"Bone in the Soviet Throat" Seventy-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN "Where 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. FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL OLINICK STATE THEATRE: Simple Spyman Triumphs Over All DANNY KAYE struggles with German generals and bad lines in his latest film, "On The Double." "Mr. Fun," as Kaye is dubbed on the ads for the show, succeeds both against the generals and the lines, and the picture, if not one of his greatest, is still worth seeing. Playing an American soldier in Britain in 1944, Kaye is selected to impersonate a high British officer at work planning the invasion of France. The Nazis, it seems, are out to get the officer. The invasion planner has a beautiful wife (Dana Wynter) and a i U.S. Policy On Red China Changing CHIANG KAI-SHEK is reportedly worried about a possible change in United States policy toward Nationalist China. It has cer- tainly taken Washington a long time, but officials now seem to realize it is necessary to completely overhaul our attitude and actions in support of the Nationalist government. We have been finding out more and more in the last eleven year that Nationalist China, unlike Berlin, is not an enclave of freedom being defended amidst tyranny. On the con- trary, Chiang has shown himself a dictator in a true right-wing tradition. And he has skillfully played upon the anti-Communist sympathies of the American people to get constant support for his dictatorship. But the United States is waking up to find that Chiang is not only a, dictator that we defend in the name of freedom, but that there is no realistic possibility of his ever returning successfully to the mainland. Yet we cannot abandon Formosa to the Communists without losing a great deal of prestige. So Washington is considering conferring with Thomas Liao who is head of a self-styled Formosan independence movement with head- quarters in Japan. If Liao truly wishes to promote reform and freedom in Formosa and is sufficiently anti-Communist, there is a definite possibility that the United States could decide to get rid of Chiang and help install Liao. If- Liao were to head Formosa (with the above conditions) then the United States would have some justification for defending the island. We could be truly defending a free country. BUT THE SITUATION probably most worri- some to Chiang is not so hypothetical. It appears that the State Department is be- coming more and more resigned to the admis- sion of Red China to the United Nations. And despite official assurances that the step will never be taken, there has been increasing talk in support of U.S. recognition of Red China by various public figures. Tnder-Secretary of State Chester Bowles has been a leading ad- vocate of the two Chinas plan. What-if anything- the United States could do to prevent Red China's admission to the UN is questionable. The neutralist Afro-Asian nations could probably carry any General As- sembly vote in Red China's favor whether or not the United States gives its support to the move. FURTHER, we can no longer disregard the existence of Red China and its probable permanence. Any refusal to recognize it as the legitimate government of China on moral grounds is ridiculous, if only because we rec- ognize so many other governments (Spain, Portugal, the Dominican Republic) that are neither democratic nor "moral". The Red Chinese are in control of the main- land. Their government is firmly established. Our foreign policy has too long suffered through lack of contact with events on the mainland, we appear much like Don Quixote to Asian observers. Continuation of our clearly inane policy can do nothing but hurt United States prestige. If there were moral justification for keeping an otherwise embarrassing policy, if we were clear- ly in the right even though it made us seem ridiculous, then we should defend China. But we are not right to support one despotism against another. We cannot back one petty little dictator simply because he is anti-Com- munist. All these considerations seem to be under serious consideration now in Washington. Per- haps Chiang really does have something to worry about. -DAVID MARCUS NATION'S SCHOOL SYSTEM: Ability Grouping Advisable Common Market Problems IN THE PAST WEEKS the situation in the European Common Market tussle has become a good deal clearer. The British government would like to take Great Britain into the Common Market, if it could. The other countries of the European Free Trade Association have announced they would like to join or associate with the Com- mon Market, if they could. Britain could join if in doing so it were not required to ruin the New Zealand farmer and add to unemployment in Canada; and if it could still keep its market freely open to its Stockholm convention partners like Swit- zerland and Sweden. These EFTA countries, too, could associate with the Common Market if nonpolitical terms of association could be offered to them. F, HOWEVER. Britain were required to put tariffs on New Zeland and Canadian goods none now exist the free world would in no wise be benefited; if Britain were required to break up the Commonwealth nobody would gain; if it were required to disassociate itself from its EFTA partners no true progress would have been made, for Europe would remain divided. Membership on these conditions thus would be an act of desperate folly and the urging of membership on these conditions is a dis- service to the causes of unity and freedom. WHAT has yet to be discovered before prog- ress can be made is whether the Common Market 'is prepared to offer other conditions. If it is, none now need doubt that the whole West can draw much closer-and will do so. If it is not, the serious danger of division in the West remains; to "bring Britain into Europe" at the expense of the Commonwealth and the Western European neutrals would be to produce a worse division still. Therefore the first requirement now from the diplomats of the Western Alliance is an open agreement openly arrived at with the Common Market that it will hold out one hand to the Commonwealth and the ether to the neutrals. With that knowledge the free world can close its ranks. -CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second of a three-part analysisof the needs of the nation's school sys- tem.) By JUDITH OPPENHEIM Daily Staff Writer ONE OF THE MAIN features of several European educational systems is class division accord- ing to academic ability. This type of grouping is already in practice in several American high schools and is found to be working suc- cessfully. In his study of American high schools, published in 1959, former Harvard president James B. Con- ant argues the need for ability grouping in all high schools. "In the required subjects and those elected by students with a wide range of ability, the students should be grouped according to ability, subject by subject. For example: in English, American history, ninth grade algebra, biol- ogy and physical science, there should be at least three types of classes. The middle group could be further divided." This grouping would not need to be "across-the-board." For ex- ample, a student might be in the top section in Algebra but in the middle section in English. UNDER such a system, the stu- dent has an opportunity to pro- gress at his own rate of speed and students with special ability or interest in a certain field would be able to do supplementary work. Students who had no intention of going on to college would be required to take only certain aca- demic classes and could take courses in shop, mechanical draw- ing, home economics and similar subjects if they chose. Schools in areas where most graduates enter a particular occupation such as farming could offer courses which would benefit the local student particularly. Ability grouping of this sort is often criticized as being "undem- ocratic" because it does not of- fer the benefits of identical course material to all. As one professor of education has commented, however, "Ameri- cans used to the idea of equal op- portunity for all are mistaking this to mean the same education for all. The schools are abandon- ing their role of preparing for a society based upon the strengths of individual differences and are accepting a society based upon the weaknesses of the 'all-too- common man.' "If we are committed to edu- cating every student to the limit of his ability, which I believe we are, we cannot do so by educating them all together in the same way." THE S P E C I AL Rockefeller Foundation Report on United States Education, made in 1958, stated that stimulation of the in- dividual to make the most of his potentialities should be an ob- jective of all education. "The general academic capacity of students," the report says, "should be at "least tentatively identified by the eighth grade as the result of repeated testings and classroom performance in the elementary grades. "Ah adequate system would in- sure that each student would then be exposed to the sort of program that will develop to the full the gifts which he possesses." Those who fear that the results of an arbitrary test would con- demn a student to a class level below his actual abilities point with horror to the "11-plus exam" administered in Britain to deter- mine whether a student continues Big "JF the Department of Justice is right in its contention that the Constitution requires the states to provide public education, George Orwell's "Big Brother" may be coming to live with us after al. . "If this is a constitutionally sound position, what limit is there to the reach of the federal author- ity? If the federal government is authorized by the Constitution to decree that education is a neces- sity, and that the states must provide it, it is a very short step indeed to assumption by the fed- eral government of responsibility also to decree what must be taught, by whom it must be taught and how it must be taught . . "Does the ultimate power to de- cide what is and what is not a necessity for the residents of the states reside in the federal courts? If so, "Big Brother" has taken over in Washington-and much sooner than we anticipated." -Washington Evening Star with academic studies and goes on to college or follows either a more general curriculum ending by his fourteenth year or a trade school course. The drawbacks of this examina- tion, however, were noticed by the British educators themselves. An examination system would cer- tainly not need to be the only.. method by which the class level of a student would be determined. General interest, past perform- ances in class and improvement could easily be taken into account as well as other special circum- stances. An examination, however, would serve as an initial basis for di- viding students and could help keep groupings more uniform on a national basis. * * * OPPONENTS of the system who argue that a method of ability grouping would aid the gifted stu- dent at the expense of the less bright, claim that talented stu- dents are needed in the classroom to provide a challenge and stim- ulate discussion. A divided group is just as bene- ficial to the slower student as to the gifted child, however. Under a system of homogeneous grouping, the slower student can proceed at his own pace so that he learns the given material thoroughly and1 has an opportunity to raise ques- tions and discuss points without1 being intimidated by the presence of brighter students who are like- ly to proceed more quickly and to monopolize much of the teacher's time. The main requirement for a sol- id homogeneous grouping system is a large enough school district to provide the requisite number of students and teachers for more than one section of each aca- demic subject. Small school districts often are hard put even to assemble enough students for one class of advanced mathematics or foreign languages and must frequently ask teachers to "double," conducting courses on topics they are really unprepared to teach. If, as Conant suggests in his report, small school districts are consolidated so that no high school has fewer than 500 pupils, there will be enough students to comprise several different classes, and the schools will be justified in hiring teachers specially train- ed in the individual academic areas. many-bellied mistress (Diana Dors but not the mistress. As his im- personator, Kaye is expected to live up to these proclivities. He fails. As is so often the case in real life, the meek low-born American falls in love with the high-born British Lady. And, as the realistic example dictates, the love is re- turned. * * * BUT this is not all. In case the love motif doesn't completely sat- isfy you, there is always the sight of Kaye running around Berlin in his underwear. (How he got to Berlin had better be left unsaid.) But while privateand Lady join hands across the ocean (blood is thicker than water) invidous agents of the Third Reich are try- ing their best to kill the private who they think is planning the invasion of France. Will they succeed? For a while their chances look excellent, but then everything goes wrong for them. The good guys, led by Kaye, prove that the mild-mannered will inherit the city of Earth. At the end there is the celebra- tion of the successful invasion (of the German defenses) and an im- pending marriage (of the beauti- ful wife). The Germans, you see, had the good taste to kill Husband Number One without realizing it. * * * AND up to the end of the show no one knows who the top rank- ing Nazi spy really is. But all the loose ends are tied together by the masterful scriptwriters, and the hero himself makes the vital discovery. Almost, though, he gets shot. And he is saved by the same Al- lied master-spy who decided to risk Kaye's life in the first place. So the irony of great drama, and of real life, both add their bit to- ward making this comedy really funny. -Peter Steinberger Modern Trend 'THE CLASSICAL liberals of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries based their- optimistic appreciation of mankind's future upon the assumption that the mi- nority of eminent and honest men would always be able to guide by persuasion the majority of infer- ior people along the way leading to peace and prosperity .. . "We may leave it undecided whether the error of these opti- mists consisted in over-rating the elite or the masses or both. At any rate it is a fact that the im- mense majority of our contem- poraries is fanatically committed to policies that ultimately aim at abolishing the social order in which the most ingenious citizens are impelled to serve the masses in the best possible way. "The masses-including those called the intellectuals-passion- ately advocate a system in which they no longer will be the cus- tomers who give the orders but wards of an omnipotent author- ity ... "Yet this outcome is not inevit- able. It is the goal to which the prevailing trends in our contem- porary world are leading. "But trends can change and hitherto they always have chang- ed. The trend toward socialism too may be replaced by a different one. To accomplish such a change is the task of the rising genera- tion." -Ludwig von Mises Modern Age ). Of course, he neglects the wife to the EDITOR Eichmannn To the Editor: WE WERE CURIOUS to know something of the background of Peter Steinberger, night edi- tor of the Michigan Daily. His editorial "Israeli Justice and U.S. Morality" seems to be the product of an immature and rash mind, and we wonder how he reached his position on the Daily staff. The use of the first person plur- al "we" instead of the singular "I" seems to be the prerogative of the writers of editorials, and Mr. Steinberger leaves no doubt that he feels he is expressing the es- sence of the thoughts of many millions of Americans. *4. * IN HIS SECOND paragraph, Mr. Steinberger dismisses the "two purposes" of the Eichmann trial in 44 words. The second purpose, stated in the second of two sen- tences, was that the Israelis " . wanted to warn their Arab neigh- bors and assorted others that it doesn't pay to kill Jews." We fail to see any justification for the attitude that this was a purpose of the trial, and we wonder how the idea occurred to Mr. Stein- berger. We would have been hap- pier if Mr. Steinberger had given more thought and space to this topic. In the 7th and 8th paragraphs Mr. Steinberger writer: "We do not like to hear of a man punish- ed only for doing his duty, for doing a good job. We can approve any punishment for a personal fault-for lust, or greed, or per- verted ambition. But Eichmann, as has become only too clear, is the sufferer of none of these dis- eases." Mr. Steinberger refers to Eichmann's "love for efficiency," and "entirely normal ambition," and suggests that Eichmann was "doing a good job." We do not see what was normal about Eich- mann's ambition, and we cannot understand the attitude that as long as man is doing his job well and efficiently, he is in no way re- sponsible for his actions. THE UNIQUE and powerful Po- sition an editorial writer has in a community places certain re- sponsibilities on his shoulders; one of these, we believe, is for the writer to always have his wits about him, so that the opinions he expresses, if not identical to our own, can at least be seen to have been derived in a logical and sane manner from the particular prejudice or point of view of the editorialist. Mr. Steinberger, we believe, has failed this responsibil- ity. -Stanley Bernstein, Grad. -Robert B. Marcus, Grad. Union FOR MORE than a decade now, the nations bordering the North Atlantic have been living off the capital provided by the great ini- tiative of the Marshall Plan . But with the achievement-indeed the surpassing-of the vision of a decade ago, it has become ever more important to relate these prosperous states to each other. The leap forward required in the next decade' is the creation of a political framework that will go beyond the nationalism which-has dominated the past century and a half." --The Reporter 1 { i s FROM OTHER CAMPUSES: N-Bomb Testing UJP ON CAPITOL HILL a bitter fight is going on in secret hearings about whether or not the United States should undertake to develop an N-bomb. The neutron bomb would be a revolutionary advance in atomic warfare, for it would destroy life within its range but would leave all other objects undamaged and free from contamination. Four years ago the possibility of developing this weapon was revealed in secret testimony by three scientists from the Livermore Radia- tion Laboratory in California. Because of this nation's voluntary halt to nuclear testing, however, the plans for the N-bomb never went beyond the disclosure stage and were placed on the closet shelf while test ban talks went on at Geneva. Now that the Russians with their troika stand have shattered any hopes for draft.- ing a. treaty to end testing, the N-bomb design has been brought back out and dusted off with spirited discussion. The do-produce and the don't-produce stands revolve around the ques- Editorial Staff MICHAEL BURNS..........................Co-Editor SUSAN FARRELL...........................Co-Editor DAVE KIMBALL.......................Sports Editor RUTH EVENBUIS..................... Night Editor MICHAEL OLINICK...................Night Editor JUDITH OPPENHEIM ..................Night Editor PETER STEINBERGER .................. Night Editor __ It.. tion of "Is it needed?" and "Would it ever be used as a battlefield weapon?" THE ANSWER to the first query is yes. Be- cause of events in Laos, fears have grown in European countries recently that the United States might not come to her defense if the Russians started an all-out offensive. The feeling is based on the fact that our defense structure is still geared to a massive retalia- tion policy while the strength of NATO has not kept pace with the Communist troop build-up in Europe. Europeans in some quar- ters believe that if the Russians attacked NATO would be overwhelmed, and the United States, from her distant position, would be forced to rely on and reply with heavy nuclear weapons. This happening would not spare Europe. If the United States developed the N-bomb, it could be turned over to the NATO establish- ment, which it has hesitated to do with large atomic weapons. The N-bomb's range can be adapted to a variety of battlefield- conditions and it would be entirely feasible for NATO's weapons system. It would go a long way in ameliorating our allies' concern over their safety if the Russians started up trouble. T HE ANSWER to the second question can- not be determined empirically. 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