"Wear It Proudly" Sixty-Ninth 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 TWO LEADERS SPEAK: The Labor Question: se. m. Opnilons Are free itb Will Prevail' Shorter itorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or g the editors This must be noted in all reprints. AY, FEBRUARY 20, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: SELMA SAWAYA Students Hold Bag As GOP PSeeks Political Edge EVERY STUDENT in every state-supported is pay their money within five years or two college or university in the state pays an extra $45 per semester-they can defer pay- ment for awhile, as l ong as they pledge the money now-they can help the Republicans out of a terrible political jam. The Republicans feel that they desperately need an issue with which to attack the Gov- ernor. They think that they have found a pretty- good one: the state's financial troubles. Their problem is to maintain, or, if possible, to expand this bit of trouble into a major catastrophe so they can get the governor out of office "before he ruins the state." Since they control both houses of the Legisla- ture, this is a fairly easy thing to do. They can just do as they have been doing, refuse to allow a reasonable new taxing structure to.be built. But' there is a rub; if the state goes com- pletely to hell in the meanwhile, -people are not. likely to accept "it's the damn fiscally irre- sponsible governor" theory unquestioningly. They, the people of the state, are likely to wonder what the Republican-dominated Legis- lature has been doing all these years. And a lot of people are going to begin think- ing that the state is well on its way to hell when their children cannot be taken into col- lege. They might find out that not since 1957 has the legislature-the Republican-dominated Legislature-given the colleges and universities of this state the money for capital outlay. jF THE LEGISLATURE says "there was no money," the people might then ask, "Why were then no new taxes?" Then it would cause a problem. The Legislature cannot very well tell' them that new taxes would solve the whole" financial crisis and that that would let the governor off the hook, can they? That is where the students come in. They are only asking for $45 dbllars,a semester (and if the students want to mortgage their future instead of the present, that is okay, too) so they can use your money-or your pledge-so they can'float a $100,000,000. loan. They can use this money to build a few buildings, and, at the same time, they won't have to worry about solving the basic problem. Representative Bowerman, from Lansing, who proposed the bill is allowing the students such generous terms, he cannot understand why the college and university administrators are not willing to get there new buildings at the cheap cost of only causing a little financial hardship. These students who cannot afford the $90 a year in the increased "hidden tuition" do not have to worry, they can mortgage their future on very reasonable terms. All they have to do years after they are through with their educa- tion. THIS IS VERY GENEROUS, if a couple wants, to get married right after college they can do this-they still have a little period of grace. Of course, it might be better to defer having, kids for a while. But this isn't so bad-the debt will be paid off in four years. Of course, it might be better-at least for awhile-to stay away from low-paying profes- sions like teaching. Once the student gets rich, then he can take risks. And there is no question that the stu- dent will get rich. Representative Bowerman says he's heard. that college graduates earn during their life-times, $100,000 more than non- college graduates. This is why no students will mind paying the extra money. OF COURSE this is not exactly why some of the Republicans, like Representative James Warner think students, go to college. Representative Warner told an Ann Arbor audience that the state's educational system was designed to give the state people with spe- cial skills, like doctors, lawyers and engineers. Since this is the purpose of education, it is easy to.understand why the Legislature continually scoffs at the University's attempt to get an appropriation to build a new building for the music school, But perhaps the Republicans are missing a.- better scheme. Since all students who do not get some type of technical training, are ob- viously useless-they probably go to college just for the extra $100,000, why not exempt all those who are in technical training from the $45 increase and apportion that amount among the rest of the students. There is one problem involved with this, of course: would those going into teaching fall under technical or non-technical classification? If it were decided that they were in a techni- cal curriculum, how would their fees be made up? About the only possible solution would be to add still another $45 to the people of Legis- lative scorn: the students in music school. It would be somewhat ironic if the Re- publicans then had to back a tax reform to raise the money to administer the system. But the students may be so grateful to the Republicans for the opportunity to contribute to the welfare of the state, they may be happy to pay the $45 and then no new taxes would be necessary. And then maybe the Republicans could really fix the governor. --JAMES SEDER ..t -=4 LPt-C: C- 019SV 7AR ~4.AS +A AI CT T%- C . Work Week By The Associated Press SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico - AFL- CIO President George Meany forecast yesterday a permanent American army of five to six mil- lion unemployed unless the work week is shortened, wages are boosted substantially and govern- ment spending is increased. - "We've got to directly turn our attention to a shorter work week," Meany said. "Now is the time." Speaking at a news conference, the top U.S. Union leader said the nation's economy, under what he called President Eisenhower's closed-fist spending policies, is growing far too slowly. Meany said the economy is not creating enough jobs for a fast growing population which constantly is learning to produce more by machine with fewer workers. As an example', Meany said the output of the steel industry now is higher than it was 20 months ago but 100,000 fewer workers are required. "That doesn't seem to bother the government economists," Meany said. *# * * HE STATED U.S. production- had recovered about three-fourths of what it lost in the depths of the recession but that only one- fourthof the recession-idled work- ers had got their jobs back. The latest official jobless figure was 4,724,000 in January, up sev- eral hundred thousand over the figure for January a year ago. "These are some of the things that really scare us," Meany said. "Unless this trend is reversed we may face a permanent army of unemployed of five to six million. "We are sowing the seeds of our own destruction. With this loss of purchasing power it will only be a question of time before we go into a deep depression that will give Communist Russia victory over Capitalism without even firing a shot." * * * MEANY SAID the economy must step up the pace of its growth considerably or "we are definitely headed for an econom collapse." He asserted high labor officials had explained this to President Eisenhower at a White House con- ference last March. "While the President listened very atte'ntively, I don't think he got the message," Meany said. ,Additional work must be pro- vided for a growing American work force or "we'll have to shoot about 10 per cent of our population," Meany said. Unions will seek to reduce the present standard 40-hour work week, he added, both through col- lective bargaining and congres- sional legislation., Meany spoke with reprters after the AFL-CIO Executive Council, holding a winter session on this Caribbean island, put out a state- ment urging Congress to provide about three billion dollars over the Eisenhower administration's budget for housing, schools, de- pressed area and slum clearance. "These urgent public issues can- not be solved by blind insistence on budget balancing at the expense of jobs and human needs," the Council said. Retards Economy? By The Associated Press NEW HAVEN, Conn. ()-Henry Ford II last night accused "Big Labor" of standing in the way of a "new productive explosion in the American economy." The Ford Motor Company Presi- dent said that labor has become an overly powerful bulwark of an "ex- treme left-wing economic view- point" that is inhibiting national progress. "In terms of unfettered power, big labor is the strongest single center in the American economy,"~ Ford said. "It isusing that poweA not to increase the growth of the American pie, but to ut out a largerishare for its constituents. "In the process, it is unques- tionably thwarting the very im- provement in productivity and the increased economic growth that it says it wants." In a speech prepared for a Yale. University lecture series-the same rostrum from which United Auto Workers President Walter Reuther spoke last fall - Ford called for steps to limit "the monopoly power of unions." * * * HE SAID the AFL-CIO has be- come "the most aggressive, ascend- ant force in American politics," and that a few of its leaders have become "careless about means" to accomplish "their own brand of social ends." "They are masters of the righ- teous slogan, the thinly veiled ap- peal to selfish interest, the glib response to the serious and com- plex problems," Ford said. Because they are politically adroit and measure highly' per- suasive publicists, economic under. standing is being done a measur- able harm, misinformation is mul' tiplied, and the Democratic pro- cess itself is impaired." In material terms, Ford said, America's "future prospect is breath-taking .. . we have had a scientific explosion that has yet to be translated into an economic explosion of like magnitude." *. * * AS STEPS to foster this poten- tial growth, he urged: 1) A halt to trade union policies that resist new methods and tools for increased production, and which retard efficiency by insisting on "extreme seniority rules" and de-emphasis on incentives for per- formance. 2) Revised tax policies, allow- ing businessprofits to gain along with other economic growth. He said that in the last 10 years, returns on manufacturing capital dropped from 16 to 11 per cent, while employee wages rose 50 per cent. 3) Stimulation of greater con. sumption of goods and services by developing new and improved pro- ducts. 4) More effective use of the re- sources of industry and govern- ment to maintain "high and stable levels of employment and income." He said the best hope for stop- ping a drift toward "government controlled economy and for open- ing the door to exuberant econom- ic growth" is for mderate, middle- income citizens to get into politics. r t :, r', s; THE CUBAN CRISIS: Revolutionaries Face Money Troubles By BARTON HUTHWAITE CASTRO'S Cuba came under fire again this week. The /two and me-half month old provisional cabinet suddenly resigned en mass as Prime Minister Jose Miro Car- dona stepped down from the na- tional post. Provisional president Manuel Urrutia immediately moved to fill the governmental vacuum with the still-bearded revolutionary hero Fidel Castro. Following the usual pattern, American observers resumed their criticism which began shortly aft- er the revolution when Castro or- dered war criminal trials for Ba- tista's henchmen. This time the criticism centered on the assump- tion that the young Castro would seize dictatorial control of the fledgling Cuban government. They are probably right. * * * PLAGUED by a rapidly falling foreign exchange, an almost non- existent tourist trade and jobless workers, Cuba faces an even great- er dilemma than during the early days following the crumbling of the Batista regime. Workers are restless, demanding higher pay and more jobs. Thous- ands of Havana citizens, almost dependent on the once-flourishing tourist trade, are demanding the reopening of the plush casinos to stimulate the flow of American dollars into the country. The peddler on the street has no cus- tomers for his hand-carved trink- ets and the sugar plantation own- er has no one to harvest his sugar cane. Ex-dictator Batista squandered $423 million, leaving Cuba with some $60 less than the legal re- serve minimum. Most of it is stashed away in the United States. Only a small amount has been re- covered for the sadly depleted government reserves. * * * CUBA NOW faces a crisis that could determine whether it will wallow in, financial troubles for the years to come. The country stands on the threshold between prosperity and poverty. The only other strong faction that has promised economic security for the Cuban people is the Commu- Calling All Reviewers! ALL qualified students inter- ested in reviewing music, drama, movies, or art for The Michigan Daily are invited to attend a meeting at the Stu- dent Publications Building on Wednesday, February 25, 7:30 p.m. nist Party, called the Partido So- cialista Popular. The chaos of the past few weeks has given the Communists ample opportunity to consolidate their forces. Their strategy is simple. By hanging on the glory that sur- rounds Castro, the Reds have broadened their support through- out the tiny island. Their next move would have been taken if the revolutionary hero had not ac- cepted the cabinet post. While the economic problems mount for the premier and his supporters, the efficiently-operating Communists could have stepped in to offer security to the aroused workers and farmers. But this chance faded when the popular Castro moved into the governmental post. * * * - FIDEL CASTRO will probably take more, control of the govern- ment than was exercised by his predecessor. This is to be expected. He will probably have to shed his drab brown khakies for a white tie and suit thus losing some of the glory that surrounds the mili- tary hero. His inexperience will probably have to be offset by the men lie chooses for his cabinet. Cuba's crisis will have to be solved. The problem -early this week was who would take the re- sponsibility. The q u e s t i o n is whether it would be Castro's Cuba or the Communists' Cuba. TODAY AND TOMORROW: t Allies Show Flexibility AT LEAST in its method the Allied note to the Soviet Union, which was published this week, is new and different. It is an invitation to hold a conference about Germany which does not lay down in advance what can be and what cannot be discussed, what must be agreed to. This does not mean that the Allies no longer have positions from which they will not retreat, as for example that they will not withdraw their troops in West Berlin until the whole of Berlin becomes once again the capital of a reunited Germany. The novelty and the differ- ence in the present approach is that the note is not a broadside in a propaganda game but a simple and unconditional invitation to confer and to negotiate. This would not have been possible if the Western powers had not reached the conclusion that there are in fact subjects to negotiate about. Behind the simple words of the note there lies the fact that we have now agreed among ourselves that we can protect our vital interests in Europe while we negotiate on a number of subjects which have, until recently, been regarded as untouchable. This is the so-called new flexibility. It covers, for 'example, the idea that reunification need not begin with free elections although some day the reunited Germany must have free elections. It covers the idea that it is possible to negotiate de facto with the East German state. It covers the idea that it is possible to discuss a regional agreement for the reduc- tion and limitation of armaments in Central Europe. WE MUST now wait to see how the Kremlin reacts. It can accept the invitation to confer and negotiate, reserving its own position for the conference which must, if it is to be at all successful, be carried on confidentially in the preliminary and exploratory stages. Or the Kremlin can issue a new public broadside of its gh1t £irhmnan &tilu LTER LIPPMANN I demands and its terms, in which case it will be painfully clear that the Kremlin does not now want to negotiate. Or the Russians can negoti- ate confidentially, say through Mr. Macmillan or through diplomatic channels, about the cir- cumstances of the conference to which the West has invited them. Let us hope that in making up their minds how to react the Russians will not draw the wrong the wrong conclusion from the fact of Secretary Dulles's illness. The wrong conclu- sion would be that the less Mr. Dulles is able to participate, the more flexible and the more disunited will be Western policy. The exact opposite is the truth. The less able Mr. Dulles is to over-see American and Allied policy and to cover it with his special authority, the more rigid will be the American position, the more intransigent will be Mr. Adenauer. It is Mr. Dulles who has made possible the new flexi- bility in Western policy, and much may depend upon whether Mr. Mikoyan realized that when he was here and has made it plain to Mr. Khrushchev. THE RUSSIANS could easily misunderstand this crucial fact. They have their own long standing stereotype that Mr. Dulles is unyield- ing and implacable. They have highly simplified views of human character and of human be- havior, and they have a rather dangerously simplified view of Mr. Dulles, who is in fact a complicated man. The Russians may not be able to appreciate quickly enough that their view of Mr. Dulles as a monolithic character is a mistaken one. They may be confirmed in their prejudice by much that is being printed in this country. In many quarters Mr. Dulles is being pictured as a kind of granite monument which never changes and never bends no matter what the winds that blow. This is mythology, and al- though it is intended as adulation, it does less than Justice to this worldly and experienced man. The myth has little relation to the fact that John Foster Dulles is and always has been a very practical man who measures the strength of the forces about him and sets his course ,anrds ~ LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 4 Reader Defends Fraternity System To the Editor: THE RECENT Daily articles on fraternities seemed to bring up several old charges based on a conception of the fraternity sys- tem as the last adolescent, sick remnant of the world of F. Scott Fitzgerald. Whether or not this is seemingly true of some ele- ments, closer consideration would show that, some of the main charges brought by the system's critics were largely fallacious. 1) "Fraternities are a conspiracy against education." - A survey of the various literary college honors programs would probably show them to be made up of at least one-third fraternity and sorority members. These people are not, further, in those programs due to the use of menacing exam files. Exam files in most cases can only point the direction a professor thinks the course is taking; they, cannot teach the course overnight by a short-cut method. Further, the best exam file on campus is being put together in the base- ment of the undergraduate li- brary; no fraternity I have seen has one to compete with the file I maintained as a freshman for a residence hall. 2) "Fraternities are based on ritualistic rot." - Nonsense! Fra- ternities change by-laws regularly, ritual seldom (and then usually by dropping some) which seems to indicate their relative import- cratic, stifle the individual and re- strict his choice of friends." Fra- ternity pledging policies are realis- tically designed to maintain a group that can stand to live - gether for three years and to be identified one with the other. Per- haps that is undemocratic. But in the system as a whole, almost any man can pledge some house. If he, cannot pledge the "elegant" Tri- Kaps it is probably because he is not elegant. To pledge it, if he could, would lead only to pressures to an unnatural conformity. Fra- ternities, on this campus, have no ability to deprive anyone of any- thing but membership in a minor- ity group. And unless a man is be- ing deprived of membership in all such groups he cannot claim to be denied anything but the gratifica- tion of his own snobbery.- The chief advantage of a frater- nity is that it offers an opening for continuing close friendships and a chance for men to organize strongly within the university community. Any social advantages and any influences to conformity, as well as, in the end, the organi- zation itself, arise from those friendships, just as they do among the independents. Any outside friendships are, in most cases, re- stricted only by the amount of time one has for them. While this is probably truer of the small houses than of the larger, frater- nities are essentially democratic, a or- n if indijidiian fvan7i n suits. Some still wear them. Oth- ers carry green book bags. All these phenomena are matters of taste, individual or group, and any true individualist, if he had the poor sense to come to Ann Ar- bor at all, could probably survive in a fraternity as well as anywhere else. In fact, it would offer him some small support against the considerably more oppressive in- fluence of the University. At any rate, it would give him a strud- ture to use in fulfilling his social needs, from the need for action to the need for ice cubes, in what is probably one of the most indi- vidualistic of organized groups. -Robert Tanner The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1959 VOL. LXIX, NO. 98 General Notices The Printing Office will close its campus office at 412 Maynard St. (U. Press Bldg.) on Feb. 20. All activities will be concentrated at the Printing Building on North Campus. The Office of Service Enterprises at 1060 Administration Bldg., Ext. 2622, will serve as a receiving center for printing on main campus, and thi special messenger service formerly car- ried on will be continued at this new contact point. Please use campus mail if time al- lows, otherwise bring orders and proofs to 1060 Administration Bldg., or direct to the North Campus. Dial 86-472 for consultation or for appointments with the manager or staff when questions arise which concern your printing needs. Prints from the A k Print Loan Col- lection may be obtained in Rm. 52$ Stu- dent Activities Bldg on Sat., Feb. 21, from 2:00 to 5:00 p.m. The following student-sponsored so- cial events have been approved for the coming weekend. Social chairmen are reminded that requests for approval for social events are due in the. Office of Student Affairs not later than 12 noon on Tuesday prior to the event. Feb. 20: Alpha Epsilon Pi, Beta, Theta Pi, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Delta Tau Delta, Delta Upsilon, Kappa Sigma, Little Hse., Phi Delta Phi, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Kappa Psi, P1 Lambda Phi, Psi Omega, Sigma Alpha Epsilon,-Sigma Alpha Mu, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Sigma Nu, Phi Epsilon Pi. Feb. 21: Chinese Students Club, Evans Scholars, Frederick He., Kelsey Hse., Phi Delta Phi, Phi Kappa Sigma, Reeves Hse., Scott Hse., Strauss Hse. Summary action taken by Student Government Council at its meeting Feb. 18, 1959. Approved minutes of previous meet- ing. Approved appointments to the SGC committee which is to gather informa- tion and make recommendations con- cerning the Committee on Student Con- duct, Joint Judiciary, Student Govern- ment Council in the area of student conduct: David Kessel, chairman, Da- vid Carpenter, Jo Hardee, Pat Mar- thenke. Received Treasurer's report; progress report on Exchange programs. Adopted a motion to appoint a com- qtl rI r' Senimore Says .. !ko