. . Sixty-Eighth Year . EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN "When Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily ex press the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, MAY 24, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: LANE VANDER SLICE Nothing Very New In Governors' Report ' EBOARD of Governors of the Residence THE AUTHORS. of the report spent most of Halls, after much student prodding, has the time patting the Residence Halls ad- conducted a survey and written a report on ministrators on the back for an able job of,- roommate assignment practices. In essence, it placing students. Only in one spot do they rejects both segregation and random selection really become critical of the system and then of roommates and rehashes some of the oft- they quickly add that measures have already heard arguments for the present system. been taken to correct the difficulties noted. While including a sprinkling of fallacious Generalities pervade much of the report, set- reasoning and some interesting but hardly ting down a comfortable and reasonable philo- convincing figures, the report is still of some sophy for placement of students. At the end importance. The biggest question that arises of the report the authors quote parts of the is: "Where do we go from here?" present written policy and restate the rest of The mass of figures compiled by the survey it: students can choose their own roommates, conducted in the Residence Halls to determine preferences will be respected if administrative- who is living with whom and how did they get ly possible, if there are no expressed prefer- there, indicates that the present system of ences "assignments will be made according to placement is not as desirable as some Univer- interests and living habits expressed in the sity officials and students have claimed. But applications." then again neither is the situation as bad as In so doing, the report leaves the impression some observers, primarily students, have that by and large, the present system is op- charged. Now that certain facts are known it eatngydanageusly rnd stmutso- is u tostudntsandadmiistator tosee erating advantageously and is without short- hut tudrent sanddmnist ratdornteer-comings of any basic nature. There is little that they are not simply stuffed in the near- noticeable criticism of the methods used in est filing cabinet and forgotten, as is often placement. Although Vice-President for Stu- done with surveys and committee reports. The dent Affairs James A. Lewis has said that "next figures indicate at least some change in place- fall there should be a 'new-look' in dormitory ment policy and procedures is called for. Just integration," it is difficult to see how the cause 'how much is not certain. for such a remark can be drawn from the re- port. His statement implies there is much more A Sleeping0wrongin the system than the report ever admits. Am erica THE HEAVY emphasis in the report put on the value of individual selection of room- SPUTNIK I shocked a goodly number of mates and the respect for preferences is easily Americans into the realization that those justifiable. But this argument, which has been "backward Russians" weren't so backward after used for years by some Residence Hall officials all. No longer could they be considered an in- as well as by people defending affiliate sys- ferior bunch of Slavs who really didn't offer tems against charges of discrimination, is phil- much of a challenge to us - the invincible osophical and fails to take consideration of the Americans. After all we were the "good guys." practical application of a placement policy. As Apparently a good deal of the shock has noble a thing as freedom of choice is, it still worn off, especially since we too managed to does- not prevent some administrators from toss a few satellites into the great void called putting two students, who have epressed no space and since it seemed that we-the good preferences, together simply because their skin guys-were again going to come out on top. is the same color or their religion the same. This complacency fortunately isn't shared by The report is pleasant reading but, actually, some of our leaders, but in the long run the It does not tell us very much. What we know impetus for maintainence of a position as a after reading it is substantially what has been world-leader must come from the people them- known for some time. The general statements selves. The people are the ones who must vote about the objectives of the gesidence Halls for the congressmen who will support educa- have lost none of their validity since we last tion. The people must see to it that their reprent heard them enunciated. But the heart of the sentatives represent,matter, what Residence Hall officials and staff N AKENING is needed. We are no longer personnel and University administrators do in A N WAKNIN isneeed. e ae n logerimplementing the policies, has not yet been the "good guys" in many parts of the world. thoroughly examined. The Soviets have beaten us in propaganda in -DAVID TARR large areas of the world. The South American incidents during Vice-President Nixon's recent tour merely illustrate that we are not the most ei en eve * popular people in the world. The Soviets have beaten us scientifically with DESECRATION of the campus by University Sputnik I and now with the huge Sputnik III. designers continues its merry way. They have again demonstrated their caa- Latest step is the paving of the area behind bilities. They have scored on us via propaganda on numerous occasions, the most distressing Haven-Mason Hall. incident being Little Rock since it was so close A coherent policy seems to be developing, to home and more controllable than the South "Wherever there is grass, pour cement over it." American fiasco. Only reason we can see for the policy is that We must regain our lost prestige but we can- somebody in the administration suffers from not do it through cockiness, over-confidence, or hay-fever. military might. The present cold war is 'testing Well . . . anyway, sociologists are getting the us to the hilt. Are we big enough and awake opportunity to observe "rapid urbanization" enough to pass? at first hand. -RALPH LANGER -RICHARD TAUB TODAY AND TOMORROW: What rice Complacency. By WALTER LIPPMANN Ha! An Un-American Tendency Toward Free Speech!' ,- 4MF rT AT THE ARENA THEATRE: Spring Playbill Worth Seeing THE SPEECH department opened its new arena theatre yesterday with a laboratory playbill of four varied one-act plays and the capa- city audience was reminded briefly of Ann Arbor's last arena theatre, which closed a little over a year ago. One advantge which the Dramatic Arts Center had, however, Wis in seating. There the rows of seats were on risers so each member of the audience could see the floor-level stage clearly, whereas in the new theatre all the audience is on the same level with the stage. But the view seemed to bother only a few as the audience entered into the spirit of the laboratory productions, a sort of annual breather, 11 w f k .. erN ,. . IL. 0' X i! f 19A3-t "w.4se{tt Ts ..a ;'!aS tr°e..r« 'COMPLEX PROBLEM' Bagwivell Discusses State Finances from the hypertension of the Drama Season. AS AT THE last lab playbill in January, the Shaw play - then "The Shewing-Up of Blanco Pos- net" and this time "Dark Lady of the Sonnets" - was the highpoint of the evening. There was little of professional bearing about the cast of "Dark Lady," but some- how it all seemed to enter into the Shavian spirit of fun. , John Klein as The Man (Will Shakespeare) plays his part with vigor and gusto, bringing out well the laughs that Shaw intended. Beverly Ogg, Stephanie Fantle and Jim Presser are able in their roles and, after all, Shaw's humor is still there whether it is deliv- ered well or not. "Dark Lady of the Sonnets' is one of \those little plays that no one who has ever studied Shake - peare should miss. * * * YEATS' "Land of Heart's De- sire" comes out second best on the program. The setting is Irish and the meaning is perhaps a little obscure, but the conflict between the forces of good and evil is clear, even in the highly symbolic way in which Yeats tells his story. Peggy Forward. as A Child is best in therpantomime and dance parts of her role and only a little less effective when she speaks. Sandra Marx as Maire Bruin shows feeling and emotion, too, and is just a little less smooth. Nicholas Havinga, Richard De- Beck and Kathryn Brock show their abilities in the portrayal of the other members of the family which is visited by evil spirits as only the Irish can be visited by spirits. The setting for "Land of Heart's Desire," as the costumes, comes out best of the evening's plays. THE TWO remaining plays, "The Midnight Caller" and "The Last of the Lowries" fight a rath- er unfortunate losing battle with dull scripts and serious actors. The former is unnecessarily long for what it has to say and the lat- ter has almost nothing to say. Both would probably fare well on television but deserve little place in the theatre. They are, however, well placed in the pro- gram and do not detract from the overall program. "The Midnight Caller" is the story of a woman who has to de- cide between two men - in a way. She is helped by another woman who has no man ,and takes out her bitterness on the other. "The Last of the Lowries" is one of those "family" plays that takes place in the south and makes a lot of fuss about blood and blood- shed. To say more about either of these plays might spoil the spirit of the evening - and, after all, there is no admission charge. -Vernon Nahrgang INTERPRETING: Airborne Army Corps By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst THE ARMY'S newly announced aerial "brush war" corps is largely earthbound. It is more a part of the argu- ment over defense planning than it is a currently applicable force for foreign service. The argument is whether the nation should prepare specifically for limited wars as well as all-out war. Secretary of Defense Neil Mc- Elroy told a congressional subcom- mittee recently there is less and less likelihood of limited wars that would demand sizeable ground forces. The Air Force contends that if there is sufficient preparedness for a major war, then smaller wars can be handled in ratio to their needs. THE NAVY contends that it is being slighted; that if its equip- ment demands were met it could largely eliminate the need for ex- pensive and controversial bases abroad, providing elusive movable bases for nuclear war. The Army contends nobody can afford all-out nuclear war, making limited wars most likely. To make its point, the Army has very smoothly presented Con- gress and the public with an ex- ample of what it wants. An Army Corps has been set up, mostly on paper, although its com- ponent parts are very much in ex- istence at four different bases in this country. It consists of four divisions-two infantry and two airborpe-ready to move by air to any brush fire if, the Army empha- sizes, air transport were available. By PHILIP MUNCK Daily Staff Writer PAUL BAGWELL would make a good Republican candidate for Michigan's governor. At least he has all the "austerity" answers necessary. At a press conference here Thursday, he said the reason higher education did not get its due share of state funds is because of the unavailability of those funds. "The business of financing state universities is a critical problem," he sa'id, for these reasons: 1) The federal government has "pre-empted state revenues." That is federal taxes have gobbled up more and more of the tax- payersamoney available to the state and country. * * * "SINCE 1940, federal taxes have incre,:sed 13.5 times while state taxes have risen only\ four and one-half times. This means that while public needs have risen steadily, the state's ability (in terms of money available), to meet them has not risen proportional- ly," he explained. 2) Michigan is one of the few states in the nation that has -so much of its income earmarked by the constitution. He said that more than 70 per cent of Michi- gan's income is alloted before it can even be collected. "In Ohio, a good, modern, pro- gressive state, only a small per- centage is earmarked. As a result their higher education facilities do not have the troubles we have and their highway program is al- ready several billion dollars ahead of ours." 3) The constitution of Michi- g~n, which was drawn up in 1908, allows the state to borrow $250,- 000. This sum may have been fine in 1908 but it is certainly inade- quate in 1958. * * * SINCE the state is so rigidly limited it is unable to manipulate its funds in the manner that the United States government is, for example. (In the last session of the state legislature, two plans were intro- duced to bring more money into the state's hands for higher edu- cation and other projects. One, proposed by Sen. Robert Faulkner (R-Coloma), would have had the state exchange state bonds for regular bonds in the Veteran's Trust Fund. The money from the sale of the trust fund bonds, about$50 milliontwould be used for contruction at Michigan colleges and universities. (The other plan, a resolution by Rep. George Sallade (R-Ann Arbor) called for a constitution- al amendment to increase the debt limit of the state to $250 million and limit the use of such funds to education and mental health. Both died in committee.) * * * IN SPITE of these difficulties, he said, the legislature gave more to higher education this year than last. However, the increase was all taken by Wayne State Univer- sity. Under a plan adopted by the- legislature a fe w years ago, he ex- plained, the state has gradually been assuming more of Wayne's financial obligations. Bagwell also said that he has run into a "tremendous amount of anti-education feeling in the last few years. "The citizens feel that we can't afford to have two major univer- sities competing against each oth- er. Rivalry on the football field once a year is fine but it shouldn't be necessary for the University to have extension centers near Lansing and there is no need for Michigan State University to have extension centers in Detroit, only a stone's throw from Ann Arbor." One way to get more mileage out of our educational system is to make greater use of the exist- ing physical plants, he said. By emphasizing the summer periods as much as the fall and winter sessions we can keep our schools and full capacity and also keep professorial salaries up. * * s BAGWELL criticized the idea of enrollment limitation assa solu- tion to the problem. "We shouldn't have to reject youngsters with the same qualifications as their fath- ers, when their fathers were able to go to college." He said that to make more ef- ficient use of monies available, the whole tax structure of the state of Michigan needs to be re- vised. He criticized the present plan for "driving industries out of the state." Wages, he said, are not the cause of their moving when industry in Ohio is con- stantly increasing and Ohio has the third highest wage level in the nation. Any new tax structure, he add- ed, must "be equitable to all seg- ments of the economy, have a sta- bility of yield and be adequate to meet the state's needs." He did not say how this could be done. He said, however, that Michigan is in need of a constitutional re- vision and that he would press for one at the earliest possible mo- ment. SOME PEOPLE connected the announcement of something that had been in existence for some time with the recent prevalence of anti-American outbreaks abroad, but it wasn't. It was strict- ly connected with the argument at home. For one thing, the air transport now available-through allocation by the Tactical Air Command- could handle less than a fourth of such a force, or one airborne divi- sion of 13,000 men. For flying more than that to-any war, the Air Force relies on plans to commandeer civilian transports, which would have to have their seats removed and other modifica- tions made. .1 4 DAILY OFFICIAL-BULLETIN A FTER the turmoil of the past week it can- not have been easy for the Secretary of State to face a big press conference. But Mr. Dulles not only did just that. He managed somehow to convey the impression that far from being disturbed by what had happened he was, if anything, confirmed in all his views. The explosions were ripples upon the surface of a great stream on which we were moving in the right direction and with righteous self- confidence. The question which dominated the confer- ence was not what the Secretary of State would do to remedy .the troubles which have ex- ploded. That could not be expected of him. The question was whether these troubles had caused the Secretary of State to believe that anything for which he is responsible needed to be re- examined and re-appraised, and whether, therefore, he would encourage or would dis- courage our people to think about what has gone wrong. Mr. Dulles's reaction to this, which was implied in a whole string of questions, was to appear unpreturbed and impervious, denying that anything very significant had happened. The net result of the press conference was an invitation to the American people not to allow themselves to be stirred up into thinking about the state of their affairs. AS IT TURNED OUT, Tuesday was a day devoted to promoting a general move of complacent self-confidence. This was the theme of ,Mr nnDulles's noenn,.-ea nn m, rr morning and, applied to the recession, it was the theme of the President's address on Tuesday evening. It is reassuring to have self-confidence. But is it possible to have such self-confidence except by sweeping under the rug the harsh and disagreeable facts which worry so many of us? Thus it may well be that the recession is flattening out, and it is true, of course, that eventually there will be a rise and, no doubt, some day another boom. But can we accept the prospect of a prolonged slump at the present level, especially as its repercussions tend to be multiplied abroad, and to aggravate the inter- national disorder? There must be many who feel as I do that they are not made confident by seeing that the President is unworried, that they would have,,more confidence if they saw him worrying about the very ugly things that there are to worry about. COMING back to Mr. Dulles, it can fairly be said that the troubles all about him are not superficial incidents which a strong man can ignore. What ha'ppened to the Vice-President in Venezuela is not disposed of by saying that we misjudged the efficiency of the local police. The fact is that the Vice-President had a bad reception in all the countries he visited. He was not stoned and spat upon in more than two of them. But there was bad will, and plenty of it, everywhere. It is a mistake to minimize the basic fact that a1mnt pverwhere to the south of us in WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: 41J: i u e UWavering Hrs By DREW PEARSON (Editor's Note.-Drew Pearson to- day reports from Europe on the crisis in the Near East.) IT WAS JUST six months ago that I drove up a winding road, climbing the Lebanese mountains from the Mediterranean like an amusement park roller-coaster, to call on President Cam-ille Cha- moun, now facing civil war in Lebanon. Along the road were apple or- chards. They clung to the moun- tainside in little terraces-walls of rock, painfully built into the hillside by hand, then a strip of level terrace and a row of trees, then another wall and more trees. It had taken years to hack these terraces out of the mountainside, perhaps going back to the days when this was part of Nineveh and Tyre, or back to the days when the crusaders battled the Moslems at the foot of these mountains for the retention of the Holy Land. * * * THE APPLE ORCHARDS had already felt the ninch of Nassere Christians, in which it is tacitly a Maronite, the Prime Minister a agreed that the President shall be Moslem, the Foreign Minister a Greek Orthodox, and so on. I asked President Chamoun the question which John Foster Dulles hasbeen asking himself for a long time: "Can the United States trust Nasser?" "Not for 24 hours," was Cha- moun's categoric reply. He's had reason since to recall the correct- ness of this statement. "Your greatest mistake," he went on, "was not to let the Is- raeli army continue in Suez for another 14 days." President Chamoun, faced with revolt by Nasser agents, now has reason to realize more than ever the effects of American vacillation in the Near East. Like the indig- nities suffered by Vice-President Nixon in South America, the ex- plosions of the Near East did not burst suddenly. They "eroded." * * * AMERICAN prestige in the Near East erndpd hersmgpWA ae nn- 2) In June, 1955, Egypt began bartering cotton for Russian arms. 3) In August, 1955, Secretary Benson wanted to dump his sur- plus of American cotton, but Sec- retary of State Dulles argued that it would hurt Egyptian cotton. The U. S. Ambassador had already reported that Egypt was trading cotton for Russian arms. 4) Despite this arms deal, Dulles began talking about lending Nas-' ser money to build the Aswan Dam. 5) In July, 1956, Dulles sudden- ly yanked the promise of the As- wan Dam away from Nasser. He did it so abruptly than an Oriental was certain to save face. Nasser saved face by seizing the Suez canal. 6) In October, 1956, as the Is- raeli army was within a few hours of Cairo and as the French and British bombed Cairo, Nasser took refuge in a cellar in a Cairo sub- urb. His policies had failed and he feared assassination by his own young army officers. At that The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michiganx Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Building, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. SATURDAY, MAY 24, 1958 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 170 General Notices Commencement Instructions to Fac- ulty Members: Convene at 4:15 p.m. in the first floor lobby in the Admin. Bldg. Buses will be provided in front of the Admin. Bldg. on State St. to take you to the Stadium or Yost Field Rouse to join the procession and to take the place assigned to you on stage, as directed by the marshals; at the end of the exercises buses will be ready in driveway east of the Stadium or at west side of Field House to bring you back to the campus. Distribution of Diplomas: If the ex- ercises are held in the Stadium, diplo- mas for all graduates, excepting the School of Dentistry, will be distributed from designated stations under the east stands of the Stadium, imme- diatelytafter the exercises. The diplo- ma distribution stations are on the level above the tunnel entrance. If, however, the exercises are held in the Yost Field House, all diplomas excepting those of Medical School and the School of Dentistry will be dis- tributed from the windows of the Cashier's Office and the Office of Registration and Records in the lobby of the Admin. Bldg. Following the ceremony diplomas may be called for until 9:00 p.m. Student Accounts: Your attention sequent semester .or summer session until payment has been made." Concerts Midwest Student Composers' Sym- posium: Four chamber concerts and onepsymphony orchestra concert will be presented in connection with this symposium as follows: Chamber Concerts - Aud. A, Angell: Univ. of Michigan, Fri., May 23, 8:30 p.m.; Northwestern Univ., Sat., May 24, 10:00 a.m.; Univ. of Illinois, Sat., May 24, 1:30 p.m.; and State Univ. of Iowa, Sat,, May 24, 4:00 p.m. Univ..of Michigan Symphony Orches- tra, Hill Aud., Sun., May 25, 10:30 a.m. Compositions performed on these pro- grams are the work of students from the schools represented. Open to the general public. Student Recital: Robert Brandzel, who studies clarinet with William Stub- bins, will present a recital in Aud. A, Angeli Hall. Sun., May 25, 4:15 p.m. in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music. He has included in his program composi- tions. by Schumann, Sowerby, Copland and Brandzel, and will be assisted by Nancy Gamble at the piano, and Carol Stavash, flute, Kay LaDouceur, Oboe, and Russell Bedford, bassoon. Open to the public. Student Recital: Alice Dutcher; mez- zo soprano, who is a student of Chase Baromeo, will present a recital in Aud. A, Angell Hall, Sun., May 25, 8:30 p.m. She will be assisted by Greta Dins- more at the piano, and will perform compositions by Mozart, Schumann, Schubert, Canteloube, Granados, Nin, Obradors, Rorem, Barber and Diamond. Her recital will be presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music. Open to the public. -' i;