Sixty-Eighth Year . EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN re Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS -eval" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3 241 ed in The Michigan Daily exp ress the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. a F 1 Of Ye Olde FI ffe "AN AFFAIR TO REMEMBER" combines the acting of two of H1 wood's biggest and best paid stars with Cinemascope, color, a theme of romance. These elements are brought together by Director Leo McC whose stock in trade is the sentimental movie. The plot is not new; rather, commonplace. Cary Grant, complete with his Spanish suntan, is a playboy is about to guarantee the end to his financial worries via a m million dollar marriage. Miss Kerr appears as a woman whose own future is abou become equally solvent. They meet aboard ship; Mr. Grant is i 22, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN WEICHER Colleges Should Provide r Leader Training ,SURE. of historic irony, the )mobile Workers recently pur- er home of Edsel Ford in east g to convert it into a student AW also bought another man- which belonged to the Chrysler ons are tied in with the mil- Solidarity House nearby, built the UAW's international head- rhole is being fitted -out as a y of the future," to use Presi- uther's words. He had more ery institution of higher learn- d States of America, manage- ve available to them schools of stration in which are being leaders of the business com- university makes available to ment any really comparable a "really comparable service' nvestment in the field of edu- University, the economics de- 4 two-semester course in "La- ster in Social Security. Gradu- 'Collective Bargaining," "Prob- nisurance," "Comparative Labor : a two-semester "Seminar ii ining to labor offered in the stration school are necessarily ented, and overlap those of lepartment. tpOSE of training union econo- ministrators, these courses are to those 'available to manage- There is, for example, an ex- m entitled "Hospital Adminis- by jpe School of Business Ad- sity's curriculum is representa- an hardly be blamed for groom- ders to the extent of provid- aining. But it obviously intends 1 a restricted and perhaps f view. Bias cannot be eradi- cated when an administrative entity under- takes its own education. Union philosophy is still far from being rec- onciled with management's, even under the leadership of such able men as Reuther and John L. Lewis, who have done much to make unionism palatable. The' impasse remains even after the social acceptance of unionism was underscored by the polite exchange of letters betwen Reuther, the automotive heads, ,and President Eisen- hower. The skirmish of letters did not resolve the problem of whether wages beget prices or conversely. No separate agency, it seems, cares to develop a solution. Reuther suggests that institutions of higher learning are neglecting a service to the la- bor movement--a movement now soundly es- tablished in our economic structure. It should become the interest and responsibility of lead- ing universities, particularly those serving areas of vast labor populations, to include a definable? curriculum in "Labor Administra- tion." An adequate program, on the model of the University's Hospital Administration offering, might serve at least to stimulate ehtical prac- ices. 'Adequate' in this sense would mean a program receiving support and assistance from, unions, much as industrial groups now bolster business administration courses. Historically, labor leaders rose through the ranks. Some of the consequences of this tra- dition (through lack of alternative, perhaps) are now convulsing the labor movements, and are leaving their stains on our society. Universities, through their educational influ-" ences, should therefore take the initiative in ,bringing about wholesomeness in labor, and an awareness of its economic responsibilities. A minimum program should include the training of union-sponsored students. In his reply to Reuther's letter touching on aspects of inflation, Henry Ford II spoke -of the need for "labor statesmanship"-a field which might well be included in public instruction.' Certainly in an era of inflation and bald- faced union corruption, something can and should be done towards mature and genuine labor statesmanship. --ERNEST ZAPLITNY ested, Miss Kerr is merely amused. But being a resourceful playboy, Mr. Grant resorts to the tried and true device of taking the girl to meet "grand mama." From there on it is all downhill. Love, pro- mises and complications ensue in that order. When the principals are on camera, the dialogue tends to be whimsical and occasionally spiced with the kind of remarkts that sharp guys like to make mental notes of for future usd. Unlike most of the recent Cine- mascope offerings "Affair" does not go out of its way to treat the viewer to large splashes of scenery. Rather, the rose-colored lens sees heavy fluty. There are a few shots of New York, however, which are bound to make refugees from the City nostalgic. * * * FOR THE SENTIMENTAL and emotional moviegoer, this pic- ture is a must. For people in love the picture is bound to have a re- inforcing effect. For the young" man who is about to pop the ques- tion this picture is geared to put the girl in the proper frame of mind. But for members of the Ernest Hemingway set who demand real- ism in their selections, who have no use for princes and princesses, who like to see 'the actor's per- spire a little if the occasion seems to demand it, this picture is de- finitely not their cup of tea., Accompanying the main feature is a. short subJect entitled "A Foot- ball Weekend in Ann Arbor" done by the University of Michigan Television Center. Film clips of many of the campus buildings, homecoming signs, and shots of the gaines from last year are shown. The whole thing is nicely put together and is certain to give the freshmen some insights into our Saturday ritual. The clip showing the Michigan Marching Band doing their famous arrange- ment of "The St. Louis Blues" will cause many a senior to fondle his section 23 ticket book with under- standable anticipation. j * * * IN CASE YOU do not call the theatre to find out what time the movie starts, this reviewer sug- gests you, do so anyway. You will be greeted by 'an imitation of T.V.'s Miss Monitor done by a University speech student. Dulcet and suggestive tones will greet you and inform you of the running times in addition to some other elementary facts of life. This technological development is a great improvement over the wheezing, asthmatic voice which has been used on other occasions and it may well be the funniest thing you will associate with the Michigan Theatre this weekend. --Paul Mott LETTERS to the EDITOR T. (Editor's Note: Letters to for must be signed, in good t not .more than 300 words ii The Daily reserves the righ or withhold letters from pub t i WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: U Aids Turkish Eco ho0my By DREW PEARSON Civic Theatre To The Editor: HE ANN ARBOR Civic Theat is, flattered by its descriptic by Miss Jean aWilloughby as Ar Arbor's only "professional" actit organization. We assume that she is referrit to the quality of our productio: which have attracted ever-increa ing audiences in the last few year reaching an average attendan of 1200 last season when we hi four sellouts. ' We would like to correct one in pression. Only our director, T Heusel, is a professional. The re of us are-townspeople and studer who participate for fun and educ tion. As in the past, Civic Theat welcomes interested students membership, both as actors at as backstage hands. --Clan Crawford, Jr. Treasurer, Ann Arbor Civic Theatre Protest To the Editor: A6 A student starting my fin consecutive semester here the University, I figured §eniori would entitle ne 'to a footb ticket for a seat a little beti than section 28, row two. --Fred C. Gielow, Jr., '58E DAILY OFFICIA1L BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is ar official publication of the Univer sity of Michigan for which th Michigan Daily assumes no edi, torial responsibility. Notices shoulc be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form V Room 3519 Administration Build ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunda Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1957 VIL. LXVIII, NO. 5 anpower Reductions May n Military Preparedness THE BEGINNING of the year, orders come from Secretary of Defense E. Wilson's. office to pare 200,000 men e armed services. Plans to cut another from the services were recently an- uts have been accompanied with as- from the secretary, that these man- eductions will not affect our national At the same time he made it equally e need for personnel cuts has been xted by lack of funds to pay for them. oint Chiefs of Staff, Secretary Wilson are "equally dissatisfied." The Army, Force have been particularly hard Army. losing a division and the Air out ten wings. the cuts are completed the Air Force e around 123 wings, the Army 15 divi- ie Marines 180,000 men and the Navy men. REASED efficiency in the armed forces. ant these cuts, there is no question that uld be made. If not, we are placing our defense in what mayx be a critically d position. sent, long range plans call for the Air, o replace at least part of their long trategic bombers with one or more of istics missiles under development. Ind maintain the strength of the Strategic J1 Air Command until it can be replaced with mis- siles, the Air Force will deactivate tactical wings rather than strategic wings. In the event of an attack, SAC would deliver the United States retaliatory blows. However, the tactical air wings provide ground troops with air support. If troops were to go into bat-- tle, a weakened Tactical Air Comand might find itself unable to provide soldiers -on the ground enough support. The Army will have lost four of 19 divisions they had at beginning of the year. The De- fense Department has said overseas bases will be maintained, and cuts will come mostly from forces in rthe United States. THESE DIVISIONS are in the United States for training and to serve as reserve units. Overseas forces are to'defend and retaliate in event of attack on our allies or ourselves. How- ever, a prolonged offensive would require addi- tional troops from the United States. In an atomic war, the few months necessary to re-ac- tivate units could be fatal. The armed forces receive 60 per cent of the budget now, If the military can be reduced, it should be reduced. The President and Wilson have both ap- proved this cut. If they are wrong, or if their hands have been forced by budget cuts, the United States has been placed in a more dan- gerous position. --PIHJUP MUNCK Editor's Note: Drew Pearson is traveling through the Near Fast reporting on the,,explosive situation thereand what the United States is doing about it.) EN ROUTE THROUGH the Near East-You would hardly expect to find a man who spent most of his life running a department store in Kansas City traveling through the small towns of Turkey, trying to reconstruct the Turkish economy, but that is what Louis" Rothschild, now Undersecretary of Commerce, has been doing for the past month. Along with a group of other American businessmen, Rothschild has been sleeping in ancient hotels, traveling over dusty roads and spending long hours with Turkish 'businessmen and officials. Turkey is a country which badly needs his advice. If it weren't for American aid, its economy would collapse overnight. American aid has been paying for all its oil, all its military upkeep, most of its wheat and other essentials., * * * : TODAY Turkey is so hard up that you can't get a cup of, im- ported coffee 'anyplace in the na- tion. Coffee imports are not per- mitted. It eats up the foreign ex- change. Neither is the importation of tires. As a result, you see trucks ,on the highways, propped up on jacks, while the driver has walked or hitch-hiked to the next town to patch his inner tube. He can't. get a spare tire. When businessmen asked Roths- child for a solution, he told them: "No one thing is going to cure. the Turkish economy. It will take a lot of different things. One of the first things you should develop is coal. You have plenty of coal, but you don't mine it because your laws restrict private enterprise. Coal is a government monopoly. Let ,businessmen mine your coal, and you can develop some excel- lent markets around the Mediter- ranean. "I've also noticed these embroid-= ered slippers worn by the Turkish women," Rothschild advised. "If you manufactured them for export -you'd find that a lot of American women would'love to buy them. "Then I've noticed that you raise some fine peaches and make peach juice," suggested Roths- child. "I've never tasted peach' juice. before. Why don't you de- velop it and export it? You might find just as'profitable a market as our cola drinks." ' Rothschild"is confident Turkey- will begin pulling up its economy. So are some of the other Ameri- cans who accompanied him. If the Russians could win over Turkey, thanks to internal eco- nomic collapse, tt would be a big- ger triumph than any event since the Czars tried to take Constanti- nople. * * * JOHN L. LEWIS, the Mine Workers chief, came through Greece with the Fairless mission, studying American aid. He made a hit. Greeks didn't find his bushy eyebrows as forboding as the ad- vance billing and they got a chuckle out of his courtly Eliza- bethan English. At one private party, Queen Frederika challenged him. "Mr. Lewis," she said, "during the guerilla fighting, orphaned, children were being picked up lit- erally on the side of the road. We had to find homes for them and organize orphanages. To pay, for those orphanages, the work- men of Greece worked an extra day and donated all their pay. Would your union do that in the United States?" "Your; Majesty," replied Lewis, looking at the beautiful Queen of Greece, "For you the United Mine Workers would work eight days a week." Frank Grismer is a Cleveland, Ohio, automobile man who says quite frankly that he never be- lieved in American aid to foreign countries. Now he finds himself in charge of American aid to Greece. "I met Bob. Taft one day in Ohio in the summer of 1953," re- calls Grismer. "He was on crutch- es, but nobody had any idea he might not be with us long." "Bob asked me, 'How would you like to go into the* government?' I told'him I wasn't built to be a bureaucrat, but he said they needed businessmen in govern- ment, so here I am. S* * * "WHEN I first took this job," continued Grismer, "I was dead opposed to foreign aid-thought it was a waste of money, just boon- doggling. But you . have to see to believe. I am now sold on foreign aid as the best and cheapest way to fight Communism. "I wish more congressmen, es- pecially those from the farm belt, would come over here and see how the farm surpluses were being used. "We are now shipping tanks and new modern weapons to the Greek Army, but at the same time we are. cutting down the foreign aid 'ne- cessary to operate these weapons. That's what the cuts voted by Congress are going to do. "American farm surpluses, con- verted into Greek drachmas, are what have helped meet the Greek military budget. I don't know how much the cut will be as a result of the last Congress. But, if it's too low, the new weapons we're send- ing to Greece may not be operated. "I don't believe Congress real- izes what a hard time Benson would have with' his surpluses if it wasn't for foreign aid, nor how much good both have done in the battle against Communism." (Copyright 1957 by Bell Syndicate Inc.) prelude REORTS from several Euro- pean sources with channels into the SeViet Union claim that the chief political basis of the struggle between Khrushchev and his party opponents has been a question of external, not domes- tic, policy. The Khrushchev faction is said to stand .in particular for "dy- namic" as against cautious moves in the Middle East. The defeat of the Molotov-Kaganovich-Shepilov combine . . . was the necessary political prelude to the stepped-up Soviet push into Syria and Ye- men. -National Revie1' Western Optimism Over Syria FACILITIES, MONEY INADEQUATE: Colleges Face Tidal Wave of New Students Lectures' Lecture, auspices of the Departr of Fisheries. "Hormones in Fish Dr. Allen Matty, lecturer in zool4 University of Nottignham, Fngl 4:15 p.n., Mon., Sept. 23, Natural ence Auditorium. 4* Academic Notic( Women Students - Sports and D Instruction: Women students who completeA the physical education quirement may enroll in classes Fri., Sept. 20 and Mon., Sept. 23 T 8:00 a.m. to 12 noon, in Barbour 0 nasium. Instruction is available in nis, swimming; diving, social and r ern dance, ballet and field hockey The Extension Service announces following 'classes to be held in Arbor beginning Mon., Sept. 23: Electric Welding, 7:00 p.m., 3313 Engineering Building. Sixteen w $50.00 plus $5.00 laboratory fee. Leslie E. Wagner, instructor. Motion and Time Study, 7:30 229 West Engineering Bldg. Sb1 weeks. $37.00 Prof. Richard W. Be ley, instructor. , Painter's Clinic, ':30 p.m. 415 A tecture Bldg: Sixteen weeks.$2 Prof. Albert P. Mullen, Instructor. The Bible and The Rejuvenatig Current Religion, 7:30 p.m. 131'S of Business Administration. E. weeks. $13.0. Prof. Emeritus I Waterman,' Instructor. The Recorder and Its Music. Bi ping course. 7:30 p.m. 435 MasonI ISixteen weeks. $28.00. Prof. Williair Stubbins, instructor. The Extension Service announce following classes to be held in Arbor beginning Tues., Sept. 24: Elementary Genery Psychology, p.m. (P'sychology 31E, two hours undergraduate credit) 171 Schoo r Business Administration, sixteen w $27.09. Lecturer Merton Krause, struttor. Elements of Nuclear Engineering p.m., 176 School of Business Admi tration, sixteen weeks. $27, Prof. 0e L. West, Jr., instructor. Investment Fundamentals, 7:30, 131 School of Business Administrat eight weekis, $13.50. Prof. Wilfor Flteman, instructor. Metal Processing '7:00 p.m. (Chen and Metallurgical Engineering 1 chanical Engineering 2, two hou undergraduate credit.) 3072 East gineering Bldg., sixteen weeks, $2 Kenneth C. Ludema, instructor. The Makin gof Modern Europe p.m. (History 13x, two hours of dergraduate credit) 170 School of i ness Administration, sixteen w $27.00. John 'W. Baldwin, instruct deiiigute cridt) 170 School of B MIAY BE presumed Egypt's President Nas- r is not, at the very least, overjoyed with ts in the Middle East and in, Syria in par- ar, events that are showing just how dis- sd the Arab world really is. he current charges being hurled between a and other Middle Eastern countries, prin- 1ly Jordan, have created a situation not lly unfavorable to the West. nce the crisis of last year, the Western nce has been following, with a certain unt of success, a policy of keeping the So- out of the area, of stabilizing the area r to a settlement of Israeli and refugee lems and of protecting Western oil inter- hile it is true that Syria has moved, in nt weeks, much nearer the Soviets than er the West or Col. Nasser would like, e are not adequate signs the country has e completely under Soviet domination. Nor is there indication Syria's move to the left .is sufficient to create the atmosphere for renewed violence in the area. Washington seems content, and probably justifiably for the present, to merely keep a ,watchful eye on the situation as it develops in Syria. It has, however, increased shipments of arms, already promised, to Jordan and Iraq. There is considerable doubt the Syrian lead- ers have any great loyalty to the Soviet Union beyond their own personal interests; it is re- pqrted Syria is trying to throw off the Com- munist label planted on them for fear of be- ing isolated from 'the rest of the Arab world, whose leaders claim, at least, great fear of Red domination. E VEN COL. NASSER must fear being sucked into the Eastern camp, an event that could easily push him into some obscure corner of the international scene. From all of this the West does not seem to WASHINGTON (R)-"When he's ready for college, will college be ready for him?' Sound familiar? It ought to, It's the headline on an adver- tisement that's been staring at you for weeks now from the pages of your newspaper and magazine, from cards across the aisle of your bus and streetcar. Featuring a small boy, the ad is one of a series sponsored by the Council for Financial Aid to Edu- cation (CFAEY and the Advertis- ing Council. Purpose: to convince Americans of the importance of higher education and the necess- ity of supporting it with cash. * * * THE FACT THAT American col- leges face a tidal wave of eager young humanity within the next few years, 'and need money to Angeles, now about 16,000, expects 24,000 and plans 12,000 parking spaces to accommodate them. The year 1970, by estimates that daily appear more conservative, will see no fewer than six million youths in America's 1,900-odd col- leges-twice as many as today. Some authorities even see en- rollments doubled by 1965. Others, like Clarence Faust, vice president of the Ford Foundation, and form- er President Francis H. Horne of Brooklyn's Pratt Institute, suspect they may triple by 1970 or 1975. Less known is what's being done about the problem. * * * BIG AND LITTLE schools every- where are assessing their needs in detail, tapping all obvious money sources, trying to locate new ones. In five years, says Executive Sec- had been subscribed in cash or pledges. But the Harvard effort by no means overshadows those of other institutions, many of which are reaching for proportionately much greater amounts. Miami, Fla. University, which set a 10-year goal of $19,250,000 last winter, has received cash and pledges of over one and one-half million-a million of it in one anonymous gift. * * * LITTLE REED College, at Port-' 'land, Ore., with 650 students, quadrupled its 1956 gifts to over $400,000 this year. Colgate, at Hamilton, N.Y., has brought in two million dollars of a three and one-third million goal. Marquette, at Milwaukee, has passed the four million mark in a drive for five 100 million last year. How much the alumni of non-AAC affiliates, contributed, says AAC Executive Director Ernest T. Stewart, is any- body's guess. ' Stewart's best example centers on 800-student Wofford College at Spartanburg, S.C. A Spartanburg industrialist and Wofford alumnus, Roger Milliken, noted that as a rule about 12 per cent of Wofford alumni' kicked in. on the annual fund -drive. He of- fered to contribute $1,000 for ev- ery additional percentage point. * * * WHEN THE CAMPAIGN dust settled, 74.4 per cent of Wofford alumni had made gifts-a high- er percentage than Dartmouth and Princeton, long-time leaders. Milliken wrote a $62,400 check. Labor unions are starting to give I