I Sixty-Seventh 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 Wasn't Beaten In Any Election" "When Opinions Ar Free Truth Wl Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: VERNON NAHRGANG Recognition of Communist China Facing Hard Political Fact AN international problem currently overlooked as attention is focused on the crises in the Middle East and Hungary is that of United States' relations with Communist China. This knotty situation came briefly into the limelight recently during the opening days of the United Nations General Assembly when the annual attempt, led by Russia, to seat the ,Com'munists in place of the Nationalists as the Chinese representatives. The United States was able to stave off this move again this year, although the margin of victory becomes smaller each year, The United States, within the next year or two; will be faced with a turn in Sino-American relations over which we will have had little control, unless we sooner come up with a solu- tion of our own making and one which is more to our liking. The United States had its own way in the United Nations this year and may have it so again next session. If the trend of voting on the issue of Chinese representation continues in the present pattern, however, the Communists will inevitably unseat the Nation- alists as the legal representatives of China and America will find herself in an isolated posi- tion concerning the China question. Admission of Red China to the United Nations prior to recognition by the United States would ac-, complish this quite pointedly. O PREVENT being forced into an untenable position, within the next year or so the United States should reach a negotiated settle- nent with Communist China, to include the recognition of the Communist regime as the de facto government of China. In reaching this settlement America should strike a bargain with the Reds to obtain, under United Nations auspices and supervision, a reunification of Korea; an agreement on the status of Taiwan, encompassing mutual guaran- tees against invasion and the recognition of Taiwanese sovereignity; and reunification of Vietnam. Only if these conditions are accepted should the United States recognize the Red regime. Three reasons can be presented in support of this proposal. First, the Communist party is undeniably in control of the government of the China mainland. Distasteful as it may be to some, only a dreamer can see any possibility of Chaing Kai-shek, or any other leader, re- turning to power in China. America must awaken to this realization and quit hiding its figurative head in the sand. Secondly, if a negotiated settlement of the outstanding questions of Korea, Taiwan, and Vietnam-where today armed truces are but unlit powder kegs-is not made, the United States will not have to wait for an explosion that will make the troubles of the Middle East fade quickly into significance. Thirdly, much talk is heard concerning the possibility of "Titoism" in Mao Tse-tung's re- gime. Most of this is now based on wishful thinking. If the United States would foster an independence-of-Moscow movement in peiping, the current policy forcing China to what Mao labels the "lean-to-one side" practice, i.e. complete alliance with Soviet Russia, is not the way to do it. Instead, a daring plan of drawing China out of the Russian orbit could well make "Titoism" in China a reality. Certainly, the time is now ripe for such a move. A PROPOSAL to extend de facto recognition to the Chinese Communist government will not be well received in many quarters. But realistic, imaginative power politics often nec- essitate unpopular- moves. In this day of ad- mitted competitive coexistence, the hard facts of international politics will have to be faced, and the sooner the better and the easier for the American people. The United States has an opportunity to dis- play clever diplomatic leadership and get a good bargain through some old-fashioned Yankee trading. Should the United States inaugurate this or a similer proposal and succeed, a sizeable step toward a stable peace will have been taken. Even if negotiations fail, America will have gained diplorfiatically and the burden of proof of peaceful intent will lie in Peiping. -RICHARD HALLORAN Editorial Director 1 t _I a. I: " . ( ; i ' r _ ,5f, f k , -., 4 C - - ''¢ ^' L s-, j7 Rp // A ( oy AVY n Co roL/ tIjr$TOf. - ik . f <.. , ,:. Y ' f ' F ].. ' , \Y R , T , : ks,_ 4 t py °Q1l6Sr-eA~nrVI4 POST C- WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Potential Turing Po By DREW PEARSON A Credit to Michigan BENNIE OOSTERBAAN has just finished his ninth year as head football coach at the University. During this time his teams have won 57 games, lost 22, and tied two for a percentage of .722. In the Big Ten Conference his teams have won 39, lost,16, and tied twice. His squads have won or shared the Conference champion- ship three times with one national title, and have finished as low as fifth in the standings only once. During this period, however, Oosterbaan has been subjected to considerable criticism. It is not "why doesn't Michigan'win?" but instead "why doesn't Michigan win even more often?" These alumni, student, and other fans have no solid basis for criticizing the coaching abil- ity of one person. It is up to the individuals in charge - plus those that participate - to de- termine the quality of the University's athletic coaches. O THOSE that know him, Oosterbaan ranks as one of the nation's finest gentlemen in coaching. He is respected as a winning coach, who takes his job very seriously in contrast to his outwardly calm manner. Oosterbaan's philosophy towards football is quite dfiferent from many in the big time field. His feeling is that the spirit is primarily in the players themselves. In the powerful Big Ten, Oosterbaan also says that there are "no up- sets"--that if a team of certain calibre wants to win badly enough, it can. He is not a big recruiter of high school ath- letes. He never overemphasizes the importance of one game or one season for his players in relationship to the whole educational picture at the University. In such a complex social and physical acti- vity as intercollegiate football today, Ooster- baan has been a definite credit to Michigan. --DAVID GREY Sports Editor THIS column has already re- ported on the emergency White House meeting the night before elections when high Administra- tion officials feared Russia was going to precipitate World War III. On that night, November 5, Herbert Hover, Jr., the Acting Secretary of State, was so wor- ried that Dwight D. Eisenhower running as the peace President might become a war President that all U.S. atomic vessels were ordered to sea, the Strategic Air Comand was alerted, and various other military precautions were taken. Allen Dulles, head of Central Intelligence, had just flown into New York from Europe and was about to sit down for a drink at the Piping Rock Club on Long Is- land with hisuold partner Arthur Dean when summoned to Wash- ington. He calmed White House nerves, argued that a Soviet at- ,tack was highly unlikely. On that night the President sent emphatic notes to Prime Ministers Eden and Mollet de- manding a cease-fire in Egypt. Since then the administration, still jittery over possible 4Russian "volunteer" attacks on Suez, has persuaded, pressured, badgered the British and French to get out. Likewise UN {Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge at first leaned to- warddRussian appeasement inthe UN debates on Hungary, while Voice of America employees were instructed they could not donate personally to Hungarian Freedom Fighters. * * * ' IT IS NOW possible to take a good look at Soviet threats and see whether Administration panic has been justified. It should be remembered that the Kremlin organized part of the Red Army from the Hungarians, Poles, Czechs, Rumanians and Bulgarians. Other members of the Red Army are not only from Rus- sia proper but from Armenia, the Ukraine, the Caucasus, White Russia, Turkestan, and areas not always sympathetic with having their nationalism merged under the Soviet Union. The Hungarian Freedom Fight brought all this latent national- ism to the surface, has made the Red Army one of the least reli- able forces politically in the world, Here is what happened: The Hungarian Red Army went over to the freedom forces al- most en masse. The officers had been Communist Party members only on paper. * * * AS A RESULT, four divisions of the Red Army in near-by Ru- mania were rushed into Hungary. The minute they left Rumania, riots started there. The troops had to be rushed back. Meanwhile, Russian troops sin- side Hungary have been apolo- gizing to the Hungarians for hav- ing had to carry out orders against them. Some Russians have de- serted. In the mountain chain north of Hungary and in the Ba- Jkony Forest in West Hungary Russian officers and men have joined Hungarian guerrillas. At the former Nazi concentra- tion camp of Germany near Sat- oraljaujkely on the Czechoslovak border, Soviet troops, demobil- ized because of their unreliabil- ity, are awaiting transportation to Siberian slave-labor camps. Some of the Red Army used in Hungary came from the Ukraine. Word of what happened trickling back to the Ukraine has caused trouble there. * * * THIS BASIC weakness of the Russian military is not new. It !vas graphically revealed when U.S. Army officers interrogated Russian prisoners after the war and found that the amazing total of 3,600,000, had surrendered to Hitler, most of them hoping to overthrow the regime in Moscow. This, not the might of the Ger- man army, was the real reason for the lightning Nazi advance over Russia. In five months der- many conquered 40 per cent of the Russian population, all because of mass Russian surrenders. Prisoner interrogation reports buried in U.S. Army files show case after case of Russian off i- cers who surrendered to the Ger- mans hoping for a change of gov- ernment in Moscow. Greatest mis- take Hitler made was to treat these prisoners with such cruelty that eventually word leaked back to the Red Army and surrenders stopped. There seems definite evidence that the same Red Army resent- mnent against their Communist masters in the Kremlin exists to- day. That is why some advisers in the Eisenhower Administration disagree with the panic policies of the State department. It is also why a great potential turning- point in history may have been lost. (Copyright 1956 by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) AT THE STATE: Elvis Tries; Elvis Fails THE DAY the Elvis Presley movie came to Ann Arbor, the ma- jority of the students left. Call it coincidence, blame it on vaca- tions and all that rot, but I firmly believe it was planned that way. However, the State theatre has won the battle. We have sheepishly 'come back to this town and that film is still waiting to grab us. It grabbed me a few hours ago. Just hold it a second, will you? I'll be all right in a minute. Give me some air, that's all. NOW, about this picture-Elvis Presley, heh-heh, does some acting, heh-heh, as well as some singing, heh-heh, in "Love Me Tender." Whatever you may think of Elvis's singing, be assured that he is a better singer than he is an actor. I am painfully reminded of the Liberace picture that played here last year, putting me on Tums for a week, wherein that musical lum- inary attempted to emote verbally in grand style. He didn't make it, either. But at least, Elvis gets shot at the end of this one, which was what Liberace also deserved all along. "Love Me Tender" is a western in black and white C i n e m a s c o p e which is what it deserves to be. Briefly, oh so briefly, it takes place right after the Civil War and con- cerns a bunch of Rebs who have stolen a Union Army payroll and refuse to give it up. They base their ethical claim on some foolish idea about "the spoils of battle" but in the end the boys in Blue get back the booty. There is another plot raging through the film and this one concerns a fellow named Vance who comes back from the war and finds his -sweetie married to someone else, namely his young- er brother Clint. Richard Egan is the Vance and you-know-who is Clint. The lady is played torridly by Debra Paget who maintains a sultry look throughout and indi- cates by every gesture that the hayloft is her home away from home. Old Elvis finally goes berserk and beats the very devil out of the poor girl, although it is perhaps noticable that he has not so much as held her hand once in the pic- ture. However, to everyone's re- lief, he gets it in the gut and dies sloppily in the dust. Sob. * * * AS FOR THE MUSICAL portion, heh-heh, of "Love Me Tender" it is a lot of laughs. The teen-age messiah whips through four num- bers in the style that made him famous. The title song is kind of a dull affair, but in the other three he slams around, revolving his whatchamacallit, g r i n d i n g his whoozamawhatsis, and grinning like Satan. Women, or girls, or men with high-pitched voices, are heard screaming on the sound-track, and I fear the audience will produce similar outcries. In one scene, he goes about his pelvic business on the front porch of the family homestead and the one enjoying it most of all is his old mother, a woman past her prime, believe me. Well, if. she doesn't mind, I don't see why I should. It is really no great surprise when he finally flips his lid at the close, since he has already flipped every other portion of his anatomy by that time. --David Newman NEW YORK-Most of Monday's early stock market gains by steels, oils, aircrafts and ship-building issues faded under profit taking and the market registered a de- cline on average. -Associated Press DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an of- ficial publication of the University of Michigan for which the MThhigan daily assumes no editorial responsibility. No- tices should be sent in TYEWRIT'TEN form to Room 3553 AdEninistrdtion Building before 2 p.m. the day preced- ing publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1956 VOL. LXVII NO.53 General Notices Prospective teachers in this area may take the National Teacher Examina- tions on Feb. 9, 1957. Appli~tion blanks and a Bulletin of Information may be obtained from Room 122, Beckham Bldg., or directly from the National Teacher Examinations, Educational Testing Service. 20 Nassau St., Prince- ton, N. J. Applications must be. re- ceived at the Princeton office not la- ter than Jan. 11, 1957. Late Permission: All woen studnt who attended the concert at Hill Audi- torium of Tues., Nov. 20, had late per- mission untl 11:30. Student Government Cuoncil, Uni- versity of Michigan, Nov. 20, 1956. The minutes of Nov. 7 and No. 16 were approved. Election of officers: The following, ere elected in the order named to the office indicated: William J Adams, President (by acclamation), John J. Collins, Vice-President, iewis ng- man, Treasurer (no contety Prospectus: Following his elec ion the president presented a 'evew and prospectus of the progress of the Council. Interimtaction: The chair an reported that the followng studen pon ored events were approved by the Execu- tive Committee since the last mneet- ing:t Nov. 19: Assembly, Fortnite, Lydia, Mendelssohn. Nov. 23-25: National and Internaton- al Committee, SG, to host Regional USNSA International Student Rela- tions Seminar, Michigan Union. Nov. 30: National and fnternational Committee, SOO, panel discussion with student and faculty patic- pants, "Use of Counter-aggressio in International Politics." Nov. 30: Women's Physical Education Club, "Barn Hop" Barbour Gym, 9-12. Dec. 1: Mortarboard, Senior Society, Scroll, Career Conference, League, 2-5p.m. University Calendar: It was moved and seconded that the Executive Com- mittee appoint a four member com- mittee to consider the UAiversity al- endar and make recommendations to the SO. It istrecommended that at least one of the atuden1s now ing on the University Calendartng Comittee be appointed to this com- mittee. Motion carried. . Metallurgical Society: If was mnved and seconded that recognition be granted the Metallurgical Society subject to approval of 'Its consitu- tion. Motion carried. J. J. Interviewing: Janet Neary was re- quested to serve on the Intervieing Board of Joint Judiciary Council on December 8, 9. Lectures Social Foundations of Esaucaion Se- ries, auspices of the School o Edica- tion, Panel discussion: "Econdic In- terest Groups and American Educa- tion." Representatives from th Mchi- gan CI.O. Council and the9 Detroit Board of Commerce. 3:00-4: mm~ Tues., Nov. 27, Universit Eleme tary School Auditorium. Operations Research Seinar. a.ea C. Mouzon, Operations Research Office, Washington, will lecture on "The Scope of Operations Research" on Wed., Nov. 28. Coffee hour at 3:30 p.m. in Room 243, West Engineering Building and seminar in Room 229, West Engineering at 4:00 p.m. All faculty 6ember 'el come. Prof. Zbigniew Brzeznsiu, of the' .Oar- vard Russian Research Center will dis- cuss The Present Situation in the Soviet Block" on Thurs., Nov. 29, 410 p.m., East Conference Room,.ack am Building. Academic No ces Engineering Seniors aud Graduate Students: Free copies of the "hngir rs' Job Directory", a new "guide to engi- neering and scientific positions",, are available to engineering -seniors and graduate students at the Engineering Placement Office, Room 347, W. Engi- neering Building. Copies 4avalabl* on order to underclassmen and o" hera at $5.00 each. School of Business Armln.itration: Students from other Schools nd Col- leges intending to apply for adrn, on for the spring semester, 957 'Id secure application forms in Riom 150, School of Business Administrator. and return as soon as possi All Mechanical & Indastrial init neering Students: Plea determjne your faculty advisor from ist, p, ed at the ME. & LE. offl s and r'ake counselling appointments immediately for any available time before Fri., Dec. 21. Instructions for counselling are be- ing distributed and are also ported. Additional copies are available .rom your advisor. Mathematics Colloquium: Tues., Nov, 27 at 4:10 p.m., in 3011 A. H. Dr. Z. A. MeIzak will speak on "A Scalar Trans- port Equation". / E. E. Department Colloquium. Amos E. Joel, Bell Telephone laboratories, will speak on "DigitalnTechniques in Telephone Systems," Tues., Nov. 27, 3:00 p.m., 2084 East Engineering. All staff and students are invited. (staff members -please announce to your classes). Sociology Colloquium: Prof. Peter Rossi, University of Chicago, will talk on "The Politics of Non-Partisan Elec- tions." Michigan League, Ana Arbor Room, Wed., Nov. 28, 4:15 p.m. Placement Notices The following school will be at the Bureau of Appointments', on Not 28 to interview for teachers for Feb., 1957. Mt. Clemens, Michigan (Vanse Creuse Schools) - elementary, (Kindergarten, 2nd grade, 5th grade); Special Educa- Reevaluation in Athietics HE University Faculty Senate met yesterday to consider problems which may result from Big 10 action on athletic eligibility, scholar- ships and financial aid. What is needed more than a discussion of specific proposals is a general reevaluation, by the faculty, of intercollegiate athletics and its place at the University. Such a reevaluation might attempt to define and clarify the faculty's position on whether the University should strive for pure amateur- ism or accept the quasi-professionalism that now characterizes the Big 10. The use of scholarships, originally a means of providing higher education for needy, quali- fied students but now used as bait for muscle, could be discussed profitably. Although efforts by the Big 10 to strengthen their rules and improve the conference are commendable, we are not sure they evidence a resolute desire to play strictly amateur ball. A faculty resolution standing for full amateur- Ism and opposing compromise would be wel- come. FULL amateurism implies, among other things, no special treatment of students based on athletic skill. Free tutoring for ath- letes when it is not available to other students, numerous athletic scholarships, and financial RICHARD SNYDER....................... Editor DAVID SILVER .................. Business Manager aid of any sort not available to .non-athletes are examples of such treatment. An argument often used to support free tu- toring and special financial help is that the athlete spends a great deal of time helping the University and deserves compensation. We consider this argument invalid as long as it is not applied (and it is not) to students who help the University through extra-curricular and similar activities. The specific proposal coming up in the Big 10 calls for equalizing, in economic terms, aid to athletes. This would be done by making the difference between what the athlete actually can afford, and the cost of his education, the maximum financial aid allowable. WHILE this is an improvement over present regulations, it is not enough. First, by their owni admission Big 10 schools "bend and tor- ture" their regulations. The proposed legisla- tion, calling for determination of the athlete's financial status and the cost of his education, can be tortured just as are present restric- tions. Second, while there is a place for athletic scholarships in amateurism, there is no place for their present use. Athletic scholarships should be considered analagous to extra-curri- cular scholarships, which are now few in num- ber and small in stipend. Certainly no one ever went through school on a scholarship for extra-curricular activities. The basic objection to proposed legislation and Big 10 attempts to raise standards is that they are not sweeping enough and they spring from a vacuum. The first step is deciding where between amateurism and professionalism the Big 10 wants to lie. We suspect it wants to rest in the middle, and as a result will inevi- LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Local Issues Draw Reader Comment Unconveyed Pleasure*.. . To the Editor: The pleasure that I, and per- haps others, derived from hear- ing the Vienna Philharmonic Or- chestra, was not conveyed to the members of that organization by the review of J. P. Benkard. I am writing this letter in the hope that it will serve that purpose. J. I. Ullman Insult to Artists . To the Editor: THINK that it is a safe as- sumption to say that the pri- mary purpose of any review is to present a conscientious presen- tation of that which they are re- viewing. The article should be on a level which enables the reader to evaluate the sqjbject intelli- gently. It is not enough to say that something is poor. What the reader actually wants to know is why something is unsatisfactory. It is the duty of a newspaper to print material which is accurate. Freedom of the Press does not in- clude the presentation of half truths or inaccuracies. Does the Daily operate with the philosophy there were things in that program which could be criticized just as well as the Boston Symphony and the Berlin Philharmonic could be criticized. I am sure that Mr. Ciuytens is interested in the ob- servations of the reviewer. Any artist is interested in improve- ment through constructive criti- cism. What was constructive about the criticisms as made by the reviewer? In discussing the work by Theodor Berger, the re- viewer stated, "It should have stayed at home." That remark is supposed to represent to the read- er an intelligent evaluation of that number. The article con- tinues with a description of the piece by Roussel as "amusing but trivial." Not satisfied with these questionable statements, the author closes with a sarcastic statement concerning the audi- ence. ". . . the orchestra played, as an encore, a piece of dance mu- sic by another local composer; at least it was on their (the audi- ences') level." I believe that the author has a right to his own opinion. But there is no necessity in using the Michigan Daily as the graveyard for such material. There is no doubt that mistakes occured in Simple, but Complex.. . To the Editor: ONE of the most important issues facing SGC in the forthcoming weeks is the question of approval for the Moral Rearmament Asso- ciation to present two plays here on campus. As a brief explanatiop1 of this group we might mention that it is an off-shoot of the Ox- ford Movement in England. The MRA has for its goal the introduc- tion of a "way of life" designed to establish "harmony among nations and world peace." As a tax-ex- empt organization they have been constantly under question, and use of the clergy half-fare on public conveyances seems to indicate that they are a religious organization despite their refusal to admit this fact. The members of MRA must sur- .render individual property rights into a common pool to support the "movement." Additional support is provided by solicitations, a pro- cess which its members have bluntly mastered. Presentation of their two plays on the Michigan campus hinges on the fact that their side show of 300 converts must be given free food and lodg- Golden Rule bec mes incidental in lieu of their determination to con- vince us that this ideology is our philosophical zenith. Having seen the plays it is our suggestion to both SGC and MRA that such an elaborate presentation is incon- gruous with the plays' simplicity. Each of their carnival performers is in actuality an audience "plant" with a melodramatic confession of his own. Their anti-democratic, anti - capitalistic, pro - socialistic plays The Vanishing Island and Freedom could be adequately pre- sented by two or three readers. -Marshall Henrichs -Donald C. Sarin '57 'Monstrous Evils'. . . To the Editor: RE: Mr. Dygert's final article on the LYL: most liberals would agree that there are more realistic, flexible, and democratic organiza- tions with which to effect political and economic action than the LYL, which is one reason why it died out; but not even the subtlest sug- gestion by Mr. Dygert, or anyone else, that investigating committees can be condoned on the basis that