and an Aug. 8 student conference both had anti-Ameri- can atmospheres -- was neither valid nor adequate. What is most important is the method by which students were expelled. On Aug. 10, by a Board of Directors decision, several students were put on good behavior. After this announcement was made known, it was announced that six students were to be expelled and one put on good behavior - be- cause the Deputy Governor did not approve of the lighter punish- ment. We emphasize this point because we are afraid that a partial return cannot be the first effective step for the total return. It would check any national movement for total return by giving the people the impression of a "best possible" conciliation for the time being. * * * RECENTLY Professor Michitaka Kaino proposed a study movement to learn the provisions of the Agreement and Treaty. We propose a national move- ment to study the real situation in Okinawa. We should study and judge ourselves whether the Ryu- kyuans enjoy "more freedom than we may imaginc." In proposing this, we have no intention of <_itating anti-Ameri- can feeling. It is our desire only to obtain sincere and objective re- search cf ti-. real situation, there- by brining it to the attention of other nations and caus'ne the American c:v rnment to change its Okinawan r-clicy. The Okinawan Problems Re- search Preparatory Committee has been established in America chief- ly by virtue of work done by the YMCA, YWCA, Civil Liberties Union and USNSA. However, the movement in the United States does not seem to be STUDENTS DEMONSTRATE-Nearly 20,000 participated in this recent demonstration protest against Christmas Island H-bomb tests. Japan's university and college students number about 560,000. r been withdrawn. Consequently, student government and club ac- tivities are all illcal: but nowa- days the school authority has been tacitly permitting the sparse stu- dent activities. Other suppression saw the Ry- dai Bungaku Ryukyu Literature), Ryukyu's ony literary magazine, virtually barmd twice for non- sensic;I reasons As Prof Ichiro Kato of Tokyo which aggravate the eonomic situ- ation and direct and indirect con- trol of freedom actually exist, the situation would never be funda- mentally improved: We cannot hope for more academic freedom. We rrongly urge Prime Minister '(hi ta visitor to America) to nE gotiate for total return of all Ohnaw an afm ristrative rights to the Japanese. We census e recent compromising i