Seventy-First Year .. l 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. THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: PETER STEINBERGER PLAYBILL PRODUCTION: Delightful Angels Spark Farce Interest in Con-Con Healthy, Encouraging DESPITE THE FACT that the public may not get to see the Michigan Constitutional Con- vention in living color, the proposed plans for publicizing events are indicative of a healthy interest. After both Republicans and Democrats had agreed to the necessity for an open convention, it was disclosed by Secretary of State James Hare that the Lansing Civic Center where the convention will be held, is large enough to provide desks for the 144 delegates but not large enough for the public. Several alternative plans are being studied to enable as many observers as possible to view the con-con proceedings. A subcommittee of the preparatory commis- sion is considering enlarging the hall so that observers may be seated in what is now adjoin- ing storage space. Another suggestion is the installation of win- dows in the rear wall of the auditorium and special loudspeakers so that citizens standing outside could follow the proceedings. A third solution would be public seating in the basement with closed circuit television to carry the proceedings there. Although this proposal is not nearly as good as the first, it is certainly better than the second. COURSE nothing can equal the real, eye- witness point of view of the proceedings. Any measure which would enable a substantial crowd to attend the convention is certainly worth the expense. If there is no possibility of a live audience, the next best idea is closed circuit television with ample facilities for seating observers. Every possible effort should be exerted to encourage school and organization groups to attend the convention. It would be an excellent idea to have an additional television room which could be open to groups on regularly scheduled visits, with commentary and ex- planation by a qualified guide. . The attention focused on Lansing beginning in September can have a profound effect on the outcome of the long awaited convention. The delegates will be faced with a complex and serious situation. Their action will be crucial to the future of the state. The interest the citizens show in the pro- ceedings should serve as a sobering and en- couraging influence as the months drag on. It is well that it has been recognized and it must be encouraged to the fullest possible ex- tent. --JUDITH OPPENHEIM " DON'T KNOW if I'm awake or asleep and dreaming," says Madame Ducotel in her home be- hind a general store in Devil's Island. The audience, watching ;his scene in Sam and Bella Spewack's ironically sentimental farce "My Three Angels" may well agree, for the setting, plot, characters and action of this drama are fantastic enough to make anyone wonder whether he is awake or drear.ing. The heroes of this piece are three unlikely convicts, two "lf- ers" convicted of murders (that are nade wholly creditabI.i) and an artistic juggler of business books (who says "Most business- men think bookkeeping is a sci- ence. With me, its an art ") Com- bining talents of burglary, for- gery, skullduggery and various other gifts, along with a poisonou.s pet named Adolphe, the trio of "bad guys" turn out to not only have hearts of gold, but hairtrig- ger minds, ready at the drop of a body to cook up schemes to allow virtue to be rewarded, wrongs to be righted 'and scores to be settled. Just how the "painfully honest" Monsieur Ducotel (a child at heart who "believes in fairy tales" and has made a mess of running his general store at the penal colony), and his lovely but schoolgirlish daughter Marie Louise (who is in love with the wrong boy) pro- gress towards happiness is a, story which the viewer must wit- ness to appreciate, and, perhaps, to believe. YET THE remarkable thing about the play, which must be said in tribute to its authors, is that it is entirely believable to the au- dience even while it is entirely nonsensical. In fact, it is just be- cause it is nonsensical that it is believable. Above all, there is rare- ly a dull moment or a heavy touch in this comedy-and this is what makes it the delightful farce that it is. In retrospect, much of the hu- nior in the lines seems rather or- di nar:, despite the grotesque comedy of some of the situations. For example, after a death, one I STATE COLLEGES: New Director To Speed Voluntary Coordinatior By PETER STEINBERGER Daily Staff Writer PROF. MERRITT CHAMBERS, newly appointed "executive director" for Michigan's public colleges, faces the task of speeding up volun- tary coordination among the schools to match the success Ohio and Indiana already have. His primary problem-and the one which has caused Michigan lawmakers the most headaches-is how to apportion the state's money among the colleges, and how to decide the total appropriation. Prof. Chambers, by doing research into needs and costs and mak- ing recommendations based on them, will be important in deciding these questions. His office will be financed by the colleges, each school contribut- ing a share. (While the University, Michigan State University and -Daily-Larry Jacobs MY THREE ANGELS-Sam and Bella Spewack's adaptation of a French farce by Albert Husson is playing at the Lydia Mendelssohn Desperate Red Giant Theatre through Saturday night. the speech department. chai acter remarks: "But his doc- tors said he would live to ninety" and is met with "Well, now he ca'i sue his doctors for breach of coniract." At the time, it tier-ain'yt seemed funny. * * * ALL IN ALL, the University Players put on a good show. Theie is no actor who can be singled out for disapproval. All did tolerably well, and some, of course, better than tolerably well. In particuler, the 'angelic" trio of convicts was quite good: the hot-blooded vourg Alfred, who almost looked as if he It is directed by Donald Lovell of sterp-d out of the Kingston Trio (Edwf ,rd Cicciarelli), the philoso- phic wife-strangler Jules (Fred Oueiette) and the principal con- vict, Joseph the book juggler (Conrad Stolzenbach) all same to their parts with the proper spirit. Next on the Players' program is the Soviet poet Vladimir Maya- kcvsky's satire on post-revolution- arv Russia, "The Bedbug." It is to be hoped that the Players' sensi- tivity to irony and farce Ng ill ex- tend to cover the Russian scene as well as Devil's Island. -Mark Slobin HISTORY ABOUNDS with allies of more divergent views than Moscow and Peking that stuck together as well in periods of mu- tual distaste as in periods of mutual evangel- ism or conquest. There is little, therefore, inherently hopeful for the Western powers in the present quarrel between Nikita Khrushchev and Mao Tse-tung. There seems little doubt that the quarrel it- self exists. It has come to the surface too often since about 1956 to be merely a contrived Com- munist booby trap. And the evidence in this latest climax includes so many ideological, na- tional, and personal snubs that it seems safe to say that Khrushchev is trying to rein in the Chinese, who have so much more to gain and less to lose than he by gambling with war. HE BASIC FACT still seems to be that the Communist regimes of the Soviet Union and China have always been out of phase. And they are tending to be more so, as Moscow has be- come a world power able to generate its own capital while Peking has struggled desperately to continue on the world scene'the momentum of its remarkable takeover in China at the same time that its domestic "great leap forward" col- lapsed. Moscow makes a good example for the prov- Memo TO: The University of Michigan Regents FROM: The University Committee on Seman- tics RE: Recommended name change 'for the Stu- dent Activities Building WHEREAS-the new addition to the SAB is devoted solely to administrative functions, and Whereas-the portion of the SAB now devot- ed to the activities of the students is extremely small, and Whereas-the role of the student in planning the addition was almost non-existent: the com- mittee recommends that The name of the Student Activities Building be changed to the Student Administration Building. -K. McELDOWNEY erb "appetite is in the eating." Peking, for the saying "hunger comes from not eating." This being out of phase but of the same faith has contributed to a long line of squabbles be- tween the two partners. But they have so far always managed to close ranks against the West. MAO APPARENTLY never fully accepted either Khrushchev or his de-Stalinization speech. And after the riots in Poznan, Poland, Peking reportedly aided Gomulka against Mos- cow. But when the chips were down against the West at the time of the Hungarian revolt, Chou En-lai was rung in to emphasize China's un- dying solidarity with Moscow. Since then there have been quarrels over Ti- toism, Formosa policy, Khrushchev's warmth toward President Eisenhower, and ultimately over the policy behind all these-"peaceful co- existence" versus "inevitable war." The latter "hungry" Chinese policy, so abhorrent to hu- manity, nevertheless proved a strong magnet to Communists in the neutral world-whose only hope of rising to power appeared to be war. Moreover, these forlorn missionaries of the Marxist faith, far from being helped, were ac- tually being left further from power by Khrush- chev's wooing of neutral governments with aid and support. IN ORDER to patch up the Moscow-Peking quarrel over co-existence, the Communist hierarchs met last October and papered over the ideological cracks. That papering has now split wide open again. But it is significant to note that once again the quarrel is being bridg- ed where the chips are down, as in Laos. Knowledge of the full meaning of today's Communist quarrel is essential to Western diplomatic strategy. But it should not be con- strued as an invitation to popular optimism. For each test of Chinese power against Soviet reins indicates that the more belligerent part- ner is growing in a paradoxical combination of self-confidence and desperation. And if, as General de Gaulle suggests, Russia will even- tually return to its European ties, such a distant reorientation of one giant may only turn out to reflect a loss of leverage over the ambitions of the hungrier giant. --CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: Crises Diplomatic, Not Moral Wayne State University have pri- vately-donated money they can set aside for this purpose, the state's smaller institutions could theoret- ically be told to stop paying their share if the Legislature wished this.) BESIDES QUESTIONS directly related to education, which, as Prof. Chambers explains, will be his office's main research area, there are other questions - many political in nature-which can af- fect education. One of these, for instance, is the matter of how to get taxes to pay for schools. Prof. Chambers thinks a state income tax-either personal or corporate-is needed for this, but he says he won't be volunteering this advice unless the council asks him to. * * * HE POINTS to Indiana and Ohio as examples of states where voluntary coordination of colleges has worked well. In each state the colleges decide among them- selves what items will have prior- ity in their budget requests; and also determine a unified plan for filling the state's educational needs. Otherwise the two methods are quite different. In Indiana an elaborate cost-study has been made, and decisions determining who will receive what are made according to a complete formula. (So detailed is the formula that the percentage of the total money given to any one school is com- puted to the third decimal.) In Ohio, the college presidents meet and decide what items to push-but do it without any elab- orate formula or series of studies such as Indiana has. Up to now in Michigan the Leg- islature alone has decided how much money goes to each school. The law specifies this. But, Prof. Chambers says, if all the schools could agree on what they wanted and what each school should get, the Legislature would certainly be ready to hear the advice. He adds, that "we're far from that, right now," but also points out that Michigan's troubles are shared by many other states. In- diana is the happy exception, and not the rule. HOW CLOSE can Michigan come to Indiana, or Ohio? Prof. Chambers believes it all depends on public information. "If the public is better inform- ed, its reresentatives will be too," he says. "The fate of edu- cation here will be bettr-as good as anywhere. "People in Michigan are in a receptive mood for information on their colleges. Half the families in the state have children who ex- pect to go to college. "The legislators have often seemed in need of more under- standing of education's needs, but the way to educate them is not to go into a conference with a blackboard and chalk and a long pointer. "Instead, I rather think of it as a business of making the pub- lic know the college situation. If the public learns, the legislators won't stay ignorant." CAMPUS: Sunday's Child THE SURPRISE bonus of a do- it-yourself ending accounts for the slightly mystified but smiling audience which leaves the Campus Theatre after "Saturday Night and Sunday Morning." It looks as though the Sunday morning life has won out over Saturday night but Saturday nightwill probably put upjust enough of a fight to keep things interesting in the future. The film is superbly acted and very moving until the end where it seems all the themes come to a dead-end and the viewer's :eac- tion to the "The End" flashed on the screen is wide-eyed incredul- ity. THE STORY involves Arthur Seaton, a British factory worker who hates every minute of his job and is determined not to get caught in the treadmill of in- difference and routinized daily living. His antedote is to live every Saturday night to the hilt and he knows how to do it. When he drinks, he outdoes everyone else in the bar and then falls down the back stairs head first. When he has an affair with a nariled woman she has a baby. When he takes pot-shots at his neighbor with an air gun (she deserves it) he hits the target every time. He is a chronic liar and proudof it. People are constantly rem'ind- irg him that "liars don't prosper" and "there's no rest for the wiked" in the emphatic tones most scientific movie-goers learn to recognize as highly prophetic. This is partly why everyone is so shocked by the ending. Not only does it defy augury, it does a com- plete about-face and leaves the hero, except for a few facial scars, trembling on the verge of a beau- tLful new existence--which is, of course, the very humdrum he swore he'd never fall for DESPITE rather sow plot de- v'lopment, the spirit of the movie is never static. With.i quicksilver aglity the actors move from m'oments of real hitarity to ones of intense pain. The nortrayals are s,7nsitive and compiewely convinc- ing. Except for occasional prob- -!ms with British accents, the au- dience is immediately won over by the simplicity and eandor of the dbalogue. The personalities are v- brant and real. It is the strength and sympathy of the character portrayal which prevents the ending from being disastrous. The audience rconciles itself to the fact that it will never real'y know the hero, but has gained enough insight into his cnaracter to be wilang to trust him. All told, this is one of the rare movies in which the characters possess the necessary stature to fufill the potential of the plot. It is an ambitious undertaking skill- fully carried out by the entire cast. It should not be missed. -Judith Oppenh-am By PHILIP SHERMAN Special To The Daily PHILADELPHIA - Some years ago, the English historian Her- bert Butterfield made a speech at Notre Dame University in which he identified the critical problems of international relations today- and, indeed, in all history-as diplomatic. Questions of good and bad, of ideology, of "morality" tend to obscure this basic fact he said. Significantly - both in 1950 when he first spoke, and now - he used for an example the problem of Germany. What Butterfield said was that a certain irreducible element may lie in the "very geometry of hu- man conflict" itself. To show this, he employed an illustration - admittedly abstracted from ac- tual 'conditions - in which he posited that both Soviet Russia and the West are of equal moral- ity; but both feel they must have control of Germany to ensure their own safety - mutually exclusive aims. The situation generates a "Hob- besian fear." These men of equal morality - at a reasonably high level - fear what the other will do. Each knows that it will not use Germany to move against the other; and each knows it does not want war. But neither can realize that the other has the same feel- ings. Neither side wants conflict, but it comes because there is no assurance that it will not - only fear which is, in reality, unjusti- fied. In this situation, it would make no difference whether Russia were Tsarist or Communist; the morality of the Soviet leaders would matter little. For, as Butter- field argues, these factors are sec- ondary. They cloud the basic and diplomatic issue which exists out- side of them. The diplomatic con- flict is always present-in its out- lines, it has never been resolved. * * * BUTTERFIELD'S FRAME of reference can be applied to the present Berlin problem. A new interpretation of the crisis-and indeed of a very great deal else- emerges by looking at things with- out ideological considerations and from the Russians' viewpoint. (The latter is debatable, of course, but the theory is fruitful enough to be used.) * * FROM THIS VIEWPOINT, the facts are that the West actually emerged from World War II with the most significant spoils: the best parts of Germany, Japan and even Italy. These Axis powers had dared the whole rest of the world with a marked amount of success. may reason, the West theoretically grabbed off the balance of world power. The West is in a position to destroy Russia thereby. Ger- many - the traditional nemesis has new allies in the conflict for hegemony raging in Eastern Europe these many years. Not for Communist ends but for the se- curity of Russia does Khrush- chev want Germany and Berlin. * ,' 'I TAKING OVER BERLIN would have many advantages for the Soviets. It would strengthen their hold in the East, protecting them better from a more powerful West and a resuscitated Germany. It would end a serious drain on skilled manpower and shut a pro- paganda showcase the West ex- ploits. It might even shake fed- eral Germany, even enough to dis- lodge it from the West. Or the West Germans might conclude the future lay with the East, though this seems unlikely. In so far as West Germany goes, it seems the, best Soviet hope is simply to des- troy confidence in the West, not to make it change sides - at least not just yet. All these are concrete and rea- sonable aims for the Soviets. But even if the adventure fails and very little happens, some advan- tage will still have been gained. The West will have been distract- ed from the fruitful exercise of its preponderance of power be- cause it got over-concerned with Berlin and, in a period of rocket rattling, forgot, as it usually does, that it is able to bury the Soviets. This last explanation can be extrapolated to account for other Soviet actions, too. Laos, the Con- go, Iran, Korea, disarmament, and all the others . . . their purpose isn't to win the world for Marx- ism but to protect the Soviet Union by drawing the eyes of the West away from what are the hard facts in the world: its own superiority. The place of the Communist ideology? A useful - indeed a magnificent - tool in the Russian struggle. If some countries can be made allies of Russia because of it so much the better. The Rus- sians will have picked up a little small change in the market of world relations, but small change that means little in the face of the real Western power. That state socialism has proven to be an effective means for eco- nomic growth, that social revolu- tion often creates openings for Soviet success is all to the good. But these are used, not for truly Marxian missionary purposes, but for Russian defense. * * * SO FAR, it must be admitted, almost sole reliance on this is one of their major successes. This is not to say they wouldn't destroy the West if they could - for that would solve their diplomatic problem until some new power arose. But it is to say that more than the SAC is needed - much more. The means have been suggested: construction of a world state sys- tem comparable to that which once existed in Europe. This system, while it did not prevent war, did limit war. In an atomic age, a world of states with reasonable national power and marked self-interest, might mean no wars at all because of the atomic danger. At any rate, it would appear to be a more stable basis for world order than the huffings and puffings of two Leviathans. There's no worry that a Nas- ser or a Nehru. a Tito or an Mboya is going to be a Russian satellite, once his own nation is built up. He's not a Russian, and, if Butterfield's downgrading of ideology in such relationships is correct, neither will his being a Marxist matter very much. After all, the West would still conflict over Germany with the Christian empire of Tsarist Russia. TWO PROBLEMS REMAIN, however. The secondary question of ideology and th3 basic problem of international relations. Ideology: it's a complicating factor, but if it can be identified as only that, then perhaps a more realistic view can be taken. It is not HUAC but the Peace Corps and the World Bank that are a means to safety in a balance of power world. This doesn't mean the Russians are any less dan- gerous. In fact, their use of Marx- ism makes them even more re- doubtable opponents. But it isn't their basic motivation. International relations: as But- terfield said, the basic problem is still unsolved. Showing the Rus- sians our real intent is very dif- ficult. We can not expect them to trust us - but the converse is also true. More so, the latter a midwestern ideologist might say, but he'd be wrong. Even after the creation of a world state system, the crucial problem would still remain; peace will depend on a balance of fears, not on genuine word order. But- terfield's dilemma remains. But because it is acknowledged, the West might be a little safer. This is the usual result of an honest, not an ideological, moral- ising approach. History, Butterfield says, shows FROM OTHER CAMPUSES: Beauty Treatment To Tha Edilor F OURTH OF JULY hospitality of United States diplomats abroad this year fell short of the usual extravagances. Their modest, al- most ungracious entertaining may indicate a long-needed shift of attention in the work of our foreign representatives. Several years ago, "The Ugly American" im- pressed many persons with its criticism of Unit- ed States diplomacy. One of its charges was that some American embassies were so busy entertaining VIP's that they resembled tourist agencies. The authors strongly objected to the time spent on "arrangements, briefings, cock- tail parties, protocol visits and care and main- tenance of wives . . Editorial Staff MICHAEL BURNS .......................... Co-Editor SUSAN FARRELL.........................Co-Editor DlAVE KIMBALL.T.......................----sorts Editor American tourists and foreigners used to get their fill of free liquor and food at the Inde- pendence Day parties of our embassies and consulates. This year at the New Delhi embassy party, Americans longing for hot dogs and soft drinks could still get them-but at 20 cents a serving. FOLLOWING President Kennedy's order to cut government spending abroad, United States ambassadors entertained on a drastically re- duced scale. They cut costs up to 90 per cent and pruned guest lists down to five per cent of the totals in previous years. The economic reason for curtailing Fourth of July parties is of course an important one. But there is another, equally significant rea- son which may be operating. "The Ugly Amer- ican" attacked the lavish entertainment of United States visitors simply because all this partying left too little time for the actual work of the diplomats. Former Vice-President Richard Nixon, not- Arab Rockets.. To the Editor: IN AN EDITORIAL in the Daily, July 11, David Marcus contends that the United Arab Republic's request to purchase weather rock- ets, is in response to Israel's firing of a similar scientific weather rocket. The fact is, both sides are trying, within their own limited capabilities, to increase human knowledge. To our surprise we found Mr. Marcus trying to be' an analyst as well as a fortune teller. He looked into his crystal ball and saw President Nasser of the U.A.R. upsetting the balance of power in the Middle East, by buying weather rockets from the U.S.A. He therefore concluded that such a deal should not be allowed by the Amercian government. ** * n NASSER PROMOTES pan-Arab revenues. The high dam has been started and better than one third completed. Trade has been greatly increased with both East and West, providing profitable mar- kets for our native goods. Factories have been more than tripled and more land is being cultivated. Currency is stable and credit is increasingly being extended to the U.A.R. The standard of living is one and one half times better than it was eight yearn ago. Over- all the U.A.R. has been truly building for peace and stability. * * * IN REGARD to Mr. Marcus' ob- vious loyalty to Israel, I think that Americans are becoming aware of the fact that Israel likes to cry with crocodile tears. Ameri- cans are getting to know how Is- rael utilizes American media of communication - TV, radio and press - for their own benefit, even at the expense of American I