"Fortissimo -Pianiss imo -Fortissimo - Sixty-Ninth Year ETf ITl AND MANAtL. Un STUDENTS OF THE UNTVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Vhen Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MiCi. * Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff u itcrs or the editors. This must be ino/cd in all reprints. Bassett's Work Highlights Program BOTH THE PROGRAM and the performance of the Woodwind Quni- tet at Rackham Hall last night showed a lack of respect for an audi- ence that was permitted to see them without charge. Only two of the five works on the program were worth a hearing at all, the Quintets of Gyula David and Leslie Basset. The performances themselves were not totally without inspiration, but the Quintet's attack was not at all clean, and they played far too many wrong notes for a concert group. To begin the concert, the group warmed up with a transcription of two fugues from "The Well Tempered Clavier." Why these arrange- ments were made in the first place is an ineluctable mystery to me, but they were short. and the Quintet performed them with hasty dis- patch. The Albert Huybrechts work was next, a contemporary work in the French tradition of clean, organized writing, without transcend- N AY. NOVEMBER 26, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: BARTON HUTHWAITE- L L L v s i ji i s V a ertar.s r.® r . s R .e a .... The Case of Student X' STUDENT X wasn't a bad guy. He was just a little careless. His parents and friends once knew him as a conscientious student with Love average grades and everything to gain. low they know him as a statistic. He was just one out of thousand of students ,round the country heading home for a peace- ul Thanksgiving vacation. With the pressures f college life far behind him, Student X was robably thinking more about home with every nile he added to his speedometer. But somewhere between college and his home tree rudely interrupted his peaceful thoughts. Phe police never did discover why his automo- Aie suddenly swerved off the highway. Per- aps Student X dozed for a second at the wheel. That party the night before didn't leave much room for sleep. Or maybe that half- empty bottle in the back seat was the cause ... THE NAME of Student X would soon be for- gotten by everyone except those who knew him. The scarred tree would heal in time and nothing would be left to remind others of his crash. The tragic case of Student X can be found In any morning newspaper after a holiday weekend or any weekend for that matter. Death by automobile is accepted as nothing out of the ordinary. Student X never imagined he would be added to this-holiday death toll. But he was. -BARTON HUTHWAITE LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Readers Reply To Writers Double Standards TRIKES ARE attacking the Ann Arbor ivory tower, shaking the student's complacency by priving him of some of the "essentials of odern life" like The Ann Arbor News every ternoon or a plane ride home for Thanksgiv- g. Whether or not Kohler fixtures appear in cal lavatories has apparently not disturbed e student mind over the past three years, t whether this-or-that airline will fly today the most crucial campus issue since salmon- a, , The strikes of both the newspaper and the rlines occurred because of outrageous union ,mands. In the newspaper case, the union ked more than the company's offer, which as above the average for newspapers of that e on a national basis. The real tragedy of the local situation is that a college town laborers are seeking large age increases when already they earn more an college professors. A definite standard of economic morality ap- ars to be involved here. Business executives io do mental work, and actors who possess lent are paid very high salaries. When the ental labor belongs to college faculty mein- rs on their regular jobs they receive less on i average than factory laborers. When pro- fessors are hired by business for consultation work, their salaries take a phenomenal rise. ANY PROFESSOR, who obviously possesses mental ability and a certain fortitude to complete the extensive education necessary for the doctorate, could probably have devoted his ability and the extra years he spent on education to rising in some business. Compen- sation for his education and his crucial position in producing the "wave of the future" should be considered when salaries are set. The fact that these factors are seemingly ignqred es- tablishes a double standard of economy. The obvious reason for the overpaying of manual laborers and the underpaying of pro- fessors is probably due to the former's strong organization. The fact that laborers are or- ganized gives them the strength to wring from their employers benefits to which they may or may not be entitled. Their economic position speaks for itself. College educators have been caught with in- creasing enrollments, smaller budgets, and no effective organization squeeze, spelling doom for salaries. Printers and airline flight engi- neers are striking. The ivory tower is shaken: until Christmas vacation no one will consider it again. - -ROBERT JUNKER TODAY AND TOMORROW: Reds Realistic in Berlin To the Editor: JEAN HARTWIG'S editorial in the Sunday issue came as a surprise to me. The title "Inter- national Week Misses Aim" was startling. I expected an intelligent analysis of the reasons for it. Instead I was left puzzled as to the purpose of the editorial. Bob Arnove, vice-president of the ISA. in an effort to clarify this stand called on Jean Hartwig personally and learned to his dismay that Miss Hartwig neither visited the World's Fair and the International Show nor acquainted herself with the League's program in which sororities and dorms invited hun- dreds of foreign students for din- ners and teas and had closely cooperated with foreign students in putting up displays and working out many other programs. Nor was any attempt made to interview foreign and American students and get their opinion on the week's program. Under the circumstances it was certainly brave of her to write an editorial what should have been treated as a personal opinion in the "Letters to the Editor" column. It is necessary to clarify certain aspects of the whole program. The week was not intended to bring about international understanding overnight as she seems to sug- gest. We believe that it is a con- tinuous process with International Week intended to give it a flying start. The big name speakers focused the attention of the stu- dents on the need for a new orientation in international out- look in general. Pete Seeger in his own inimitable way expressed the closeness of the world in folk music. Scores of foreign students had their American friends parti- cipate in the gay social spirit that pervaded the Monte Carlo Ball. The World's Fair and the Inter- national Show brought a little bit of the world's culture and art to the American students. The ardu- ous work of hundreds of foreign and American students of various organizations all over the cam- pus has made many inconspicuous friendships and conticts during the course of the week. I do not assert that the program was per- fect and needs no improvement in various directions. The Daily staff is in a unique position to evaluate the results impartically and pass constructive criticism. Instead to dismiss it with an indifferent editorial is a positive disservice. --P. Krishnamurthy President, ISA Compliments . . . To the Editor: MY ADMIRATION for the work of Mr. David Kessel-"Hector Berlioz in America"-in the au- tumn issue of Generation, and my concern that its very cleverness may cause it to go unrecognized, lead me now to register publicly these opinions. There is in this work a most artful mixture of fact and fancy, of true report and absurd fiction. Too few will recognize, I suspect, the perfect accuracy of quotations taken from nineteenth century is- sues of the Boston "Musical Rec- ord" and the Boston "Home Jour- tention. I am pleased to convey to the author my compliments and my belief that his essay is an outstanding piece of originality and wit. -Carl Cohen Department, of Philosophy Duty- To the Editor: IS THE Michigan Legislature really aware of its constitution- al duty to promote higher educa- tion? According to Article XI of the Michigan Constitution: "Religion, morality and knowl- edge being necessary to good gov- ernment and thenhappiness of mankind, schools and the means of education shall forever be en- couraged." Vice-President Niehuss' admon- ition that the lawmakers may be "running the state at the expense" of the larger universities should not be treated with "shrugged shoulders." Where are all of the funds raised through sales, property, amusement, cigarette, etc. taxes going? Certainly funds for educa- tion should be classed among those distributions which, should enjoy top priority, and especially educational expenses which are incurred at the "university" level. It is common knowledge that the efficiency and end-products of our system of higher education will be crucial factors in America's survival. Should we allow our legislators to deflate the morale of these institutions by depriving them of their sustenance? Bor- rowing funds is no solution; on the contrary, it is a sure sign of administrative inefficiency and weakness. -Scott Hodes, '59L Clothes . . To the Editor: TWO "Letter to the Editor" writ- ers have recently complained of the manner of dress and the manner of mating habits of vari- ous groups. These puritanical re- formers are under the impression that students are walking com- puters and should be clad or "en- closed" in IBM-grey. Praise Livonia! For they have outlawed Presly haircuts, blue- leans, and other attire that the Livonia administration doesn't ap- prove of. Let us next dictate the brand of underwear other peoples' children shall wear. Make them conform to rigid standards. After all, why shouldn't they dress the way the Livonia administration wishes them to dress? "A lesson can be found here for those who wish to raise the intel- lectual level of the University," says our reformer. The logic is obvious: A man in a grey-flannel suit is much more intelligent than, a man in a leather jacket. This same writer condemns the "unstudious" attire displayed by coeds at the Undergraduate Li- brary. "Distracting," he implies, Slim-jims should be outlawed, he says. A counter proposal to his sug- gestions would be to hand out blinders to all male students at the entrance to the Undergraduate Li- brary, lest these disturbed males become unduly distracted by the About the women parading through the library: let's face it- they do go to the library for books and research and will continue to do so for some time to come. I think his distraction reflects his weakness, not the women's. Also, did it ever occur to him that just like men, women do have to walk to get from one end of the room to the other. If he knows of some other means of locomotion I wish he would let us know. Now, about the cheerleaders. I, myself, like the tradition here at Michigan of an all-male cheering squad. But I am sick of these generalizations accusing all women students of being cheap exhibition- ists. At the Illinois-Michigan game, I sat behind a lawyer. At half- time he stood up and told the young lady next to me that he was a lawyer and had to study on Saturday mornings. This gave him a headache and would she there- fore refrain from yelling. Well, I hate to disrupt an illusion you law- yers seem to have but other people study also, and we have found the aspirin quite advantageous. The point I am trying to make is the contrast between the lack of spirit he showed at the game compared to that of the young lady. ; Therefore, even if we don't agree with some of the coeds' ideas on cheerleading, let's stop accusing them of being constantly "on the prowl" and give tijem a little credit for showing fine school spirit. -Julie Price, '61N Politics . To the Editor: RE your front page headline "SALLADE ASKS FOR MORE AID" (for mental health). Might I be permitted an honest non-political inquiry into who (and why) on the staff of our student newspaper has taken it upon himself, or themselves, to beat the drum for George Sallade, a small time local politician. Perhaps an appropriate headline for a front page would be "VIRGIL SNOD (local democrat) COMES OUT FOR MOTHERHOOD." -Barry Hirsch, '59L Team... To the Editor: [T WAS unfortunate that more of the loyal followers of the University of Michigan football team could not have witnessed what I did this past Saturday in the Ohio State stadium. It's been two years since I've seen U of M's team in action, and I must admit that the majority of the players' names were strange to me. Never- theless, at the end of the game, I was very proud of my school and its football team. It was agonizing to see them fumble when victory seemed to be near, and yet they were to be respected in this heart- breaking defeat. The usually rabid Columbus fans and newspapers stopped their cus- tomary beratement of "Woody" and his team long enough to rec- ognize that they had seen a truly inspired opponent which refused to accept its underdog role. The impersonal record books ing the delicate boundaries of taste in order to plumb great depths of feeling. The uniform- ly light, unemotionally vivacious texture of the outer movements contrasted with a slow section, containing a chorale-like passage reminiscent of a theme from Ber- lioz' "Symphonie Fantastique." The more conventional Quintet of Gyula David was more emotion- ally communicative. The opening Allegro impresses one immediate- ly with its incisive well-deliniated musical lines, a standard which visibly expands in the wonderful color and wit of the Minuetto and final Vivace. There is a disarming folkish quality about the melodies, and yet the composer has not "written down," but used them in a meaningful manner. THE FINEST composition of the whole evening was the Quin tet of Leslie Bassett, a member of the faculty in the School of Music. The alternating slow and fast movements were. one in an inexorable flqw of musical power. There was always the sense of nearly total communication with a significant musical mind. This is certainly the work of a master. The Quintet of Anton Reicha, which closed the program has more of the character of a seren- ade than a concerted work. It falls into the category of light enter- tainment, with the same aesthet- ic qualities as dinner music (though whether anyone could hold a meal while listening to this work is a dubious proposi- tion). A piece that has been justly dead and buried for over one hundred years, the quintet should not have questioned the purposes of God, but waited till The Day of Judgement at the very least, for its resurrection. -Matthew Paris INTERPRETING: Democrcy' Lossout By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst AGOOD many people, moaning over recent setbacks to demo- cratic governmental experiments in newly independent countries, are overlooking the fact that Western policy frequently en- courages military dictatorship. It is almost axiomatic that, if a dictator is sufficiently loud in his condemnation of Communism, he will have the support of the United States and Britain. Indeed, sufficient neutralism or moderation in the East-West con- flict now seems to be accepted by the West as a basis for coopera- tion. There has been no change in American help for Pakistan since the recent overturn there. The British have recognized the new Sudanese government. Both Britain and the United States are largely ignoring the Iraq purges in the hope that the new dictatorship there can be held to its professed middle road between Moscow and Cairo. The United States has'for years pursued this course in Latin America to the point of seriously damaging its standing with lib- erajl elements there. * * IT IS A MATTER of expediency of a type learned early in all poli- tical dealings. It is justified by its exponents as the choice of the lesser evil. There is no question that the practice has contributed to coups before as well as after their oc- currence. After a period of standoffish- ness during the most active period of rebellion in Indonesia, the United States resumed limited military aid to the Indonesian government despite its acceptance of local Communist cooperation and its defenses of Russian Com- munism. This aid has strengthened the military faction which surrounds President Sukarno, and encour- aged its suppression of the Red influence which the president had virtually accepted. There is now the expectation that this aid will be increased. Inherently, this will further en- hance the power of the military faction. It will be able either to BERLIN: Communist Triumph? By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press Foreign News Analyst THERE's more than meets the , eye in the crisis over Berlin. Perhaps by the time it simmers down - and the Russians will be calling the shots - the West once again will be blinking with aston- ishment at some new and signifi- cant Communist world victory. As it did several times before, the Berlin situation has the look of a diversion, and an important >ne. This time the Middle East may be involved. Like the offshore Chinese is- lands in the Pacific, Berlin is readily available at any time the Communists need a crisis, either to cover up some internal devel- opment or to serve as a smoke- screen for thrusts elsewhere on the world stage. Perhaps it could be both at the same time. As in the case of the Formosa strait, the Communists have the initiative in Berlin. The sudden sppearance of an extremely dan- gerous situation either in the For- mosa strait or in Germany must be judged from the standpoint of Communist timing. Peiping and Moscow, together or separately, can turn these two crises on and off as they choose,. Berlin's situation existed for a long time. Why, then, a crisis now? ON THE BASIS of past experi- ence, Berlin's crises are steamed up deliberately. The first big one came in 1948 and lasted 11 ner- vous months. Stalin manufactured it. When the clamor died away, the world suddenly realized the Red revolution was all but ended in China. Chiang Ka-shek ad been chased from the mainland. The next noteworthy Berlin crisis, two years ago, lasted only a few months. Then - as now - the Russians were only a few months away from an all-union Communist Party Congress. Such congresses serve as platforms for unveiling important d e c i s i o n s with regard both to internal and external affairs. The 20th Con- gress two years ago was the one which dethroned Stalin as a hero. But it also paid much attention to external affairs, particularly in the Middle East where the situa- tion was becoming more and more promising for world Communism. The 21st Party Congress is set for January. Ftom Soviet press hints,.it may be the occasion for boss Nikita Khrushchev to finally nail down 'his one-man dictator- ship. It also will be a platform for telling the Russians what's ahead for the next seven years. They face more years of waiting for promises to be fulfilled while the U.S.S.R. builds world power. Such internal considerations alone, however, would not seem sufficient for a diversion on the scale of a full-blown Berlin crisis. There seems little for Moscow to gain in Europe from firing up a perilous fuss now. Indeed, from Stalin era experience, they stand the risk of stiffening Western re- sistance to Communist ams. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 'i o Dealy OfiC iatl uetif isean official publication 'of The tniver- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no edi- torial responsbility. 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 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER. 6, 1958 VAL. LXIX, NO. 61 General Notices Library Hour's Duringg Thanlksglving Vacation: The General Library and all divisional libraries will be closed on Nov. 27. Thanksgiving Day, The General Library and divisional libraries, with, the exception of the Medical Library, will be closed Sat., Nov. 29. There will be no Sunday service on Nov. 30. The General Library ant ithe Undergrad. Li- brary will close at S p.m. Wed., Nov. 28. Both libraries will be open Fri., Nov. 28 from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. All units within the General Library bulding will be open on their retular schedules , I By WALTER LIPPMANN E MOST LIKELY explanation of what the - Soviet government is up to in Berlin is, t seems to me, to make the West Germans nore willing to deal with the East Germans. The fact of the matter is, of course, that the ,wo sets of Germans are already negotiating it what is called the technical level, as the rade agreement announced last week reminds is. The Soviet government's policy calls for a 3roadening of these negotiations with a view, ventually, to a political agreement for a lim- ted reunification of the two German states. When I was in Moscow last month I had i talk with the Foreign Minister, Mr. Gromy- ko, and when we got to the German question, : asked him what was the Soviet view of how ;he Germans could be reunited. Without hesi- ;ation he replied that this could be done only by E "confederation" - he was speaking Eng- ish - in which each of the two German states ould retain its own social institutions. Like dir. Khrushchev, whom I had seen the day be- ore, Mr. Gromyko maintained that German eunification by confederation would have to e brought about by negotiation between the wo Germanys. THE ADVOCACY in Moscow of a German confederation seemed to me very significant n view of the fact that last March, when I was in Bonn, I had heard the same thing in so many and in such high quarters. The State Department, to be sure, continues to repeat the old official formula that Germany should be eunited by free elections in which, of course, he Communist regime would be demolished md East Germany would be absorbed into the be a heavy burden for the West Germans and very probably there wuould be considerable re- sistance to it in East Germany. Integration would change radically the balance of religious forces and of the political parties. Seen realistically, and not through the fumes of the official formula, the alternatives are, on the one hand, the formation of some kind of dual state and, on the other hand, the con- tinuing partition of the German nation. READ the news of the Berlin maneuvers against this background. Mr. Khrushchev, who is nobody's fool, is certainly aware that there is a strong and growing sentiment in West Germany in favor of expanded negotia- tions with East Germany. There is already a lot more talk among the two sets of Germans than the official policy of non-recognition contemplates, and there is no doubt at all that there would be still more talking, were it not for the respect and the fear in which Dr. Adenauer is held. There is, of course, no way of telling what will be the immediate course of the maneuver in Berlin. But it would be surprising indeed if the Soviet government, though it withdrew its own forces, did not keep the East German gov- ernment under strict control, For it is com- mitted to defend the East German government if it is attacked. and that makes it reasonably certain that Moscow will restrain the East Germans from doing things which might pro- voke an attack, I do not think. therefore, that the Soviet ob- jective is to blockade the United States and