"Ha Hla--We're Still Ahead Of Them" v Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UN1VERSITY OF MICHIGAN Vhen Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. AY, MAY 13, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: THOMAS HAYDEN. .07 T .. s.' 1 "6'.. . TIA1i 7 -o, w " LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Laboratory Wants Storm Information Residence Halls: Big Business or Education? THE RESIDENCE HALLS are not a conveni- ence; they're big business," said Joel toneham, business manager of West Quad- angle at the Student, Faculty, Administration onference Saturday. "If I'm satisfying the ajority', I'm doing a good job," he continued. "This is one reason why we don't let business- en run the University," answered James H. obertson, assistant dean of the literary college. This is indeed a very good reason why busi- essmen do not run the University. It would e interesting to know why businessmen are inning the residence halls.A. The Michigan House Plan did not set up the alls as a big business, for there was supposed be a little. thing called "education" involved i the whole thing. Students have accused the sidence halls of being a big business; the ad- inistration has denied this for as many years. f INALLY, Mr. Stoneham has said, "they are big business." No one except the residence alls administration is likely to deny this. Everyone is ready to attack this concept, at least in principle. The residence hall system was set up to pro- vide an educational experience as well as a place to eat and sleep. If Mr. Stoneham's state- ments were correct, the people who set up the Michigan House Plan could have saved them- elves a lot of trouble by establishing The -Quad- dy Hilton. But this presumably is not what they had in mind. T HE RESIDENCE HALLS were supposed to' have an educational atmosphere. They were planned as an extension of the scholastic pro- gram into an integral part of the functions of the quadrangles. There is no such intellectual atmosphere in the residence halls. They have become hotels.l And they have become hotels because men like Mr. Stoneham seem to insist that they are a big business. Well, Mr. Stoneham is right. They are a big business. The question that re- mains is how to change them into what they should be. --THOMAS KABAKER C - c Referendum Important WHAT IS THE PURPOSE of the Rose Bowl Referendum now being held by the Student Government Council? The motion calling for the vote was not passed just to give the. Council something to do. Its aim is to ascertain student feeling as to whether or not Michigan should play in the Rose Bowl, or in any post season game at all. This question will be presented at the May 23 Big -Ten Conference where action whether or not to renew the Rose Bowl contract which will expire in 1960, will be taken. Although the opinion of the students will not determine Michigan's vote on the question, it may be an important influence. The actual vote is cast by Prof. Marcus Plant of the Law School, but he is strongly influenced by the vote of the Faculty Senate which will be taken on May 18; Many of the faculty members will base their decision on that of the students, so that al- though no one is bound to abide by the results of the referendum, it could be a deciding factor. MANY STUDENTS feel that this vote won't make any difference, and so will not take the two minutes necessary to vote. Whether or not Michigan, as such, goes to. the Rose Bowl is not the question. It is whether he believes the Big Ten Conference should send a representa- tive to the annual New Year's festivities in Pasadena. The second question on the ballot asks whether we should play in any other post- season football games, such as the Cotton or Sugar Bowl games. Michigan is the only univer- sity that has given its students any opportunity, to voice an opinrion on any matter of this na- ture. Even if the University's final vote doesn't coincide with the results of the referendum, such opinion will have been made known and a step will have been taken toward more stu- dent participation in future decisions. It is thus a privilege for students to express whatever views they may have by exercising their right to vote on this issue. KAY WARMAN .>CAPITAL COMMENTARY: Spaak Imp( By WILLI ortant to West AM S. WRITE TO THE QUESTION of round table, as the square table, as we pre important. But It is ver early sample of the kin are now beginning, ne at Geneva and will go'o in San Francisco. It w so much about what sh it shall be done. Thus, in Bonn and London, Washington, cepted as a fact that cannot be united du The real controversies East, and also in son West, will turn on h( politically and psycho of a continuing partit Equally, it is surely cow, as it is in Washin West Berlin will notx the Allied token force ness to this decision, the access routes to B war. The real problem, to deal legally, politic with the fact that Wes' in the Western comm within the Eastern co; THESE ARE NOT in at bottom both s stance the status quo not Insoluble, are, howl Butor, Michel -- At is accepted will haw and psychological con )DAY AND TOM ORROW: The Sape of the Table Th ,S~p 'ot y WALTER LIPPMANN whether to confer at a manys, in West Berlin itself, and indeed in all Soviets wanted, or at a of Europe. eferred, was not in itself If, for example, the partition of Germany ry interesting. For it is an were recognized publicly and definitely, the nd of negotiations which , political consequences in West Germany would motiations which opened almost surely be very serious. It would mark n to the summit, perhaps the total defeat of Adenauer and of his party, ill be a negotiation not and no one could foresee what they could mean fall be done as about how in the coming German elections of 1961. If, on the other hand, there is no recogni- in Paris, no less than in tion of the fact that there are two German and Moscow, it is ac- states, and if the Soviet Union openly aban- nthe two German states doned East Germany as a state, treating it as ring these negotiations mere occupied territory, there would be a g as between West and strong incentive and much provocation for an- measur ithinthe East German revolt. When West Germany is low toealegal nd rearmed, perhaps with nuclear weapons, an ow to deal legally and East German revolt would be a very great ologically with the fact danger to the peace of the world. ion of Germany. well understood in Mos-T HE MORAL OF THIS is that the real prob- agton and the West, that lems will require a high degree of states- be abandoned, and that manship and that they cannot be solved by s will remain as a wit- pounding the table and playing to the gallery. and that a blockade of The hard part of the negotiation, which will erlin would be an act of have to be carried on quietly and offstage, will about Berlin will be how consist in devising juridical and political for- ally, and psychologically, mulae ' which accommodate the political and t Berlin will remain with- psychological imponderables. This will not be unity while it is located easy to do, especially if it has to be done with mmunity. constant stamping, whistling, and cat-calls from the gallery about who has won what, who isoluble problems in that has given away what, who is a fool or a knave. ides will accept in sub- There are two things which we need not . The problems, though Worry about. One is that Washington and Lon- ever, complex and subtle. don will betray Bonn and Paris. They will not. Change of Heart. Trans- The other thing we need not worry about is that e far-reaching political Bonn and Paris have a veto. which they will asequences in both Ger- exercise to prevent us from negotiating what has to be negotiated. Bonn and Paris have no such veto power, and they know it. t3 tit THEPROBLEM WITHIN the alliance does not lie in any fundamental and substantial conflict of purposes, or even in any important nal Staf difference of estimate as to what is the reality TAUB, Editor of the existing situation. The problem within JOHN WEICHER the alliance is how to enable West Germany to City Editor accommodate itself politically and psychologi- ate Editor cally to the reality that there will be two Ger- ...........Personnel Director manys for the indefinite future. Associate Editorial Director ............., sports Editor This will be a hard experience for the Ger- . Associate City Editor mans. Historians may well say that in this .Associate Personnel Director .Associate Sports Editor experience the role France has chosen for itself .... Associate Sports Editor is not to say yes-yes to Adenauer, but to pro- N WORLD diplomacy not even the greatest of power is yet a. substitute for people, for individ- ugl man. And in diplomacy it is impossible to overestimate the value of a long-established repu- tation for special integrity, for ability, for common sense. This is why a statesman from one of the smallest of ithe Western nations is filling an ever-increas- ing role in the West's search for a unified approach in the summit conference with the Soviet Union. It is all very well to keep one's eyes on the mammoths-on Wash- ington, on London, on Moscow. But it would be a mistake to spare no glance to Paul-Henry Spaak of Belgium. * * * SPAAK COMES from a country that has few troops; but even fewer soft and foolish illusions. Stalin cynically asked during the second World War of the Pope: "How many divisions has he got?" Belgium, like the Pope in this regard, is short on divisions. But Belgium has Spaak. Or, rather, Belgium has provided Spaak to be the leader of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization as its secre- tary-general. And this Spaak is no mean force on the side of the West. For Spaak speaks now not for Belgium; but for what is, after all, the sole collective and political force of the West, the NATO alli- ance. He is not now simply that middle-aged, calm, rocklike Bel- gian who, used to lead his own country with the skill of the true professional. He is now the em- bodied voice of the free West. * * * THOSE WHO please to do so are welcome to compare Spaak to Dag Hammarskjold of the United Nations. But there is, in fact, a big difference, all the difference in the world. Hammarskjold as sec- retary--general of the UN speaks for an organization that is im- mense on the outside but next to powerless on the inside. Spaak, as secretary-general of NATO, speaks for an organization that is unique in international politics. Spaak understands both persua- sion and power and is fully at home with either. He is a kind of human bridge now, and more and more will be one, between the big- ger partners of NATO. This he could never be, not withstanding his official position or a dozen official positions, but for the kind of man he is. It is not the title that is significant here; it is the human personality. Spaak stands now at the point of what is in sober truth a genuine division in spirit within the West- ern alliance as to how best jointly to deal with the Russians at the summit. It would be false and de- structive to inflate this into some bitter and rupturing row. But it would be equally false, and per- haps destructive too, to pretend that no kind of disagreement exists at all. CERTAINLY, the United States, West Germany and France are troubled by the -fear that the British may be ready to offer the Russians too much too soon. Cer- tainly, some of the smaller part- ners-Belgium among them, for that matter-are similarly trou- bled. And certainly the British, on their side, are worried that we may offer unduly difficult preconditions to negotiating at the summit. Thus it will be necessary to accomplish two things of an al- most-unspeakable gravity: 1. To see to it that the smaller members of the Western alliance are kept fully and currently in- formed of what the big fellows are preparing. These smaller members are in no "big four." But their wisdom is not defined by their size. And they can contribute much, both in the preservation of West- ern unity and even, perhaps, in sound procedural suggestions to the big fellows working upstairs. 2. Most of all, to make certain that the big powers do not gain the summit only to lose the alli- ance itself. There is good reason to believe that Spaak is setting out now on just such a delicate mission as this. It would be drawing the bow too far to say flatly that he can do this historic job. But it is certainly fair to say that if anybody can do it, that somebody will be Spaak of Belgium. (Copyright 1959, by United Features Syndicate, Inc.) To the Editor: TH E Meteorological Laboratories of the University of Michigan would appreciate receiving infor- mation based on direct personal observations from your readers concerning the severe storm which struck Ann Arbor on the morning of Monday, May 11. We would be interested in hearing about any unusual appearance of the sky and clouds, with photographs if available, unusual sounds, light- ning displays, etc. Positive inf or- mation on wind direction and wind speed, barometric pressure, the exact time the storm struck a specific point along its path, and on similar matters would be help- ful. We have our own observations made at the Meteorological Lab- oratories and one citizen with a private weather station equipped with a pressure-tube anemometer watched the indicated wind speed rise well above the scale of the in- strument. Additional information would be valuable. If you have facts of these types you would like to report, please phone NOrmandy 3-1511, Ext. 639 or 642 or 3060 before 5 p.m. or be- tween 7 and 10 p.m. during the next several days. --E. Wendell Hewson Professor of Meteorology Diplomacy To the Editor: WRITING under "What Price, Diplomacy," in the May 2 is- sue of The Daily, the writer advo- cates for the installing of profes- sional diplomats, well versed in diplomacy and world affairs, to bolster the now ebbing American diplomacy abroad. No one pretends that the pres- ent system of selecting prominent citizens (prominent actors, busi- nessmen, writers, etc.) to'U.S.A. ambassadorial missions, as differ- entiated from a professional dip- lomatic class, is the best one. But of all the systems that have been tried from time to time, it is the least inimical. Every solution to a problem is a complex one and comes as a "co- alesced solution" of advantages inseparably fused with disadvan- tages. It is the aim to select the. one with the greatest advanta- geous content and the least dis- advantageous ingredients. For ex- amp le, in pre-war Germany the strong professional military offi- cers' class became such an exclu- sive clique of a father officer be- getting a son officer that it be- came very hard, if not impossible, for anyone to intrude into this of- ficers' class, unless born into it. It no doubt had the advantage of 'high military fighting efficiency, but suffered from the far greater disadvantage of its e x c l u s i v e.. members often taking rash action prompted by feelings of vindicat- ing the honour, pride and such high sounding ideals of the class. Thus a class removed from the affairs of the common citizens be- cause of its professional isolation found itself defending the des- tinies of a nation. Today one only has a lingering fear for the pro- fessional military class. Likewise the professional diplo- matic class (as it was in Great Britain) soon became an exclu- sive class. Removed from the com- mon humdrum affairs of the citi- zens, it became a class distinct and isolated from the general citi- zenry with whom it shared noth- ing in common. This becomes, in- deed, dangerous, for the profes- sional diplomatic class is more apt to be concerned with preserv- ing its own professional class prestige than the welfare of the citizens. A step forward was taken when the diplomatic corps was chosen from prominent persons from every walk of life, so that it could share feelings closer with the common citizenry, much as a jury is composed of men and wo- men from every walk of life. Now to advocate for a professional dip- lomatic class is to take a step backward in the conduct of hu- man affairs. Thomas David, Grad. Inconsistency . . To the Editor: THE STANDARDS by which the judges chose the winners in Spring Weekend were not only in- consistent, they were often com- pletely absent. Since I have been on this campus, I have seen a steady decline in the enthusiasm which is placed in such events as Homecoming, Spring Weekend, and Michigras. I attribute this de- cline directly to the fact that the judging is so spasmodic and un- predictable that the participants have no idea what they can do to make their display, or skit, a winner. Rumor has it that "luck," and nothing else, determines the surprised winners of these acti- vities. Last weekend, for example, I understood from my friends on the Central Committee that the criteria for judging the skits were to be originality, performance and number of people actively en- gaged. So far I have talked to few people that were not surprised at the results of the judging. The skit won, though excellently per- formed, was as unoriginal as they come and, without the few near professionals that held it togeth- er, would have been a flop, I ask you: What chance has Geddes and other independent houses against the financial resources of a national sorority? The booths at the dance were another surprising affair. Was it necessary to have four winners, four honorable mentions and then leave five houses completely out? Is a bare bar fronted by a few tables with no enthusiastic sup- port, or the front of an old movie theater more worthy of honorable mention than a wake parlor which, in terms of technical skill and imagination, spelled original- ity? How are these houses to know what to aim at? I say it is no wonder that people were puzzled at the judging of these events. My reason for writing is not to establish myself as a spoil sport, but as a speaker for the many confused students who work mad- ly on the originality of their skit one year, only to find that the scenery won; or work madly on their scenery to find it was the number of student employed in the skit that counted. Please: Can't we have some standard for consistent judging on this campus so that at least half the students will be satisfied with the out- come? I believe the criteria for each event should be published beforehand, the judges should have some conception of the stu- dent appeal which the individual effort represents, and that, above all, there should be a consistency in the judging of all campus events. --Name Withheld on Request DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Uiver- sity. of Michigan for which Th Michigan Daily assumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Roome3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 1959 VOL. LXIX; NO. 160 General Notices The eleventh in a weekly series of films on Space Technology, sponsored by Bendix Corp. and The College of En- gineering Wed., May 13, Aud. A., Angell Hall at 4:30 p.m. Lectures University Lecture, Dept. of Sociology. "Research Strategy in the Sociology of Mental Health." Dr. John A. Clausen, Nat'l. Inst. of Mental Health. 4:15 p.m., Wed., May 13, Aud. C, Angell Hall. Concerts The University symphony Orchestra, Josef Blatt, conductor, annual spring concert, Hill Auditorium, Wed., May 13 at 8:30 p.m. Symphony No. 3 in E-flat (Eroica), by Beethoven, first Ann Arbor performance in twenty-six years. Stra- vinsky's "Le Sacre Du Printemps (The Rite of spring). Academic Notices ..Dept. of Near Eastern Studies. Afif Tannous, Chief, Africa and Middle East Analysis Branch U.S. Dept. of Agricul- ture. "The Critical Role of Agriculture in Near East Development," Thurs., May 14, 4:15 p.m. Angell Hall, And. A. Center for Japanese Studies, Prof. Ronald Dore, Dept. of History, Univ. of British Columbia, "Decline of Oyabun- Kobun Relations in a Japanese Village," May 14, 4:00 p.m., E. Conf. Rm.. Rack- ham. Applied Mathematics Seminar. Dr. Rudolph Albrecht "On the Conformal Mappings of Ring Domains," Thurs., May 14, 4:00 p.m.. Em., 246:W.Engrg. Bldg. Refreshmnets at 3:30 p.m. Rm. 274 W. Engrg. Bldg. Political Science Roundtable meet- ing, Thurs., May 14, 8:00 p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall. Prof. Lucian W. Pye, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "Political Theory and Behavioral Sci- ence." Analysis Seminar: Dr. D. S. Green- stein, "Stieltjes Integral Representa- tion,f Harmnicn'and Anavtic ThFuc- 4 t '°, INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Summit Meeting Under Way' By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst RUSSIA has yielded before the first display of allied unity at Geneva and the Big Four Con- ference is under way in just about the atmosphere which was ex- pected. Representatives of East and West Germany are siting in as ad- visers, an arrangement which the Western powers had expected al- though they did not desire it. Thus Conference By The Associated Press GENEVA, The conference of Big Four opened Monday with this twofold purpose: 1. To narrow East-West differ- ences on the future of divided Germany. 2. To clear the decks for a pg.- sible East-West summit meeting in the summer. The Big Four are the United States, Britain, France, Russia. The parley was arranged in the wake of Russia's demand last Nov. 27 that West Berlin be turned into a demilitarized free city and that Western garrisons quit the former capital. rrnn 4Q.I1., to h rliA~Cm,,oeCA ends the semi-comical battle of the tables. * * * THERE IS an air of symbolism about this beginning of the con- ference. Fundamentally, it is being held as a substitute for the crisis which the Soviets had threatened to stage this spring over the status of West Berlin. It began with a threat to throw the Allied occupation forces out of the former German capital, which Khrushchev now agrees can be "delayed." The meeting is inaugurated under a reminder, or a boast, by Khrushchev that he can knock out all of Europe with 16 hydrogen bombs. The Allies said positively they would not get out of Berlin. Mos- cow began talking about negotia- tions. *. * * GROMYKO WANTED a round table so the East German repre- sentative could be squeezed in, and then formally demanded a seat for him. The Allies said no, there would be no recognition of East Germany as an entity separate from all Germany, de facto or otherwise. They were prepared for German presence in an advisory capacity, and Gromyko accepted. The Russian threats, and the Allied determination not to run, rather than close it, on a summit conference. For a time, Khrushchev insisted that, unless the Foreign Ministers reached at least some preliminary agreements of substance the Reds would go ahead with a separate peace treaty for Epast Germany. Since thenhe has indicated, and repeated to Viscount Bernard Montgomery, that this, too, be de- layed. Five years ago, a Foreign Min- isters conference sealed the formal division of Vietnam, as another conference had sealed the division of Korea. That is not going to be repeated with regard to Germany. Germany is too close to the heart of the free world. 4 Senimore Says .. . 'I ~:jig 14 Edito RICHARD' MICHAEL KRAFT Editorial Director DAVI7 Associ DALE CANTOR ......... JEAN WILLOUGHBY .... ALAN JONES...... BEATA JORGENSON ... ELIZABETH. ERSHINE.. GI COLEMAN . ...... CARL RISEMAN ........ '~i~ zzm~qm