Sixty-Sixth 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 I hen Opinions Are Free, 'Truth Will Preval" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. 7URDAY, MAY 5, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: PETER ECKSTEIN The McKeon Incident And Military Training, WITH THE PROSPECT of military service ahead for the majority of the University's male students, the Parris Island incident in- volving Sergeant McKeon is of particular con- cern. This occurrence and others similar to it, though fortunately not as tragic, give rise to the question of the value to the nation, the military service, and the individual, of the military training system as it now exists. Basically, the system is good and is effect- ive. By intentionally being made rough and tough, it is designed to produce two qualities, effectiveness and security necessary to the ac- complishment of the military mission. Good training provides a man 'with the skill and capability for doing his assigned task in com- bat in the most efficient and effective manner. It also insures that the combatant conducts himself so as to afford maximum protection to himself and others around him during combat. Essentially. these goals of training are com- plementary as maximum personal and unit security is most often achieved by skillful and effective performance, and rarely can one be had without the other. SURVIVAL in combat has been attributed to 60% skill and 40% luck on the part of the individual soldier. Modern American military training is trying to get as close to this 60% as possible. But no organization, however well disciplined, will reach perfection in all of its individual com- ponents. Individuals such as Sergeant Mc- Keon can and obviously do overstep their bounds, bringing disgrace and tragedy to the unit. At times like these, those observing an isolated incident must avoid generalizing about the system under which such accidents occur. In considering the McKeon tragedy, the poor judgment of a single individual must not be allowed to damage or destroy a system which has produced the fine armies of the past and which will turn out the same caliber of fighting man in the future, should the nation need him. THE MARINE CORPS, which traditionally runs a taut ship, has taken up slack in its characteristically effective manner. Military training throughout the services may suffer temporarily as a result of Sergeant McKeon's misjudgment but should not . be drastically changed in its basic precepts. -DICK HALLORAN y 1 a : :",'. 4 {' t ': f. _ - f{!Y' r N .. -; '. C* J ..'.:. -Y P; s %' ' 4'. -' r t; "Wait -I Haven't Got This Straightened Out Yet" 4. .;Iz ell x s' 14 0001, si / ; x yv +- MAY FESTIVAL: All Mozart Program Superb Musical Rite THE TWO HUNDRETH birthday ceremonials for Mozart last night, even without candles and incense, had all the elements of a loving. respectful and devotional ritual. The occasion seemed primarily solemn. And for this reason, as well as the fact that Thor Johnson's tempo initially seemed all too rapid and irregular, the Overture to The Marriage of Figaro sounded an unfortunate opening. The tone of the orchestra was supple and clear; the strings, silken and mellow, yet none of that agitated rustling of skirts, the smell, even, of powdered wigs, or that excitement that precedes the rising of the curtain was present in this rendition. THE MAJOR WORK of the evening was the Choral Union per- r r t F 4 bi '9 formance of the oratorio Davidde pally on the earlier Great Mass in C Minor. The performance was a superbly moving one, deeply felt and powerfully delivered. The or- chestral and choral balance at all times seemed perfect, but the chor- us itself, partly due to its mam- moth size, sacrificed transparan- cy of tone and clarity of articu- lation (especially in the final fu- gal passage) for grandeur, force and intensity. *- * * THE SOLOISTS in the oratorio were Lois Marshall, soprano; Jane Hobson, mezzo-soprano; and Ru- dolf Petrak, tenor. Miss Marshall displayed a dark- er, more dramatic voice than one remembers from her performances several years ago. An impeccable musical taste and sensitive phras- ing were combined with an excit- ing, effortless execution of colo- ratura passages. She far out- shone the other two soloists, not only by her technical accomplish- ments, but by simple beautiful singing. Miss Hobson's dark voice is sumptuous in the middle register but apparently non-existent in the upper and lower registers. She sang with agility, but she seemed out of sorts last night. Her in- tonation was poor, she sounded fiat at the beginning of her first aria (at least where I sat), and her phrasing and vocal style seemed mannered. Mr. Petrak used his small, clear voice with discretion, singing with accuracy and much subtlety. It was a pity 'that he did not have much to sing. IN THE AFTERMATH of this penitential offering, Vronsky and Babin performed a light, 2 piand concerto (k. 242). The adigio movement contained some of the loveliest Mozart playing heard here recently. The greatest tri- bute that one can pay these two performers is to say that they made the work sound like two highly individual intellects con- versing with a perfect understand- ing of each other. -A. Tsugawa x 1l Penitente (K. 469), based princi- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Paternalistic Condescension WHAT ALGER HISS said last week to the Princeton Debating Society, wasn't of much significance or importance. In fact, his speech on Geneva and Yalta was described as "one of the dullest speeches in the 192-year history of the American Whig-Cliosophic -(debating) Society." The significance, however, lies in the fact that the convicted perjurer was invited by the group to speak on a college campus-even though Princeton trustees disapproved and its alumni protested angrily. Apparently, the Whig-Clios were more inter- ested in hearing what a man of intelligence-- a man who has had much experience in foreign affairs-had to say about Yalta and Geneva. In the meantime, they were disregarding the reddish tinge that colors his past record mak- ing him a dangerous, unsavory radical in the eyes of alumni and trustees. Although the trustees did alloyw Hiss to speak on the campus, Princeton's president, Harold W. Dodds, explained this action to the public with, "It is often not enough to tell a child that the fire is hot. To learn the personal significance of the fire, the child must some- times burn himself." The decision of the university authorities to allow Hiss to speak on campus is commendable, but their attitude leaves something to be de- sired. This "selfless" move of paternalistic-conde- scension on the part of the trustees and alum- ni brings us to the question: What are they trying to protect? Surely it isn't the students who have been taught in Princeton's great halls of learning to distinguish between right and wrong. Could it be Princeton's untainted reputation? Could members of the administration and past- members of the school's student body want to bar a perjurer from speaking so that he would not cast aspersions upon an institution so well- known for its educational standards and liber- alism? Paradoxical, isn't it? Perhaps the child, to whom President Dodds referred, after learning the significance of the fire, will be better able to explain it to adults who have never been burnt. -DONNA HANSON WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Controversy Over Soil Bank By DREW PEARSON 2 4. T HE BACKSTAGE maneuvering over a farm bill has been hap- pening with such lightning speed that the press, let alone the pub- lic, cap't keep up with it. Seldom, however, has politics been so wrapped up in any legislation, even in an election year.. With dire reports coming from the farm belt following Ike's veto of the farm bill, the Republicans were almost frantic in their de- sire to pass something to put im- mediate cash in the farmer's pock- et. Secretary of Agriculture Ben- son was also frantic In his desire to get credit for the soil bank. Appearing before the House Ag- riculture Committee, Benson was asked by Chairman Harold Cooley, North Carolina Democrat: "Mr. Secretary, you have pre- sented something you call the soil bank. But you overlook the fact that in 1934 we spent $637,000,000 starting to build up the soil of this country. And from that year on, we continued to build up the soil. Every year that you've been in office, however, you have asked us for less and less money for soil. You asked us last year for $175,- 000,000 and we voted you $250,- 000,000. * * * "AND NOW suddenly you want what you call a soil bank. "I remember last February," con- tinued Cooley, "I wrote you a let- ter asking you in detail about set- ting aside an acreage reserve in the form of a soil bank. And you kept my letter from February un- til July. Then, after conferring with all your assistants, you final- ly answered that it was too expen- sive and impractical. , "Now, can you tell me today," concluded Cooley, "one authority you need for a soil bank that you don't already have in the bill pass- ed 20 years ago by the Demo- crats?' Benson turned to his lawyers for advice. Before they could an- swer, Cooley continued: "I can think of two-authority to make long-term contracts with farmers and authority to protect the future basic allotments of f armers. * .nen. "ALL RIGHT," said Cooley, "you send me in writing the authority you need and we'll pass it." Benson, however, didn't warm up to the idea at all. He wanted a brand new bill. The White House also asked for authority to make advance payments to farmers out of the soil-bank program to the tune of $500,000,000. This pre-election bonus outrag- ed Democratic leaders in general and Congressman Jamie Whitten of Mississippi in particular. "If a Democratic president were to recommend paying the farmer part of his 1957 income in 1956. just before the November election, as Eisenhower has Tecommended," observed Whitten, "the press would carry big headlines accusing the Democrats of trying to borrow the farm vote-which incidentally would be borrowing it with the farmer's own money loaned against his own next year's depleted in- come." HIS DANDER up, Whitten call- ed his appropriations subcommit- tee and OK'd a $1,200,000,000 ap- propriation based on the old Hen- ry Wallace soil bank bill which had been on the statute books for 20 years. This would have given an immediate payment instead of borrowing against the future. The House Rules Committee, however, rejected the appropria- tion on the ground that the Henry Wallace law needed amendments. By this time Cooley had gone back to North Carolina where he faces a tough primary battle on the race issue, due to the fact that he refused to sign the "Southern Manifesto" against the Supreme Court. Reached on the telephone, Cooley dictated a 29-line amend- ment to the Henry Wallace soil bank law which brought it com- pletely up to date. (Copyright 1956, by Bel Syndicate, Inc.) TODAY AND TOMORROW: I '' THE SPRING M NATO powers1 siderable headshak the alliance. The like the American French have moved from the central h Africa. The Germ scription law beca popular and becau below the official is a strong dispos membership in NA' security but, as at with the Sovietsa As Germany anc countries most vul the way they are be themselves whethe I should like to arg ing is not the fo superstructure that WHAT ARE the f consist, to spea can guarantee to Soviet military agg of the members of fundamental idea i assisted by its NATi tary forces in bein at once will deter ag This was the o North Atlantic alli slightest reason fo mental guarantee i it ever was before. Edi DAVE BAA MURRY FRYME Editorial Direct DEBRA DURCESLAG. DAVID KAPrLAN. JANE HOWARD ...... LOUISE TYOR ...... PHIL DOUGLIS ...... ALAN EISENBERG ... JACK HORWITZ ... MARY HELLTHALER ELAINE EDMONDS ... Review of NATO Strategy By WALTER LIPPMANN EETING in Paris of the that the United States would go immediately has been preceded by con- to war if an aggressive attack against the NATO ing about the prospects of territory were launched. Iceland Parliament would Upon this fundamental guarantee there has troops to go home. The been erected a super-structure, not originally d large parts of their army contemplated when the alliance was formed, ront in Germany to North consisting of an international army. The ans are putting -off a con- superstructure was added on the assumption use military service is un- that if the Soviet Union decided for a war of se business is booming. Just aggression, it would use the Red Army to in- surface in Germany there vade and conquer Western Germany, the Low ition to treat the German Countries, Scandinavia and France. This as- TO, not as vital to German sumption was adopted before the Soviet-Union bargaining point in dealing .had developed serious nuclear power of its about reunification. own. It was adopted in the days when the main d France are the two big military instrument of the Soviet Union was lnerable to the Red Army, its infantry. ehaving has made many ask NAT i dg N THIS ASSUMPTION, which was most r that what is disintegrat-. strongly held in the bad days of the Kor- undation of NATO but a ean War, the NATO powers decided to build t is obsolescent.\ up a large European army which was to in- clude strong West German forces. The troubles foundations of NATO? They of NATO have been almost wholly concerned k plainly, of a North Ameri- with this army superstructure. Insofar as there go to war if there is a are signs of disintegration in NATO, it is a ression across the frontiers disintegration of the plans for this superstruc- the NATO alliance. The ture. Neither the French nor the Germans, s that if the United States, the nations presumably most interested in the O allies, has adequate mili- NATO army; seem to be taking it very serious- ig, the commitment to act ly. ggression. It is often said that their lack of interest is original conception of the due to the wiles and guiles of the new softer ance, and there is not the Soviet tactics. This is, I think, a superficial rthinking that this funda- explanation. The real explanation is that there ls any less firm today than are few people left in France and in West There is no doubt at all Germany, or indeed anywhere, who think that World War III could take the form of an attempt to invade Western Europe. It is not that the Western nations have been ;ulled ;* into thinking that there is no danger of war. They are very much afraid of war. But they are afraid of a different kind of war. They itorial Staff do not think that the war they are afraid of AD, Managing Editor will be begun or will be decided on the ground AD JIMng DYGERT in the middle of Europe. or CityGEditor .Magazine Editor THIS VIEW is not confined to the masses of ... .........Feature Editor the people, who, it is often supposed, are .................Associate Editor beguiled by the new Soviet propaganda. The ...................Sports Editor view is general, though not universal, that .........Associate Sports Editor invasion by the Red Army is not the real .......Associate Sports Editor military problem - given the abundance of .Women's Editor . ,..Associate Women's Eio nuclear weapons on both sides and the nuclear LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Football and the Iron Curtain Iron Curtain . . To the Editor: ONE IS led to wonder these days just where the so-called Iron curtain really lies. Perhaps it can be presently found at the borders of the United States. 1 An exchange of students from Harverd and Chicago Universities with students of the Soviet Union for a year's study had to be can- celled last week because of the provisions of the McCarran Immi- gration law Despite this, one Chi- cago student is still going to Mos- cow to study for a year. The M Carren Act provides that a non-official visitor from the USSR must be fingerprinted and shown not to be a member of the Commun.st party. These two pro- cedures are uniquely American, not being required by any other country to my knowledge Finger- printing it even regarded outside the U.S. as reserved solely for criminals. Therefore. the Soviet students couldn't come, nct wish- ing to submit to procedures hardly in keepine with rules of hospi- tality practiced abroad. The incident is not an isolated one eithex Last week also, the Russians who met ten Americans at the Elbe River in Germany eleven years ago, linking the Soviet Armies, were denied admit- tance to this country (as guests of the ten Americans) for the same U.S. They won't though if the McCarran Act continues in force. If there is a Soviet Iron Cifrtain today, it is like Swiss cheese in comparison with our curtain which more closely resembles the real thing. --Paul Dormont, Grad. Football Suggestion.. - To the Editor: SUGGESTION to the football coaches and players: forget about practice one of these after- noons and go up to watch Michi- gan State practice instead. I guar- antee you it will be an extremely worth-while and enlightening ex- perience. The difference between State's training techniques and ours is almost unbelievable. Here at Mi- chigan all the best players are on one team. Naturally this team runs roughshod over the oppo- sition. They are able to gain con- sistently with brute force line plunges, so they use this type of play with sickening rekularity. An occasional end run or pass is mixed in, but it is obvious that this type of attack works onlybe- cause the varsity players are so much better than the scrubs, since the scrubs get stopped cold using the same plays against the var- sity. And so our team learns a whole system of offense that con- sistently goes nowhere against good Big Ten teams. lateral, hand off, or pass. They run so many wide plays that when they do hit the middle of the line, there is often a big hole there. And the important thing is that both the first and second teams use these plays with considerable effectivenessagainst each other. To say that State's techniques are better than ours is a great understatement. They are in a completely different class. Anyone who still thinks Bennie Oosterbaan belongs here as head coach should first see one of our practices and then go up to East Lansing and see what I saw. -Charlie Carroll, '56 'Switch' Parking .. . To the Editors: IN REGARD to the Daily's recent article on our "efficient" Traf- fi3 and Safety Commission and police department, an important assertion must be reviewed. The Commission found it neces- sary to reorient the parking on these narrow streets, and in doing this were justified. But in defend- ing their actions through infantile arguments they have reduced the regulation to an absurdity. "Switch" parking is a burden on any resident, and unless absolute- ly necessary should be avoided. The police department and com- mission say it must be done this way because how can a sign say "No Parking This Side Every Other AT THE ORPHEUM: e Plaisir' Displeases THIS IS another of those cine- matic conglomerations in which three short stories, with little in common but the name of their author, are placed end-to-end in an attempt to achieve some sort of unified effect. The three de Maupassant stories selected for this one are not par- ticularly good, not particulary bad. The array of French actors is the most impressive part, but the brevity of their separate roles leaves most of their impressiveness to the expectation aroused by the theater marquee. THE FIRST story, "The Mask," stars Claude Dauphin as a doctor interrupted in his frolicking at a dance in Montmartre to revive a dancer unable to take the strain of a lively quadrille. The dancer, wearing a mask to hide the wrink- les of his age, is taken home, and his wife philosophizes to Dauphin in the de Maupassant manner to fill out the episode's 15 minutes. "The Model," the second episode, is scarcely longer. It boasts Simone Simon (looking as youthful as she ever has) and Daniel Gelin, who is youthful enough to require a beard to look his part. She is a model, he is a painter; they enjoy a brief idyllic romance, he tires of her, and a full-scale catastrophe is re- quired to reunite them. Most of the time the two stars spend rush- ing somewhere or breaking some- thing, neither of which allows them much time to act. .* * * THE FINAL STORY is called "The House of Madame Tellier," and it 'features two of France's best film stars: Danielle Darrieux and Jean Gabin. Madame Tellier, highly successful and respected in her not-so-respectful business, locks her doors on Saturday and troops her young ladies off to the country to attend the first com- munion of her niece. The fete is a success, and the brother (Jean Gabin), having had a bit too much to drink, evinces no small amount of interest in Madame Rosa (Danielle Darrieux), THE Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN from to Room 3553 Administration Building before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for the Sunday edition must be in by 2 p.m. Friday. SATURDAY, MAY 5, 1956 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 63 General Notices Graduating Seniors who wish to renv caps and gowns should place orders now at Moe's Sport Shop, 711 N. Uni- versity. Late Permission: All women students who attended the May Festival Concert Thursday, May 3, had late permission until 11:15 p.m. Regent's Meeting." Because of the anticipated volume of business which must be transacted at the Regents' meeting of May 24 and 25, it is earnestly requested thatrall those having com- munications for presentation at this meeting submit them to the President not later than May 15 instead of May 16. The preparation of the individual copies of the agenda which must be sent to the Regents at least a week in advance of each meeting s requiring more time than in the past, because of the number of communications In- volved. Lectures American Chemical Society Lecture, Mon., May 7, 8:00 p.m. Room 1300 Chemistry Building. Dr. A. L. Wilds of the Department of Chemistry, Univer- sity of Wisconsin will speak on "Re. actions of Diazomethane with -Acid Chlorides. A Case Study in the Unex- pected." Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Constantine Christofides, Comparitive Literature Thesis: "Bossuet on Politics, History and Jansenism," -Mon., May 7, ast Alcove of the Assembly Hall, Rackhan, Bldg., at 3:00 p.m. Chairman, E. B. Ham. Placement Notices The Following Schools have listed vacancies for the 1956-57 school year. They will not send representatives to our office to Interview at this time. ARMADA, MICH. - Teacher needs: 1st, 4th, Kdg./1st combination, 4th/5th combination; 6th/7th combination, man. CALUMET CITY, ILL. - Teacher needs: Elementary (Kdg. to 5th). CHATHAM, MICH. (Rock River Township Schools) - Teacher needs: Commerce (Typing, Shorthand, Book- keeping); Physics/Math; Band/Junior High English or Social Studies. DAYTON, WASH. - Teacher needs: Elementary (2nd, 4th, 8th); Elem. Vocal Music; High School Girls' Phys. Ed./ Health/Library or English. EAST GARY, IND. t- Teacher needs: Elementary (1st, 2nd, 4th, 5th, 6th); Junior High Math. FLUSHING, MICH. - Teacher needs: Elementary (3rd/th Combination, 5th 6th combination); Librarian; Math; English; Science (Chem./Physcs/Gen. Science); English; Social Science/Jr. High Geography; Commercial; Girls ICoach/Phys. Ed./Teaching. HIGHLAND PARK, ILL. - Teacher needs: Elementary (Kdg. to 4th); 8th grade Social Studies/English; Primary Music. HOOPA, CALIF. - Teacher needs: Elementary; Phys. Ed. Boys; Phys. Ed. Girls; Phys. Ed.-History-Gen. Bus.-Gen. Science; Home Ec. Girls'; English; Science-Math; Music; Voc. Shop Teach- er. JACKSON, MICH. - (Vandercook Lake Public Schools)-Teacher needs: Elementary; Commerce; Home Econom- ics; Jr. High English; Industrial Arts, LEWES, DEL. - Teacher needs: Ele- mentary. MODESTO, CALIF. - Teacher needs: Vocal Husic (7-8 Grades); High School HIome Ec.; Gen. Science; Girls' Phys. Ed.; Printing/Graphic Arts/Metal Shop; Wood Shop; Chemistry; Art; English (9th to 12th grades, Drama, Speech, Developmental Reading.) PONTIAC, MICH. (Waterford Town- ship Schools) - Teacher needs: Vocal Music; Commercial; Librarian; Speech. PORTLAND, CONN. - Teacher needs: Elementary; Art; Vocal Music; High School English; Biology/Gen. Science; Vocational Home Ec.; Industrial Arts. RIVERSIDE, ILL. - Teacher needs: English; Math; Math/Chem; Industrial Arts/Science or Math; Chemistry; Vocal Music; Girls Phys. Ed. SEASIDE, ORE. - Teacher 'needs: Elementary (5th, 6th, 7th, 8th). TAYLOR CENTER, MICH. -- Teacher needs: Elementary (kdg. thru 8th). For additional information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Ad.. ministration Bldg., NO 3-1511, Ext. 489. PERSONNEL INTERVIEWS: Representatives from the following will be at the Engrg. School: Thurs., May 10: Owens-Illinois, Toledo, Ohio-Juniors 8 . uI 'A .3 'A .4 4 A 1~ .4 A 4 #. 4- M