rI "We're Not Un Yet" ThREE METHODS: 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 Government Strives m Opinions Are Free uth Will Prevail" printed in The Michigan Daily ex press the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This mus t be noted in all reprints. for Business Recovery By SAM DAWSON Associated Press Staff Writer NjW YORK-Plans to get a business recovery off the launching pad run largely today to three types of economic fuels: 1) Easier credit to make borrowing at business and consumer leavels attractive. 2) Increased government spending to restore a bit of the late Wfliationary zip. 3) A possible tax cut to give consumers and maybe business, too, More wherewithal to buy the goods that manufacturers have the over capacity to produce. These efforts aim at offsetting the deeper causes of the present slump: leveling off of consumer spending and borrowing to buy, especi, 6. 1958. NIGHT EDITOR: RICHARD TAUB Suggestions for an Improved Literary College Curriculum [BERAL ARTS education should, as much s is possible, serve- to prepare a student Iderstand and control himself and his onment, to contribute to the society in Z he lives and to bring home the bread. these goals in mind it is interesting to b through the lit school catalouge-as of us have been doing of late-to see if a liberal arts educational program is d to students or if the form in which it is d could be improved. appears revisions could be made in the lit 1 menu that would better prepare students derstand and contribute to their society. nost serious shortcoming is the unjusti- preoccupation with things European and ern, a malady of our intellectual life which er Lippmann laments in today's column. "English" majors are given almost an sive diet of English literature, almost as s literature alone had right to claim the of literature. The offerings in Slavic and Eastern literature are very few and are, ded mainly'for area concentrates. Fine Arts, we could find no courses con- d either with Slavic or with Black African History we could not find a course on 3 Africa, though historical claims are im- nt factors in understanding contemporary an nationalism, especially in Ghana. The ry Department can be used to make ier general point. Though non - United s, non-European geographical areas may e attention when you take advanced es, introductory courses; beyond which students do not go, are concerned pri- y with things Western. That is, Political ce 11 considers modern government using Jnited States as the case in point; Eco- es 51 and 52 essentially considers United s capitalism, by no means the prevalent >mic system of the world; and Fine Arts rer peeks at a Japanese print. Likewise, ry 11 and 12 hardly mention Ghengis, i or touch the long history of China or might be added that, although there is ed a course in modern Scandanavian-a age of perhaps 25 million people-there Drs to be no offefing of Hindi, virtually the nal language of 375 million Indians. And there is a course- in scientific German, is no such course in scientific Russian, the scientific superiority of the Soviet n is a conceded fact at the present. And t might be suggested that there be a course omparative religion so that Americans t speak in knowledge and appreciation of eligions of so many foreign peoples. THE SECOND MAJOR shortcoming in the menu is the lack of courses that would facilitate an understanding of contemporary issues and events-that is, preparation that would help students to thoroughly understand the front page of a newspaper. In regard to social issues, perhaps a Great Issues of the Day course like that offered at one eastern college would fill the void. In regard to scientific and technical events which confront every layman' in so many current social areas, perhaps a General Science course like that offered at many colleges would be of more value than the existing arrangements. If the- 12 hours of re- quired natural science could be devo.ted to a course that would teach the non-science major enough physics to understand the potentialities of fusion, enough astronomy to understand the promise and problems of space travel and enough chemistry, biology, geology, etc. to understand thpir importance in today's world, the lit school may have better fulfilled its tasks. This integration of the natural sciences for non-science majors brings up the third major criticism of the lit school program-the lack of cooperation between the departments in integrated programs available to most stu- dents. That is, the student has some difficulty in connecting the knowledge he gathers in different departments into a meaningful whole. Though Fine Arts, History, Political Science, Economics, Geography and Psychology are all interdependent and inter-influenced, they are taught essentially as separate entities. and taken by students at haphazard times during their four years. It seems careful considera- tion should be given to such a multi-hour course like Great 'Civilizations as taught at Columbia where the history of civilization is traced considering the roles played by the different disciplines. Lecturers are drawn from their areas of competence. One last problem is the duplication present among the different departments. Thus, nu- merous cases arise as in the Political Science department and the Philosophy department, the former offering The Politics of Totali tarianism and Democracy, the latter offering Philosophical Bases of Communism, Fascism and Democracy, neither being much different in subject matter. In fairness, one must say that the lit school has done, all in all, a competent job of shaping. the curriculum to fit the times and needs of education. But, in the areas mentioned, some fat could be eliminated and some lean added. --JAMES ELSMAN JR. Editorial Director * WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: O FAR IT'S BEEN the Republi- can members of the Moulder FCC Investigating Committee who have voted solidly, steadily, and unanimously against doing any deep-rooted investigating, to pay for which they were voted a quar- ter of a million dollars. That quar- ter of a million has now been spent and the preliminary evid- ence is at hand. Reluctantly,, the Republicans were forced by the pressure of public opinion into a probe of free color TV sets and free travel for FCC officials. However, the TV scandals go much deeper. And if the Republicans are afraid'of stepping only on Republican toes, here are some Democratic toes they can also steponr: * * * TOE NO. I--Jimmie Byrnes of South Carolina. Jimmie, who has long been known as "Mr. Demo- crat" of the Southeast, was Secre- tary of State under Truman, Supreme Court Justice u n d e r Roosevelt, a Democratic senator, congressman, and war mobilizer. With this prestige behind him, he sent a letter to the United States Court of Appeals, urging speedy action on WSPA, a TV station near Spartanburg, S. C., in which his wife owns stock. As a former Justice of the high- est court in the land, Jimmie knew it was unethical to write such a letter. Yet he wrote it to the late Chief Judge Harold Stephens, on behalf of his wife's station. The Court of Appeals, however, held against Mrs. Byrnes and Jimmie's long-time friend and associate, Walter Brown, on two different occasions. Despite this, the Fed- eral Communications Commission three times supported Mr. Demo- crat's wife and friends in per- Locrats Pull FCC Wires By DREW PEARSON mitting them to switch their TV antenna from Hog Back Mountain to Paris Mountain, despite the fact that this knocked one UHF station out of business and gave unfair competition o a second. Toe No. 2-- Se A. Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas. Mrs. Johnson, a lovely lady, is head of the LBJ Co., which owns one radio station and two TV stations in Texas. Her husband's prestige didn't hurt her at all in getting them, and she was paid in the past $25,000 as board chairman, which the income tax agents questioned on the ground that she couldn't operate the sta- tions in. Texas while living in Washington with the Senator. This was settled in her favor, which, however, is not the paint the Moulder Committee should in- vestigate. * * * THE POINT to be investigated is how the Johnson family got its first big TV license, KTBC-TV, in Austin. Any investigation will re- veal a whole series of so-called "quickie" grants to the Johnsons and many others, put across under FCC Chairman Paul Walker, a Democrat, when the Democrats dominated the FCC. These "quickie" grants were one of the most unfair developments in the telecasting business. Among other things, they helped put UHF television almost out of business. And the UHF part of the TV spec- trum is where a lot of TV licenses can be granted, instead of a few big semi-monopolistic VHF lic- enses. What happened was that when the FCC unfroze television after the war, a TV applicant would get together with a competing appli- cant, buy or persuade him out, then file a new application at 5 p.m., just a few minutes before the FCC closed for the day. Then at 10 a.m. next day, there being no competition, the FCC auto- matically granted him a license. If he had filed at 3 p.m. instead of 5 p.m., he couldn't have got away with it. Because other attor- neys would have seen the new, non-competitive application and would have filed a competing one. Toe No. 3-Mrs. Oveta Culp Hobby. Nominally, Mrs. Hobby is a Democrat. True, she held office under Ike, but she was uncere- moniously kicked out; so Republi- can congressmen who are shying away from any embarrassment of the Eisenhower Administration should not hesitate to probe the manner in which the FCC gave Mrs. Hobby's TV empire one-third interest in a TV station in Beau- mont, Tex. THE HOBBY family, which owned KPRC and KPRC-TV in Houston, plus the Houston Post, was originally turned down by the FCC for a TV station in Beau- mont. Then suddenly the FCC did an unusual thing. Politics reared its head. A rehearing was sched- uled. In only one other political case had the FCC ever reopened a deci- sion already made. But with un- usual forces working behind the scene, it reopened this one, and after the new hearing was sched- uled, the Hobby family paid $55,- 000 for one-third interest in the Beaumont Broadcasting Co., and eventually got the blessing of the complacent and politically minded FCC. The deal smelled so bad that at one point the Court of Appeals threw it out, but the FCC still ruled in favor of the Hobby group. (Copyright 1958 oy Bell Syndicate, Inc.) ally of durable goods: and the drop in business spending for capital goods plant and equip- ment and for inventories. The counter moves also attack the two things blamed by some for triggering off the recession--tight money and the economy wave in defense ordering and spending. * * * THE FIRST two are being tried now. Credit is easier, if only at the financing level-that is, interest rates are down, although bankers contend that so far they actually have very little more funds to lend than before. Federal government ordering for defense is already up and spending will rise as the goods are delivered. State and local spending is rising. A tax cut is being talked of as a possibility only if the business recovery doesn't launch itself by April. Meanwhile, most figures coming in each day just add up to a clear- er picture of how deep the dip has already gone. Total unemployment continues to' rise with a turning point thought to be six to 10 weeks away. r JANUARY auto output was the lowest for that month since 1954. Steel production is far below that of a year ago. Oil companies have various gas- oline price wars on their hands. Cotton textile mills have cut out- put and sliced inventories but prices are still weak. Business spending for plant and equipment and inventories is well below peak. The steel industry has spent 10 billion dollars since World War II to build up a huge capacity, al- most half of which is lying idle today. Oilmen are soft-pedaling their expectations for 1958. Consumer demand for their products has been disappointing. Profit margins have been shrinking while inven- tories haven't. All this can change by April, as many in Washington say they ex- pect. If itadoesn't, the direct pump priming moves of tax cuts and bigger federal deficits may be tried. Exchange BACK FROM an averseas vaca- tion, Washington's gregarious Democratic Senator Warren G. Magnuson brought tidings to a private Seattle luncheon of a droll exchange between himself and Pope Pius XII. At the end of an audience with His Holiness, the senator, having been tagged as a Lutheran, was about to leave. He clutched a box containing a rosary, a souvenir of his visit. The Pope asked him to tarry a moment and asked: "Did youlook at what is in the box?" Magnuson allowed that he had peeked. Quipped the most urbane of modern pontiffs: "Sometimes, when I give them to Lutherans, they're emptyl" -Time OFFICIAL TODAY AND TOMORROW: x New Paths By WALTER LIPPMANN DAILY 1_BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is a official publication of the Univr- city of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes noeditori- al responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Buil- Ing. before, 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1958 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 16 General Notices Applications for Phoenix Project Re- search Grants: Faculty members who wish to apply for grants from tie Michigan Memorial - Phoenix Projet Research Funds to support research in peacetime applications and implications of nuclear energy should file applica-. tions in the Phoenix Research Office, 118 Rackham Bldg., by Mon, Feb, 19,1 18958. Application forms will be miled on request or can be obtained at 118 Rackham Building, Ext. 256Q. Applications for Grants in support of Research Projects: Faculty memberS who wish to apply for grants from the Faculty Research funds to support re- search projects should file their appli cations in the Office of the Graduate School not later than Man., Feb. 10, Ap. plication forms are available i tle officeof the Dean, Room 1006 Rackham Building, Student Organization Sponsored A. tivities: All activities and projects spon- sored or produced by student organie.- tions must receive the approval of u dent Government Council. Only recog- nized organizations are eligible to sub- mit a petition for consideration. A pe- tition should be submitted to the Council at least two Weeks before t6, event is to take place. Forms may be secured from the Administrativo 8ec- retary of Studet Government CoiincSl In the Student Activities Building (Room 1538 or 2011), Activities are to be scheduled so as to take place before the seventh day prior to the beginning of a final examination period. For the present semester the examination per- iod begins May 30, 1958. Publicity for an event may not be released until ap- proval has been secured, For detailed procedures and regulations relating t student organization activities, .eus UNIVERSITY REGULATIONS ,CON- CERNING STUDENT AFFAIRS, CON- DUCTS, AND DISCIPLINE, copies of which are available in the Office o ,tudext Affairs, 2011 Student Atlvi.n ties Building. Recognition of new campus Orgail- zations falls within the jurisdition of the Student Government Council. In. formation concerning procedure and as- sistance may be secured from Student Government Council offices in the Stu dent Activities Building or from the Administrative Secretary, Mrs. Calla- han. Summary, action taken by Student Government Council at its meeting Jan. 15, 1958. Approved: Minutes of pre. vious meeting. Appointed: stan Levy te SOC Evaluation sub-committee. Post- poned action on recommendations for appointments to Membership restriction study committee. Established date for spring elections as March 25, 26. Ap- proved activities as follows: Feb. 15, Ga. lens, Caduceus Ball, Union, 9-1 a.n, Feb. 14, 15 Ukranian Student Club, Sym- posium "A Critical Analysis of the Sov- iet Education System," six lectures: 13 Ukranian Student Club, Ukrainian Ball. Rackham, 8 p m. and 22 Michigan Un- ion "Jazz at Ann Arbor" show, Hill, p.m. The following activities were cal- andared March 37, Michigan .Union Union Madness and March 8 Jr. IFO, Jr. Panhellenic, dance. Change of date for Military Ball from March 7 to Mar. 14 was approved. Assembly Ball, previ- ously calendared for March 8, was dropped. Adopted statement relating to final examination policy, Approved Forum program, John Gate., speaker (speaker subject to approval by Co- bmttee on 'University Lectures). Lectures United Nations Lobbyist. Dr. Elton Atwater, will speak Informally durng the Office of Religious Affairs Coffee Hour, 4:15 p.m. Fri., Feb. 7, Lane Hall Library. Norman Thomas, director, Post-Wa World Council, will speak on "Arms and the Economy," Fri., Feb. 7, at 8:00 p.m. in Rackham Auditorium. Spon-. sored by the Economics Club. All staff and graduate students in economics"a and business administration urged to attend. All others invited. Concerts Faculty Recital: Harold Haugh, ten or, accompanied by Charles Fisher, pianist, will be heard at 8:30 p.m. Fb., 6, in Lydia Mendelsohn Theater. Th. entire program will be devoted to songs by American composers, including Francis Hopkinson, Roes Lee Finney Sarah Dittenhaver, Theodore Chanler, Sven Lekberg, Gustav Klemm, Char- lotte Lockwood, Charles Griffes, Mar- shall Bartholomew, Quincy Porter and Herbert Elwell. Open to the general public without charge. Academic Notices Admission test for graduate study In business: Candidates taking the Ad- mission Test for Graduate Study in Business on Feb. 6, are requested to report to Room 130, Business Adminis- tration Building at 8:45 a.m. Thurs. Medical college Admission Test: Ap. HE AMERICAN satellite Explorer has made us all feel better, having given tangible roof that the science of rocketry is known in his country and that our experts possess the rt of making and guiding rockets. The event as confirmed the testimony of those who have een saying that the Russians have a consider- ble lead but that we are in the race. Explorer is, therefore, a good popular anti- ote to the panicky view that we are in mortal anger. But it does not wash out the main ortent of Sputnik-which is not that the ussians launched a satellite first, and that heir satellite is very much bigger and heavier han Explorer. The main portent is that, start- ag at the end of World War II with their ountry devastated, their technology far more rimitive than our own, the Russians have thieved a rate of scientific and technological evelopment which is faster than our own. that they did with the Sputnik shows not lerely that they have mastered a particular pecialty but that they have generated a 'emendous momentum in the physical sciences nd their application. Though Explorer is in the sky, there is no eason to think that the comparative rate of evelopment is now back in balance, much less hat it is in our favor. We are still the bigger nd the stronger. But they are still moving rward the faster. 'HERE IS, therefore, much for us to do, and as I see it we must move forward simultan- Editorial Staff PETER ECKSTEIN Editor JAMES ELSMAN, JR. VERNON NAHRGANG Editorial Director City Editor ONNA HANSON ................ Personnel Director A.ROL PRINS r... ........Magazine Editor DWARD GERULDSEN .. Associate Editorial Director ULLIAM HANEY................. Features Editor OSE PERLBERG ., ,.,...Activities Editor [ANE FRASER .,............Assoc. Activities Editor EOMAS BLUES ...,..... Assoc. Personnel Director eously along three broad paths. The first is that we have to find out how to make the government much better able than it is now to make and to carry out long-range decisions. There is little doubt that American progress in missiles has been retarded by bureaucratic confusion, presided over by political appointees who did not understand the issues they were supposed to decide. Undoubtedly, this requires a reorganization in the Pentagon. But the trouble will not be cured in the Pentagon alone. The White House and the relevant committees of Congress have at least an equal responsibility. The second path we must take is even broader. It is the transformation of American education which on the average and by and large is declining in quality as the quantity of those to be educated grows larger and larger. Our schools and colleges are over- whelmed by the growth of the population they are supposed to educate, and they are under enormous pressure-for the most part irresist- ible -- to lower their intellectual standards. There is an ominous tendency in American education to teach more and more students less and less of the great disciplines which form an educated man. It is in this, more than in the ups and downs in the military balance of power, that there lies the deepest danger to our American society. We can most surely defend ourselves against conquest or domination. What we have to worry about is that the declining level of education, with the vulgarization of the cultural standards in our mass society, we shall become a big but second-rate people, fat, Phili- stine, and self-indulgent, THE THIRD PATH on which we must travel is to learn to adjust our minds to the hard facts of life-particularly to the fact that our Western society, of which we are the strongest member, is no longer paramount, is now only an equal, among the great societies of the globe, The post-war era is ending and the great reality to which we have now to adjust our thinking is that we are an equal but not a LETTERS TO THE EDITORS: Law Student Suggests Higher Resident Tuition Bargain. . . To The Editor: THE STATE of Michigan is the 'fall guy' when it comes to the expense of higher education. Some 80,000 students are being sub- sidized by the state at some nine or ten universities and colleges throughout Michigan, at the cost of more than $100 million per year. This cash outlay is probably more than any other state in the nation spends on higher educa- tion, yet Michigan is only seventh among the states in population. California, with twice as many people as Michigan, has about half as many students in the various branches of the University of California. The value of higher education in the modern world is undisputed, but is it noble to be a fool? It is a simple economic fact that this state, as pointed out in numerous recent newspaper headlines, can- not afford to spend a hundred mil-. lion every year on higher educa- tion, * * * I AM a student of law, not an economist. However. it seems auite dents will be unable to attend this university for financial reasons, if the tuition is again raised. Both of these arguments are good ones, but they are by no means beyond rebuttal. As a state law student, I am now paying $350 per year for tui- tion. At any one of the other top five law schools, I would have to pay an average of three times as much for tuition, because they are mostly private universities. In other words, thanks to the generosity (or should I say fool- hardiness) of the State of Michi- gan, I am getting a tremendous bargain. I am getting a top-notch legal education for one-third of its value. I would be willing to pay more so that this University might become a better university. Now, I realize that all of us can- not afford a several hundred dollar tuition raise. However, despite our protestations to the contrary, by far the majority of Michigan's state students can afford it. For those that cannot afford it, the University could put additional funds into scholarship aid. * s * LET ME SAY that I am grate- ful to this university for the eco- the privilege of swelling the cof- fers of the City of Ann Arbor by $5, I have a few constructive sug- gestions to offer. 1) Why doesn't the hospitable city government invest a portion of the thousands of dollars bled from University students in erect- ing the "No Parking" signs at a more frequent interval? At night they are difficult to see in most areas. Five dollars is pretty hard to come by nowadays. 2) The few pennies saved by not, having a stop sign at the corner of Oakland and Church has al- ready resulted in many injuries, and will cause many more if not corrected. 3) I further suggest that on basketball nights the City could spare one of its army of ticket. writers and station him in front of the field house to "aid" stu- dents, faculty and residents. * * * THE ANTI-STUDENT feeling of this city should be tempered with the fact that, without the stu- dents, the drag of the overstaffed department of ticket writers would bankrupt both the city and the residents. If as much diligence and effort Loss of Memory . . To The Editor: BROWSING THROUGH the De- cember, 1957 Reader's Digest, I came across this paragraph quot- ed from the Architectural Forum: "The very things that Ameri- cans adore abroad they destroy systematically at home. Old build- ings are broken up in the United States as fast as used packing boxes, to make way for the new ones. The loss we endure is not merely sentimental. What we lose is our funded experience. "Architecture is an art whose masterpieces cannot be stored away like paintings or reproduced centuries later Like music. The art lives on in used buildings; they alone can carry it. Without them we are perpetual juveniles, start- ing over and over, a people with- out a memory." THE IMPENDING destruction of the Romance Languages Build- ing brought to my mind the very same thoughts so aptly expressed above.