"What Would It Cost To Add A Storm Cellar?" 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 -- When Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" CHORAL UNION SERIES: Vienna on Parade' --Wiener- Vaudeville THE DEUTSCHMEISTER Band, in another of the current series of music for the masses, opened last night's concert with a rendition of the "Star Spangled Banner in Three-Quarter Time." After a few minutes of selections which I could neither recognize nor locate on the program, the band was joined on stage by the costumed Gumpold- skirchner Children's Choir (the translation of which is NOT "Boys and Girls of the Vienna Woods"), whose selections were announced by an elfin-like Maedl and accompanied by the zither. The band acted as the filler between the several acts, which also Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. £ Y. APRIL 3, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: BROOKE TOMPKINS t Will Khrushchev Conquer Capitalism? the LAST WEEK Nikita Khrushchev said, "We will conquer capitalism through a higher standard of living." A year ago he said, "We will bury you." Tomorrow he may say, "We have conquered you; we have the last laugh." Incredible as it sounds, the Kremlin hierarcy is coming uncomfortably close to accomplishing their avowed end-the destruction of capitalism. Essentially the communist strategy has re- mained the- same since its birth in 1917. Es- pionage and internal dissatisfaction, culmi- nating in revolution, is the order of events Nikita Khrushchev has planne'd for his most stubborn enemy, the United States. It has never been his, Stalin's, Trotsky's or Lenin's intention to defeat their opponents in battle when a much simpler, more practical and a proven more successful method is available to them. To date their plans elsewhere have been frighteningly successful. In less than half a century they have grabbed off approximately a third of the-earth's land and population. They have made serious inroads into the all-im- portant neutral nations, nations which hold the balance of power between East and West. If they continue to expand at the pace they have been setting for the past decade and a half there is little doubt that within the life- times of our "Beat Generation" we will witness a universal communist system. The success of communism should raise some questions and deep consideration from the people of the free world. Ironically enough, it doesn't. The failures of capitalism, and in particular the United States, to thwart communism does not lie in the superiority of communism as a social ideology. On the contrary, communism is based on principles which are erroneous and iunpractical. Thk reason for communist success is due to the dedication of those party mem- bers who will go to all ends and take advan- tage of existing circumstances in achieving their purpose. Simply stated, the communist is a harder worker than the soft American, who, though he has everything to gain and everything to lose, refuses to apply himself to the task before him. When Khrushchev predicted that he would bring the downfall of capitalism by achieving a higher standard of living than we in the United States enjoy today, he wasn't drunk and he wasn't just exercising his vocal cords. Khrushchev meant exactly what he said, and like all dedicated communists before and after him, he will work inexhaustibly with all resources he can muster at his disposal. THERE IS NO DOUBT that if Russia suc- . ceeds in overcoming the ever diminishing lead that the United States has over it in compara- tive standards of living American capitalism would be terribly discredited before the eyes of the world. Consequently the tide of inter-j national sympathies would swing in the direc- tion of Russia and communism. Nations, once our staunchest allies would crumble from with- in as the opportunity to spread dissatisfaction and kindle revolution increases. If the course of history should ever resemble this, there would be no use in resorting to war as the last desperate measure. We would be defeated on our own battlefield, in the fight we know how to fight best-the war of econ- omy, living standards and material display. There would be no excuses, no politicians we could point to and say, "Because of you .,.. We would never admit that our evaluation of communism and capitalism was at error, though it might cost us many lives. We would be right ,in contending that capitalism and democracy are superior forms of society despite its defeat. We might even live to see the day when capi- talism and democracy return and communism is blotted out as dramatically as it was born, but, as always is the case, we will never likely point the finger at ourselves and sincerely admit, "I was lazy, I let him outwork me." It must be remembered that the high civili- zation we in America take for granted today is the result of centuries of hard work and perspiration. We have not achieved the highest standard of living the world has ever seen by laboring on five-hour shifts and four-day work weeks. To be lulled into complacency would be to sow the seeds of our own annihilation. To bow to the demands of organized labor and establish a society in which work becomes con- tinually less a part of individual sustenance would be to nourish the seeds and make them grow. Now in the hour when we are in need of it most we must apply our individual talents and working capacity as judiciously as possible, and, as our fathers before us, continue to pros- per and grow, so that our childrens' children will not read of the deterioration, decline and fall of America in Russian textbooks. -RICHARD CONDON WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Moscow Propaganda Scores K By DREW PEARSON INTERPRETING THE NEWS: The Decline of America W ASHINGTON - U.S. experts on public opinion admit pri- vately that Moscow scored the No. 1 propaganda victory of the year with the announcement of a uni- lateral ban of H-bomb tests. It almost equals the No. 1 victory of last year - launching the Sput- nik. 4 The Moscow announcement, coming on top of the steady drum- beat of Bulganin notes urging a summit conference and the ban- ning of missile bases in Europe, more than ever has pictured the United States as a warmonger; pictured Russia as the disciple of peace. The real inside story of how badly the United States muffed the ball on banning H-bomb tests is known only to a few people. As early as Sept. 11, 1956, President Eisenhower and the National Se- curity Council had decided to pro- pose more or less what Moscow proposed this week a ban on H- bomb tests. * * * WHAT ACTUALLY happened at the Sept. 11, 1956 meeting was that Secretary of State Dulles urged a moratorium on the nu- clear tests, pointing out that it would win friends for us abroad, would give us the diplomatic ini- tiative, would help convince the world that we are more peace- loving than Moscow. Harold S t a s s e n immediately agreed with Dulles. Secretary of Defense Wilson and Adm. Lewis Strauss, chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, did not. They warned that Russia might violate any agreement, would test small atomic weapons. They admitted we -could detect all large explo- sions. In the final voting, Secretary of the Treasury Humphrey concurred with Dulles, and the President fi- nally did, too. As is customary in National Security Council meet- ings, the decision was made un- animous. Though final details were to be worked out later, the tentative plan was to ask Russia to join in suspending H-bomb tests for one year as a "peace ex- periment." This was to be coupled with a "moral agreement" to out- law the Intercontinental Ballistic Missile in the same manner poison gas has been outlawed. Approximately one week later, Ike's political advisers warned that Adlai Stevenson had made speeches as early as April, 1956, proposing the end of H-bomb tests, and that he had made an- other full-dress proposal in early September. The advisers urged that it would be a political mis- take to play into Stevenson's hands by going ahead with the Se- curity Council's decision of Sep- tember 11. EISENHOWER then reversed himself. On September 19, he came out with a vigorous state- ment attacking Stevenson's H- bomb proposal as "a theatrical gesture." In speech after speech following this, Eisenhower at- tacked the Stevenson proposal as political grandstanding. He made it Clear he didn't consider Steven- son qualified to discuss atomic energy. On October 26, the President stormed into the National Se- curity Council meeting and an- grily lectured them about leaks. He said he had heard that the September 11 decision regarding H-bomb tests had become known to people outside the Council, and as a result he was ordering a full investigation. Meanwhile, the White House was so embarrassed over Steven- son's proposal to ban nuclear tests that it even played politics with the Public Health Service's survey of radioactivity. Suddenly on Sept. 26, 1956, and without explanation, the survey was canceled. Ike's blast at Stevenson's pro- posal had been made on Septem- ber 19. One week later, Assistant Surgeon General Otis L. Ander- son wrote state health officials: "Field sampling operations in connection with radiation sur- veilllance. network will terminate at the close of business Thursday, September 27, 1956." TWENTY-FOUR hours is an extremely abrupt cancellation no- tice. Many state officials didn't receive the notice before Septem- ber 27. Anderson was obviously in a hurry. The date of October 1 was scratched out and September 26 typed in. The termination date of September 27 was also typed in. Previous surveys showed in- creases of radioactivity as high as 15 to 25 times normal by some monitoring stations. An increase of 10 times normal, according to1 statements by the Atomic Energy Commission, was considered the alarm point. Stevenson had proposed the end of H-bomb tests because, he said, the air was becoming dangerously contaminated with radioactive fallout. This was denied by Atom- ic Energy Chairman Strauss. The surveys made by Public Health Service substantiated Stevenson, contradicted Strauss. The surveys were canceled. (Copyright 1958 by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) included a quartet, consisting of labeled the Grinzing Schrammel Ensemble, several vocal soloists, and the afore mentioned zither player. The atmosphere throughout was completely informal, like that of a midsummer night's concert on the village green in a Tyrolean village. Even the band uniforms were in the style popular for use in stage armies in productions like "The Chocolate Soldier." I did, however, miss the dark beer and Wienerwurst. * . . WHAT WITH the additions,. substitutions, fleeting pauses be- twedn numbers, frequent reprises and the two sopranos switching roles at will, the exact spot on the program was constantly in doubt, not that it mattered. Included in the. program was the in.evitable "Third Man Theme," vaguely disguised as "The Harry Lime Theme," the sound of which, heard in a Heuriger, de- notes the unmistakable presence of the American tourist. Unf or- tunately, Herr Jancik, the zither spieler, does not choose to use Anton Karas' original accompani- ment, consequently much of the catchiness is missing. . . . BY THE TIME the next few beer hall selections were through, the performers were, no doubt, as thirsty as I was. Yet, it contin- ued. The marathon was reminis- cent of the "Farewell Symphony" (where the performers leave, one by one) only vice-versa. Noticeably absent from the pro- gram, purporting to be a represen- tation, albeit for American con- sumption, of Viennese music, were the works of Mozart, Schu- bert, Beethoven, Mahler, etc. (Brahms being represented by a zither rendition of the Waltz in A-flat major,'and Johann Strauss by a few adaptations). These com- posers were after, all, the mnen who made Vienna what it is yet today, the musical capital of the world, and no program can truly represent musical Vienna with- out their music. --Allegra Branson AT THE CAMPUS: Unhappy A ffair "BERMUDA AFFAIR" is a win- ner, I walks away with all the prizes - the booby prizes. It has all the glamour, excitement and romance of ,a third-rate TV soap opera, which doesn't say much for TV soap operas. The story, such as it is, concerns an affair between two married people - both married to other people. At one corner of the quad- rangle is Bob Scofield (Gary Mer- rill), a lonely man who comes from a large family on the wrong side of the tracks, "where you don't get to see many headwaiters." His wife, Fran (Kim Hunter), is a globetrotting magazine photog- rapher, forever running off and leaving him to his own devices. This, predictably, leads to trouble, in the form of Chris Walters (Zena Marshall), wife of his partner in an air freight business. The road to sin is left conven- iently unobstructed, as Fran runs off on an assignment at the same time that Chris's husband, Chuck (Ron Randell), departs on a busi- ness trip. Bob and Chris, left to amuse themselves unchaperoned, do just that. All we'd need then, to make everything come out all right is an affair between the wandering spouses. Then they could swap and, all would be hunky-dory. But, alas, the wronged ones love only the wrong ones. * * * THE WHOLE MESS finally comes to a head when Bob and Chuck's plane is disabled, and they have to bail out. But there's only one chute (Bob took the other on an amorous jaunt with Chris), and so Bob, realizing the terrible wrong he's done to Chuck, becomes a hero. He knocks Chuck out cold, puts the chute on him, and shoves him out. Bravo!l So f inally comes the long- awaited end, when everybody's happy but Fran; Chuck and Chris have each other back, but poor Fran's only consolation is the knowledge thatlBob died loving only her, after all. The weak and wandering story line of "Bermuda Affair" is ex- ceeded in "badness" only by the dialogue, which is at times so 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. THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 1958 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 134 General Notices There will be an International Center Tea, sponsored by the International Center and the International Students Association this Thurs., Apr. 24, from 4:30 to 6:00 p.m. at the International Center. Undergraduate Library: From Mon., March 31, through Thurs. April 3, reservations may be placed at a special reservation desk on the Second Floor of the Undergraduate Library for Re- serve Books to be circulated from the Undergraduate Library over the Spring Recess. Reservations may be placed for one book per person per course during the following hours: 2:00-5:00 p.m., Mon- day-Thursday. If there Is only one copy available in the Undergraduate Li- brary, no reservation will be taken. In order to fill the reservations, Re- serve Books will not circulate April 3. Reserve Books may not be charged out for the Spring Recess without a reser vation. The Reserve Books that are being held will be available from 8:00 a.m.- 5:00 p.m., Fri., April 4. Books not claimed by 5:00 p.m. on that day will be- returned to the stacks. Reserve Books that have not been charged out over the Spring Recess will circulate according to the follow- ing schedule: Out Fri., April 4; Due April 7 at 9:00 a.m. Out Sat., April 5, 8:00 a.m.; Due April 7 at 9 a.m. Out Mon., April 7-Thurs., April 10 4:00 p.m.; Due following morning at 9:00. Out Fri., April 11, 4:00 p.m.; Due April 14 at 9:00 a.m. Students who expect to receive edu cation and training allowance under' Public Law 550 (Korea GI. Bill) or Public Law 634 (Orphan's Bill) must fill in MONTHLY CERTIFICATION for the Veterans Administration in the Office of veterans' Affairs, 555 Admin. Bldg., between 8:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. by Friday, April 4. College Qualification Test. The Col- lege Qualification Test for Selective Service purposes will be given on May 1. Applications for the 3-hour exam can be obtained at Local Board No. 85, 103 E. Liberty St., Room 212, Ann Arbor, until April 11. All pre-medical students and pre-dental students, as well as those who desire college deferment from the draft, should plan to take the exam. It will be given only once this year and the deadline for applications is April 11. Blue Cross Group Hospitalization, Medical and Surgical Service Programs for staff members will be open from April 14 through April 25 for new ap- plications and changes In contract now in effect. Staff members who wish to include surgical and medical serv- ices should make such changes in the Personnel Office, Rm. 1020, Admin. Bldg. New applications and changes will be effective June 5, with the first payroll deduction on May 31. After April 25 no new applications or changes can be accepted until Oct., 1958. The Seventh Annual Social Work Progress Institute will be held in Ha- ven Hall, Fri., April 11, under spnsor- ship of the School of Social work and Extension Service. There is no charge for the Institute, except for the lunch- eon. Luncheon reservations and pro- gram details may be obtained from the School of Social Work, 2060 Frieze Bldg. College of Architecture and Design midsemester reports are due on Mon., April 7. Please send them to 207 Archi- tecture Bldg. Lectures Readings by Members of the Englsh Department: Prof. Robert F. Haugh will read "Some Stories of J. D. Salinger" on Thurs., Apr. 3, in Aud. A, Angell Hall, at 4:10 p.m. Academic Notices The Extension Service announces the following class to be held in Ann Arbor beginning Mon., Apr. 14, at 7:30 p.m. in Rm. 131 of the School of Bus. Admin.: THE BIBLE AND THE NEXT STEP IN RELIGION. A consideration of the reli- ance in the Protestant Movement on the authority of the Bible, the result- ing Sectarianism, and the evidence now available for the study of biblical ma- terials; a consideration of the task of the Unfinished Reformation, particu- larly as these tasks have been stated in Isaiah (40-55) in the Old Testament and in Luther's dictum,what it is to teach Christ, in the New Testament. 8 weeks. $13.50. Professor Emeritus, Le- roy waterman, instructor. Registration for this class may be made during the half hour preceding the clas in the class room. The Extension Service announces the following class to be held in Ann Arbor beginning Tues., Apr. 15, at 7:00 p.m. in room 524 of the Univ. Elem. School: EFFICIENT READING II Helps the individual to improve his reading rate. c~oncentratin. vnreabiIars <# tv Vi DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN W4 violins, guitar and accordian, }r c ,4 it I By WALTER LIPPMANN TRAVELING ABOUT in Europe, as, I have been doing, it has, of course, been only too obvious that there is a great decline in Ameri- can influence. The immediate cause of it is, no doubt, the debility of the President's role in world affairs, and its accompaniment, per- haps its inevitable accompaniment-the nega- tivism of Secretary Dulles. But what I learned in Scandinavia, in Poland, in Germany, in Britain and France, persuaded me that the compelling cause of the decline of our influence is that the American view of the main European issues is becoming out of date, is being by- passed by events, and that when we talk about Europe, and Germany, and the captive states and Russia, we sound rather like old codgers talking about the past. I became most aware of this as I began to realize how very different is the official Ameri- can view of Germany from what one finds vir- tually everywhere in Europe. We have been taking it for granted that the hope of the future in Europe turns on the reunification and revival of Germany. The truth, as I found it, was that the World War is not forgotten, indeed that the memory of it is reviving, and that to understand the European situation as a whole it is necessary to take account of this growing fear of German domination. The spectacle of West Germany's economic recovery plus the growing knowledge that there is also a remarkable recovery in East Germany have revived the remembrance of the war and played a very big part in affairs. I had not realized this before I went abroad this time. Always until then I had believed that Germany, even if reunited, was too small to be a world power again. What I had failed to realize is that all thing are relative, and that relative to the rest of Europe-excluding the USA and the USSR-a reunited Germany would now be the foremost power. In London as in Warsaw, and in the neutralist countries as well, there is a deep anxiety that this power- ful reunited Germany would become the ally of either the USA or the USSR, or that it would hold the balance of power between them. The practical effect of this is that it is hard to find anyone who does not want to put off as long as possible the reunion of the two Germanies. This works out in a curious way. Those who are affiliated with the West cling publicly and officially to the Dulles-Adenauer formulaof free elections to unify Germany. Poland, for example, longs for the withdrawal of the Red Army and yet, out of fear of Ger- many, hopes that until there is some other kind of settlement of the German question, the Russians will stay in East Germany. IT IS IN WEST GERMANY that the official American-German policy seems particularly antiquated. Whatever their neighbors may fear from them, the great mass of the West Ger- mans are not dreaming of domination by a united Germany. They are worrying about a united Germany. Some are worrying because they fear a revival of German nationalism, many more because a united Germany would probably be predominantly Socialist, others' because it would be extremely difficult to integrate the collectivist economy of Eastern Germany and the capitalist economy of West- ern Germany. For reasons like these, the Adenauer-Dulles formula has a fading role among the Germans. Few expect the formula to work, and few really want it to work. What we are going to see, it seems to me, is-as unfortunately only the Russians have had the wit to suggest- negotiations between the two German govern- ments. As a matter of fact there is already negotiations about the currency and about trade, all of it nominally at a technical rather than at a political level. These negotiations will almost certainly broaden greatly into some sort of political arrangement which might one day take the form of a dual state. The West Germans will not break with the Western powers and the East Germans will not break with the Soviet Union. They will seek to obtain the practical advantages of reunion without the serious political and psychological disadvantages. THIS PROCESS in the two Germanies will, I am convinced, promote and will be accom- panied by a thinning out of the military forces in Germany -and in Central Europe. There is every reason to believe that the future of Cen- tral Europe lies with the principle of disen- gagement. But the application of the principle will be gradual, and the ffull application if it may not come for a great many more years than anyone can calculate about. These developments will, I believe, have acquired great momentum in about three years. I say three years because at the end of that time Adenauer is not likely to be in power, and 4F A ;$ LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Comment on Ection Abs 4 . ,, Elections * . To the Editor: WOULD be one of the first to agree that voting for Student Government Council members is every student's responsbility. But how can we expect more students to vote when the election is turned into a mockery? In The Daily of March 25, SGC Elections Director Roger Mahey praised the poll workers. When supposedly "civic-minded" poll workers such as the ones I saw are praised for their work, it seems to me that someone is ignorant of the facts. He does not know, perhaps, that at booth five at 4:30 p.m. Tues- day, the poll workers were telling students, including myself, how to vote, -Lee Bollendonk, '60 Delinquents . To the Editor: TN MY FEW YEARS at the Tni- forms of government operate on the principle that everyone has an equal say in choosing their repre- sentative. When anyone takes it in his own hands to over-repre- sent himself by stuffing the ballot box he cheats not merely the op- posing candidate, but he commits the crime of effectively disenfran- chising everyone who cast a legi- timate vote. I do not know whether this in- cident was perpetrated in the idea of a prank, to actually gain votes for a desired candidate, or to dis- credit an opposing candidate, but in any case it has far more un- desirable implications than merely the outcome of the recent election. When the people of this state pay taxes to support the Univer- sity, they have every reason to ex- pect that the future Ileaders of the state and nation will be coming from this or similar institutions. I do not know if the State Legisla- ture, in its discussion of appropri- ations for this school, has been informed of this incident, but this Immigration .. To the Editor: TN THE INTERVIEW which Miss Cicely Chan gave to the Michi- gan Daily she made two state- ments, one misleading, and one incorrect. The statement that she "had to wait two years" to obtain her visa to the United States "because the British are very reluctant to let Malayans come to America," is misleading. The granting of visas to enter the United States is en- tirely the responsibility of U.S. Consular representatives wherever they may be, and never the re- sponsibility of the British. The only way that the British could have hindered Miss Chan's obtaining a visa was by refusing to grant her a passport for travel to the United States. This seems unlikely, as there are students from all parts of the Common- wealth attending universities in this country. I suspect that Miss Char's two years' wait was due to U.S. Immigration and Naturali- 4 .,I