Sixty-Eighth 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 Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editdrs. This must be noted in all reprints. ESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT JUNKER Primary Race Raises Question Of Eletive S eif' Ps t "Now, Would You Mind Raising Your Little Finger?" r r o . BUT STILL PRO-WEST: Neutralism Appealing To Postwar Japan By The Associated Press TOKYO-Japan, industrial giant of Asia, is moving on historical tides toward a more neutral, but still Western-oriented role in world affairs. Economics, fear and deeply rooted abhorrence of international en- tanglement appear to be teaming up to produce this result. Prime Minister Kishi and his conservative Liberal-Democrats in June launched a new government pledged to continue close ties with the non-Communist world. Yet pressures against this posture are strong and insistent. Most imperative is the problem of making a living. Last year Japan sold $372,000,000 in goods and services and bought $4,307,000,000, leaving a staggering gap of 585 million dollars in its international balance of trade. To cover the deficit Japan must trade 4. ELECTION DAY supposedly is a time when the voters evaluate the candidates and vote ccordingly. Unfortunately, the theory fails to hold up midst the common practice of voting for the arty, not the man and the voters' tendency to ive only casual attention to the many minor ffices. Because of this, the primary contests for some osts loom much higher in importance than the eneral election, for in a number of areas, in- luding Washtenaw county, nomination by the ominate party is tantemount to election, specially for the local county offices which the oters usually ignore in favor of the more pectacular statewide and national races. 'HAT TODAY'S primary race for the often slighted sheriff's post has gained the center f attention is at least partly because there is ttle else to arouse interest. There is no contest >r the Republican nomination in the top state aces and the controlling Democratic group led y Gov. G. Mennen Williams is apparently in no anger from the insurgent Democratic Club of [ichigan. But also, for a change, there has been some ntroversy in the race as words flew between heriff Robert Lillie and George Peterson, a rmer member of the department, who was red the day after he announced his candidacy. The controversies, partially centering around issing items, including money from the Flower ind, have quieted down in the last weeks of ie campaign, but the questions they raised still iger. A somewhat similar controversy flared up in eghboring Wayne County where, finally, one the dozen or so candidates for the Demo-. atic nomination demanded an investigation the department.. OCALLY, three men are seeking the Republi- can nomination and four the Democratic. Legions, Legions FEW NOTES from New York remind us that the religious scene is still far from R Zeventful.1 At an international conclave in New York ty, the Jehovah's Witnesses (described as an rderly" group by hotel managers) have con- mned leaders of organized Christianity fort t being other-world directed.] Witnesses believe that only they will inherit e new world of peace and everlasting lifet zich will come as soon as this world ends,C clich will be soon. [EANWnHLE, the state convention of the x American Legion (never called an orderly s oup by anyone); is also being held in New c rk City, and Legion officials are a trifle eved that the Witnesses are getting more i bblicity. rhe Legion is especially upset since this rivalt oup is the one which has refused to salute e American flag on Biblical grounds. But the t gion is hardly likely to pass any resolutionsc sweeping as this condemnation of organized INTERPRETING THE NEWS: This is in interesting contrast to the primaries for County Clerk, Register of Deed, County Treasurer, Drain Commissioner, Surveyor and Coroner, where only one Republican and one Democrat are running for their party's nomina- tion. Obviously, there are more advantages to being sheriff, at least from the viewpoint of power, and the questions raised over missing funds raise one even more important than who was responsible for what. The competition, and its nature for the sheriff's job raises the basic question of whether it should continue as a political post. Law enforcement should not be a matter of political affiliation or of vote getting ability. As with other fields, law enforcement is getting more complex and scientific in its methods. The important criterea should be ability and training and it seems doubtful that these qualities are judged at the polls or are brought forward during the election campaign. THE SHERIFF'S JOB is a legacy from old England, and while the method of county organization and enforcement might have been effective in the past, today's conditions demand abolishment of the archaic position. With modern communications, an enlarged state police organization should be able to provide for Michigan's non-urban areas, a law enforcement agency that would be better train- ed, more efficient and free from the suspicion- arousing controversies such as questionably handled flower funds. If state wide control of law enforcement seems unfeasible at least in the near future; it might well be worth considering putting the sheriff's job on a non-political basis, perhaps similar to the city manager's post. -MICHAEL KRAFT Co-Editor Legions and BB Christianity; they may not even condemn the Girl Scouts this year, so it is easy to see how the Witnesses have picked up all this notoriety. 1WHILE the Witnesses and the American Le- gion match headlines in New York, an- other Legion is matching wits with a Lake Placid theatre manager. Upset by either the film's misleading title, or the costumes of its leading lady, the Legion of Decency has condemned "And God Created Woman" as unfit for human consumption. Starring Brigitte Bardot and her atomic bomb neckline (80 per cent fallout), the picture was shown in spite of the condemnation and box office receipts poured in. But now theatre manager James McLaughlin is definitely on the banned wagon, for his theatre has been placed under a six-months ban by the pastor of St. Agnes Catholic Church. The Lake Placid American Legion Post is, unfortunately, unavailable for comment on this curious state of affairs. -DAVID KESSEL g WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: * Insurance Companies Hit ill By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON - A hot battle to safeguard labor's welfare and pension fundsis coming to a head in the House of Representa- tives tomorrow. All sorts of wires are being pulled backstage to amend the pension bill already passed by the Senate. Strangely, the wires are being pulled by the insurance companies. The labor leaders are trying to get the bill passed. What the insurance companies object to is the Senate bill's re- quirement that business as well as labor disclose the facts regarding welfare and pension funds. It hasn't made headlines, but some whopping big commissions have been paid by employer and insurance groups in the past to get these lucrative welfare funds. One set of commissions totaled $1 million and the insurance com- panies don't want to disclose them. However, two congressmen will introduce amendments to change the Senate bill. They are: 1) Congressman Bill Ayres (R- Ohio) who would exempt all pen- sion funds to which workers do not contribute. 2) Congressman Albert Bosch of Woodhaven, N.Y.. will introduce a resolution exempting all pension funds operated by employers. This is what the insurance companies are plugging for. * * * CONGRESSMAN Bosch is now coming through for the insurance companies. He believes that labor unions only are guilty of dis- honesty. Unfortunately, the records of the fidelity and deposit company of Baltimore, which bonds the em- ployees of banks, insurance com- panies, and business firms, show to the contrary. They, show that business theft has increased 400 per cent in the past 10 years. There is now an average of one- half billion dollars a year stolen or embezzled from banks and busi- ness firms by executives and em- ployees of those firms. This is an average of $2 million for every working day of the year. The amounts stolen from labor's pension and welfare funds by union executives as revealed by Senate probers were nowhere near this total. * * * THE Republicans have devel- oped a new technique for knocking out key Democrats, which the Democrats call "Nasserism." It's the technique dictator Nasser has used in Lebanon, Saudi Arabia and Iraq - boring from within, If the Republicans find they can't defeat an important Demo- crat in a straight election, they put a candidate in the Democratic primary to run as a Republican. This is what happened when Wil- liam "Cowboy" Blakley, the Eisen- hower Democrat, ran against Sen. Ralph Yarborough and lost. This week it's happening in Tennessee, where Republicans are putting up all sorts of money to try to defeat young, moderate Sen. Albert Gore. Gore had the courage to take some tough positions. He has fought for reciprocal trade, which a fellow Tennessean, Cordell Hull, pioneered as secretary of state. He also balked at signing the south- ern manifesto. - As a result, Dixiecrats, high- tariff Republicans, and the big insurance companies have been flooding Tennessee with money, full-page ads, expensive billboards to defeat Gore in the Democratic primary. It looks, however, as if the people of Tennessee lean to- ward the senator with less money more than toward his opponent with a lot of money. * * * OUT in Missouri, Republicans are trying to Nasserize another Democrat, Congressman Morgan Moulder of Camdenton. Moulder is the former chairman of the Legis- lative Oversight Committee who started the investigation of Sher- man Adams and Bernard Gold- fine, Commissioner Mack of the FCC, channel 10 in Miami, and channel 5 in Boston. When his committee insisted on firing his counsel, Bernard Schwartz, Moulder stepped down as chairman. Since then every investigation Moulder started has been substan- tiated. The result has been one of the most important probes of the year. THE ARMY will ship private Elvis Presley, the rock-and-roll singer, to the Third Armored Divi- sion in Germany. Some third armored' units in Germany have, been alerted for action in the Near East. . . . Government agents have quietly cracked down on a Soviet trade ring which has been buying up chemicals used to manufacture rocket fuel. The ring has been falsifying export licenses in order to ship strategic chemicals, such as boron, behind the Iron Curtain. Several American businessmen may be Indicted.... Ike's chief economic adviser, Raymond Saulnier, has advised the President that the Middle East crisis should pull the United States out of the. recession.± Increased spending for defense, he said, should stimulate business. ' While the Chinese Communists are hailing independence for the Moslems of the Middle East, they are suppressing their own Moslems in China. The Chinese have just smashed a Nationalist movement among the Moslems of Chinese, Turkestan in Eastern China where the' Moslems. actually outnumber the Moslems in Iraq., (Copyright 1958 by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) wherever it can. This includes the Communist world and Asia main- land, particularly Red China, a nation with which it has no dip- lomatic relations. * * * CHINA is considered by many Japanese a market of great poten- tial, capable of purchasing more than 200 million dollars n Jap- anese. goods annually, although 1957 trade totaled only 60 million. China severed trade relations with Japan early this year in a squabble about flying its flag over a trade mission in Tokyo, and made it plain it wants diplomatic concessions as the price for re- newal. There is strong sentiment for paying the price-a definite move toward the neutral center in the cold war - even though proper development of the American market is a far greater source of potential revenue. AN EQUALLY strong pressure toward a middle of the road, posi- tion is Japan's fear of getting caught in an East-West shooting war. Of much more -immediate concern to virtually all Japanese are the American air bases in Japan. Many view them as an open in- vitation to atomic attack. Kishi already has negotiated removal of the last American combat ground troops. The slow pullout of air units is expected as Japan's own air forces enlarges, severing an- other tie with the Western alli- ance. American withdrawal is a cher- ished Japanese dream. It touches a deep chord in Japanese psy- chology - the desire to avoid foreign interference of any type. COGNAC: Kiey French Export By The Associated Press W ASHINGTON - It would be hard to imagine Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson, a Mormon and teetotaler, out peddling booze so that United States farmers could sell more corn. Yet here is Henri Coquillaud, a French government official, hit- ting the international road and trying to get more people to drink more cognac, for the glory and gain of France. Coquillaud is known among his friends - at least among his friends who are press agents - as Mr. Cognac. He polices the indus- try at home and pushes the stuff abroad. After listening to him,, it now can be reported: THAT this is a strange world, and nowhere is it stranger than in the field of economics. France's finances lean heavily on an area, only a fourth the size of Rhode Is- land, with soil so chalky and rocky it's fit for little except the grapes that make cognac. That though brandy is made the world over, no other spot can blend soil as poor with climate as good - Coquilaud is vehement about this - as Cognac. Cognac is a town, a region and a drink. That cognac is the most impor- t.nt export France has right now, even more important than those little cars that have Detroit con- cerned. Why? "Because with cars the steel and other things must be bought. But the cognac, we pro- duce it all." That 80 mil n bottles of cognac are produced each year. The peddle the rest all over the world. "Cognac is the drink of the gods," Victor Hugo once said. That cognac consumption in this country has increased steadily. Last year Americans sipped five million bottles of the brandy, as compared with one million in 1952. Both father and son looked de- lighted as they passed along this intelligence. * . , THAT the British Isles, with a much smaller population, use eight million bottles of cognac an- nually. That's because of a belief -apparently shared by many British doctors -- that cognac is good for what ails you. "It's in every medicine chest," Jean Pierre KUWAIT: rVery Rich By The Associated Press WASHINGTON -- In all the dreary and often frightening news from the Near East, at least one item always is a joy to con- template. The Sheik of Kuwait, the stories say, is one of the world's richest men, with an annual income of 200 million dollars -- and no in- come tax to pay. But for heaven's sake, what's Kuwait? Is it a fruit? A tropical lisease? A new soft drink? The phonetic spelling of a bird call? The dictionary says you pro-, nounce it koo-wite or ko-wate with the accent on the second syllable in either case. * * * IF YOU peer closely enough at a map of the Near East, you'll find the sandblown country of Kuwait, up at the top of the Persian Gulf. It looks sort of like the head of a knight in armor, with an elon- gated jaw jutting out to help form Kuwait Bay on which the town of Kuwait is located. To the north is troubled Iraq. To the south is Saudi Arabia. But never mind what's on each side of Kuwait. It's what is underneath that counts. Oil! Beneath Kuwait's sand may be the biggest pool of oil in the world. With our Puritan heritage, we still like to think that success comes only to those who labor like ants, It's something of a shock to' realize that countries, like men, can strike it rich without much effort. ' * * * ANYONE cameling through Ku- wait's history scarcely would hit on this as the ideal place for a successful sheikdom. It's smaller than New Jersey, and much of it is unrelieved des ert. Only 206,000 people less than half the population of Newark alone, live there. Once its seaport did a lively business in shipping horses to Bombay, but you know what hap- pened to horse trading. Once it did a good business in pearl div- ing, and then came the cultured pearl to displace it. And then - oil. It first was dis- covered in Kuwait in 1938, but nothing happened because of World War II. Not until July 30, 1946, was the first Kuwaiti crude oil poured into a tanker. By 1955 production was up to 386,398,000 barrels a year. PRESIDING over this profitable venture is Sheik Abdullah As Sa- lim As Subah, who gets half of the profits made by the Kuwait Oil Co., owned by British and Americans. He comes from a long line of sheiks. Although the country has been a British-protected state for more than half a century, it still is a proud: independent sheikdom that can trace its dynasty back to 1756, or 20 years before the United States went into business ,for It- self. Sheik Abdullah Salim, in a pic- ture dug up by the National Geo- graphic Society, doesn't look much like a movie sheik. He has a short beard, a wart on the right side of his nose, and what looks like a red- checkered tablecloth over his head. By Near East standards he ap- pears to be a benevolent ruler. In- stead of building race tracks and collecting assorted costly brie-a- brac, the sheik has put consider- able of his enormous income into hospitals and schools. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m., the day preced- ing publication. TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1958 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 295 . 1 I I' I What Ike Really Means By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst 'HE Soviet Union doesn't want war she I. have to renounce her ideas of world ation. it's what President Eisenhower and Sec- r of State Dulles are actually saying gh their demands for a check on indirect ssion. it is the focal point around which all the issues between the world and the Soviet i have revolved for 40 years. the moment the American leaders are rig their stand to the Middle East, because roposed summit meeting, if it develops, >e confined to that problem. But their clearly apply to the cold war situation in al. PHE Soviet Union does not want war she 11 almost have to agree that these prac- should be brought under some kind of il by the United Nations," says Dulles. ure to make this point clearly and to other problems to it has been largely Editorial Staff LHAEL KRAFTAVID TARR o-Editor Co-Editor .T JUNKER..,..........., Night Editor D GERULDSEN............,.. Night Editor HOLTZER ...................Night Editor VANDERSLICE................. Night Editor RD MINTZ ........., Sports Editor SHIPPEY ......Chief Photographer responsible for the unreal atmosphere in which all East-West negotiations have been conducted. It is as though settlements of the issues of disarmament, German and Korean reunifica- tion, liberation of Eastern Europe, the futures of underdeveloped peoples and the like could be undertaken individually. The failure of the Western world to make its general position clear on this point began before the end of World War II Stalin thought the Soviet Union should be repaid for her war suffering by hegemony over certain areas. He did not say he meant tem- porary hegemony preparatory to Moscow's com- plete control of the whole world through inter- national communism, but that had long been written in the book of Kremlin intent. CHURCHILL and Roosevelt temporized in order to get agreements on more immediate Issues, and the years of doubletalk began. Even today, despite the general nature of part of his woids, Dulles presents the idea of some sort of check on, ;indirect aggression as something to be negotiated. Yet for decades the diplomats have sought a far simpler thing-a definition of direct aggression so that it could . be established as a crime against which the world could react collectively. They found the Nazis guilty in a specific case, but even history has not definitely fixed respon- sibility for many wars, such as the Franco- German war of 1870. DEFINING indirect aggression is infinitely more difficult, as witness the case of Leb- AERIAL WARFARE: Ideas Only Product of Rand Corp. ny The Associated Press SANTA MONICA, Calif. - In a handsome building a block from the blue Pacific, hundreds of people devote most of each work- ing day to just one think: think- ing. They are part of an unusual, little-known organization whose sole product is ideas. On the quality of these ideas hangs a measure of the free world's future. For the men and women and the huge electronic brains in the handsome building think exclu- sively about aerial warfare of the future and how the United States can excel in it. * * * THE organization is the Rand Corp. At a cost of 10 million a year. it advises the Air Force on how best to spend its money today so it can best fight the wars of to- morrow. What is Rand? The name is an abbreviation of research and development." But The late Air Force Gen. H. H. (Hap) Arnold put it more concise- ly when, in the late stages of World War II, he took some of his brightest men aside and told them: "Now stop thinking about this war and start thinking about the next." RAND was formed to create an environment conducive to bright ideas. At any given time it may have more than 100 projects on the griddle, ranging from a one-man study of the configuration of a tail fin to a full-team effort on a com- plete weapons system. Details on its projects are se- cret. Ask a Rand man to tell about its brainchildren and he'll clam up. Security, he'll say. And this is quite true. Virtually 100 per cent of Rand's work is classified. But, aside from security consid- erations, the Rand people are loath to toot their horns. They have so shunned publicity that idea that clicked, it took months to win Air Force clearance. But the example finally sup- plied was a dramatic one: that of the MB-1 anti-aircraft rocket with nuclear warhead, developed as the result of a crash program and the Rand program was approved. The nuclear rocket grew from the need, recognized more than a decade ago, for more effective weapons for interceptor planes. In 1951 the Air Force and Rand both concluded that an investigation of the potentialities of nuclear aerial weapons was in order. RAND undertook an analysis in- volving such wide-ranging sub- jects as blast effects on the inter- ceptor, radiation. danger to the crew, maneuverability of enemy aircraft, rocket design, nuclear warhead characteristics, cost in relation to alternatives. It found the A-rocket to be the. best bet. A similar study by the Air Force special weapons center