I 0 4r mtrfltgau DaftlU Sixty-Seventh Year EDrTED 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 "Coast To Coast Without Seeing A Stop Light- Or Anything Else" Tod1ay and Tomorrow By WALTER LIPPMANN 'Wboen Opinions A". re Trutb Will PrevaIV' Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: VERNON NAHRGANG Placement Conference Deserves Public Attention THE UNIVERSITY summer session is fast The interest in the program on the part of becoming a myriad of miscellaneous con- educators, then, is an active, working interest. ferences - with the clear danger that one of those conferences, like the Advance Placement BUT THERE should also be interest on the English Conference this weekend, might be- part of the public, for, after all, it is the come lost in the crowd. public which should be ultimately concerned Certainly no other conference planned for with the public's education. the summer has the meaning and importance Educators from across the nation will be for higher education and advance courses for here for the weekend conference-workshop. .better students than this one does. Their goal will be an even greater implementa- The Advanced Placement Program itself is tion of the program, coupled with improve- relatively new and, at least in Michigan and ment and amplification where necessary or many other parts of the country, still in an possible. experimental stage. In turn, the public should be watching for The news that Ann Arbor High School has the results of this experiment in higher edu- joined the program and will offer its select cation and the results of this weekend con- students courses for advance study and credit ference. Attendance at tonight's two introduc- beginning in the fall is very good news. tory talks would be highly desirable. With Ann Arbor High and Cranbrook both One of the most essential ingredients in a offering such courses, the opportunity for the conference of this nature is the interest, the serious student is broadened - and the re- attention and the criticism of the public. It sults of these experiments should have much should be forthcoming. to do with the furthering of the Advanced -VERNON NAHRGANG Placement Program in Michigan. Editor Prurient'-Well, That's Life! THE SUPREME COURT has laid down the els in dresses which, to quote the editors, "ex- law again - this time on the subject of hibited not only plunging necklines but un- obscenity. Justice Brennan, one of the newer even hemlines of the current mode," although members of the court, spoke for the majority the latter were not apparent (and not missed). in upholding the federal law against mailing At least one of these three, we would be so bold obscene literature, as to suggest, was not only "material having a Brennan went a step further than the law tendency to excite lustful thoughts' or induce and undertook to himself define obscene ma- an "itching or longing," but was deliberately terial as that "which deals with sex in a man- calculated and included in the issue to do just ner appealing to prurient interest." that. This sent us to our dictionary, as it had the Of course we're quite young yet and still good Justice, and we both came up with the rather itchable, and the Court has only recent- same definition of Prurient: "itching; longing; ly ruled that the general censrship of ma- uneasy with desire or longing." That our def- terial not fit merely for the eyes of youngsters inition was identical with the Justice's is tantamount to burning down the barn to showed that we were both using the same dic- roast the pig. (The figure of speech, we hasten tionary; this was gratifying, since we're ob- to add, was the courts.) viously not reading the same magazines. But we're not that young, and while we Just to be sure, we checked the latest issue would not be so presumptuous as to inquire of the largest and most colorful of a series when Mr. Justice Brennan itches and when of slicks published by one of the leading sup- he does not we would expect that he and per- porters of the Administration which elected hadssn oterou pha ea er- Mr. Brennan to the High Court. We got to aps several others of his colleagues are not page four and immediately began to -itch: above an occasional one now and then, even There was a full page movie ad depicting a over some of the pictures in America's "family young lady in lingerie, herself exhibiting many magazines. signs of "itching." It seemed almost unchival- So if prurience be our guide, the publishers rous not to itch back a little. of this particular chain of magazines (if not A few pages later there was another movie the backbone of the American way of life, at ad this one with a little better clad but a little least one of its vertebrae) and many others better looking center of attraction, and we may soon find themselves banned from the itched some more. These wern't big itches, mails, and the newsealers of America may you realize, but respectable ones, surely siz- find themselves with little left to purvey but able enough to fit the definitions of Messrs, the Christian Science Monitor, perhaps not Brennan and Webster. such a bad prospect at that. E PAGED through ad after ad for cloth- THERE is one other aspect worth mentioning ing, cigars, drugs, beer, chemicals and of Mr.'Justice Brennan's attempt to differ- even thermos bottles, and just by chance -- entiate between "sex" and "obscenity", the pure chance, mind you - each one made us latter dealing with sex "in a manner appealing "itch" just a little. Then we hit a two-page to prurient interest." If sex is no longer to be spread - a black and white shot of the rear allowed to provoke "itching, longong" or un- view of a woman clad only in rayon "panties" easiness "with desire or longig," we would on one side and a color shot of the rear view suggest that it might just as well be banned of a scantily clad dancer in a Broadway musi- by the court at the next session rather than cal. be allowed to wither and die for lack of pub- And a few pages later there was a full page lic interest. devoted to 21 - count 'em, 21 - fashion mod- -PETER ECKSTEIN INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Ike's American Economy IN THE WATKINS Case the Su- preme Court, with Chief Justice Warren delivering the opinion of the majority, has tried to set down certain limits on the rights and powers of Congressional investi- gating committees. We must, I think, describe the opinion in this tentative way. For the limitations are stated in gen- eral terms, and no one can know how they will in the future apply specifically in concrete cases. In practice, the application will depend on how much each particu- lar committee is willing to accept, how much it is determined to stretch, the limitations, and whe- ther the court will be disposed to construe the limitations strictly or loosely. However, we have in the Wat- kins decision a powerful assertion of a principle which will influence the conduct of committees, the attitude of witnesses, the actions of the court, and the general pos- ture of public opinion. The p-incipie is that a witness, who believes that his Constitu- tional rights are being abused, may appeal to the "ourts for protection. The question now before the coun- try is whether this principle is constitutional and is in the public interest. Those who are opposed to the decision must say that they do not think that a witness should be able to appeal from a Congres- sional committee to the courts. This is, in substance, what Mr. Justice Clark, the lone dissenter, seems to think-that for the courts to intervene is a usurpation of power, and that, as a matter of fact, it _s not in the public interest that the judiciary should "super- vise" Congressional investigations. MR. JUSTICE CLARK, who re- gards the decision as "mischie- vous," comes very near to saying that Congressional committees are a law unto themselves, and that there should be no appeal from them to the courts for the pro- tection of the Constitutional rights of the individual witnesses. "Perhaps," he says, "the rules of conducts placed upon the com- mittees by the House admit of in- dividual abuse and unfairness. But that is none of our (i.e. the court's) affair. So long as the object of the legislative inquiry is legitimate (!) and the questions proposed are pertinent (!) thereto, it is not for the court to interfere with the committee's system of inquiry." This is a masterpiece of confu- sion. For it begs the question be- fore the court. In the Watkins case was there individual abuse and urfairness because a partip- lar phase of the inquiry was not legitimate or because the questions put to Watkins were not pertin- ent? It is not entirely clear what Jus- tice Clark really thinks. But ap- parently, it is that the court must assume that what a committee does is legitimate and that the questions it puts are pertinent, and that if they produce "individual abuse and unfairness,' it is none of the court's affair. THE ULTIMATE ISSUE raised by the Watkins case is not Con- stitutional. It is, if we are quite candid, whether in order to com- bat the Communist movement, which would if it could destroy the American government and the American social order, it is neces- sary to encourage or to permit Congressional committees to pro- ceed outside the Constitution, Can the Constitution be def end- ed only by extra-Constitutional means, or can it be defended with- in its own terms? It has been on the grounds that there was a des- perate emergency that many sober and conservative men have sup- ported McCarthyism The Watkins decision is ad- dressed to this particular kind of extra-Constitutional investigation, of which the object is to outlaw by exposure and pitiless publicity all behavior which might assist, might favor, might tolerate the spread of Communist propaganda. These investigations are not car- ried on for the purpose of inform- ing Congress how to make new laws. Quite the contrary. It is evident that laws prohibiting these activities would be in open conflict with the Constitution, There being no legal way to sup- press such activities as propagan- da, infiltration, and fellow-travel- ing, Congress with the support of public opinion, has created com- mittees which are designed, among other things, to suppress by intimi- dation what cannot be suppressed by due process of law. THE SUPREME Court has wait- ed a long time--some ten years- before it has intervened in what as unconstitutional process, re- sorted to on the grounds that fire must be fought with fire, that the end, which is to stop the spread of Communism, justifies any means. p~v citroo MADE Fv~om AN tMAILS By DREW PEARSON I Washington Merry- Go- Roid Fi PR06WAY 4 AT THE CAMPUS: Japanese Film: Eastern Western ONE OF THE best movies of the current crop of Asiatic and European screen imports is the film currently playing at the Cam- pus. "The Magnificent Seven," a produlct of Japan, exemplifies all that is skillfully and carefully wrought in these importations. The plot, the acting, the back- ground and the photography of the film seem to have perfectly molded to fit one another, Unlike the recent trend in Holly- wood, the necessary balance of the elements is not upset by the use of excess action, excess cheese- cake, excess color or cinemascope. A simple story, well filmed, "The Magnificent Seven" proves that a language barrier, whether sur- mounted or not by often irritating sub-titles, need not exist in the communication of emotion or in the evocation of human empathies. * * * JAPANESE films in recent years have been characterized by a cer- tain amount of isolated power or abstraction. Rather like the cool dignity of plum tree paintings, they have been, with few exceptions, com- paratively pure examples of that rare phenomenon, twentieth cen- tury classicism. "The Magnificent Seven," however, is an atypical example of the trend. Far from cool classicism, it ap- proaches more closely the well- made American Western than any other familiar form of film, Bandits and swordsmen leap around the screen with the bois- trous agility of energetic Holly- wood extras, and the blood shed by horses and men would without a doubt satisfy the most blood- thirsty of Saturday afternoon cow- boys. * * * A GROUP of Samurai, or pro- fessional swordsmen, are called upon by the peasants of a rural village to help defend the city against the plundering of some local bandits. The men, seven of them, are magnificent, as the title implies, and they not only shape the slumping farmers into competent defenders of their land but suc- ceed in eliminating the threat of the bandits altogether. After many skirmishes and battles, the farmers return to their fields and the soldiers, only three at the end, start off for an- other town. The inevitability of war and the compulsive heroism that forces men to fight are here treated with persuasive delicacy and force. * * . YET THE movie is more than a blood and thunder tale of war; it is as well a story of people. The sub-plots are few and large- ly undeveloped, but thty commun- icate a feeling of the completeness of this segment of life to the viewer. An ignorant farmer who has perhaps said three words in the film dies at the end and his murder affects us as much as that of the most worshipped of the swordsmen. The careful touches of classic skill and simplicity are not miss- ing from this film, but are assimi- lated with an essentially romantic plot to form a successful fusion of two traditions. The acting is naturalistic and, in fact, superb. The photography effectively blends it, the plot, and the beauties of the Japanese coun- tryside into a triply impressive whole. In particular, the shots of a love scene in a hillside forest are beautifully handled. "The Magnificent Seven"is an- other laudable Asiatic contribution to the development of the motion picture as a semi-serious art form. -Jean Willough WASHINGTON - This column was the fir at to reveal that, ex-congressman Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr., had been hired by Dictator Trujillo of the Dominican Republic. It's only fair, therefore, to report on other relatives of those in high places who have been playing footsie with the Caesar of the Caribbean. The list includes: 1. The son-in-law of John Fos- ter Dulles, Robert Hinshaw, 2. The brother-in-law of Presi- dent Eisenhower, Colonel Gordon Moore. 3. The ex-assistant secretary of state in charge in Latin American affairs, Henr.y Holland. The chief source of Dictator Trujillo's wealth is the Dominican sugar industry. He owns most of the sugar mills in his country. It was no accident, therefore, that Congress last year increased the quota of Dominican sugar ad- t mitted to the United States. It took this action despite opposing pressure of beet sugar growers In our Rocky Mountain states and cane growers in Louisiana. HERE IS part of the backstage story of what happened: In 1954, Dulles' son-in-law of- fered to help Trujillo get his su- gar quota increased. The dictator then sent his personal plane, a luxurious flying yacht, the "San Cristobal," to fly Dulles' daugh- ter, Mrs. Robert Hinshaw, her husband, and children to the Do- minican Republic. For three months the Hinshaws stayed at the beautiful seashore Hotel Jaragua, running a bill of no small proportions. Hinshaw tried to promote several deals with the dictator, finally overstayed his welcome. Trujillo paid his bills. Hinshaw, when queried by this column as to why he had not registered as a foreign agent, as required if an American works for or accepts funds to represent a foreign government, said that he did not do any work for Trujillo, Informed that some people reg- istered if they received expenses from a foreign government, Hin- shaw admitted that his expenses were paid, but did not agree that he should have registered. * * * UNDER THE Foreign Registra- tion Act there is nothing wrong about an American working for a foreign government, but it speci- fied that the American public has a right to know when someone is so working. The law firm of Secretary of State Dulles has been registered in thepast as working for various foreign governments; also the law firm of ex-Secretary Dean Ache- son. It is a criminal offense not to register. Note - The Justice Department recently indicted John Frank, an ex-FBI agent who wired Trujil- lo's palace for sound, for failing to register as a foreign agent. ONE FORMER high official who definitely helped put across Trujillo's sugar quota increase is able Henry Holland, former top official in the State Department for Latin American Affairs. Holland scarcely got out of the State Department when he headed for the Dominican Republic. He not only made several trips, but got on the payroll of TruIlbo's 't mining consultant, William Paw- ley, the former ambassador to Brazil. It can be argued that Holland gets his fees directly from Pawley therefore doesn't have to register. Likewise Franklin Roosevelt Jr. might have argued that he got his fees through Charles Patrick Clark, lobbyist for both Franco and Trujillo. However, Roosevel registered. (Copyright 1957 by Bell Syndicate Inc.) DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin 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.mi. Friday. THURSDAY, JUNEN'7. 1957 VOL. LXVII!, NO 3 General Notices Standards of Conduct: All students, graduate and under- graduate, are notified of the follow- ing standards of conduct: Enrollment in the University car- ries with it obligations in regard to '' conduct not only inside but outside the classrooms and students are ex- pected to conduct themselves in such a manner as to be a credit to them- selves and to the University. They are amenable to the rules and orders of the University officials and they are expected to observe the standards of f AT THE MICHIGAN: Webb, Bugs Bunny Show Talents By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst President Eisenhower suggested yesterday that American labor should base its wage in- crease demands on increased productivity and that management should eschew price in- creases except for business expansion. That would strike at one of the most cher- ished labor practices of recent years - the principle of progressive increases. But the President says it is one important thing needed to stop the danger of inflation. It's not just the "danger" of inflation this country faces. Inflation is already here. Two years ago the Washington economists thought they had learned pretty well how to keep the nation's economy on a stable basis. This confidence was directed primarily to- ward prevention of depressions, since there had been no serious disruption after the Korean War. One of the chief reliances was control of the supply of money through Federal Reserve manipulation of interest rates. That was ex- pected to control inflation too, if needed. Editorial Staff VERNON NAHRGANG, Editor JOHN ELLYER ...................... Sports Editor RENE GNAM ..............:..........Night Editor Business Staff Instead of depression, the inflation of the war periods was resumed. To meet it, labor has been demanding in- creased wages year after year. Contracts were made providing for raises keyed to the cost of living. Management passed the constantly increas- ing costs along to consumers. Nevertheless, most people have been doing fine. But the labor pay envelope catches up with increased living costs only sporadically. The purchasing power of dividends, of farm produce, of salaries, goes down so steadily that people who have grown accustomed to better living than enjoyed by their fathers are seriously pinched. Prosperity is great, but uncomfortAble. There is grave question whether such a- com- pleX situation can be solved by the President's suggestion that most of it can be handled by a conservative labor approach to increased wages in manufacture, and a management hold-down on prices not needed for plant ex- pansion. "Hard money" has not provided the answer, although it has had some effect. Secretary Humphrey says he thinks it will - in another month or so - prove its effectiveness. Many other economists are not as sure as they were two years ago. The President may not want to violate what he considers fundamental principles of the American economy, but he may yet have to come around to greater controls than at pres- ent. Mo, , Rn n ke "t thop Libhr rv ANYONE passing the Michigan Theatre might suspect a dis- gruntled employee was playing a TV set too loud in the lobby. But not so. It's Jack Webb and his boys shouting their way through "The D.I." D.I. means Drill Instructor, a sort of Marine-type teaching fel- low who takes the new recruits and explains all the secrets of the organization, like how to take apart a rifle and how to lose weight. The Marine Corps is supposed to have cooperated in filming "The D.I." and probably another chap- ter of the Jack Webb Story will not do them too much harm. * * * JACK WEBB, master of the cliche, the snide remark, the quick phrase, the cold stare, the signifi- cant grunt, the impatient twitch, and the hard answer has put to- gether a series of grunts, twitches, stares, remarks and answers and produced another Mark VII affair. Webb plays the role of a drill instructor who turns boys into men and vice versa. He is a dedi- cated Marine who doesn't like women,booze, gambling, or even Dragnet. But eventually he learns to like women. Don Dubbins is the everpresent misfit who is eventually salvaged by Webb's treatment and becomes a good Marine. This story has been filmed many times before with dif- ferent people in the parts, but the difference here is Jack Webb. Webb is like Jose Ferrer in "Cy- rano." \Webb is on stage all the time. If you look away from the screen, there are big pictures of, Webb all over the theatre. Even the spiders in the basement are spinning webbs for the occasion (instead of ordinary webs). After Webb shouts at Dubbins for an hour, his inner ear bursts, and he becomes a Man. Webb's voice gives out and he retires with some girl he found. In brief: "The D.I." is good for a few laughs and a aching head. THE SHORT subjects immedi- ately preceding "The D.I." (or following it, depending on when you come in) are curious. The first deals with a little Bavarian town with an unpro- nounceable name which has a festival every year because it at- tracts tourists, and visiting cam- eramen. qstensibly though, the festival commemorates the fall of the village to the Swedish army in 1650. It's very colorful and will turn your optic nerve into a tangle of riotous impulses as the rods and cones try to keep up with Techni- color. After all the excitement, the simple life of Bugs Bunny is a source of much relief to ears weary from shouting Webb and the charge of the Swedish army. Coming Attractions: Rock Hud- son in "Something of Value," the best chronicle of the African situ- ation since I Remember Mau Mau. -David Kessel Financial Roundup 't LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibier -- - -- C C) ( 3 NEW YORK (/P)-An early ad- vance was erased by the stock market as volume dwindled to the lightest in nearly three months. r