Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BYS TUDENTS OF THE UNIVEKsITY OF MICHIGAN )pinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BoARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Wip Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. " ANN ARBOR, MICH. " Phone NO 2-3241 rials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editor. This must be noted in all reprints. "Don't be Silly- .-We Never Need Money that Much" 5 CfL" NO CRITICISM: Senate House Argue Politely By ARtHUR EDSON Associated Press Newsfeatures Writer AN ACTIVE DEMOCRACY like ours often looks like a tug-of-war at an octupus picnic. Everyone seems to be tugging away in every direction. (C Y, JULY 2 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: KATHLEEN MOORE Tw o VieWS Of Governor Long 1 ault" Persecuted ' NURSE in University Hospital was discuss- ing the case of Gov. Earl Long vs. the world. 'You know," she pointed- out, "when Long ant into the asylum in Texas, some of the ctors there diagnosed him as paranoid schiz- renic." (This, she explained, manifests it- f partially through feelings of persecution.) 'As soon as he got out," she laughed, "the t thing he said was 'everyone's against me'." Such a statement may or may not be a symp-, n of mental disorder. And Long himself may may not be clinically insane. But recent mnts in the sovereign state of Louisiana can .y lead one to hope strongly for a mass shift the governmental reins, away from the pack it currently holds sway over Baton Rouge. EMOVING a goveinor from his position is, at best, sticky business. Mrs. $lanche Long, parently with solid backing from a number state officials, chose the most shameful and trading method -- degrading to herself and husband, to the state of Louisiana and the ion as a whole. Earl Long the man may belong in a mental titution; Governor Earl Long does not. If, feed, his actions in the state house have been -h as to indicate insanity, surely they could , have gone unnoticed. And certainly, if cir- nstances grew severe, he could have been peached. Impeachment is nasty work, but current mess is many times worse. But the events that followed Long's incarcer- on - almost funny by their very disrepu- leness - were nothing so much as fuel for argument that, in American politics, it's ry man for himself. HE STRUGGLE for' Long's power began almost before the governor was out of the te. Petty officials - and important ones - d with each other to speed his exit, insure absence and grab what influence they ild. fnd then the governor obtained his release, hed back to his beloved state, and began ting rid of people right and left - including wife. t is impossible to feel sorry for any of them, they have all admirably demonstrated their ential worthlessness to a responsible gov- ment. n a way, Long has a point when he com- ins that "everyone's against me," for in feral they are. And yet, it is impossible to I sorry for him, either, for all of this is his rg -- these are his men, placed in their po- ons by him, and supposedly subservient to command. That they turned on him the nent his power wavered - this is the his-, ic pattern of any political machine. That: ig in turn tried to solidify his position by ss firings - this too is in the pattern. (Of rse, the pattern also indicates that political, ses, like prize-fighters, rarely make'a come- k once they have lost their title.) 'he only possible object of sympathy in the te of Louisiana is the people of that state -- - i yet they, in the final analysis, are more blame than anyone. They suffered Long dly as governor; they must suffer now. --SUSAN HOLTZER Co-Editor- ONE OF THE real dangers of the American political system has been realized during the last few weeks. The American public exec-: utive is not safe' when he has been elected; he is subject to plots and schemes which rival the coups-d'etats of South America or the Middle East. Gov. Earl Long of Louisiana was not always the most subtlr tactful chief executive of the democratic realm, but he ran the state com- petently. In doing so, he made enemies, lost his temper and "carried on." Long was a colorful individual. Occasionally his color and his tem- per tantrums coincided; making an unusual spectacle for the constituents to observe. Someone had the idea of trying to prove him insane. His wife played her role and the good governor was committed to a mental institu- tion outside; the state. This was a convenient way to:remove him from the controversial po- litical sphere of Louisiana where he played the, leading role. THEN LONG won his freedom from the, Texas hospital, only to be promptly plunked into a similar'Louisiana institution. There he was examined by a board of competent special- ists, who decided he was not insane at all, merely uffering from a nervous breakdown. The story has a somewhat happy ending. Long is ditching the wife who wanted to play politics by conveniently having her husband committed to a mental institution. One won- ders whether she should not undergo similar study. Long is back in control of one of the biggest political machines in the country, and one with which the people! of Louisiana are apparently very pleased. The danger to the individual, however, is clearly shown in this case. Any politician with strong views and a big mouth like Long is liable to.similar treatment. Having a man com- mitted to a mental institution when he is just as sane as those committing him is one of the shameful situations which still exist in Ameri- can society, but using it as a device for politi- .cal control is the added twist which makes the Long case so interesting. LONG COMPLETES the tragic cycle of the family history which began with the assas- sination of his brother Huey. As a state leader Long has presented a positive program which created many enemies. The fact that he is the governor gives him the power to suggest and fight for what he believes. It is sad com- mentary when political opponents who can- not beat a man at the polls decide to beat him any way they can. Long's purge of his "friends" was overdue. Every great political figure is surrounded by "climbers" and "leeches." In Long's case they, happened to be less moral than most. The case is still marked by charges and counter-charges of doctors, wives and poli- ticians. The confusion as to who is an authori- ty on mental illness, Long's condition and the rest continues unabated. The real story of Long and his troubles will make fascinating reading when all the facts of the case eventually come to light. Right now, Long looks like the persecuted man. --ROBERT JUNKER Co-Editor yf f Y. yy l e j :, ff## T, 4\ M1 J.. 4 K 'i i ' F , -. _, ,. ' ~1 * .7 j ^ .3j I . k- .: ., i) ,' ;,F. 4i>k_ $b YF PUC rO' -"4+ P=- 'i;z,- - e. L. c> c *-- 00959Tfi' wngSi r+ l "'Y-tA! O..S t C+d CAPITAL COMMENTARY- y The 'Graj By WILLI WASHINGTON-The approach- there are strong poten ing 183rd anniversary of the forces. Declaration of Independence finds Where does the alli the ancient foes, the United stand, from the Amer States and Britain, still forming point? We on this the ultimate shield of all the free troubled by manife society of men. England which we be Much is'being said of national latently dangerous to independence on this side of the mon cause. First andI water. But something needs to be is widely believed her said, and felt, on both Atlantic British are "unrealistic shores of another concept: inter- problem of dealing wit dependence. sians over Berlin an The shield Is strong; but it will, cold war generally. not necessarily remain so forever. o*rery * S It needs a hard, unsentimental ITSFETtaB examination. For there is no law IT IS FELT that B of life decreeing that the oldest policy tends to force us of friends can never, never part. er concessions to the S True, the theoretically unshak- than we should make able alliance is yet the single therefore, an America most important fact of power in tion to call names;F the world. Winston Churchill said frustration with ar during World War II that Ameri- leaves a bitter taste i, can and British affairs would be- and in the mouth. come so mingled that at last they Where does the alli would flow like the Mississippi, in stand, from the British a single mighty current. A British view, whic * * * could b~e called authc THIS confluence has largely this: If anybody is "s occurred. We share our ultimate cold war issue, it isi atomic secrets only with Britain. States, not Britain. Our military chiefs and our in- If we really intend telligence agents - "black chain- an inch over Berlin, sa ber" and otherwise - work to- fish, then we must mea gether under all but interchange- are prepared to accept able hats. But if unity is a prac- bility of atomic-hydi tical fact now,. there is no auto- with the destruction of matic assurance that it will go on millions of lives. through the next critical decade. But, continue the Bri For while the two allies have is what American lea drawn closer together in a sense, mean, then they ought Ad A Iliance' [AN S. WHITE The courts may pull down the Congress. Presidents may feud with Congress and the Courts. And Congress, good old Con- gress, may struggle with Courts and Presidents - and wind up pulling against itself. THIS INTRAMURAL warfare between the House and Senate usually is conducted quietly be- hind scenes, but occasionally it breaks into the open. That's how we learn Sen. Rus- sell B. Long (D-La.) and 34 other Senators are miffed. They think the Senate, high, mighty and proud, took a bad licking from the House on the excise tax bill. The dispute developed like this: The House passed one version of the bill, the Senate another. The bill then went to conference -that is, the Senators and Rep- resentatives, having seniority on the committees, involved met to iron out the differences. * * * USUALLY whatever these con- ferences produce is accepted by both houses. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-Minn.), who his looked into this, says he can find only 12 conference reports reject- ed in 10 years. But, Congressmen being Con- gressmen, the grumbling goes on. So here is Long, complaining that the House members had de- cided in advance that 'they wouldn't give in on a thing. "I think we lost for two rea- sons," Long told the Senate. "The House felt it could safely be ada- mant and that the Senate was go- ing to surrender. After fpur hours, the Senate did surrender. * * * THE MAIN difficulty in any dispute like this is something called Congressional comity. A Senator isn't supposed even to mention a House member in de- bate, lest friction develop. And it's hard to work up a lather without naming names and adjectives. "Back in the old days," Long explained, "if a Senator said something derogatory about an- other Senator or about his state, it usually ended in a fist fight, and that was the end of action in the Senate for the time being. To enable the Senate to legislate, one Senator was forbidden to criticize another Senator." LETTERS to the, EDITOR' To the Editor: TUESDAY'S movie reviews sug- gest that a strange force has invaded The Daily staff. These excerpts will show you what I mean. Say One for Me: "The plot . is grim." Two-headed Spy: "Occasionally grim language.", Stranger in my Arms: "Grim though it may sound." Can it be that grimlins have taken over The Daily? Fred Steingold, '6L best laid plans of a President or DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily 'assumes no di- torial responsibility Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN fori to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 pan. the day preceding publication. Notices for '.Sunday " Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1959 VOL. LXIX, NO. 8-s General Notices Regents Meeting: Fri., July 24. Com- munications for consideration at this - meeting must be in the Presidet'sT hands by July 14. Univ. Libraries, including General Li- brary, Undergraduate Librarynlid divi- sional. libraries, will be closed Inde- ' pendence Day, Sat., July 4. Preliminary exams for applicants for the Ph.D. in 'English will be given .at 2 p.m. In 2443 M.H. on the follo Ung da d s: July 17-English Literature, 550 186 July 20- English anid Ameria Literature, 1680-1780; July 24-English and American Literature, 17804-1870; July 27-English and American Litera- ture, 1870-1950. Applicants planning to take these examinatiobs should leave their names at the English office if they have not already done so. International Center Tea. Thurs. July 2, 4:30 to 8:00 p.m,, at Internation- al Center. Lectures Forum Lecture, Linguistics Institutd. "The Strategy of Lexicostatistics." Prof. Dell H. Hymes, Harvard Univ. Thurs.,. July 2. 7:30 p.m.- Raka Amiphi-. theater. Concerts. Student Recital: Arthur Theodore Hegvik, clarinetist, in partial fulfill- ment of the requirements for the de- gree Master of -Music, Thurs., July 2, 8:30 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Elnorb Louise Barber, Music; thesis: "Antoni, de, Cabezon's Cantus-irmius ~omposi- tions and Transcriptions," Fri. July 3 at the home of Prof. H. W. Hitchcock, 912 SunsetRd, at 1:30' pa.. Chairman, H. T. David. Placement Notices The following schools have listed va- cancies for the 1959-60 school year. Blue Isid, Ill. - Girls FE; Eng./ German; Eng./Journalism; Librarian; Ind. Arts (Woodworking, print). Cocoa, Fla. -- Psychologist.. Copley, Ohio - 8th Gen. si.; En, Math; Elementary. Cottage Grove, Ore. -- 4th grade Remedial Reading. Detroti, Mich. (Redford Union).- JHS Art. Fontana, Calif.;- Elementary; JHg Nurse; Girls PE; HS Librarian. Ida, Mich. - vocal; First grade,. Lorain, Ohio - Elementary; H : Chem.; Eng.; Guidance; -Librarian Slow Learning. Lordsburg, New Mexico-Elementary; HS: Girls PE; Spanish/Eng; Chem./ Phys./Gen. Sci.; Library/Eng.. Marinette, Wis. - Math (Adanced math and algebra); 9th Eng.; Olchies- tra; Kindergarten. Mount Prospect, 1ll. - Early Elemnen. tary. North Branch, Mich. - Eng.; Art; Shop. (Continued _on Page 3) 4 .' tial divisive ance really rican view- side are tations in lieve to be the com- foremost, it re that the about the h the Rus- d over the 3ritish high. into great- oviet Union There is, an tempta- a sense of real friend n the mind ance really viewpoint? ch actually oritative, is oft" on the the United not to give y the Brit- an that we the possi- rogen war uncounted itish, if this ders really t to be do- ;' ing what they have never done: enter upon a national all-out mo- bilization, open joint war plan- ning with Britain and the other Western allies, and tell the people of theWest the unvarnished story that the apocalypse may be at hand. * * * THE BRITISH, moreover, are: deeply hurt at suggestions that they -who took much more than, their share of the risk and much more than their share of the dy- ing in the last war -.are some- how "appeasers" now. They, are far less than pleased, too, at in- nuendos that West Germany, which was a part of the Germany that killed so many Britons not long ago, is perhaps a more reli- able or wiser partner than Britain herself. And for a final point of real but rarely advertised friction: The British are all but aghast at what, they consider to be anti- British American world trade pol- icies. Britain lives at best on the thinnest of economic margins. Britain must have far greater world trade opportuinities than American policies now allow if she is to find any kind of permanent stability. These are the sub-surface facts of life atbout this old alliance. They are far less cheerful than the trans-Atlantic salutes of this season. But they are for more real. (Copyright 1959, by United Features Syndicate, Inc.)' t .4 .. Fred Steingold, 'COL WALTER CHARGES COMMUNISM: t - i INTERPR E*ING THE NEWS: Russia's Berlin Bluff Called Committee To Probe Selections for Exhibition By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst, THE ELECTION of a German president in West Berlin has passed off, like the May 27 deadline originally set by Khrushchev for Western evacuation of the city, without the re- prisals threatened by the Communists. The winner, Heinrich Luebke, a former pris- oner of Adolf Hitler, is Konrad Adenauer's man. The event helps to point up three situations which have been subject to speculation in re- cent ,months. First, it is added evidence that the Commu- nists have been set -back on their heels by Western determination to maintain the posi- tion of West Berlin as an enclave inside the Iron Curtain, and eventually to reestablish the city as the capital of all German. IT INCREASES the belief that the Kremlin has been conducting a limited offensive rather than an all-out attack - for control of the whole city. Editorial Staff SUSAN HOLTZER ROBERT JUNKER Co-editor Co-editor PETER ANDERSON .................. Sports Editor THOMAS HAYDEN....... .......Night Editor' When Khrushchev brought up the matter of Western withdrawal from West Berlin he may have been judging their position by his' own. Knowing the celebration which would ac- company Communist withdrawal from German territory, he could have hoped to stir up a German nationalist movement against the Western Allies.a Instead, there is every evidence that West Germans are now more than ever aware of their integration with Western European and American interests, and no sign has developed of a "Yankee go home" spirit. CHANCELLOR ADENAUER, having opposed convocation of the Electoral College in Ber- lin as a ,possible provocation to the Reds dur-' ing the Geneva Conference interim, is proved to have been overly cautious. The outcome, however, represents a political victory which the Western powers will welcome for him. The political squabble resulting from reversal of his decision to quit his job for the less active one of president appeared in the West as a threat to German unity at a time of crisis. Now it appears to have been less serious than it seemed. His party, though undoubtedly di- vided over his actions, was able to present an overwhelming front against its principal chal- lengers, the Socialists. Every time the Communists have reached out for new territory in the past few years - ini the Middle East, Europe, Quemoy -- they By HAROLD OLIVER WASHINGTON ()-An intense dispute over the art works selected for the American Na. tional Exhibition in Moscow began an airing in Congress yesterday, before the House Committee on Un-American Activities. Critics allege many of the paintings and sculptures were executed by United States artists who have been associated with Communist causes and say they do not portray this country's true culture. The four-man jury of art ex- perts who picked the 70 paintings and sculptures by 67 artists for the exhibition says they were selected on artistic merit alone and with no regard to political backgrounds of the artists. ** * SOME OTHER art experts, how- ever, have criticized the selections and asked that they be recalled. Government officials - the United States Information Agency and State and CommercehDepart- ments are sponsoring the exhibi- tion-say the art works are al- ready in Moscow and there has been no thought of changing plans to show them. The exhibition, showing many other products of American in- genuity besides art objects, opens in Moscow's Sokolniki Park July 25. ists and Communist Frontiers our cause is lost," Walter said. Walter says his committee will call as witnesses Government offi- cials and some of the artists. The Committee, he adds, has prepared complete , background records on the artists to whom he referred. SINCE WALTER'S speech on the house floor, the USIA has received a flood- of clippings and editorials, commenting on the ex- hibit. Many editorials have been highly critical of the art selec- tions, but one USIA spokesman estimated a majority of them expressed approval. At the time of Walter's speech, the USIA said government offi- cials decided to place the selection of the art in the hands of a four- man jury of distinguished art ex- perts outside the government without any attempt at guidance. "The jury felt," the USIA said, "thatithe judging of works of creative art should be solely on the merit of the paintings and sculptures rather than the politi- cal views of the artists. The gov- ernment authorities concerned concurred in this view." The ' jury was chosen by 22 cultural advisers of the State De- partment and USIA, with the ap- proval of the White House, the USIA spokesman said. were chosen "solely on merit.;. . to show a wide range and variety . ,. if any of the artists are, as Congressman Walter says, on any subversive list, it is not known to me. I know some of the artists. personally but have not engaged, in political discussions with them." Goodrich, another jury member, said: "the committee selected this exhibition on the basis of artistic quality and importance, and not of the alleged personal back- grounds of the artists. * * * "CONGRESSMAN WALTER'S statements are of course not new. Their substance has been re- peated by other Congressmen for at least 10 years whenever such international exhibitions were planned. Fortunately for our cultural re- lations with other nations, such political attacks on artists have become less and less effective."' Goodrich was asked by a re- porter what he thought of an edi- torial in the Richmond Times- Dispatch which said in part: "There -was a time. when one might have argued, under the 'art for art's sake' doctrine, that po- litical opinions are not germane in choosing paintings and statues for an international exhibit. "But all that has changed, with' Sculptor Williams of the Artists. Professional League took a differ- ent view. He told a reporter he regarded it as most unfortunate that any American artists with Communist affiliation should be selected to have his work ex- hibited in Moscow. AMONG DEFENDERS of the exhibit has been Sen. Philip A. Hart (D-Mich.). He told the Sen- ate he had hoped "that we had grown beyond the point where a political litmus test would be ap- plied to our judgment of art." "All= that this hullabaloo would do," Hart said, "would be to take the Russians off the hook of world opinion on which they find them- selves with the Pasternak case, and putpus right on it." Hart referred to the uproar among Russian Communists last year over Boris IPasternak's best- selling novel "Dr. Zhivago' de- scribing how freedom suffered un- der Bolshevism. Under Red pres- sure, Pasternak refused to, accept! the Nobel Prize. Artists whose work was selected for the Moscow exhibit and whom Walter named in his June 3 speech were Jack Levine, Ben Shahn, Max Weber, and Philip Evergood. Walter said his Committee rec- ords indicate Levine "has been affiliated with at least 21 Com- way they would like to be able to do but can't. It's a good picture." Walter said Shahn, whose 1958 painting "Parable" was chosen "has been affiliated with over two dozen Communist fronts and causes" and has been "repeatedly described in the Communist press as a 'people's artist'." Max Weber, whose 1940 oil painting' "Music" was selected, was said by Walter to have been "connected with some 70' Com- munist fronts and causes." WALTER SAID Evergood "has been connected with over 75 Communist fronts' and causes" and has contributed articles to Communist newspapers. Ever- good's' 1936 painting "Street Cor- ner" is in the exhibit. Informed of Walter's statement that he had been connected with 70 Communist fronts and causes artist Weber said: "That is as untrue as it is to say it is dark outside, and it is now daylight." Weber, who said he was nation- al chairman of Artists' Congress of theWPA (Works Progress Ad- ministration) in 1936 for one year, attributed the critical use of his name to "jealousy and enmity." Artist Shahn limited his com- ment to a statement that he re- garded Sen. Hart's statenient about leaving politics out of art x .5 / 1 A