Sixty-Seventh 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 Wben Opinonsa"Ate re Truo'. ww PremIV' Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. IRDAY, JULY 13, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: VERNON NAHRGANG Dearborn Center Plans May Solve Problems LHE AMBITIOUS planning for the Dearborn. Center of the University indicates that hie new two-year school may be the solution o a number of problems. As pointed out at yesterday's Regents meet- ng, the school will, in addition to nearby [enry Ford Community College, provide a ouch-needed, competent and economical four- ear college program for the growing Dearborn rea. Easily reached in short time from Dearborn nd many parts of Detroit, and at the same ime in a rather secluded area deep in the rounds of Fair Lane, the Center will certainly e a convenient and inspiring locale for study nd research. Economically, the men and women living in Ie area unable to afford the costs of living n Ann Arbor will find a new breaking down f their barrier to higher education. University will be held back a little - for at least a short time. Students with interests in special fields and those finding it more convenient to live some place other than Ann Arbor will turn to the Dearborn Center for their studies. EVEN MORE intriguing about the plans for Dearborn Center is the concept of building additional facilities as the funds are made available - by other grants similar to last December's $6,500,000 Ford Motor Company- Ford Motor Fund gift to the University. This, at any rate, was the hope expressed yesterday. But it seems to be a very logical and honor- able hope, for where else is a state university to turn for its building funds when a state legis- lature does not meet its budget requests and a student body is already paying an increased tuition? Industry can certainly be the answer. --VERNON NAHRGANG Editor At the same time, as the Regents also made ote of, the tide of rising enrollments at the Inf lationl [HE SERIES of events coming in the wake of the recent pay raise to steel workers provides n excellent example of inflation in action. Following the wage increase, the steel in- ustry announced that added labor costs would wrce it to up prices at least six dollars per ton. utomobile manufacturers are now claiming the eel price will force them to charge from $25 to 100 more for their products next year. ,But what is the real process involved? The act of the mattet is that United States Steel ould easily have absorbed higher production osts. Even a cursory glance at their own re- ords and prospectus discloses that they could ave had profits for the coming year greatly xceeding any in the history of the company. Much the same situation prevails throughout he- industry. Yet the producers saw in the igher wages an excuse to pick up an additional iorsel of profit. In other words, it's a simple ase of grabbing while you think your con- umers will stand for it. Even this, however, does not clearly explain he fact that six dollars each, on at the most wo tons of steel, means a $25 to $100 increase n automobile prices. Nor is it likely that next' in Action year's models will be using from four to seven- teen tons of steel. WHAT ACTUALLY happens is a phenomenon known as a. "compounding effect." This happens when steel prices are raised, say by 5 per cent, the supplier of auto parts will like- wise up his prices by 5 per cent (or as much as the market will take) even though steel supplies may be as little as 30 per cent of his costs. Passed through several suppliers, the effect begins to take on astronomical dimensions. It goes without saying, moreover, that the auto- mobile manufacturer himself also gets in a lick. Yet to hear the businessman talk, inflation is all a result of greedy labor unions. And perhaps the most interesting twist in the whole plot of the story is that the Eisenhower Administra- tion has decided that the way to control this inflation is tighter credit. This will make it harder for the public to borrow the difference between the increase in wages and the increase in prices,, thus slowing up buying and con- trolling inflation. - We must, as Ike said, avoid such "odious" nMeasures as price controls; they are, after all, "restrictive of free enterprise." --JOHN WOODRUFF Today and Tomorrow By WALTER LIPPMANN ONCE AGAIN, as with the budg- et, the President has let it be kpown that he is not sure he is fully in favor of a major measure which has been put forward by his administration. Indeed, in the case of the civil rights bill, it ap- pears that he has had a quite mis- leading impression of what is in it. Thus, at his press conference on July 3, he said in reply to a ques- tion that while he is not a lawyer and did not "participate in draw- ing up the exact language of the proposals," he did know "what the objective was that I was seeking." It was "to prevent anybody ille- gally from interfering with any individual's right to work if that individu'al were qualified under the proper laws o his state" Protecting the right. of Negroes to vte in elections for Federal of- ficials is, in tact, the objective of part IV of the bill but the objec- tive of part III is to strengthen the Federal power to enforce all the civil rights laws, including the law which calls for integration in the public schools. The President has certainly been misled, in fact it is hard to see how he can have read the bill, if he thinks that it is directed solely, or predominately, at securing and protecting the right to vote. For, as the text shows clearly, the bill is a comprehensive meas- ure for the better enforcement of all these civil rights, which exist in the laws but are in fact denied or nullified in various parts of the country. THE PRESIDENT'S lack of un- derstanding -of the bill enabled Sen. Russell of Georgia to score heavily when he charged tht the gill was an "example of cunning draughtsmanship," and that it was promoted by a "campaign of deception." It certainly is puzzling to find the President so inadequately in- formed about the objectives of the bill. But whatever the reason for his misunderstanding, there has been no cunning deception. The text of the bill makes it quite ob- vious that much more than the right to vote is involved. The Attorney General, Mr. Brownell, during the hearings in the House committee and in a memorandum, dated April 9, 1956, specifically included integration in the public schools among the fed- eral activities to be promoted by the bill. THERE IS no doubt, therefore, that the objectives of the bill are much wider than to secure and protect the right to vote. This raises great questions of principle and of national policy. For while the right of qualified adults to vote and the right to nave their children attend unseg- regated schools are both civil rights, there are important differ- ences between the two kinds of rights. Sen. Russell himself recognized this in his sr"ech of July 2 when he said that "the American people generally are opposed to any de- nial of the right of ballot to any qualified citizen" but that even "outside the South there are ml- llor~s of people who would not ap- prove" of the use of force to com- pel integration. In principle, it is the duty of the Federal government to use its le- gal powers to secure and protect the right to vote. But to promote integration it is its duty to use persuasion in order to win consent. The two objectives-voting and integration - ought not to be lumped together, and the wise thing to do now would be to ac- cept an amendment to the bill which separates them. NO DOUBT there would still be a die-hard opposition in the deep South. But 'a bill which did only what the President thinks that this bill does, would be much harder to defeat. It would be hard to fili- buster against it for any long time. For there are indeed millions cf Americans outside the South who think that it is high time that the right to vote was respected. They do not think, however, that integration in the public schools can be or should be en- forced more rapidly than local sentiment will accept it. Insofar as the right of South- ern Negroes to vote can be se- cured and protected, they will ac- quire powerful means for estab- lishing all their rights. I am not sure whether Sen. Russell's re- marks, which are quoted above, really mean that Southerners of his eminence are now prepared to concede the right to vote. But if they do mean that, they mark a very great advance for the cause of civil rights. A disfranchised minority is po- litically helpless. Let it acquire the right to vote, and it will be "It's Not That We Like You Less -" - ~*'- 4/ S, / CONTEMPT TRIALS: History of a Witness Washington Merry- 47o- Bounda A Weather Note WEDNESDAY afternoon we had planned to go to Silver Lake. Through Monday and Tuesday we looked forward with enthusiasm to what we hoped would be a relaxing afternoon at' the beach. To make sure all was okay weather-wise, we turned on a Detroit station sometime around midnight Tuesday. Wednesday afternoon, we were promised, would be sunny and mild. Fine, we thought, just right for the beach. Having some studying to do, we burned good ole electric watts and also kept the radio playing softly in the background. Handles of the clock approached 2 a.m. and soon it was time for "a comprehensive report on early morning news." This, our announcer said, would include the weather and ball scores. As there was only one ballgame the previous afternoon, we weren't too concerned with the sports news, especially since the game was in that other league. And, we figured that we knew the weather.. Imagine our amazement when in a soft, com- forting voice the'announcer said, "There's been a change in predictions for this afternoon.. Thunderstorms are forecast. Thoroughly disappointed, we retired. WHEN WE woke up, however, the sun was shining and only a few of those tradi- tionally lazy clouds were traditionally wafting across the traditionally blue skies. to, because we had believed the second weather report and changed the setting on our clock-radio, we missed the afternoon at the beach. . Now an afternoon at the beach isn't tre- mendously important. But other things planned around weather conditions are. Thus we won- dered why the thunderstorms predicted for Wednesday afternoon and those predicted for yesterday afternoon never came. We wondered, too, whether those 'claims of 85% accuracy in all predictions by the weather bureau are realistic. They certainly don't seem so. -RENE GNAM By EDMOND LEBRETON WASHINGTON UP) - There has been talk, inspired by a recent Supreme Court decision, of resum- ing trials by the House or Senate of witnesses who balk at questions from investigating committees. But if Congress ever seriously considers taking over this job-in recent years left to the courts- some member with a long memory is sure to remind it of the roar of laughter that swept the country in 1934. That year saw the last trial for contempt at the bar of the Senate. But first the American public, sated with reading of depression at home and Hitler abroad, whooped with delight at the spectacle of a nimble lawyer and a swallowtail- coated Senate sergeant - at -,arms pursuing each other through the capital's better-known landmarks. After the Senate won its point and ordered two prominent citizens to jail for 10 days each, the Su- preme Court declined to interfere. Ironically, it is another decision of the Supreme Court-on some- what different grounds-that now has some senators and House members talking of resuming trials with the aggrieved 1 a w m a k e r s themselves as judge and jury. * * * IT WAS the great air mail con- tract controversy of 1934 that led to the Senate's extraordinary pro- cedure. The Senate set up a special com- mittee to investigate. Among those told to come with all pertinent papers were several air line executives and their attor- nye, William P. MacCracken Jr. Between Jan. 31, when Mac- Cracken got his subpoena, and Feb. 6, when he first appeared, la- den with papers and marshalled by a sergeant-at-arms, Chesley W. Jurney, some of the documents were taken out of the attorney's files. MacCracken contended through- out he complied as, fully as he could with the Senate's orders. He said if any air mail documents pertinent to the inquiry were taken out it was by inadvertence. * * * ULT SENATORS spoke darkly of files .stripped and burned. Mac- Cracken and three clients were cited for contempt of the Senate. The duty of arresting Mac- Cracken fell to Jurney, who wore a working uniform of swallowtail coat, striped trousers, 10-gallon hat, red carnation in buttonhole and silver-headed cane in hand. For several days he hunted Mac- Cracken . with a Senate warrant. Then abruptly the roles were re- versed. MacCracken decided it would be best to be arrested by the Senate, then have a court take him out of Senate custody yith a writ of ha- beas corpus. MacCracken tried to persuade Jurney to arrest him in the clerk's office at the District of Columbia courthouse, described afterwards as "a comfortable public office where any gentleman could be arrested with dignity." J u r n e y, understandably con- fused, consulted his Senate super- iors, who apparently smelled a rat. So he declined to arrest Mac- Cracken. * * * BUT MacCRACKEN was persist- ent. He showed up at Jurney's home on Saturday, Feb. 10, de- manding to be arrested. Jurney said no, and MacCracken said he was moving lift Jurney hospitably set up a cot in the living room and MacCracken's attorney sent in a pair of sky blue pajamas, a tooth brush and other necessities. The District of Columbia court meanwhile issued a writ and law- yers began wrangling as to wheth- er MacCracken was or wasn't un- der arrest. Jurney and his prisoner-or-guest took a walk together the next day and Jurney gave MacCracken the slip, leaving hat, coat and silver- headed cane behind to throw the attorney off the track. This action was described by MacCracken's lawyer as "establish- ing the first legal precedent of a prisoner released by the flight of an arresting officer." * * * BUT CONGRESS could not let such divertissements go on forever. Jurney on Monday was author- ized to arrest MacCracken, who finally was haled before the bar of a dead serious Senate. It heard the case and deliberated 5% hours before voting, 64-20, that. MacCracken was guilty of con- tempt., Meanwhile, three of the attor- ney's clients also had been tried by the Senate for contempt, but only one, L. H. Brittin, former vice-president of Northwest Air- ways, was convicted. MacCracken and Brittin were sentenced to 10 days in jail each. Brittin, saying he was too broke to fight any longer, did his time immediately. MacCracken appeal- ed, but the Supreme Court even- tually upheld the Senate's right to try him. * * * MacCRACKEN served his sen- tence in 1935, leaving behind hif at the District of Columbia jail a reputation as a superior bridge player. Throughout the proceedings, he had remained on personally friendly terms not only with Jur- ney, but with the head of the spe- cial Senate investigating commit- tee, the man who made the motion for his arrest, Sen. Hugo L. Black of Alabama. MacCracken is still 'a practicing attorney in Washington. Black is now Justice Black of the Supreme Court-a member of the majority which rendered the decision last month decelaring witnesses before congressional committees must be told plainly how the questions put to them are legislatively pertinent. By DREW PEARSON W ASHINGTON - President Ei- senhower blinked when Bill Knowland of California, Senate GOP leader, reported at the last White House strategy meeting: "The filibuster against civil rights, conceivably could keep Congress in session until October. Those south. erners are awfully smart parlia- mentarians. They know every de- laying tactic in the book." Knowland strongly indicated, however, that he would be ready to discuss a "compromise" to prevent a prolonged filibuster which would tie up appropriation bills and oth- er important legislation. "But the only compromise I would accept," he added, "would be an assurance from the Demo- cratic leadership that the Civil Rights measure would be put on the Senate calendar for debate on a specific date next January." "In the event of a long filibus- ter," inquired the President, "what happens to the rest of our pro- gram-the school bill, the OTO (extension of reciprocal trade), the postal rate - increase and so on?" "I guess it would have to be put on the shelf until the next session of Congress," replied Knowland. Eisenhower said he hoped this wouldln't happen. Once again he stressed his hope for action on the school construction bill. Republi- can leaders nodded without com- ment. They consider the school bill virtually a dead duck, not be- cause of the civil rights filibuster, but because of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. NOT LONG ago when the House passed the Civil Rights Bill, the President heartily congratulated House GOP leaders Joe Martin and Charlie Halleck. He said it was an excellent measure. But at this week's White House meeting, he seemed to be getting cold feet. "I'm a little concerned about Section 3 of the bill," he told Re- publican leaders. "Senator Russell of Georgia has objected that it may open the door to the use of troops. Nobody wants that. I'm sure I don't. I hope the Senate will carefully look over this section and make any changes that may be necessary." There was a chuckle when Sen- ator Knowland suggested that the President should not let the Sen- ate filibuster interfere with his "vacation plans." "I'm giving the House some time off during the filibuster," re- ported the Californian. "Its mem- bers will be taking a recess while we are working in the Senate." "In that case," interposed ex- speaker Joe Martin, "why don't you come along with us, Mr. Pres- ident? While the Senate talks, you might as well be 'carrying on the routine business of the White House in Newport!" The President happily agreed. * * *k EX-SENATOR Bill Benton of Connecticut was surprised, while attending the Truman Library dedication, to see a. letter of his framed as one of the library's ex- hibits. It was a letter he had written, as a senator, to President Trurman stating that his hearings on Civil Rights had convinced him that the President of the United States had the power to enforce fair employ- ment practices on all government contracts immediately and with- out the passage of a law by Con- gress. Under his now framed letter, Benton noticed a note scribbled in Truman's own handwriting, ad- dressed to Charles Murphy, the White House counsel, which said: "Please prepare an order to carry this out. HST." Next to the letter was an ex- planatory note. by the Truman. li- brarian explaining that this i1- lustrated the manner in which", presidential orders sometimes, or- iginated. It was the first time Senator Benton had known that he origi- nated enforcement of fair employ- ment practices on government contracts. (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 2p. the day preceding' publiation. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. SATURDAY, JULY 13, 1957 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 14 General Notices Exhibition of Art by French children V I. , INTERPRETING THE NEWS: The Russian Creed { NEW DETECTIVE BOOKS: 'True Tales' Drawn from Life By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst N IKITA KHRUSHCHEV'S appeal to "let us stop considering each other as enemies and try and get on" sounds fine - except for Rus- sia's addiction to the theory of world revolu- tion. Khrushchev is still trying to make every- body believe that Russia is prepared to con- fine herself to nonbelligerent competition for the minds of men. Yet Russia continues to violate, throughout tge world, the principle embodied in the Ameri- can diplomatic recognition treaty of 1932 - that she should not interfere in the internal affairs of other countries. And she continues to live by a creed which Editorial Staff VERNON NAHRGANG, Editor JOHN HILLYER .. *.,.....Sports Editor RENE GNAM.... .........,..........Night Editor Busies S f holds-that revolution must be imposed by force. Even while talking of coexistence and peace- ful competition between systems, Khrushchev . threatens to break the bones of any satellite whose people act as Hungary's people acted last fall. As long as Russia threatens free peoples with force, as long as she keeps small nations' in jail, she will be considered an enemy by all subscribers to the principle of liberty. As for some of his other sayings in Czecho- slovakia, Khrushchev assumes the guise of a lout rather than a barbarian. When he talks about the possibilities of a loveless marriage between Russia and the West. he displays a profound ignorance of American sensibilities. Loveless marriages are a product of the old world. They violate American sentiment. Especially when they take place for the purpose of en- hancing the power of some ruling family, such as the Kremlin hierarchy. New ooks cit the Library Carmichael, Leonard. Basic Psychology: A Study of the Modern Healthy Mind. N.Y., Ran- 4ram Hiap 19r57 True Tales From the Annals of Crime and Rascality, by St. Clair McKelway. Random House. With detective literature, as with other genres, something new is always something notable. St. Clair McKelway's paperbacked collection of "True Tales from the Annals of Crime and Rascality" is a case in point: something a little iiffurent and, in this in- -.*or.ce, hi'o', y entertaining. "True Tales" (which really are true tales) have been selected from the imaginatively handled "sketches of rascality" which the author has been contributing to the "New Yorker" magazine ever since 1933. There are an even dozen of these colorful narratives included in the present collection, and they sport intriguing titles like "The Wily Wilby" (wily indeed!), about an embezzler extraordinaire; "Place and Leave With". an account of orities tried in vain to trace down the source of the old man's incre- dibly unartistic one dollar bills- legal tender which bore the like- ness of one of our presidents with the caption "Wahsington" etched below. To attempt to describe the de- lightful style of St. Clair McKel- way would be to set out to enu- merate the charms of plum pud- ding. The proof's in the reading- and only the timid need further enticement. Give the Devil His Due, by Peter Graaf. Mill-Morrow. This novel introduces a new de- tective and a new writer, both fol- lowers in good standing of the "hard-boiled" tradition. What is fresh and interesting, however, in the author's approach is that his detective Joe Dust is a Brooklyn- ite who's settled down in England to onerate his nwn nrivate detec- just after they meet turns a rou- tine lost person assignment into a fast-paced adventure in and around London. Peter Graaf has a good first novel with more of the feel and the philosophy of the hard-boiled genre than many of the old pros get into their stories. Joe Dust's first adventure is a real success. This reviewer, for one, hopes he's not kept idle in the little west end London office of the Medea Bu- reau of Missing Persons. Tall, Dark .and Deadly, by Har- old Q. Masur. Simon & Schuster. In this novel, author Masur writes a semi-hard-boiled type story strictly by the book. In this new Scott Jordan exploit treating the fraudulent divorce racket, Ma- sur has lip service paid to a num- ber of the conventions of the hard- boiled school of detection (the de- licious dish and the colorful cyni- icI a m, ii t ,. Prminf +a tem ,. .ill