Seventieth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 "When Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints, SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 26, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: THOMAS KABAKER Illegally Parked Bicyles: Will They Ever Learn THE OFFICE for Student Affairs says it is BUT THOUGH bikes were impounded during going to impound bicycles that are illegally the summer, many students refuse to be parked around University buildings. The idea convinced. Bicycles still clog the doorways to is a good one, for though some students may the Undergraduate Library and the fishbowl. find themselves slightly inconvenienced - and Normally, the hazard of running into a bicycle only slightly - the rationale behind the policy is bad enough, but should the need arise for is quite sound. one of these buildings to be evacuated, the Bicycles blocking entrances to buildings are danger bicycles could cause is frightening. creating a hazard in case of a fire. So says the Added to this is the problem of the handi- fire marshall,, and it is hard to argue with capped student or faculty member whose pas- him. The Administration has alternately plead- sage around campus may be completely ed for cooperation and threatened the offend- blocked by parked bicycles. It is plain that ers - all to no avail. So when the Office for bikes cannot be parked on the sidewalks and Student Affairs says it has no alternative, it in front of doorways, and experience shows is not exaggerating, students are not going to move them unless The idea of impounding bikes should be a they are forced. foolproof way of convincing students to put ~ So when the men come around with a truck their bicycles in the racks, or if they should and start hauling away bicycles people will be happen to be full, at least force students to forced to learn. But for how long? keep their bikes off the sidewalk. --THOMAS KABAKER Ideas and Humanisnm TODAY it is fashionable in some circles to humanities; but again, these calls were only decry the decline of the humanities in an in principle, not plans of action. increasingly scientific and urbanized world jITH SUCH a concentration of brainpower But perhaps the humanities are not so badly at the conference, it would seem that more off after all. This is suggested by the comments concrete proposals could be made. at the International Council for Philosophy The conference's result should have been and Humanistic Studies, held at the Univer- more than to set the minds of the participant sity this *eek. humanists at ease. Prof. George Boas of Johns Hopkins Univer- Even simple ideas, such as methods of im- sity pointed out that, it is the humanist, not proving content of humanistic courses to make the concert-goer who is lamenting the decline them more vital in today's context and more of the humanities, related to the contemporary world were not. He suggested that old-style humanists are conspicuous. Something was said on the sub- out of touch with today's problems, being more ject. But it mostly ran to teaching classical concerned with issues found in books instead languages, though one speaker called for sup- of In real life. Other speakers painted some- port of teaching the classics in translation as What less rosy pictures, but all agreed that an effective method to get traditional ideas the humanities are far from dead. across. It would be surprising if a group of indus- HOWEVER, all present seemed to realize that trialists and professional educators, who are the humanities are not in as good shape as not professional humanists could do more to they used to be. further the humanities than the world's most Prof. Boas suggested that humanists' task eminent. humanists. But the industrialists and is to ask questions about the world; the hu- educators created the admirable educational manistic content sells itself. experiment, Michigan State University Oak- But this seems inadequate. The .day of the land Center, which if successful, could be a soft sell is over. prototype for a new scientific humanistic edu- Others pointed to an alliance with science cational system. as the key to a complete resuscitation of the -PHILIP SHERMAN TODAY AND TOMORROW SThe Race-of Armaments By WALTER LIPPMANN .., .- - - .._ ... .. .r'.. .. .. .. . ... EISENHOWER MEETS THE HEADS OF ENGLAND-PRIME MINISTER MACMILLAN (left) AND QUEEN ELIZABETH AND PRINCE PHILIP. ANTI-AMERICANISM RECEDES: Sig niicantIssuesAffectBritishton, (EDITOR'S NOTE; Mr. Stone is an English graduate student from Oxford University. He is presently working on a doctoral thesis on American politics,safter a consider- able period of research in, the United States.) By LESLIE STONE LONDON-Anti-Americanism in British politics has notice- ably diminished in the last year. The bitter memories of Suez were, buried in the warm greeting given President Eisenhower on his re- cent trip to London. For the mo- ment the guns aimed at Matsu and Quemoy are silent and the Formosa issue has conveniently dropped out of the headlines. The passing of John Foster Dulles and his succession at the head, of the State Department by .Christian Herter has robbed pro- fessional critics of effective old slogans and a vulnerable target., Only obscure leader-writers can be heard muttering about Laos and Tibet. NOW, WITH the Khrushchev visit to the United States a reality, the threatened showdown over Berlin has been delayed and it seems that the President may take the last faltering steps to the Sum- mit he was so reluctant to con- template only a few months ago. With both the leading political parties in Britain pledged to work to bring about a top level meeting between East and West, the Presi- dent's popularity here will soar when such a conference is an- nounced. IT WOULD BE foolish, how- ever, to allow pious platitudes and the customary campaign oratory to obscure some genuine British doubts and difficulties which must soon come to light. Macmillan's chief aim since he came to power has been to re- establish in Washington the con- fidence so sumimarily shattered by the events of Suez. In this he haz been amazingly successful. In thef eyes of the public he has emerged as a statesman of the front rank. His visit to Moscow last March gives-him some claim to be re- garded as the, architect of the present Eisenhower - Khrushchev negotiations. He can be relied up- on to represent Britain at any top, -level meeting with a considerable flourish.. But so'far all his energies have been devoted to that single goal and it is in looking beyond this that many critics have their res- ervations. THE CONSERVATIVE propen- sity to adopt violent 19th century methods for the solution of com- plex modern problems has caused "The Observer" and "The (Man- chester) Guardian," the two Brit- ish newspapers with the keenest interest in foreign affairs, to main- tain strong editorial doubts about the reelection of -a Conservative government. Mr. Selwyn Lloyd continues at the Foreign Office despite his ob- vious inadequacies and so far neither he nor the Prime Minister have publicly come forward with proposals likely to make a signifi-. cant contribution to negotiations at a summit conference. On the disarmament issue they have been particularly sterile, and their task has been made more difficult by their supporters. For many Tories see in the possession of nuclear weapons a great prestige value above and beyond their use- fulness as a deterrent. To them the H-bomb is essential for Britain very much in the way the Kaiser considered a strong navy neces- sary for Germany in the days of the Dreadnought--"for the gen- eral purposes of her greatness." The bomb compensates for shat- tered visions of imperial grandeur and ensures Britain's position as a world power. ** * AS MIGHT BE expected, the Left has been more adventurous in its approach. Faced with the prospect that a dozen other na- tions, including France and China, will soon possess nuclear weapons and the subsequent danger of ir- responsible use, the Labor Party has embraced a policy of nuclear containment. In view of the con- flicting evidence on "fall - out" dangers, Labor long ago adopted a plank calling for the immediate suspension of British nuclear tests. In the last few months the party has gone further by proposing to renounce British possession of nu- clear weapons on the formation of a so-called, "non - nuclear club" which would agree to. restrict such weapons to the Soviet Union and the United States. This is intended to be the first step towards a gen- eral disarmament settlement. * * * MEANWHILE Mr. Gaitskell is sponsoring a disengagement plan for a zone of limited armaments in Central Europe along the lines of the original Rapacki Plan and the suggestions put forward by George Kennan last year. There is no hint of appeasement in Gaitskell's policy. He has suc- cessfully withstood criticism froM the extremists that he hasn't gone far enough. The Labor Party ie heavily committed to the Anglo- American Alliance and NATO. The disarmament debate centers upon the most effective contribution Britain can make within the framework of that alliance. President Eisenhower is re- ported to be disturbed at the pro- spect of a Labor Foreign Secretary, but thoughts of a Gaitskell ad- ministration should hold no fears for men with views like Adlai Stev- enson, Chester Bowles, Hubert Humphrey or William Fulbright, Indeed, I doubt that the possibility frightens even Senator Kennedy. LUCE ON CUBA: It's Time for a Change By THOMAS TURNER Editor "OUR BIGGEST enemy is Henry Luce," the Cuban student said. "And he's your worst enemy too." Luce, editor-in-chief of Time and Life, is singled out by Cubans as the most prominent example of the bad press Cuba gets in this country. Life en Espanol is probably the THE SENIOR COLUMN: Activities and What's in It for Me' MR. K's SCHEDULE calls for his arrival at Camp David before dinner on Friday and for his return to Washington on Sunday after- noon. There is time enough here for some talking. But it is not nearly enough time for talking out thoroughly any of the great issues, much less all of them. There will be time enough, however, to talk about how to go on talking, and if there is agreement on this point, it will be a very considerable gain. For until the President proposed this ex- change of visits, the lines of communication between the two governments were for all prac- tical purposes closed. They could not or would not communicate through their Ambassadors or through their Foreign Ministers. Because of this stoppage both countries are beset with problems which they cannot resolve and about which they do not want to fight. There is the German problem which becomes more tangled and more menacing the longer the division of. Germany lasts. And there is the race of arma- ments which with its mounting costs weighs so heavily on the social progress of both countries. For various complicated reasons the President was unable to reopen the communications which had become closed. So he made a break- through by entering into direct conversations with Mr. K. O N HIS TRAVELS Mr. K. has made a con- vincing case for the proposition that the Soviet Union wants and needs to avoid war and that it wants and needs a slowdown in the race of armaments. The Soviet Union is spend- ing oh armaments a larger proportion of a smaller national product than we are spending. The Soviet government is able 'to do this be- Editorial Staff THOMAS TURNER, Editor PHILIP POWER ROBERT JUNKER Editorial Director City Editor CHARLES KOZOLL .............. Personnel Director JOAN KAATZ................... Magazine Editor BARTON HUTHWAITE ............. Features Editor JIM BENAGH.....................Sports Editor SELMA SAWAYA......Associate Personnel Director JAMES BOW . .......Associate City Editor SUSAN HOLTZER....... Associate Editorial Director PETER DAWSON ............. Contributing Editor cause in the Soviet system the government has the power to allocate capital and labor to public purposes. But in the Soviet Union, as elsewhere, things have to be paid for. The Soviet Union is paying for its armaments by a slowing down in the rise of the popular stand- ard of life. There is no doubt, it seems to me, that Mr. K. wants, provided that he is not afraid of the conditions, to" slow down the race of armaments. We know from the President's last press con- ference before Mr. K's arrival that an im- portant, perhaps the decisive, consideration in his mind has been the expenditure for arma- ments and its effect on the American economy. We are, to be sure, paying for our armaments and are at the same time enjoying, compara- tively speaking, a very high standard of life. But in order to enjoy our great output of consumer goods and still support the military establishment, we too are paying a price. The price is the neglect of the future, the neglect of the needs of our expanding population. We have guns and we have butter. But we do this by economizing on our public facilities, begin- ning with our schools and hospitals and going on to our railroads and airports and the de- velopment of our cities. MR. K's PROJECT for slowing down the race of armarnents-I omit the utopian future- faces us with a national question which we ought to examinie and to debate and to decide. It is possible to argue, although I do not agree with the argument, that it is to our national interest to slown down but in fact to speed up the race of armaments. The argument is that in order to be secure we must restore what we had until 1949-absolute supremacy in the great weapons. The military budget should, it is said, be enlarged and the increase paid for by a reduction in the social services and by an increase of taxes. The counter-argument is that absolute supremacy is an ever-receding goal which can never be reached, and that provided we keep and protect powerful foces in being, we shall have the maximum security which is attain- able. Moreover, if we decide to step up the race of armaments, the Soviet Union, which is quite able to impose austerity on its people, will re- spond. In such an accelerated race for armaments, By BARTON HUTHWAITE Features Editor WITH A WEEK of classes tucked between the covers of his new notebooks, the average freshman will probably pause this weekend and ask himself just what this gigantic institution called the University of Michigan means to him personally., His college friends and high school counselor have already briefed him on the educational challenges the University offers : his parents on the future profits of a University education. But somehow, the freshman knows the ideal college education goes beyond the narrow realm of prolific professors, tiring texts and close classrooms. A class schedule taped on the inside of one of his textbooks and a care- fully detailed syllabus from each instructor tells him what is aca- demically expected of him in the weeks to come. For some, a means of breaking out of this narrow realm of academics has already been determined by their ability to throw a block or run the 100- yard dash in 9.8 seconds. * * * BUT FOR the majority of Uni- versity freshmen, just what direc- tion they will go and how far from the restricted bounds of the classroom in their quest of per- sonal expansion is as yet unde- termined. The opportunities here are limitless . . . everything from a sailing club to Student. Govern- ment Council is within his reach. As the freshman glances about. his eyes will undoubtedly come to rest on that organized phenomen- on especially peculiar to higher educational institutions called the extra-curricular activity. Very soon now, if not already, the 100 or more active student groups here will begin their bi- yearly bleatings of "mass meet- ings,' "sign up now " and "serve the University," This includes the ize a used bicycle sale to the whys of the Russian premier's current visit. And perhaps even convince' others that his opinions are right. But as he progresses up the hierarchy of his chosen organiza- tion, these same opinions may be- come other than his own person- al views. The glimmer of a high senior position and the subsequent title of BMOC (Big Man On Cam- pus) may subjugate his will to the wills of those who will determine whether or not he is to have a senior position. ! r AND AS THE years turn from freshman to sophomore to junior, the dull routine of lectures and study may succumb to the more short run pleasures of a place of honor in his organization. The re- sult might be a Student Activities Person (SAP) . . . a lopsided char- acter concentrating more on SA's than studies. An aspiring freshman student at a recent organizational meet- inn of one of the larger student activities raised a vital question in the minds of many a junior year SAP this year. "Does any- one ever go through the three years of work here and never be- come something?" the freshman inquired of the personnel director. Rightly assuming she meant by "something" a gilt-edged senior position, he quickly countered, "Yes, but don't worry about that now." Perhaps the better answer would have been, "Yes, but_ don't worry about it." The student who devotes three year out of four to. loss of sleep, continuous worries and sometimes dull duties for loss of sleep, continuous worries and sometimes dull duties for a senior position is sadly disillusioned. * * * THE "WHAT'S in it for me" of the student activities question should come during the years from freshman to junior. The senior year is one of looking back on the profits of the past three years. The question of whether the freshman should sacrifice a grade point, hours of sleep and some friends for a student organiza- tion can only be answered by himself. But the q u e s t i o n i n g should begin when he is a fresh- man . . . and never end until he has graduated. most influential periodical' in Latin America, while Time is most influential in the States. * * * SINCE the Jan. 12 issue which reported Castro's victory, Time has published some 38 issues. Of these, 35 contain articles on Cuba. Almost from the beginning of the revolution, these began to show a distinct anti-Cuba slant. The second article was headed "Jubilation and Revenge." "The Mob is Back" headed the eighth, "Bullets! Ballots?" headed the ninth, "One-Man Court," the tenth, "Fastest Gun in Cuba," the eleventh. These dealt respectively with courts martial, reopening of ca- sinos, courts martial and post-. ponement of voting, violation of the double jeopardy principle, and execution of embezzlers. GRANTED the excesses of the Castro regime, the consistency with which they are discussed, to the exclusion of any favorable as- pects, suggests either a specific bias or a generally unconstructive approach. Time's Cuban critics tend to en- dorse the former, charging Tru- jillo money has bought out the United States press. Time's Amer- ican critics, on the other hand, tend to go along with the latter theory. Coverage of a specific issue tended to corroborate the "kept press' theory. 'The only article dealing speci- fically and solely with Castro's pet project, the agrarian reform, ran in the June 1 issue. UNDER THE broad heading "The Hemisphere' the lead sub- section' was "Cuba." The article on Cuba's reform program was in turn headed "Confiscation!" It occupied the top third of the page. The bottom two-thirds was filled by a boxed story, edged in blue, headed "The Long,.Sad His- tory of Land Reform." "This means the great landed estates will be broken up through- out Latin America," the article began, attributing the quotation to "a top U. S. sugar broker." Time presumably thought its readership would be disturbed by this alone. THE BOXED article, which by its bulk dominates the page, then went on to describe alleged fail- ures of land reform in various Latin American countries. Dealt with particularly are the reform attempts of "Mexico's vic- torious rebels of 1910-17" who nored any Puerto Rican statute it found awkward. Since then, the limit has grad- ually been enforced, until today only two sugar companies own both mills and substantial ,land- holdings; and both of these will likely be forced to sell the excess land to the Commonwealth with- in the year. There is of course a problem in applying large scale methods to small land 'holdings, but Puerto Rico has chosen to meet the prob- lem by setting up some coopera- tives and encouraging establish- ment of others. Cuba's agrarian reform also in- cludes plans for cooperatives. THE ANTI-CUBA articles have continued down to the present, the Sept. 21 issue containing a story entitled "Early Deification." It described a Christ-like por- trait of Castro, which pictures him "a fleeting enlightenment cap- tured on paper of that tremen- dous hope of God when he want- ed to make man 'in his image." This parody of the faith Cubans have in Castro hardly seemrs a constructive approach in today's difficult situation in Cuba. DAMLY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices 'should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to, Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. 'Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1959 VOL. LXX, NO.5 General Notices Applications for ushering positions for the Choral Union Concerts and the Lecture Series for the coming season may be made at the Box Office at Hill Auditorium between 5 p.m. and 6 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 25 and between 10 a.m. and noon onSat. Sept. 2 . This will be the final chance to. apply for these positions. Lutheran Student Center and Chapel (National Lutheran Council): Hill St. and S. Forest Ave. Sunday Worship Services at 9:00 and 11:00 a.m. Bible Study at 10:00 a.m. Student Supper at 6:00 followed by program at 7:00. Speakers:.Dr. Allan Pfnister and Prof. Leslie Ross - "Higher Education and The Church." "A Discussion of Dr. Zhivago" 'will be held as a part of the Summer Read- ing and Discussion Program Mon., Sent. 28 at 4:00 n.m. in the Multi- 71 o hig soeic.. > v - INK. SIG~~ } al