Sixty-Eighth 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 hen Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the itidividual opinions of staff writers bn'%the editors. This mus t be noted in all reprints. AY, MARCH 6,1958 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL KRAFT Imagination Needed in Dealing with Soviets "Can't Be Spending Money Foolishly, You Know" .MOM. sca 4 1 PROJECT TO TEAR POW A - THE H I ST"ORIC. EAST FRONT o F THE I/ ) ) _ . ly p PERHAPS TOO SOBER: The 'Beat' Generation Hard-Headed, Realistic By HAL BOYLE N EW YORK (M)-Is the present college generation the best America has produced? This cheerful possibility is raised by dr. Otto Buts, a young professor of political scienec at Princeton University. It is part of the story of man that each generation tends to look down its nose at the generation that is rising to replace it on the stage of history. So it is that the middle-aged man today, himself a survivor of what was denounced as "thelost-generation," is often found now denouncing the present college crop as the "silent" or "beat" generation. This . 'ECRETARY OF STATE John Foster Dulles' rejection of the latest Soviet proposal for alks should have surprised only the most naive r optimistic. Dulles turns a cold shoulder to Soviet sugges- ions almost as if by involuntary reflex. The reason given this time is that the Rus- ian suggestions for a pre-summit foreign min- ter's meeting are "unacceptable" because they ai1 to provide for enough advance preparation. "We do not want to be a party to what would e a fraud, or a hoax, and which would be lerely a spectacle," he said. E UNITED STATES has held that agree- ment on the important issues for the agenda hould take place among the foreign ministers a summit talk is to produce positive results, hile the Russians are opposed to agreeing on substantial agenda before the chiefs of state Leet. So once again, East stays east and West stays ome. Yesterday, President Dwight D. Eisenhower aid the Kremlin leaders had sent a message %ying they would be glad to consider holding summit conference in the United States. The United States will never close the door n any efforts to arrange such a meeting, he nphasized. Numerous valid reasons appear for rejecting ae latest Soviet attempt. Crucial, is the hold- g of such a meeting without advance prepara- on to clear the way ,for earnest across the ble negotiations. The Soviet's insistence that aditional conferees be replaced by equal rep- sentation on both sides of the iron curtain ise objections that a sovereign nation such ; Britain would be balanced against a satellite ation such as Czechoslovakia. Particularly, the Russian determination not discuss German reunification appears, to the rest, to ignore a crucial issue. These reasons ay be enough for any nation, no longer how much it desires solution of world tensions, to close the door against talks that seem likely to turn into propaganda platforms. Once again, proposals to talk are merely excuses to parry. Easing international tensions appears secondary; the important thing is to build one's own strength upon the opposition's weakness. The argument about international inspection, the obstacles for unification of'°Germany and the haggling over ending nuclear energy tests all gain force from both side's unwillingness to actually sit down and negotiate instead of standing up to spout propaganda. PERHAPS sad experience has enforced a feel- ing that Russia is not a nation one can bargain with. Possibly, memory of the Berlin Blockade may recall the Russians have not exactly been scrupulous in keeping agreements they have signed. But the past, while beneficial, cannot always be counted on to guide the present. If any progress is to be made towards real world peace, if any dissolvment of international bar- riers is to result, a willingness to meet the Russians with a fresh imaginative attitude is needed. The fact that such an approach is possible can be seen in the recently signed cultural exchange program. Visible in the exchange of students and cultural groups, are the small beginnings of cooperation. And in declaring that the United States, hasn't closed its door to summit talks, it seems the time is opportune for the administration to open its mind to some additional fresh think- ing. World peace will not come from automatic rejection; the goal is approachable only by a willingness to continually try different ap- proaches. This takes imagination, not auto- matic reflex actions. --MICHAEL KRAFT J -41 .' ®48-Ries w 4S A.4T + C' WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Searching for a Cure By DREW PEARSON I1 How Free Is Free? [ME QUESTION was raised recently as a theoretical point only: may a political party se the rights of a free society in an attempt o destroy those same rights?-' The answer given by P'rof. Benjamin Lip- 4ncott of the University of Minnesota's politi- al science department was: a party may not. The question asked here is: how free is free? The United States prides itself, and right- ally so, on its generations-long tradition of olitical freedom - the right to vote as one leases, to discuss, debate, and argue the facts nd the issues from whatever viewpoint one appens to take. These rights have been ex- ounded so often they have become platitudi- ous. They are taken for granted - as they hould be. At least, they always have been taken for ranted. The last 20 years have changed that: eedom of speech has itself become the topic f debate in the face of increasing Communist cpansion and the threat of "Red infiltratign" i4his country. McCarthyism, the Smith Act nid the Communist registration bill seem to ave no doubt as to the winner of the debate; ctual free speech becomes an increasingly recious commodity in a country that, as a hole, is "running scared." Brought up to date, the original question iters an entirely different context, for a' 7eory once applied cannot remain theoretical. he United States is at present assuming Com- unism, as representing a threat to estab- shed institutions, mustand should be stifled Y every means at hand. And it is operating i this assumption. )NE NEED only reverse the original question to see that what is happening here is the her side of the coin: may a free. society with- old rights from any of its members In order preserve them? The answer to that question must be no, r the question itself represents a contradic- m. A "right" cannot be withheld; it is by finition innate, automatic, something taken r granted because it is always there. Once withheld from any segment of society, any sort of freedom becomes no longer a right, but a privilege, to be granted or not by the ruling group at its pleasure. By the very at- tempt to preserve its rights, then, a free so- ciety will sow the seeds of its destruction. It seems, then, a vicious circle is created. Apparently a nation must either stand by and see its cherished jpstitutions devoured, or take action and risk being itself the instrument of their destruction. It is, indeed, necessary for them to stand aside. But only a society whose institutions are precarious has need to "run scared." By its very nature, a really free society has built-in protections.J N SUCHi A SOCIETY, the most precious right of all is the right to know both sides of any given issue, and to decide accordingly. Further, democracy has been defined as "the recurring conviction that more than half the people are right more than half the time." Perhaps it has never been defined better; in any case, democracy is certainly based on the conviction that a decisive majority of the people are entitled to formulate governmental policy. Given these factors - the right to know, the right to decide and the right to see their de- cisions implemented - the Communist threat becomes no longer a threat but simply anoth- er possibility - the possibility it might attract enough of a following in this country to con- stitute a majority. If such should eyer become the case, this majority should, does and must have the right to form a Communist govern- ment, whatever the implications or. the con- sequences. This, in itself, represents one of the most basic of all rights, so basic as to have come down from the Declaration of Independence. Thomas Jefferson wrote that "it is the right of the people to alter or abolish it (the govern- ment.) " Only when the "rights of a free society" en- compass this wide a sphere does that society have the right to call itself free. --SUSAN HOLTZER WASHINGTON - Disagreement continues among Eisenhower economic advisers regarding the best way to end the "depression" --a word which Ike used for the first time last week. One group believes a tax cut and wage controls will do the trick. Ike himself sides with these advisers. He inclines toward the Herbert Hoover theory, twice ex- pressed in the past two weeks, that there is nothing much wrong with the economy which a little public confidence won't cure. A chins-up fireside chat may at- tempt to restore that confidence. Other advisers are more wor- ried, believe it will take some real pump-priming, a further drastic cut in the Federal Reserve re- quirements, and a sizable boost of consumer buying power before there is a business pick-up. * * * WHAT worries them is the fact that consumers have bought so heavily on the installment plan that buying power is at a low ebb. Auto production is at a dis- couraging low. Until buying power is restored, White House advisers warn there will be no pick-up in business. There's been a lot written about the tragic setbacks of the Navy's satellite Vanguard, but little about the heroic efforts of Navy scientists to overcome those set- backs. One interesting feature is that budget officers, anxious to keep down ' overtime pay, gave rigid instructions that scientists should work no more than eight hours a day, 40 hours a week. These orders have been com- pletely, though secretly, ignored. The secrecy results from the fact that Navy scientists don't want to get into a wrangle with bidget officers. They: simply work over- time, but don't collect for it. The Budget Bureau frowns on over- time for fear government em- ployes will come along later and try to collect -for it. So the scien- tists have kept their overtime to themselves. * * * REPUBLICAN Congressmen A. L. (Doe) Miller and Phil Weaver of Nebraska knew the odds were against them when they walked into President Eisenhower's of- fice the other day to sound out Ike on whether he would oust his bloody-but-unbowed Secretary of Agriculture, Ezra Taft Benson. dWhen they walked back out, the odds hadn't changed. They were still about 100 to 1 against Ben- son's resigning, at least by Presi- dential request. The two Nebraska congressmen didn't immediately lay their cards on the table. Instead, they talked about "economic unrest" among Midwest farmers, which, they contended, was bound to get worse if Benson's order lowering dairy support prices was allowed to go into effect on April 1. "There are other considerations of a political nature, Mr. Presi- dent," he said. "I don't want you to think that we are selfish or that Republican congressmen from our part of the country are motivated solely by their own poli- tical futures. But our party is in real trouble in farm areas. Every poll and recent election shows this to be true. "The reason we came here to- day, Mr. President, is to respect- fully request that something be done about Mr. Benson. Our party will continue to lose prestige with the farm vote if he remains in of- fice until the November election." The President thought for a moment, then favored his visitors with the traditional Eisenhower grin. * * * "GENTLEMEN, I knew the pur- pose of your visit today and I ap- preciate your frankness. I shall be equally frank with you. I have given .this matter a lot of thought recently and want you to know that I recognize and am sympa- thetic with thesproblems of Re- publican members of Congress in farm. areas. "However, I have no intention of requesting the resignation of Mr. Benson. You may not agree with me, but I am convinced he is doing a good job. I could -not in conscience fire a' man I think is doing a good job." "What if Mr. Benson volun- tarily offers his resignation?" asked Rep. Miller. "Do you mind telling us how you might be dis- posed in that event?" "Well, that hasn't been done," replied the President, "and to the best of my knowledge is not in prospect. But I think I can tell you that Secretary Benson has agreed to reconsider his support price order that is effective on April 1. At the request of the White House, he is giving this further study and may have an announcement soon." (Copyright 1958 by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) verdict didn't Jibe at all with the on-the-spot findings of Dr. Butz, who, as a German-born Canadian, felt himself in a better position to judge. "After all," he said, smiling, "I'm an inside outsider. * * * "I HAD HEARD the younger generation inthe United States was a group of unthinking con- fomists without individuality, al- truism or dedication. "But gradually, as I taught col- lege classes here, year after year, these criticisms amazed me more and more, and seemed more unfair to me. I sensed in these college kids a tremendous amount of seri- ousness, public mindedness-even idealism - covered over with a sophisticated casualness." So much of what he felt to be eyewash had been written about the present young generation that Dr. Butz wondered, "Why doesn't someone ask these young college men what they think of them- selves-and the role they hope to play in life?" * C * HE FINALLY did it himself. He had 11 Princeton seniors, picked pretty much at random, write their own biographies-and their dreams.The result is a book called "The Unsilent Generation," and it sold 4,000 copies in two days. Some of the essays are sopho- moric, as could be expected. Some are smug. But no one who reads them, if he accepts them as typi- cal, can feel quite so safe again in describing this generation as thoughtless, silent, beat, or inter- ested only in personal security. "It is my determination," wrote one, "to adhere to the belief that each man must find his own truth after learning the realities and truths that exist for others; that each man, in other words, must decide for himself." "The characteristic fear of our' generation is the horror of finding ourselves ludicrous," wrote an- other. To Dr. Butz the generation now maturing is hard-headed, realistic -and if anything too sober. Position 1 NASHVILLE came Lord Hailsham, sharp-witted chair- man of Britain's Conservative Party, on a sentimental journey. His mother, Myssie Brown, who died in 1925, was born there, the daughter of a distinguished Ten- nessee family (her grandfather, Neill Brown, had been governor of Tennessee). Lord Hailsham wanted to visit her home, and meet his American cousins. One was Neill S. Brown, Nash- ville attorney, a staunch Demo- crat who promptly turned the conversation to politics. Brown asked: "Just how conservative is the Conservative Party?" Hailsham answered: To the left of both the Democrats and Repub- licans." -Newsweek DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin i 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, THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1958 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 110 General Notices The Queen's University, Belfast, Ire- land, again offers through a recipro- cal arrangement with the Unversity of Michigan an exchange scholarship for a graduate from the University of Michigan. The scholarship will provide fees, board and lodging for the next academic year, but not travel. How- ever, application for a Fulbright travel grant may be made. conomcs, Geog- raphy, Mathematics, Medieval History, Philosophy, Political Science, and Ro. mance Languages are suggested as es- pecially appropriate fields- of study. Further information is available at the Office of the Graduate School, and ap- plications should be filed with the Graduate School by March 14, 1958. Fellowship Applications are now available for the Margaret Kraus Rams- dell Award. This fellowship is used to assist students who are graduates of the University of Michigan in pursu- ing graduate studies in this .country or. abroad in religious education or in pre- paration for the Christian ministry. Bothmen and women may apply for the fellowship. Applications should be made to the Dean of the Graduat School on forms obtainable from the Graduate School. The deadline Is March 14, 1958. School of Business Administration: Students from other Schools and Col- leges intending to apply for admission for the summer session or fall semester should secure application forms in Room 150, Sclool of Bus. Admin. Appli- cations should be completed as soon as possible. Delta Delta Delta General fund Scholarship Eligibility: any woman of better than average academic standing; evidence of participation in activities; evidence of genuine need. Apply to Of- fice of the Dean of Women, March t through 10. Late Permission: Women students who attended the Stanley Quartet Con- cert on Tues., night, Mar. 4, had late permission until 10:45 p.m. The following student sponsored so- cial events are approved for the com- ing weekend. Social chairmen are re- minded that requests for approval for social events are due in the Office of Student Affairs not later than 12 noon on the Tuesday prior to the event. Friday: Acacia, Delta Theta Phi, Kap- pa Sigma, Lloyd, Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Saturday: Acacia, Adams, Alpha Chi Sigma, Alpha Epsilon Phi, Alpha Kap- pa Kappa, Chinese Students Club, Chi Phi, Sigma Phi, Delta Tau Delta, Del- ta Theta Phi, Delta Upsilon, Huber, Nu Sigma Nu, Phi Alpha Kappa, Phi Kap- pa Psi, Phi Kappa Sigma, Phi Sigma Kappa, Phi Delta Theta, P Lambda Phi, Reeves & Scott, Sigma Phi, Tau Delta Phi, Theta Phi, Theta Delta Chi, Theta Xi, Wenley, Zeta Psi. Sunday: Delta Theta Phi. Coffee Hour for all students inter- ested. 4:15 p.m. Fri., Mar. 7, Lane Hall. Sponsored by the Office of Religious Affairs. Annual Industrial Relations Confer- ence meets Mar. 8 and 7 in Rackhan Bldg. General topic: "Public Issues and Practical Problems in Labor' and In- dustrialRelations." Program sessions today at 10 a.m., 2 p.m.. and 3:15 p.m. Changes in Circulation Hours for R- serve Books, beginning March 8, Re- serve books in the Undergraduate Li- brary will circulate as follows: Sun-Thurs., out at 9:00 p.m.; due following morning at 9:00. Fri., out. at 4:00 p.m.; due following morning at 9:00. Sat.,nout'at 4:00 p.m.; due following afternoon at 2:00. Lectures Thomas M. Cooley Lectures: Philip C. Jessup, Hamilton Fish professor of Internat onal Law and Diplomacy, Co- lumbiaAJniversity, will speak on: "The Role of International Courts." 4:15 p.m., March 8, Room 100, Hutchins Hall, Academic Notices Interdepartmental Seminar on Ap- plied Meteorology: Engineering. Fri., March 7, 3:30 p.m.. 5500 E. Engineering Bldg. Prof. W. H. Wagner, Jr., will speak on "Atmospheric Pollution by Aeroallergens: The Ragweeds and their Pollens." Seminar in Mathematical Statistics will meet ,Thurs., March 6, from 3,00-to 5:00 p.m. i1C 3201 Angell Hall. Prof. J. G. Wendel will discuss a paper by A. T. James on "The Relationship Algebra of an Experimental Design." Analysis Seminar. Prof. J. L. Ullman will speak on "The Approximation of Analytic Functions by Rational Func- tions." The meeting is in 3010 Angell Hall, Thurs., March 6 at 3:00 p.m. 402 Interdisciplinary seminar on the Application of Mathematics to Social Science. "Nets with leciprocity Bias." e (. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Rejection of Red Propaganda Defended INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Heat in the East Contradiction . . To the Editor: REPLY TO the letter, "Bitter Truth," Daily of March 2: It was to be expected that biting answers to the Red propaganda I translated for The Daily of Feb. 27 would follow, but I was per- plexed by Mrs. Judy Perloe's con- currence with most of the article. The article is ridiculous because it can be contradicted, not only from the standpoint of modern economics, but also by the facts as one finds them 'behind the Iron Curtain. It is not necessary to point out flaws in Marx's thinking and the errors in his predictions which history has demonstrated. Even the statement that the working masses in a capitalist society have not suffered increas- ing misery, but have enjoyed a ris- ing trend of real wages and higher standards of living ever since the middle of the 19th century might sound trivial. But let us analyze the facts a little. * . * I HAVE NOT seen "bread lines" in any town of America I visited, whether East, West, or Midwest. I have not found "begging for beneficence with the adminis- where 18-year-olds have never in their lives seen coffee, chocolate, real wool, or good milk. .With the Communists, people indeed do not suffer unemploy-- ment, since their Soviet govern- ment has plenty of work laid out for them to do, including women working underground in salt mines or - slave laborers toiling in the uranium diggings. Over there, indeed, there is no "inherent contradiction" between demand and overproduction" be- cause they do not produce for the consumers, but for the state. In economics, the very field in which the Communists proposed to prove their theories in action, the result has been a dismal catastrophe. In Eastern European countries, the Communists have to perform before a curious and objective double-mirror, the mirror of all Germany. The mirror of West Germany today reflects the amaz- ing results of an experiment in liberal capitalism, the free market economy. BUT HOLD this mirror up to the East Zone of Germanyand all the dreary Communist slogans about how much worse things are under capitalism ridicule them- SPnmeP-_ +Whiles t hh.. tion there will always be less than in the West. Mrs. Perloe states that in the Communist article the "criticisms may still be very valid . . . A hard-headed evaluation of this article is a far more intelligent approach than the automatic re- jection, by now very well developed in this country, of everything that the Communists have to say." I say that the criticisms are not valid at all because there is no crisis in America, and not even a depression. I automatically reject this article because it-in typically Communist fashion - suppresses the truth and applies its insidious dialectics. For someone who has worked for two years in a Soviet uranium mine, there is nothing to evaluate; I can only laugh at this twisted Communist logic. We have chosen to live in a capitalistic society, so we have to stick to it. If downturns in the business cycles occur, we have to use our remedies with all our strength to get well soon. It is defeatism to agree with the article, or even part of it, and just say "The knowledge that the ideas in this article are substan- tiated by actual events . . . make, real creative thinking and con- residence halls which was spon- sored by the Political Issues Club. I was disgusted with the lack of respect shown by some of the people who claimed an interest in a solution to the problem. Most of this heckling, laughing, and out- burst of "emotions" took place when Dean Bacon was speaking. She did not deserve this kind of reception. Dean Bacon gave a direct explanation of the present University philosophy on room- mate placement and defended this philosophy in terms of the criti- cisms which she felt were unfair. At the beginning of her remarks, she also indicated a problem which she felt was evident in students who favored dorm integration- that they are not willing to respect or listen to views other than their own and that they would be will- ing to "force" their ideas on any- one who might come to the Uni- versity. Instead of taking this as a means of improvement for future relations between student and the administration, many of the "in- terested" demonstrated that her criticism was true. * * * MY IDEAS and rationale, and the ideas of most students present last night whn ae sincea in ask-, 4 A By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press Foreign News Analyst 'HE MIDDLE EAST appears to be heating up again, A decision by King Faisal of Iraq to all Nuri Said, his ablest elder statesman, to a premiership hints as desperation in the t of rising Egyptian-Syrian pressure against new Iraqi-Jordan Federation. When that federation first was formed, obvi- ly as a response to the Egyptian-Syrian ion proclamation, President Gamal Abdel sser hailed it as another move toward the ab goal of unity. But for days recently Nasser who have a strong hold on thd public imagina- tion. NASSER APPARENTLY gave up hope that the federation of Iraq and Jordan would be a step toward removing Iraq from the Baghdad Pact linking an Arab country to Britain, Tur- key, Iran and Pakistan in a northern tier defense against communism. The Egyptian president's repeated charges that "imperialism" was behind the Amman-Baghdad federation agreement were, in effect, renewed attacks on the Baghdad Pact. Premier Said probably is the only man in a