"What? Add A $10 Gadget Like That?" C, 4rfalrigan Bal SeventiethYear EDITED AND MANAGED BYS TUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. " ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Mlen Opinions Are Fres Truth WM Preval" AT RACKHAM: Artistry Prevails At Greer Recital FRANCES GREER once again brought a receptive audience under the spell of her wonderful vocal artistry in a recital in Rackham Lecture Hall last night. Miss Greer was assisted by Eugene Bossart at the piano and the Stanley Quartet in a program of music dating mostly from the las, sixty years. The ability to evoke just the right mood from songs of widely varying moods is rare among singers. It is an ability which Miss Greer possesses in abundance. Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. DAY, MARCH 10, 1960 NIGHT EDITOR: KATHLEEN MOORE Two Views of Gus Scholle, Michigan Labor Leader: boring Democrat.. . GUS SCHOLLE, the state AFL-CIO leader, is a frightening man. He gives the impression of an immense power, and a will to use it if necessary. As a speaker, he alternately rumbles and reasons; He had the disappointing small audience of young Democrats eating out of his hand when he spoke Monday night. And he patently made no claim to great professorial sophistication. He spoke as what he is; the leader of laboring men. His message was simple: that there is a mess in state politics, and that this mess is largely the responsibility of business. He cited strong evidence, and even if some of it was question- able, it is a serious and weighty indictment. ON THE OTHER SIDE of the coin, Scholle himself has often intervened in politics, and business must have a great deal of telling evidence against his activities. But at least, he represents people and not dollar signs. The use of union power in politics can be overdone, certainly. But, if equitably used, per- haps it is not as much a perversion of the political process as many claim. Gus Scholle Is a democrat; he believes his- tory, and interprets it as a vindication of his advocacy of equality and opportunity. The Founding Fathers did include more checks than Scholle seems inclined to favor, but this is an issue for negotiation. It does not auger well that all politicians and citizens apparently do not listen to Gus Scholl when he speaks as a Democrat. -PHMIP SHERMAN Big Labor Captain .. . STATE API-CIO political leader (Gus) Scholle condemns inroads into Michigan politics made by big business, but apparently approves of any such inroads as long as they are made by big labor., In a recent speech here in which he was quoted as blasting industry's desire "to control state government," he spokeof the acceptibility of candidates for endorsement by the state AFL-CIO Executive Council. His battle cry was "Government of and for the people must be also by the people," and few would dispute it. But let's let the people do their own endorsing, without the AFL-CIO Executive Council telling them how to vote. rI1HE RESULT of business interests' influence in Lansing has been, according to the report of Scholle's talk, "an alliance of big business in the state which guns for control to gain various economic advantages." Scholle certainly would have been hard put to specify just what "various economic ad- vantages" such an "alliance" has secured for Michigan business. Or maybe he hasn't noticed the recently publicized migration of industries from the state, its shrinking industrial growth as compared with other states. Perhaps he feels big labor could clean up the "morass of filth" he sees in today's politics. It's questionable, to say the least. On the basis of recent Congressional subcommittee evidence, big labor cannot even rid its own operations of a "morass of filth." No, Mr. Scholle, your cryptic comments on business and government do not present a con- vincing case for hailing big labor as the saving grace of politics. -PETER STUART THE PROGRAM opened with; performance of Le Nozze di Figaro intended to replace Susanna's aria "Deh Zini non tardar. " Bril- liant and free singing made this number a strong opener. As a presumably unintentional tribute to Samuel Barber's fiftieth birthday, ' Miss Greer next per- formed that composer's song cy- cle, "Hermit Songs." This is a group of ten songs, the texts of which are translations of Irish writings from the 8th to the 13th centuries. Some of the texts were re-written by W. H. Auden and Chester Kallman. The songs are short and evoca- tive of the words. Since the text seems to be the result of doodling by various monks, they are not all suitable for ideal musical setting. * * * THROUGHOUT the work, Miss Greer and her magnificent ac- companist, Mr. Bossart, worked with splendid unity of spirit. Mr. Barber would have been proud of this tribute, I am sure. The first half of the program ended with Ginastera's "Cinco canciones populares argentinas." These five songs have been fea- tured on previous recitals by Miss Greer. It was a distinct pleasure to have this opportunity to hear them 'again. They are marvelous songs. The Stanley Quartet joined Miss Greer and Mr. Bossart for a performance of Chausson's "Chanson p e r p e tu e 11e." This work, composed just a year before the early death of the composer, is one of his most appealing cre- ations. The performance was beautiful. * s * RAVEL'S three songs from "Scherezade" closed the pro- gram. Originally intended for voice and orchestra it is inevit-, able that Ravel's multi-colored instrumentation would be missed in a performance with piano ,ac- companiment. However, in this performance I missed nothing. These two artists, Frances Greer and Eugene Bossart, have been working together for a num- ber of years. Their association has consistently produced some of the most satisfying perform- ances of my experience. This was certainly one of them. -Robert Jobe SOCIOLOGY COLLOQUIUM: MeiselDi~scusses Elite Theory TODAY AND TOMORROW The Size of the Problem HERE AT HOME the overriding question is how to pay for the public needs of our growing population in an era when our social order is relentlessly challenged. These public needs include not only the rising costs of the race of armaments and the competition among the underdeveloped nation. They include also the rising costs of scientific research, of better public schools, of more adequate hospitals and public health services, public works, roads, water supply and sewage disposal, slum clear- ance and urban renewal. There are some who will say that we cannot meet all our public needs without abandoning the freedom of our society. There are others of us who say that we must meet these needs, that we can meet them without sacrificing our lib- erty, and indeed that by meeting them we shall strengthen our liberty. This is the central issue of our time, and no one who is interested in public life can ignore it. AN EXCELLENT newspaper, which I read regularly and greatly respect, "The Wall Street Journal," said recently in an editorial that to argue, as I have done, that our public needs have to be met is "to invite us to start surrendering our liberties in panic." For to meet the needs will cost a lot of money, and this will put us on the "dreary road of statism" and "when the individual must face the face- less state, he has only as much free choice a the state chooses to grant." This would indeed be monstrous if it were allowed to happen. How are we to make up our minds whether it will happen if we decide to devote to defense and to other public needs enough of our wealth to pay for them? One way to go about deciding it is to look at the problem quantitatively and concretely, and not ab- stractly and in generalities. Let us then look at some figures. I am taking my figures from the Fourth Re- port of The Rockefeller Brothers Fund which was issued in 1958. It covers all government expenditures, Federal, state, and local, which are for the purchase of goods and services. It omits transfer payments which, like the in- terest on public debts, "do not make a direct Editorial Staff THOMAS TURNER, Editor PHILIP POWER ROBERT JUNKER Editorial Director City Editor CHARLES KOZOLL .............. Personnel Director JOAN KAATZ,......................Magazine Editor JIM BENAGH ..............................Sports Editor PETER DAWSON ............ Associate City Editor BARTON HUTHWAITE .. Associate Editorial Director JO HARDEE .......................Contributing Editor FRED KATZ ................ Associate Sports Editor <ER LIPPMANN 1 claim on our production of goods and services." The report contains figures for the year 1957 and estimates for the year 1967. The Report is, by common consent I believe, expert, disin- terested, and obviously it is not partisan. IN 1957 ALL government purchases of goods and services came to 86.4 billions. In 1967. if we meet the public needs for defense and other things which the authors of the Report are agreed upon, the cost will be 153 billions (in 1957 dollars). This gives us an idea of the dimensions of the problem. The question then is whether the expenditure for public purposes of 153 billions in 1967 would revolutionize our society. In 1957, when we spent 86.4 publicly, we were taking 20 per cent of our national production, leaving 80 per cent in private hands. What would be the situation in 1967 if we carry out the programs to meet public needs which are recommended in the Rockefeller Report? The answer to that question will depend on our rate of growth in the next ten years. The Rockefeller estimates show that on the feasible assumption that our gross national product can grow at a rate of 4 per cent per year, the share taken for public purposes in 1967, if their recommendations as to what is desirable are followed, would be only 24 per cent and the share left in private hands would be 76 per cent. This would mean that the rise in private consumption, which on the average has been 2 per cent per year, would drop to 1.4 per cent. We would not be raising our private standard of life quite so fast as we are now. But we would be raising our public standard and we would be doing it with three-quarters of our product still in private hands. No one can say that on these fairly conservative assump- tions we would not still be a free society. TESE FIGURES make the assumption that we can grow only at the rate of 4 per cent. If, however, we could raise the rate of growth to 5 per cent, the position would be changed substantially. We would then be spending for public purposes 22 per cent, which is not much more than the present share of our spending, and there would still be left in private hands 78 per cent. At the same time consumption would be rising at 2.8 per cent, which is above the average. It is evident then, that the argument of "The Wall Street Journal" is based on an assumption which is not stated. The assumption is that the United States economy, in this age of automa- tion, cannot increase its productivity fast enough to support our growing public needs. The figures I have cited indicate that if we can now achieve a growth rate equal to that of the years 1947 to 1953, that is to say an an- nual rate of growth of 4.7 per cent, instead of the 2.3 per cent rate of the years since then, we shal1 h eable tn nrvide the needed puble serv-. By NAN MARKEL Daily Stafn Writer PROF. James H. Meisel of the political science department yesterday surveyed the history and usefulness of "the lamented but not yet late" theory of elites. He pointed out that "the com- mon people had intuitively always known the fact of domination, and had referred to the masters as them"'"- these masters were "more rumored than identified," but were experienced as a true fact of life just as any myth is felt to be a true expression. Theories of the elite, as such, have come in times of social crisis when we no longer see leaders' functions and responsibilities clearly, Prof. Meisel told attend- ants at yesterday's sociology col- loquium. TRACING THE theories' growth, he noted Henri St. Simon pro- claimed a law of two elites-one in charge of values, the other con- trolling the material assets of so- ciety. Both elites functioned as a dominant minority over and against the ruled majority. Then Gaetano Mosca took up elite theory as a "new, scientific tool to smash the Marxism class concept . . . a godsend to all old- style liberals who wanted to give battle to that twin utopia of democracy and socialism." Mosca showed the Marxian pro- letariat would give rise to a new class of managers. Robert Michels, his disciple, "sadly penned his Iron Law of Oligarchy" under which circulation of elites was to go on forever. Prof. Meisel indicated Mosca's model was derived from a tradi- tionalist society in which elites were small and relatively stable. With "our kind of post-capitalist mass society," the model seems to have little relevance, he said. * * * BUT NEW ELITE THEORY has sprung up-ironically, "the man who more than anybody else was to rejuvenate the theory of the elite, conceived of himself as its gravedigger par excellence." This man is C. Wright Mills. His elite is "The Power Elite" in which power has become so concentrated that, for the first time in modern history, men could make their own history free from the limita- tions of Marxian determinacy. Mills has painted his elite "as a new triad of corporation direc- tors, government bureaucrats, and generals." The new masters do not create their own institutions: rather, they are created by them. WHAT ARE the criteria for an elite? Prof. Meisle named three: A group 1) conscious of its iden- tity as a group 2) which is co- hesive, working together as a group 3) which works to some purpose. Elite theorists have not proved that a cohesive ruling class exists. But this "is not the same as hav- ing shown that such a ruling class does not exist," Prof. Meisel pointed out. Much current criticism of elitist theory has denied its usefulness for modern scientific inquiry. These critics have called it "im- pressionistic, somewhat metaphy- sical assertions about the nature of political decision-making." One critic notes, "What we seem to have most in pluralistic politi- cal systems is rather a fluid elite whose membership varies over time, and at any given point is depending on the issues at stake, the scope of the group's interest, and so forth." * * ', PROF. MEISEL puts some stock in these criticisms, but he pointed out that an elite may be viewed as more than a group of decision makers. Decision-making is only one elite function, and "not all members of the dominant minority are necessarily decision-makers." Also, supposition of a "fluid elite" presupposes; if not equality among the various social groups, then at least their ability to main- tain between them a perfectly fluid equilibrium. Could this be scientifically verified? Prof. Meisel offers two ways elisist theory could retain "some modicum of usefulness." * * * IF THE CONCEPT "has only a very limited usefulness for the social analysis of Western society at the present time of relative social peace," it is still applicable to the kind of societies for which it was originally developed-"un- derdeveloped" countries of Asia and Africa "where decolonization proceeds at such a fast pace that the necessary social forces have to be virtually created by energetic minorities." These native groups, which in many instances are military as the. Young Colonels of Egypt or Iraq, can be identified and properly studied. And "there remains a last possi- bility to interpret the traditional Western and the New Eastern elites with the tools of the Soci- ology of Knowledge," Prof. Meisel said. Elite theories could be under- stood as myths, "as the pseudo- scientific camouflage of claims to power . . . . as the authority de- mands of the men of achieve- ment." an aria which Mozart wrote for a in 1789. This rondo, "Al desio," was I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) For foreign nationals only: A) Adver- tising. As an advertising brand man you would have over-al responsibility for one or more individual brands de- veloping consumer acceptance for products, financial planning, as well as advertising and promotion. Con- tries - Belgium, Canada, France, Italy Mexico,'Philippines, Puerto Rico, Swit- zerland, Venezuela. B) Purchasing. After a period of training you will be working closely with suppliers and with many parts of the P & G organ- ization to purchase the equipment and raw materials necessary for proper op- eration of the business. Countries -- Belgium, Mexico, Venezuela, Philip- pines. C) Sales. After successfully dem- onstrating your ability to handle the sale of the company's products in a territory of your own, you would pro- gress into the area of sales manage- ment. Countries - Belgium, Italy, Mexico, Philippines, Puerto Rico, Vene- zuela. +D) Finance. Careers in finance could include -providing fnancal in- formation and forecasts which would directly affect the subsidiary's prog- ress. Training in accounting is nees- sary. Countries - Italy, Mexico, Phil- ippines, Switzerland and venezuela. E Factory Management. Engineering and Chemistry majors. After your ini-- tialetraining period you would be placed in charge of an operating or staff department and be completely re- sponsible for itsnoperation. Countries -Belgium, France, Mexico, Philip- pines, Venezuela. F) Technical Chem- istry and Engineering Majors. Men work in close cooperation with the Re- search and Development department of Procter & Gamble in the U.S. Chem- ical Engineering or Chemistry is neces- sary. Countries - Belgium, Canada, France Italy, Philippines. 1) U.S eiti- zens. Men with a degree in Liberal Arts or Business Administration for overseas marketing training Career. This is not a short term position but rather they are looking for people who want to live abroad and work with Procter & Gamble as a career. You will be given a paid furlough every two years to come back to the U.S. You will be located in any of the countries listed above. Procter & Gamble Co. of Canada, Ltd., Location of work: Canada. Cana- dian citizens only. Men for 1) Adver- tising; 2) Purchasing; 3) Sales: 4) Fi- nance; 5) Factory Management; 6) Technical Staff. For further informs- tion on the positions please read the information listed under Procter Gamble Co., Overseas Division. Fri., March 18: Sears, koebuck and Co.-See Thurs- day's listings. Travelers Insurance Co., Hartford, Conn. Location of work: Detroit, Hart- ford, (home office) or offies through- out the U.S. Graduates: June, Aug. The company writes all kinds of in- surance and bonds commonly obtain- able. The policies cover individuals and groups and corporate property and other assets against substantially ev- ery insurable loss. Men and women with a degree in Liberal Arts or Busi- ness Admin. for the following divi- sions: Actuarial, Claim, Sales and Service, Underwriting, or Admnistra- tion. In most cases, training combines formal instruction with on-the-job rotation through various aspects of the work. Food and Drug Admin., Dept. of Health, Education and welfare, De- troit, Mich. Location of work: Detroit. Mich.: offices in principal cities of the U.S. Graduates: June, Aug. The Food and Drug Admin. Is resonsibe for the protection of the public from harmful, contaminated or improperly labeled foods, drugs, devices and cosmetics. Men with a degree In science (Re- quire 30 semester hours, any combin- ation of physical or biological sciences) for Food and Drug Inspectors. One in- spects production and distribution es- tablishments, collects, samples, inves- tigates injury complaints, outbreaks of poisoning, and reports evidences of violations of the law. He examines the sanitary conditions in manufacturing establishments and the techniques and controls employed in the processing, labeling and packaging of foods, drugs and. cosmetics. Student Part-Time Employment The following part-time jobs are available to students. Applications for these jobs can be made in the Non- Academic Personnel Office, Rm. 1020 Admin. Bldg., during the following (Continued on Page 6) To The.Editor Shocked... To the Editor: I WAS SHOCKED and surprised at the action taken at the Big Ten meeting in Columbus to out- law participation in NCAA spon- sored championship events and hence to end the season with the conference meets. I feel that this action is the athletic directors' ultimate weapon in their power struggle with the faculty repre- sentatives for control in the forma- tion of athletic policy. This motion was initiated by some athletic directors as an ex- pression of disgust and protest over faculty action in killing post season football competition. It seems to me that the athletic directors feel that the faculties at the individual schools will not back this resolution and thus a resounding defeat will be inflicted upon the faculty representatives and hence force them to retract their stand regarding post season football competition. * * * BANNING NCAA competition in all sports is certainly not con- sistant with the recent Big Ten decision to continue NCAA foot- ball television policies through 1961 and reject a large offer from a private source to televise all Big Ten sports. It seems consistant with recent policies of deemphasis of athletics in the member schools of the Big Ten that the faculties will ap- prove the resolution. Banning NCAA competition in such sports as swimming, hockey, wrestling, basketball, track, golf, tennis and baseball will undoubtably result in the lowering of quality of com- petition and interest in these sports to a point where they will die due to apathy on the part of the coaches, the athletes, students and alumni from which support so necessary for the maintenance and growth of these sports is de- rived. What athlete of Olympic or near Olympic caliber will want to at- tend a Big Ten school knowing that he will be able to compete in no meet above the level of the Conference championships? -Lanny Geibman, '61 New Books at Library Bottome, Phyllis - Walls of Glass; NY, Vanguard Press, 1959. Brennan, Louis A. - No Stone Unturned; NY, Random House, 1959. Clark, Gerald - Red China To- day; NY, David McKay Co., 1959. It Takes Two To Tango, but 22 To Con-Con