"I Hear You're Still Trying To Eleminate Fallout" l4w p id iaan JtiIy Sixty-Eighth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 "When Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This inns t be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: LANE VANDER SLICE Liberal Arts Need More Vocal Support THE UNIVERSITY may get as many dollars vocal opposition to this attitude. Although the as last year, liut the last fe* weeks' session University and many other schools like it have of the Legislature-produced some outstanding been graduating students for years who have comments on the educational processes of both presumably benefited by "non-basic" courses, the University and Michigan State University. no one is willing to speak out for them. Spearheading the criticisms (and the economy drive) was Sen. Elmer Porter, head of the WHY DOESN'T ANYONE defend "non-basic" Senate Appropriations Committee, who said he courses, and more generally the whole was "more worried about.the next generation system of education of which it is a part. No than dollars, because our education system has one knows why the system is worth defending. failed to present the children with something Why is a Shakespeare course valuable to a they need-basic subjects." political science major? We doubt whether the Other legislators felt the same way, as Sen. political science major or anyone else could Porter. Prominent among these was another say except in very hazy terms. Hazy terms member of the Appropriations Committee, Sen. aren't going to satisfy two very practical state Clarence Grabner. He, too, advocated a return senators, who want to see exactly why and how to the "three R's." state money is used to finance higher education. The important thing in these comments is What good is a college education? Does it not the question of their validity, but that the make us "more anything" except more likely legislators who made them are sincere in what to get a good paying job? We have only a foggy they say. In this instance, they are not trying notion that somehow college does change us to save a buck, because whether there are fewer for the better-a notion which is contradicted courses offered, there still must be the same by some tough-minded evidence in the Jacobs number of teachers, buildings and classrooms, report. the major determinants of c&st. What they are Along these lines it is interesting to note arguing for, we think, is a more practical out- that President Hatcher, in speaking to the look on education-which they think can be Legislature, stressed the research projects that gained by cutting the number of "frilly" courses would have to be stopped because of a cut in offered at the University. the University budget and not the damage the Some of the "frilly" courses-and the ones cut would do to the more academic side. He that made the newspaper as examples-are the had to stress research, because we' who are great variety of physical education courses directly involved in the educational processes offered by both universities. But this is a small didn't provide him with ammunition for the part of the frills, and any sincere return to academic side. the "three R's" would entail cutting many more The point is just this: With no sharp concept courses. It would be a hard task to fit courses to use of what education means, in defending like "The Mind of Primitive Man," "Metaethics" our concept of education we default to the or a phonetic study of the English language Legislature our share of the responsibility for into a concept of merely basic education. helping to decide our educational future. No We don't think its so important that we try matter how wrong we may feel their ideas to to disprove the statements of the legislators-- be, we should realize that it isn't they alone for we think they are educationally inapplic- who are derelict in their duties, it's we, too. able and weak. What is important is the lack of -LANE VANDERSLICE Architecture of the Pentagon, (lion P Ii~ s l rA f( WR z tv'6 . i iry T Y.: PROPAGANDA TO DIPLOMACY: Russia Makes Her Point On Sumit Project By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst THE SOVIET UNION finally scored its point in the months-long effort to get work started on a summit conference. The project is now moving from the propagahda field into that of diplomacy. Khrushchev did that when, as premier of the Soviet Union, he sug- gested a meeting at the ambassadorial level this week to make arrange- ments for a foreign ministers conference. The United States was at first reluctant to go even that far without some assurance that Allied ministers would be free to argue for the type of top-level agenda they want. European reaction, however, was more realistic. Take the first steps, said Britain and France, and see what happens. At the ambassadorial level there is no foreclosure of what can happen among the ministers. If there is foreclosure among the ministers, then the question of a summit conference will still re- main open. * * * IN RETROSPECT, the Europeans don't think the Geneva conference did any harm. The main result was that the Comimnu was that the Communists once more agreed to something - the principle of general elections for Germany-which they later re- fused to follow through. A few. small doors in the cultural Iron Curtain were unlocked. One of the chief concerns of the Allies, though one they don't care to talk too much about, is that they shall not be maneuvered into a public refusal to give up their atomic weapons. They could agree to give up atomic testing under certain cir- cumstances. The world is partic- ularly worried right now over re- ports that recent Soviet tests have produced an especially heavy fall- out. * * * THEY COULD agree not to take the initiative in use of such wea- pons. Indeed, this would merely be a formalization of a position in- herent in the policies of the de- mocracies. But they cannot agree to give up their deterrent stockpiles as long as the Soviet maintains her aggressive posture and her vast military establishment. But in the long run, the Allies are constrained to keep open the door to agreements with the So- viet Union. not only because they wish sincerely that something might be accomplished, but also because, if they don't they would never know what might have been, * * * THE UNITED STATES, despite her doubts, apparently made no great effort 'to impress them on the European Allies. 'Once' the matter was presented before the NATO Council in Paris it seems to have been agreed upon without de- lay. Under the terms of the Khrush- chev proposal the ambassadors and Soviet officials will merely fix the date and name the countries which will be asked to send rep- resentatives to a foreign min- isters meeting. If she acts as she has over dis- armament meetings in the United Nations, trying to load the minis- ters conference with her satellites and certain neutrals, even the am- bassadorial negotiations could pro- duce fireworks. But there's a good chance the Reds really want to get past the diplomatio stages and back to the propaganda war. It Ilk -1 - u -o+cec,. e iQSa -cep wA s-cu+ t - a P sr WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: AR as ommust Plot' By DREW PEARSON LESS THAN twenty years ago, the planners of the nation's defenses could count upon two oceans to effectively shield the United States from a substantial attack launched by any European or Asian nation. Pearl Harbor shook that confidence. In later years, it -was shattered completely by the development of the long range bomber and the inter-contin- ental missile. The gift of natural protective barriers could and did provide the United States with valu- able time during the.early stages of the First and Second World Wars. Scientific progress has wiped away that advantage and has forced a recognition that if push-button warfare isn't upon us, it is rapidly-coming. Among the many senses of urgency aroused by Sputnik is the realization that something must be done not only about the nation's defense, but also the organization of its defenders. Secretary of Defense Neil McElroy pointed out recently that in every war in the last cen- tury our nation has had to change its mili- tary organization after the war started. "We no longer have time in which to change command lines or to shift from a peacetime to wartime organization," he said. At present, the command line runs from the President to the Secretary of Defense, to the secretaries of the three branches of the armed forces, then to the service chiefs of staff, and finally to the head of the unified command. Under the .reorganization plan President Eisenhower outlined to Congress last week, the unified command would be directly responsible to the Defense Secretary, thus removing the secretaries and the chiefs of the three serv- ices from direction of joint operations. AS TO BE expected, the evolvement of the Joint Chiefs of Staff from heads of their re- spective services to a detached top-level mili- tary staff has aroused negative reaction from those who wish to see the services functioning separately. The strengthening of the Defense Secretary's position also has raised concern about the concentration of authority., Unfortunate as this may seem to some, the reorganization may have been prompted inad- vertantly by those who dislike it the most. The interservice rivalries and the conflict over who will develop what missile is a luxury of disagreement this nation cannot afford. The proposed integration of the Army, Navy and Air Force may abandon the traditional con- cept of separate forces for land, sea and air combat but the missile and nuclear age has changed the traditional weapons for fighting. Naturally it is hoped the changes will never be used in warfare. But wishing is not enough and preparedness for the possible requires an alertness to the necessary. The administration has proposed steps it feels are not only neces- sary, but so urgent that President Eisenhower has changed the topic of his speech tomorrow at a meeting of the American Society of News- paper Editors from foreign policy to need to reorganize the Defense department. The nation will have an opportunity to hear the President over television. Perhaps mem- bers of Congress, including Sen. Richard B. Russell (D-Georgia), chairman of the Armed Services Committee, who are concerned about maintaining the identity of the individual serv- ices will also listen and consider the need to maintain the effectiveness of the nation's de- fenders. -MICHAEL KRAFT WASHINGTON -- The cherry blossoms may be late this year, but the Daughters of the American Revolution, benign, busy, and bux- om, are right on time in the na- tion's capital with their annual effort to keep things as they were when their ancestors crossed the Delaware or made whoopee follow- ing the surrender of Cornwallis. The Daughters have taken some potent positions on all sorts of pol- icies, from Joe McCarthy tothe banning of Marian Anderson from Constitution Hall. And this year one of their big battles is over fluoridation., Chief banner-waver against thus protecting children's teeth is Mrs. Ray LaVerne Erb of 50 Sutton Place South, on swank East Side New York. Mrs. Erb is a lady of charm, distinction, and the posi- tive view that the American Medi- cal Association, the Public Health Service and the most eminent den- tists in the nation are all wet about protecting children's teeth by fluoridating the drinking water. MRS. ERB feels about fluorida- tion just exactly as some old Army officers playing pinochle in the Army and Navy Club feel about the cavalry. They don't think missiles or airplanes should ever have re- placed the cavalry. However, Mrs. Erb is in a better position to- carry out her policies than retired Army officers, for she occupies the stra- tegic post of National Chairman of the National Defense Committee of the Daughters of the American Revolution and is also a member of the Resolutions Committee. Long before the Daughters beat the cherry blossoms in coming to Washington, Mrs. Erb was as busy as one of Charlie Wilson's bird dogs bombarding other Daughters with literature showing that fluori- dation of drinking water was "so- cialized medicine," inspired by the Communists and "deprives us of our constitutional rights." Mrs. Erb has even used the ex- Reverend ex-Communist Kenneth Goff as a propagandists to carry her dental banners into battle. Gaff is a joiner of extreme causes, who jumped from the Communist Party to Gerald L. K. Smith's rab- ble-rousing "Christian" Party. In- between,'he got caught passing bad checks and was convicted. NEVERTHELESS, Mrs. Erb sets such store by Goff's veracity that she is circulating his affidavit swearing that the Communist Par- ty "discussed quite thoroughly the fluoridation of water supplies and how we were using it in Russia as a tranquilizer in the prison camps. The leaders of our school felt that if it could be introduced into the American water supply, it would bring about a spirit of lethargy in the nation; where it would keep the general public docile during a steady encroachment of Commu- nism. "We also discussed the fact that keeping a store of deadly fluoride near the water reservoir would be advantageous during the time of the revolution, as it would give us opportunity to dump this poison into the water'supply and either kill off the populace or threaten them with liquidation so that they would surrender to obtain fresh water." In contrast, Public Health Serv- ice officials state that to produce a lethal effect, a three-year supply of sodium fluoride would have to be dumped into a reservoir. At the Aspinwall plant at Pittsburgh, sev- enty railroad carloads of sodium fluoride would be required. Obvi- ously, there are easier and cheaper ways to poison a water supply. Mrs. Erb has also circulated Daughters with the statement that the New York City Department of Water Supply prepared two reporst opposing fluoridation. The exact opposite happened. After extensive hearings, New York City adopted fluoridation. s* s AND ALTHOUGH Mrs. Erb calls fluoridation "socialized medicine," it happens the American Medical Association, bitterest foe of social- ized medicine, strongly endorses fluoridation. Collecting taxes, most of the time, is no more fun than paying them. But Internal Revenue agents do get a smile from reading some of the returns. One midwestern farmer and his wife, for instance, set forth their occupations as "peasant" and "slave." Another taxpayer, a woman who was planning to file a joint return, recently wrote the Internal Reve- nue: "I am asking for an extension to file my return. My husband-. and my income tax return-have been misplaced. I was told to write to you and ask for a 30-day exten- sion, to see if I can find them or get replacements." (Copyright 1958 by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) THE CULTURE BIT: Rise and Fall of the DAC By DAVID NEWMAN DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which the Michigan Dailyassumes 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. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1958 VOL. LXVIIi, NO. 137 General Notices Hopwood Contest: All manuscripts must be in the Hopwood Room, 1006 Angell Hall, by 4:30 p.m., Wed., April 16. Senior Board, Graduation announce- ment orders taken April 15 and 16, 12:30 to 4:30 p.m., Admin. Bldg. Residence Hall Scholarship: Women students wishing to apply for a Resi- dence Hall Scholarship, for the aca- demic year 1958-59 for Betsy Barbour House may do so through the Office of the Dean of Women. Applications must be returned, complete, by Tues., April 22. Students already living in this residence hall and those wishing to live there next fall may apply. Quali- fications will be considered on the ba- sis of academic standing (minimum 2.5 cumulative average), need, and contri- bution to group living. Residence Hall Scholarship: Women students wishing to apply for a Resi- dence Hall Scholarship for the aca- demic year 1958-59 for Helen Newberry House may do so through the Office of the Dean of Women. Applications must be returned, complete, by Tues., April' 22. Students already living in this residence hall and those wishing to live there next fall may apply. Quali- fications will be considered on the ba- sis of academic standing (minimum 2.5 cumulative average), need, and con- tribution to group living. June graduates may now order their caps and gowns at Moe's Sport Shop on North University. 1 There will be an International Cen- ter Tea, sponsored by the International Center and the International Students Association Athis Thurs., April 17 from 4:30 to 6:00 p.m. at the International Center.. The Mary L. Hinsdale Scholarship amounting to $134.41 (interest of the Endowment) is available to single un- dergraduate women who are wholly or partially self-supporting and who do not live in University residence hails or sorority houses. Single girls with better than averalke scholarship and need will beconsidered. Application blanks are obtainable at the Alumnae Council office, Michigan League and must be filed by April 21, 1958. The Laurel Harper Seeley Scholarship amounting to $200 is available to both graduate and undergraduate women, though preference is given the latter. Criteria for the awardvare scholastic achievement, contribution to Univer- Applicatisirebet-9d etaoni toanei etaoin sity life and financial need. Applica- tion forms are obtainable at the Alum- nae Council Office, Michigan League and must be filed by April 21, 1958. The Lucy E. Elliott Fellowship carry- ing a stipend of $750 will be awarded this spring to a woman graduate stu- dent, from any University or college for use at the University of Michigan, in the fall term, 1958. The recipient is cho- sen on the basis of personality, achieve- ment, and scholastic ability with pref- erence shown to those doing creative work. Application blanks are obtain- able at the Alumnae Council Office, Michigan League and must be filed by April 21, 1958. Prince: "The Solar Program of the IGY." Prof. James T. Wilson: "The Trafficability of Floating Ice." Prof. Leo Goldberg: "Artificial Satellites." Agenda, Student Government Coun- cil, April 16, 1958, Council Room, 7:30 p.m. Minutes previous meeting. Officer reports: President - Letters, Recount, J-Hop, Council visitors; Exec. Vice Pres.-Conferences: Michigan Re- gion, NSA, Ferris Institute April 19, 20; Michigan College Personnel Association, Western Michigan University, April 24, 25; Interviewing and Nominating; Ad. min.'Vice-Pres; Treasurer. University Calendar Committee (old) final report. Standing Committees: National and International, Public Relations, Educa- tion and Student Welfare, Student Ac- tivities - Early Registration Commit- tee; Activities: May 9, 10, Frosh Week- end events; May 13, Lantern Night; May 15, Men's Glee Club, to New York for Pat Boone show. Old Business. New.Business - Student Conduct, motion. Constituents time. Members time. Announcements. Adjourn. Lectures The Henry Russel Lecture will be de- livered by Verner W. Crane, Professor of American History, Wed., April 30, at 4:15 p.m., in the Rackham Amphi- theater. Dr. Crane's lecture topic is "Dr. Franklin's Plan for America." Political Science Graduate Round- table meeting, Wed., April 16, 8:00 p.m. in the 3rd floor Conference Rm., Mich. Union. Speaker: Henry A. Kissinger, Assoc. Director of the Center for In- ternational Affairs, Harvard Univer- sity. His topic will be: "Military Pow- er and Defense Strategy." Sociology Colloquium & Coffee Hour: Prof. Peter Blau, University of Chica- go on "Bureaucracy: Social Structure or Psychological Processes?" in Room 3-B, Michigan Union, Wed., April 16. Coffee at 3:30 p.m. Talk at 4:00 p.m. Lecture: "Dilemma in the Study of Bureacracy." Peter Blau, visiting lec- turer in sociology from the University of Chicago where he is associate pro- fessor. Wed., April 16 at 4:00 p.m. in Rm. 3-B, Mich. Union. Coffee will be served at 3:30 p.m. Guy Nunn, Director of Television and Radio Activities, United Autoworkers. AFL-CIO will speak on: "Next Steps in Collective Bargaining: Labor Looks Ahead." Thurs., April 17, 4:00 p.m., Aud. A. Angell Hall. University Lectures in Journalism, Thurs., April 17, 3 p.m., Rackham Am- phitheatre, vance Packard, author of The Hidden Persuaders, will speak on "Our Morality and the Hidden Per- suaders." Lecture under the auspices of the Committee on the Program on Russian Studies, by Prof. R. N. Carew Hunt of Indiana ,University and Oxford Uni- versity, on Thurs., April 17, at 8:00 p.m. in Aud. C, Angell Hall. Topic: "The De- velopment and Present Form of Com- riunist Ideology." Professor W. B. Stace, of Princeton University, will lecture on "The Myti- cal Elements in Religion" at 4:10 p.m., April 17, Aud. C, Angell Hall. Prof. Stace will discuss informally the sub- ject matter of his lecture with any interested persons in the E. Confer- ence Rm., Rackham Bldg., at 8 p.m., April 17. Lecture with slides: "Picasso In Our " A1.A,..b e ,,lle n.of . f A,.t I' A INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Nasser and Neutrality I& By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst PRESIDENT NASSER of Egypt, having adroitly escaped from an almost suicidal position nearly two years ago, is now applying himself to loosening the key log in his coun- try's economic jam. Secretary Dulles indicates the United States is ready to supply him with .the peavey. Behind it all is an apparent realization by Nasser that the benefits he has enjoyed from a neutrality favorable to the Soviet Union are small compared with the benefits possible through real neutrality. By mortgaging Egypt's cotton crop for sev- eral years, Nasser obtained arms and some oth- er commodities from the Communist bloc. He snatched the Suez Canal with its 100-million- dollar annual income. But it hasn't been .Mt3r~piJgZtrt- ily enough to offset his loss of commercial rela- tions with the West. IS PROMISES of a revolution in Egypt, pulling the people out of the mire of sub- standard living, have played second fiddle to his maneuvers for leadership of a united Araby. The Soviet Union has agreed to let him have a large sum, perhaps 200 million dollars, for industrialization. But it isn't enough. He needs help and trade from the West. To get it, he must rehabilitate himself as a good business risk. To do so, Nasser is about to resume nego- tiations with the old Suez Canal Co., chartered by France and largely financed by Britain, Egypt's traditionally best customers. If he makes a decent offer of compensation for its seizure, they and the United States are pre- paring to help him pay by unfreezing the as- sets they sequestered largely for that purpose. Nasser will then want to borrow and make new trade agreements. WE HEARD an exciting rumor the other day that the Dra- matic Arts Center is trying to re- activate itself on campus. There may or may not be truth in it, but, however spurious the rumor, the prospect is good to think about. A return of the DAC has long been desired by many. We could use its like again. The rise and fall of the DAC, in retrospect, would seem to be a pattern of self-activation and self- liquidation. It came from nowhere, rose to the top and then vanished almost as suddenly as it began. DAC began in 1954, billing itself as "Ann Arbor's New Resident Professional Theatre." Professional it was, with such stalwarts as Ralph Drischell, Irma Hurley and Joe Gistirak, who doubled as direc- tor, bringing to Ann Arbor a thea- tre that had high ideals as well as commercial wants. * * * ITS AIM was to present plays covering a variety of theatrical periods; plays which might not have a commercial chance in New York, because of their concern with thought and intelligence. Staging its nroductions in the play which, for all its virtues, is nobody's idea of a sure-fire box office smash. This is a college town, however, and that made the difference. The crowds started to come. The show was talked about. The DAC instituted forums and discussions on the work after the final curtain. The year ended with a memor- able production of Sartre's "No Exit" which we would be glad to see again. By this time the DAC was finding out that good plays drew good audiences. * * THE NEXT season was the best it had and the best Ann Arbor had seen in quite some time. A fast- paced, droll production of Anou- ilh's "Thieves Carnival," an hys- terical romp with Moliere's "The Physician In Spite of Himself," a fine "Pygmalion," an almost-fine production of "The Sea Gull," a bristling "Hedda Gabler," and a brilliant, moving production of Fry's "A Sleep of Prisoners" (the best DAC production we've ever seen) were among that year's of- ferings. The campus responded. We re- member being turned away at the But something odd and, it now seems, quite foolish happened. The next school year, with a solid repu- tation behind it, the DAC an- nounced a repertory that included some of the most dismal plays of all time. A loser called "Captain Carvello," which Katherine Cor- nell had flopped with in Boston, opened the season. An unknown horror called "Inheritors" by Su- san Glaspell was on the bill, and also proved awful. A nice, but over-long comedy called "Topaze" by Pagnol was done. Strindberg's "The Father" had a too noisy pro- duction, while "Medea" had too many ups and downs. The crowds dropped off. The DAC began to lose money. At the end of the year it announced its demise. Many were sad to see it go, but some of the same sym- pathizers, were more than dis- gruntled with that year's fatal fare. * * * THE PERFORMERS have gone elsewhere. Irma Hurley, for in- stance, appeared on Broadway in "Eugenia" not too long ago. Sid- ney Walker. garnered good notices for his portrayal in the title role I