You~ I/ *,. Ittff Sixty-Eighth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN one Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS il Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone No 2-3241 printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. I 1 .. , M awr.: A' ' .Y - _ .p Fysb6 i4fc Student U.S. with. Britain 26, 1957 * NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN WEICHER (EDITOR'S NOTE: Robert H. Whealey is a graduate student in history the University. He spent a year in Germany (1955) with the United States An and, after discharge, a year at Oxford University as a student. Following is first article of a two-part series.) By ROBERT A. WHEALEY FOUND the British the same as the Pennsylvanians, Germans, I warans, Michiganders or any other people I've had the chanc observe. In traveling, one meets the dumb and the clever, the and the poor, the right wingers and the left. Thus, generalizations anyone else makes about "national character" should be handled extreme care, if not dismissed altogether. I was neither anxious to get back to America nor anxious to r Troops Guard the Schools, And the World Watches C RONT PAGE of Tuesday's Daily eared a small story, easily over- the more sensational reports of olence, pinpointing an important events at Little Rock. Nigeria, Africa, the story told of onal Student Conference's strong- nouncement of racial segregation I States. The action preceded the ,t Little Rock but grew from simi- ensationgd incidents around the -. artening to consider what people the world are thinking and will think when they hear of these afe to say that the vast majority ates citizens are repelled at huge ing themg that soldiers are neces- nen equal standing under law. But imated how greatly this reaction plied in other countries,, particu- i Africa, the Middle East and the fese are lands where Communists d up a newspaper to "prove" what to "all" of a United States minor- ose skins happen to be a different be majority. these men tell their listeners the s at one school in one city in one' ed of the unwise judgement of a 1 an apparent lack of respect for r is obvious. Nor will the foreigner' resident Dwight Eisenhower said s to the nation Tuesday, of the iunities in our Southern states instituted public school plans for . . the enrollment and attendance of school children of all races ..." The President spoke of these efforts as hav- ing "demonstrated to the world that we are a nation in which laws, not men, are supreme." But it would be silly to believe that these efforts; numerous and successful as they may be, have any real meaning to the illiterate or semi-literate foreigner when placed next to reports of school bombings and screaming mobs of whites kicking Negroes and crying for the Lord to save them from the plague of dark- skinned people. It is difficult even to expect the educated in' foreign lands, such as the youths at the Inter- national Student Conference, who understand the true nature of the problem in this country and know of the gains made, not to be some- what impatient with that segment of our populace that finds violence necessary to achieve its ends. N THAT President Eisenhower's message seemed more directed to the world than to Little Rock in an effort to minimize adverse effects in other nations, it is commendable. But we must challenge his statement that a return to normal in Little Rock will remove "a blot upon the fair name and high honor of our nation in the world ..." People in this country may be coon to forgive and forget the tragic incidents in Little Rock. But in other lands there will be friends of the Soviets who will not let the people forget; in this country there will be other incidents to reinforce the Communists; and the. shining image of the United States as a place where all men are equal in the eyes of the law will become more and more tarnished. -DAVID TARR 4113~ joh 11 L_ "" Vp ! i5n a _ P ('? ,. , -f ' , , WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: MediterraneanWatchdogs By DREW PEARSON TODAY AND TOMORROW: The Grace of umity By WALTER LIi'PMANN, AT WITH Little Rock, Cyprus, Algeria, Kashmir, and so forth, the work of the 16n propagandist is not at present a y one. It is hard to keep bright and con- ng the image of America as the leader of ree nations and the liberator of the cap- For we are a long way short of having ed to practice all that we preach. Yet we ;h incessantly .about justiee and freedom, nd order. home, there is the. stark fact that there among us a caste system based on the' o a man's skin: It mocks us and haunts aenever we become eloquent and indignant e United Nations. It mocks us and haunts ien we sprinkle our speeches and writings advice ahd warnings and exhortations.. e is no use fooling ourselves. The caste nm in this country, particularly when as± ttle Rock it is maintained by troops, is an aous, indeed an almost insuperable, ob- e to our leadership in the cause of freedom human equality. .,OAD, WE find ourselves caught in a ries of dilemmas-France and the Arabs, 1 and the Arabs, Pakistan and India- e, we are damned if we choose and damned shrink from choosing, and where neither native is so noble and so fine as we like osition to be. own view is that much of this, though not 'hole of it, is so to speak in the nature of s, and beyond our control. It is one of the of life that no country, which is as power- id as rich as is the United States, can ex- not to be feared, distrusted, envied and y disliked. But I think also that all this ich worse than it needs to be. It is more ging than it would be if those who repre- us, particularly the President and the tary of State; displayed more of the wis- that should direct, and of the grace that d sweeten, the possession of great power ;rent wealth. ere exists a remedy, though not a cure, ae excess of our unpopularity and for the 'mal dislike that exists abroad for Mr. s. The remedy is a strong and, for those need it, a bitter medicine. It calls for a ge in the moral posture which the Presi- and Secretary Dulles 'habitually adopt they address mankind. Editorial Staff PETER ECKSTEIN. Editor IES ELSMAN, JR. VERNON NAHRGANG ditorial Director City Editor A HANSON.......,.........Personnel Director 1Y MORRISON..............Magazine Editor RD GERULDSEN ...Associate Editorial Director AM HAN Y .................Features Editor PERLBERG ........ ....Activities Editor. L PRINS..........Associate Personnel Director 3 BAAD. .... .. Sports Editor E BENNETT.......... Associate Sports Editor HILLYER ........,..Associate Sports Editor LES CURTISS .....,...... Chief Photographer Business Staff , It is a change which would require on their part a humility, that is now lacking, about our moral grandeur, and a new candor. For our faults and our sins seem all the bigger when, they are seen by the world against the exces- sively self-righteous picture that is our official version of ourselves. IN. THEIR speeches and press conferences, the President and the Secretary are too noble about our ideals, and never humble at all about our human, our very human, failures and faults. This alienates, indeed enrages, those who are by national interest our friends and allies, at least the prouder ones among them, who do not in the hope of favors to come, lick our boots. , For with great power, which is always sus- pect, there should go a decent humility and there should be no pretense, no intimation, no implied assumption, not a whisper or a nod that we are not only stronger and richer than our neighbors but quite a bit better. The President himself is not an arrogant or a proud man. But he is a naive man in that he believes sincerely that the enunciation of moral ideals will somehow bring about the realization of those ideals. Ngot long ago he" came very near to saying that It was his mission to express the aspirations of this country, leaving it to Mr. 'Dulles to adjust those aspirations to the reali- ties. This is a novel conception of what it means to be the head of a government. The net prac- tical effect has been to make the world think that the President preaches one thing and that Mr. Dulles does something else. MR. DULLES is in action a tough and real- istic operator in the realm of expediency. But in speech he is a moralizer, the invariable and confident exponent of all that is righteous. His great handicap, which might be removed by a searching of soul, is that he lays down the moral law without humor and humility, as one of the righteous speaking down to the unrighteous. This lack of the grace of humility does not make for affection or understanding, or even for charity, as when in Little Rock, we, like other nations, fall far short of our professed ideals. It makes, rather, for a kind of unholy satisfaction, human nature being what it is, that we who have not been humble, have been humiliated, and that we who have held our heads too stiffly and too high, have stumbled and fallen on our faces. New Books at the Library Burgess, Jackson - Pillar of Cloud; N.Y., Putnam, 1957. Castelot, Andre --Queen of France ... Marie Antoinette; N.Y., Harper, 1957. Chiang Kai-shek - Soviet Russia in China; N.Y., Farrar, Straus and Cudahy, 1957. Cook, J. Gordan-The Fight for Food; N. Y., Dial, 1957. ABOARD the USS Salem, flag- ship Sixth Fleet-There was a day, shortly after the first Bikini bomb test, when the strategists figured that navies were outdated and that Uncle Sam's fleet would sail the seven seas no more., Today, just the opposite is true. With Moscow well, ahead of the British as the second navy in the world, and with a submarine fleet far bigger than ours, the U.S. Navy has become more important than ever. Flying ever the Sixth Fleet, fan- nec out in the blue waters of the, Mediterranean, watching both, fighters and bombers take off from the deck of the Franklin Roose- velt every few minutes in practice maneuvers toward satellite coun- tries, you get a sense of security and can understand why our Med- iterranean allies appreciate its presence. VARIOUS GREEK, Turkish and Israeli officials expressed to me their satisfaction over the Sixth Fleet. 'The Governor of Rhodes even remarked that two visits per year by part of the fleet balanced the island's economy. In Athens, I noted that the arrival of seven American ships was greeted en- thusiastically. To see how the fleet really oper- ates, however, I flew first aboard the carrier Roosevelt, then the flagship USS Salem, 21,000-ton cruiser which juts up out of the Mediterranean like a traveling Rock of Gibraltar. The fleet's personnel werebusy preparing for a unique and highly important NATO maneuver on the Turkish coast-namely, -the Mar- ine landing by both helicopter and small boat. For this maneuver, NATO com- manders picked Saros Bay, a thin finger of water in European Tur- key just a few miles from Greece. This is one of the most strategic spots in the world. Directly across to the south - the Dardanelles, whose beaches still bear the bleached bones of British ships, remnants of Churchill's and Lord Kitchener's tragic Gallipoli land- ing where thousands of British troops lost their lives trying to storm Turkey in World War I. A few miles away to the north, Alexander the Great marched his legions to conquer the Pesians. Further-south, the Crusaders from France and England stormed Mos- lem shores in a 100-year effort to take the holy places of Christ away from the infidels. e* . * THIS IS the crossroads of East .and West. It is the crossroads which Russia must take to dominate the Medi- terannean, which the czars coveted for 100 years and which present rulers of the Kremlin -not only covet, but seem determined 'to dominate. Already the Soviet has three potential submarine bases - Al- bania, Egypt, and Syria-and the fleet recently sighted a Russian cruiser-destroyer force en route from Albania to Syria. When hailed by the Salem, the Russian ships didn't return the courtesy of Spirit TT'S GOOD to see that our armed forces have lost none of the spirit of competition. The Navy is engaging in a sporting race to see whether it can put its ships in mottballs faster than the ship- builders can build them. --Cleveland Plain Dealer the sea. Three Russian subs, at- tached to the Egyptian fleet, are one more than the subs in the Sixth Fleet. I Further north, in the Black Sea, Russia has three times the naval strength of the Sixth Fleet. Just why she keeps it bottled in the Black Sea remains a mystery. Janes "Fighting Ship's" also lists Russia as having 20 15,000-ton. cruisers of the Swerdlov class, all newer than the Salem, plus seven heavy cruisers, plus excellent new destroyers and over 500 submar- ines, mostly new. For the first time since the war, Russian ships have been venturing from the Baltic and Black Seas and cruising in the Mediterranean and Atlantic. In brief, the Russian' Navy is now breaking out of its' cocoon. IN SAROS BAY, therefore, a strategic neck of old Europe not, far from the Russian Black Sea fleet, 8,000 Marines and 75 United Stat9s vessels will stage the first "--full helicopter amphibious landing ever seen in Eurore. At Tarawa in World'War II, 200 Marine were lost in rough seas., Heavy shelling by Japanese shore batteries at Iwo Jima caused more marines to be lost in a desperate hand-to-hand struggle for the beachhead. But in this operation, helicop- ters will fly 1,000 Marines, eight men pr helicopter, over the heads of the enemy to attack from the rear, while other Maines attack from landing boats. Turkish Army support will be given, from land. The maneuver will be warced by NATO allies, and unofficially, but probably with greater curiosity, by Russians from a distance of the, Black Sea. (Copyright 1957 by Bell Syndicate Inc.) remained in England. There are country. Some of the things I liked about Britain were: (1) The government operates BBC. There are three classes of programs (Light, Home Service and The Third Programme) for people with varying intellectual interests. Thus the Third Pro- gramme, for the high-brows, will broadcast university lectures on the Hittites or Plekhanov. In the United States, because the advertisers want to sell more soap and the politicians want more offices, we have all Light Pro- grammes pitched 'to a heterogen- eous audience. The quality of U. S. radio, despite its great variety of stations, is thus mediocre. (2) I also'liked the quality of the British press. Actually, there are only two daily papers worth reading in either country: The New York Times and the Christian Science Monitor (even if you are not a Christian nor a scientist) in the United States; The London Daily Times and the Manchester Guardian, in England This ex- cludes The Michigan Daily, which is best for local coverage. The two American papers are better for detailed quantity re- porting, but the two British papers are better written and . more ac- curate. This condusion of mine depends, howeveit, upon the sub- ject to some extent. American re- porters do a better job on Latin America and Japan. TheBritish are better on /India and Africa. (The Times supports Pakistan; the Guardian, India). But in general, the British papers and weekly newspaper-magazines are better in my opinion. The Times Literary Supplement, the New Statesman, The Economist, and the Observer score over the Nation, New Republic, Atlantic, Harpers or the Saturday Review of Literature. Whet I disliked most hi England were the heating arrangements, lack of business efficiency, rain, some of the foods and various other minor irritations. I have two pet peeves. One was to go into a store, buy three items .and be handed them loose. The British can't afford paper bags. My second major gripe was the practically-curfew hours kept by Bitish establishments. Drug stores close at 5 p.m. Last movie 7 p.m.; last bus 10:30 p.m.; street lights out at midnight. This was a city of over 100,000 half-way between London and Birmingham, the two largest cities in England, roTi hillbilly country. As a country to. live in permanently, I found it imr.osible. I was born on the wrong side of the tracks. Wages are low, prces are relatively high and opportunity limited. (Tomorrow: comparing American and British educational systems.) INTERPRETING: Global Judg9emen t DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which thes Michigan Daily assumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 .m. the day precding publication. Notices forSunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1957 VOL. LXIlI, NO. 8 General Notices Regents' Meeting: Fri., Oct. 18.. Coni munications for consideration at thi meeting must be in the President' hands not later than Oct. 9. Marshall Scholarships at British Uni versities have been announced for 1958 59. Twelve awards ae offered ever year to American graduates, men an women under the ag of 28 The chol arships are tenable for two years an 'each has an annual value of 55 pounds, with an extra 200 pounds fe married men. The deadline for filn applications is Oct. 31. More informa tion may be obtained from the Offic of the Graduate School. THE'FORD FOUNDATION is offer ing fellowships for the academic yea 1958-59 for study and research on fox eign areas and foreign affairs. Fellow ships are available to college seniors graduate students, young faculty mein bers, and interested persons .w hay already received their doctorate.A plicants should be under 40 years c age. Persons in the fields of law, so cial scienco, humanities, and Inter nationalrelations are invited to ap ply. Work should pertain t Afric Asia, the Near East, the Soviet Uior or Eastern Europe. Study and researc: may be undertaken, in theUnt States or abroad beginning as early the summer of 1958. Applications must be filed by Noi 1, 1957. Details about the fellowship may be obtained in the Offices of t Graduate School. For applicalon write to the Ford Foundation,44 r Madison Avenue, New York 22, Ne York. The fllowing student sponsored o cial events are approved for the corn ing week-end. Social chairmen are re minded that requests for approval fo social evets are due inthe Office of Student Affairs not aer than 12:0 noon on the Tuesday prior to th event. Sept. 27: Kelsey, Mosher. Sept. 28: Allen Rumsey, Alpha Delt0 Phi, Alpha Kappa Alpha, Alpha Sigmn Phi, Alpha Tau Omega, Chi Phi, Delt Chi, Delta Sigma Delta, Delta Tau Del ta, Delta Theta Phi, F. F. Fratornitl Fletcher Hal, Gomberg, Graduate at dent Council, Haven-Taylor, Huber In ternational, Students Association, Kap pa Sigma, Lambda Chi Alpha, Nu Si ma, Nu~, Phi Epsilon P, Phi Gamin Delta, PhiDelta Phi, Phi KappamT Phi Kappa Sigma, Phi Rho Sigma;. Pi Upsilon, Reeves, Scott House, Signi Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Alpha Mu, Sigi Phi, Strauss, Taylor, Theta gi, Va: Tyne. sept. 29: Phi Delta Ph. Concerts Carillon Recital by Sidney Giles, Aa sistant University Carillonneur, 7:1 p.m. this evening. Three' *compos tions by Giles: Prelude No. 1, Minus and Trio, and Ganutte; Gondoliera, ' B. J. Franssen;..Suite for Carillon b Staf Nees; three compositions arrange for the carillon by Sidney Giles: Son of India, Home to our Mountains, an Largo, from Dvorak's New orld Sy phony. Academic Notices Doctoral Candidates who expec t receive degrees in Feb, 1957, must ha at least three bound .copies of thel dissertations in the office of the GraI uate School by Fri., Dec. 13 The reo of .the doctoral committee on the fin*l oral examination must be filed wit the Recorder of the Graduate Schoc together with two copies of the thesli which is ready In all respets for pub lication, not later than Mon., Jan. 1; History Make-up Examinations Wi be held Sat., Oct. 5, 9-12 a.m. in Row 429, Mason Hall. Please consult yot instructor and then. sign the listi the History Office, 301 Haven Hall, Preliminary Ph.D Examination1 i Economics: Theory examinations wi be given on Thurs and Fri., Oct. ,3 and Nov. 1. Examinations in othi subjects will be given beginnIng o Mon., Nov. 4. Each student planning't take these examinations should leai with the "secretary of the Department of Economics not later than Oct. 17 his name, the three fields in which h4 desires to be examined, and his field o specialization. The Extension Service announces h following classes to be held in An Arbor beginning Thurs., Sept. 26: Introduction to Mathematical Con. cepts. 7:30 p.m. (Mathematics la, tw hours of undergraduate 'credit) 171 School of Business Administration. Si teen weeks. $27.00. Professor Gail. 1 Young, Jr., instructor. Oil Painting, Beginning, Intermediat and Advanced. 7:30 p.m. 501 Archite< ture Bldg. Sixteen weeks. $27.00. Prc fessor Frede Vidar,sInstructor. Fundamentals -of Speaking, 7:30 p.m good and bad points about BUSINESS DEALS, EMPLOYEES: Hoffa Talks About Money, Honesty (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the last in a series of 'articles on Teamster vice-president James Hoffa. Today's installment completes an interview begun yesterday.) By SAUL PETT Associated Press Writer, LIKE SOME 40 other Teamster officers and business agents in Detroit, James Hoffa drives a big black Cadillac provided by the Union. Why a Cadillac? Because, he has said, they're economical on gas and have a good resale value. But outside the Cadillac, Hoffa Is known to live simply. He wears $50 suits. He lives with his wife, whom he met on a picket line, and their two children in a small, six- room house that cost $6,800 in 1938. His union salary is $21,000, but people who know him say Hoffa lives like a man earning half that. - * Q. IT LOOHkS like you live well within your salary. Why then the big outside investments? A. A man with a family would be a fool not to prepare for their future security. Especially if he's in an elective position, where he could run into an occupational thing to interfere with your union work. And the good contracts I've gotten for my members are the best answer to that'.. Loans? Look, if I know a man 20 years and I wanted to borrow some money, who else would I go to? I go to the guys I know re- gardless of what their position is, Q. If 'John Foster Dulles, as a lawyer represented oil people with interests in Arabia, and, as Secre- tary of State, negotiated treaties with the Arabs, wouldn't you see a conflict of interest in that? A. It's a mtter of opinion. Anybody who's honest is subject to criticism, Die you ever notice that the dishonest ones are less subject to criticism?' They got to get caught first . . . Look, I bor- rowed money. But those loans weren't made under a rug, there was no attempt to hide them . . It's all a question of whether you're honest or dishonest. Q. DON'T YOU think you put your union in an awkward public position, to say the least, by hiring men with known police records? A. Where? Who? There's a guy ; ~ mm..,.,..I- -,-1 . -- - -_ a Florida murder, came to Min- neapolis and was hired as a Team- ster organizer. Later, he was con- victed of taking a bribe from an employer. A. What about him? I didn't hire him originally. But pending his trial I and a committee-all right, I'll take the responsibility' for that-recommended that he stay in the job until his trial was over. When he was found guilty, he was immediately removed. Q. What about your dealings with Johnny Dio? Dio's latest sen- tence was two years for conspiracy and bribery. He also fa-- -trials on charges of income-tax evasion, ex- tortion and conspiracy to obstruct justice in the acid-blinding of Vic- tor Riesel, labor columnist. *. * * A. TELL ME THIS. How do you get the cabs out of the UAW and ;nto the Teamsters if Dio has the cabs? You got to deal with them to the point where it's to the union's advantage. Q. I un, rstand you gave a lecture at Harvard last year on the trucking industry. Were you ner- vous? A: 'Nn ,Tf: w',va nn 'rfRrpnthan By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst F YOV' ARE talking with a man from Asia, Africa or parts of Latin America, you will sooner or. later get around to the topic of racial relations in the United States. Hindus who are still trying to slough off the effects of a most rigid caste system are no more understanding than the others. The United States was a founder of the United Nations, whose char- ter proclaims this spirit "without regard for race, sex, language and religion." If this motive is so strong in American history, ask the peoples of color why is there such trouble over the Negro. Nearly all of them approach the question from the same angle, ex- ploitation. * * * MANY OF THEM bring it up deliberately in discussing why a large part of the world gives Com- munists at least a hearing. For the Communists make much of this tag of exploitation. But most foreign- ers don't even know they have. swallowed the Communist line.. Explanations about 'the special factors which enter into relations between the white and black races in the United States make little or no impression. To them, Amer- ica presents herself before the world as the land of economic and