. - Sixty-Eighth Year .. EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN hen 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 express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. Y. NOVEMBER 19, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: RICHARD TAUB Equality of Opportunity A National Necessity "Oh, Boy, This Is Going To Be Tres Gay" N Lm s: ~ i -- * AT HILL AUDITORIUM: 'Jazz for Moderns' Occasionally Interesting RAIN, FOG and impending midsemesters were not enough to pre- vent a near sell-out at the Jazz Concert last night in Hill Audi- torium. The program was informal, with the Australian Jazz Quintet, Helen Merrill, the Miles Davis Quintet, Chico-Hamilton and the Gerry Mulligan Quartet performing in that order. Each group seemed to have a particular strong point which it emphasized, often to the point of boredom for the audience. The Australian Jazz Quartet, which opened the program, produced really fresh color with rather carefully conceived contrapuntal tex- tures. For this reviewer, this was the most expressive ensemble on the program. A slow, quiet number, with the instrumentation of flute, 4 HE "REAL" meaning of the Soviet sputniks will continue to be debated for years to come. Perhaps that meaning is not much great- er than that it has occasioned such a debate - that 'it has deflated a gigantic national ego and caused America, for perhaps the first time since it became a world power, to compare its institutions with those of another nation and, in many cases, find ours wanting. In some cases this national self-examination has proven fruitless: Soviet educational ad- vances have been frequently written off as having been achieved through means incon- sistent with our way of life, the implication be- ing that our way of life is so far superior that it should never be modified to attempt to match the Russian accomplishments. Others have said the real problem is that we have been wasting too much time in education on non- scientific (and therefore non-practical) sub- jects, or, as is suggested by the President's Oklahoma City speech, have been spending too much government money on non-military items. Such comments reveal very little under- standing of the nature of the Soviet accm- plishment and the responses from America which would be appropriate to it. NE DANGER lies in regarding the Soviet achievement as being entirely a scientific one. A comparison of Soviet and American sci- entific progress, even in the missile field, can- not be made through a comparison of the two nations' satellite programs. As the President was quick to point out after the launching of the first Sputnik, one reason for the American lag was that government planning prioritized satellites low, because of their low military potential, and target missiles high. But the psychological impact of the Sputniks suggests that the Soviet victory lay not so much in the area of surpassing the United States scienti- fically, although they undoubtedly have done so in this area, as in intelligently applying their scientific knowledge to the realities of the atomic stalemate, sacrificing, as they have often done before, military advantage for poli- tical victory. The current concern over the need for a greatly improved national scientific ef- fort Is Justified, although there is an equal need for the national perspective and sensi- tivity which would lead us to apply more intel- ligently our scientific and-material accomplish- ments. As George F. Kennan describes our sit- uation, "Ofir problem is no longer to prevent people from acquiring the ability to destroy us: it is too late for that. Our problem is to see that they do not have the will or the incentive to do it." While this is partly a problem for the physical scientists, it is far from being theirs alone, and any increased educational effort which emphasizes physical science to the detriment of the humanities and social sciences would not only be a serious detraction from an already undernourished American culture, but would be but 'another step in the direction of cultivating a race of men who know "how" but not "why," who abdicate to elusive "others" the responsibility for the uses 'of the power which their discoveries have given to man. ANOTHER danger lies in writing off the So- viet achievement as secured at too heavy a cost for the American people to pay without abandoning their way of life. Insofar as So- viet educational advances - the basis upon which the Sputniks were built - are being 'achieved at the expense of the necessities of life for Russian peasants and workers and of freedom for teachers and students, this is true. But is this entirely the case, or was the achievement based partly on the Soviets' great- er recognition that education is a necessity, not a luxury of national life? And, even if the price to the Soviet people was in the short- run high, in terms of consumer goods lost through channeling of resources to education, may not that investment itself pay dividends in greater industrial productivity? And might not a similar investment by the American people, who are already consuming so much, be achieved at a much smaller price than that paid by the Russians, a second automobile rather than a second loaf of black bread, a color television set rather-than an indoor toilet. It is true, as many have been too quick to point out, that the Russian systems of dicta- torship and public enterprise have permitted the heavy diversion of resources to education without the necessity of popular assent. But, along with the indispensable American systems ,of democracy and largely private enterprise, we Editorial Staff PETER ECKSTEIN. Editor JAMES ELSMAN, JR. VERNON NAHRGANG Editorial Director City Editor DONNA HiNSON.............Personnel Director TAMMY MORRISON .. ...... Magazine Editor EDWARD GERULDSEN .. Associate Editorial Director WILLIAM HANEY ....'................ Features Editor ROSE PERLBERG.............. .Activities Editor CAROL PRINS....... Associate Personnel Director JAMES BAAD ....,................. Sports Editor BRUCE BENNETT.........Associate Sports Editor ON NTT.YER ............ Associate Snorts Editor have acquired some rather dispensable tenden- cies to react toward the federal government as though it were still being run by George III, to regard even public primary and secondary schools as a concession to the Bolsheviks, to pinch every penny of public expeniture as though it detracted directly from the bread- and-water subsistence of the American tax- payer. If these notions are a part of the American way, then the kind of educational program this country needs is incompatible with it. But if it is not inconsistent with American freedom of choice for it to be exercised in such a way as to prepare the nation for the challenges it must face, challenges even more difficult than that of two metal projectiles and a dead dog circling the globe, then America can match the Soviet educational system with a better one of its own, better not because it is as rigid but because it is freer,, not because it has ome out of the daily bread of peasants but because it has come out, of the ample incomes of free and willing people. WHEN Eleanor Rosevelt spoke here recently, she said that America must try to do for its people under a free system some of the things Russia was able to do under compulsion, the most important of these being an approach to equality of opportunity. And it is important, she said, not only because it is the humanitar- ian thing to do, or even because America and Russia are being constantly compared by new- ly-freed peoples who seek equal opportunities -between countries and within them-but also because, as she put it, the most precious thing we have, in our current race with the Soviets and always, is "human material", and it has become "almost wicked" for so wealthy a coun- try to waste what it is most in need of. The point is that without imposing rigid re- strictions on the freedom of students and teachers, without establishing educational fac- tories under strict party supervision, without even sacrificing local control over educational policies, the United States can copy the most important feature of the Soviet educational system - full support fpr education at all lev- els and jealous guarding of every human re- source - and at much less cost, in terms of other benefits lost,, than can the Soviets. What we need primarily, is not greater emphasis within education, but greater support for edu- cation as a whole. Were we to match the Soviet example, we would establish a federal scholarship. program at all levels of education, recognizing that even primary and secondary education can be ex- pensive for some families, when it involves the loss of even a young child's earning power. We would subsidize teaching at all levels of educa- tion, especially in vital areas like physics where competent scholars can earn much greater sums practicing their specialty than teaching it. We would subsidize counselors in each large public school or school district in the country to examine carefully every actual or potential "dropout" to see whether the child was capable of benefiting from continued edu- cation and whether his parents couldafford to provide him with it; counseling and offering scholarships where these would help. We would keep in mind that the child and society are the losers if parental poverty or parsimony - or even youthful impatience - separate the child and his school. We would ask whether the ruthless men in the Kremlin - without a hint of humanitarianism or idealism - would stand by and allow the tenement child in Man- hattan's lower east side, the farm boy in the Tennessee hills, or the Negro youngster in Mis sissippi to be swallowed by their environments and lost in their potential usefulness to society. Unfortunately, such a program - and such an attitude - are as far from reality as the sputniks from the real moon. Our own pre- occupation with "private initiative," "local control," and even "rugged individualism" are still likely to regard as "collectivist" any effort by society to selfishly preserve and improve it- self by helping - seemingly selflessly - the in- dividuals who comprise it. But the least we can expect from the next session of Congress and the President is an extensive program of federal college scholar- ships and graduate fellowships in the areas of education and the physical and social sci- ences, federal subsidization of the incomes of teachers at all educational levels, and the sponsorship of projects to develop curricula more attuned to the needs of our children and our security, quite possibly with an earlier ap- proach to many subjects now deferred to high school and college. More complete programs will await the aban- donment of our national phobia against even the most practical of programs which give any hint of idealism. But those should not be lost sight of, because, as the Sputniks serve to il- lustrate, America finds itself in a situation' wherein equality of opportunity, once merely, an egalitarian ideal, has become a national necessity. --PETER ECKSTEIN Editor " .fit, r- Tr s NOR t r pM t WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Revolutionary Defense Plan By DREW PEARSON bassoon, marimba, bass and piano was particularly interesting. The bassoon and flute players also played saxophones and the ma- rimba player doubled on percus- sion for the final number. * * * HELEN MERtILL managed to overcome what seemed to be a very weak voice and limited mu- sical taste by singing very close to the microphone in a husky voice. Occasionally, she showed a real flair for the dramatic. Her glissandi and evidently in- tentional flatting cannot be ex- cused by her "style" of singing. These seem to be affectations, and only detract from the total ef- fect. Her accompaniment in the piano and 'bass was always clear and sometimes very imaginative. In direct contrast to Miss Mer- rill's intimate vocal, Miles Davis and his Quintet were loud and usually rather uncontrolled. The insistent crashing of a cymbal through an entire piece was par- ticularly annoying; especially, as was the case here, when the oth- er instruments were drowned out in the process. Davis' trumpet produced some unusual sounds at times, but he seemed to reach for many notes that he never was able to hit. . * I/ THE Chico-Hamilton Quintet (reduced to a trio by illness) played with real finesse in its two planned numbers, but sagged slightly as an ensemble in two improvised bits. Chico Hamilton demonstrated, however, a real tal- ent and a fine sense of humor in the last of these, with a long per- cussion solo, the basic materials of which might have been heard at almost any football game. His guitarist's 'interjection of a phrase from the Stars and Stripes For- ever was hilarious. Concluding the evening with some fairly innocuous counter- point for baritone and alto saxo- phone were Gerry Mulligan and his quartet. George Shearing's absence was a real disappointment. He might have sparked an otherwise only occasionally interesting evening. -Wayne Slawson DAILY OFFEICIAL BULLETIN AT THE MICHIGAN: 'Jailhouse' Shook Up TME LATEST Elvis Presley movie, "Jailhouse Rock" is not even as good as "Love Me Tender." We might also say that cancer is not as good as leprosy, and that "Kiss Me Deadly" is not as good as I, the Jury." An Elvis flick should at least be funny, but "Jailhouse Rock" can't even boast that. It is dull. It drags along, plodding through its plot (?), compelling the audience to sleep. It's so dull that I had to buy an extra box of Jujyfruits to stay awake. That way, I keep so busy picking my teeth that it's im- possible to snooze. Even Elvis doesn't seem to have his heart (or other portions of his anatomy) in this one. Occasionally, he will slam about and grunt; re- volving and rolling in the style that made him infamous. But that stuff is at a minimum, and we don't know whether that's to the good or not. Perhaps the advertisements are trying to tell us something by advertising "Elvis in his First Dramatic Singing Role!" But then, one wonders what he was supposed to be doing in those last two movies. 4, * IF YOU GET a glimpse at the advance plans John Foster Dulles has for the NATO meeting in Paris, you can readily understand why he wants Adlai Stevenson to stand by his side to give a helping hand. Dulles will need all the sup- port he can get from Stevenson and the Democrats, since he isn't likely to get much from Old Guard Republicans. For he has worked out the most revolutionary plan of Free World defense ever contemplated in the history of individual nations. So far it's tentative and subject to change. It depends in part on Stevenson's reaction. But what Dulles wants to sell is such a com- plete coordination of West Euro-, pean defense that France might give up her Navy to depend on the British and American Navies, while England might give up long-range bombers to depend on American bombers. * * * HERE ARE the outlines of the tentative work plan for Western Free World defense: 1) A pool of Western scientific resources, not only of scientists, but of laboratories and equipment. 2) A joint training program, whereby the best science students would study at any university, whether British, American or Ger- man. Thus an Italian student might go to Germany, a Greek student to the United States. There would be an international pool of scientific training. 3) A military pool, as outlined above, whereby expensive land armies are curtailed in favor of pushbutton warfare. 4) Finally, the United States and England would build up an arsenal of nuclear weapons and guided missiles in Europe. This involves the most revolu- tionary step of all. For what Dulles and Eisenhower will have to sell the smaller nations of Europe is that the Anglo-Saxon nations re- serve the power to decide when Europe will go to war or when it won't. It will be their decision as to when this stockpile shall be used. Eisenhower and Macmillan did not want to permit Belgium, Greece, Denmark et al to dip into the atomic stockpile when they may be worried about war; only if England and the United States are ready to go-to war. Selling this will not be easy. In order to sell it, Dulles proposes a solemn pledge that the United States will come to the aid of any free European nation if attacked; that we will go all-out to protect it with every weapon in the ar- senal-even if this involves retali- atory bombardment of American cities. This is the trump card Dulles proposes to play, and this is where Adlai Stevenson comes in, His job will be to keep the Democrats in line. * * * IF YOU STUDY the diplomacy of John Foster Dulles, you come to the inescapable conclusion that his chief failures have resulted not from lack of brain, but lack of courage. Today he has two great fears: one is Russia; the other is the Congress of the United States. And much as the Administration is worried about Russia, much as it fears their ICBM and new scien- tific victories, even more it seems to fear Congress. In the past, Dulles and Eisen- hower could always fall back on the Democrats for support. They knew they could expect little from such pillars of Republicanism as Sens. John Bricker of Ohio, Styles 'Bridges of New Hampshire, Bill Jenner of Indiana, or, in many cases, Bill Knowland of California. These stalwart GOPers have been against almost every plank in the Eisenhower-Dulles foreign af- fairs platform, because basically Eisenhower-Dulles are following New Deal foreign affairs policies. So Dulles knew he could fall back on the Democrats. Today, however, he can't. The Democrats are irked, sore, and re- bellious. They are all too aware of the fact that the Republican Na- tional Committee is continuing to mail out reams of publicity ac- cusing them of getting the nation into two world wars; still branding them as guilty of 20 years of trea- son. Democrats also see the Eisen- hower missile-satellite setback as their political victory. And they know that GOP chairman Meade Alcorn has warned the White House that public-opinion polls show Sputnik means political dis- aster for the Republicans. Sputnik, Alcorn has reported, is the basic reason for fantastic Democratic majorities in New Jersey and New York. The Democrats know this, and John Foster Dulles knows that they know it. That's why he is clutching at the coattails of the once-scorned egghead, Adlai Stev- enson. * * * CLOSE FRIENDS of Adlai Stev- enson are firmly convinced he will never run again for President, but that he does cherish the ambition to become Secretary of State in the next administration - which he hopes and believes will be Demo- cratic. Stevenson's greatest interest has always been foreign affairs. He worked on British-American prob- lems in London during part of the war, was later the first to propose, a republic rather than a kingdom for Italy; attended the San Fran- cisco conference in 1945 which hammered out the foundation for- mat of the United Nations. (Copyright 1957 by Bell Syndicate Inc.) 'W " THE CULTURE BIT:f The Need for a Theatre By DAVID NEW MAN The Daily Official Bunetin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which the Michigan Dailyaassumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. TUESDAY, NOVEMBEIR 19, 1957 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 54 General Notices President and Mrs. Hatcher will hold open house for students at their home Wed., Nov. 20 from 4:00 to 6:00 p.m. Conference on Higher Education, Nov. 19-20. Theme of the conference: "The Community College and Its Relations With Four-Year Institutions." Sessions Tues., Nov. 19 in the Rackham Amphi- theater at 2:00 p.m. and in the Michi- gan Union at 7:45 p.m.; Wed., Nov. 20 in the Raekham Amphitheater at 9:00 a.m. Square Dance, Tues., Nov. 19, Lane Hall at 7:30 p.m. Caller Grey Austin. Applications for Engineering Research Institute Fellowships to be awards for the spring semester, 1957-58, are now being accepted in the office of the Gmaduate School. The stipend is $1,175 per semester. Application forms are, available from the Graduate School. Only applicants who have been em- ployed by the Institute for at least one year on at least a half-time basis are eligible. Applications and supporting material are due in the office of the Graduate School not later than 4:00 p.m., Tues., Jan. 7, 1958. Applications for F ello ws h ip s and scholarships in theFGraduate School for 1958-59 are now available. Applications for renewal should also be filed at this time. Competition closes Feb. 1, 1958. Please note that this deadline is earli- er than in previous years. Applications and information may be obtained in the Graduate School Offices, Rackham Building. Only students who intend to enroll in the Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies for 1958-59 may ap- ply. LcueLectures Lecture on Soviet Union and East Europe.rauspices of the Committee for the Program in Russian Studies. "American Scientists visit the Soviet, Union." George Y. Rainich, professor emeritus of mathematics, chairman; Henry J. Gomberg, professor of nuclear and electrical engineering, and assistant director, Michigan Memorial-Phoenix Project; Arthur J. Lohwater, associate THE PLOT of "Jailhouse Rock" might well have been a writing assignment for students in Ding- Dong School. At the opening, Elvis is in a bar and sees a lady (hah!) get insulted. His wrath mounts and he slashes out at the insulter, finally killing him with bare fists. Pretty cool stuff. So Elvis goes to jail where, in the picture's high point, he gets his hair cut. His cellmate is a whiny hillbilly singer who fore- sees a great future for the Pelvis. "Aw," says the unbelieving hero, "I never heard of any body payin' money to hear guitar playin'." In one of the most implausible events since the birth of Fats Domino, a network coast-to-coast television show emanates from the penitentiary. Sure, happens all the time. In this little sing at Sing- Sing Elvis appears, is seen by the world, and skyrockets to success upon his release. It's very poignant stuff. ON HIS WAY UP, he acquires a beautiful girl manager, whose ,father is a professor at Berkeley. jElvis' boorish ways and swelled head bother her, but she loves his cool style. She invites him to a cocktail party at her papa's, and there he insults all the faculty members. Then there occurs this classic bit of dialogue: Girl: (annoyed) "But they were just trying to draw you into the conversation." Elvis: "Aw, they can shove their conversation." And so it goes, reel after reel, with the hero getting more and more money and less and less dec- orum. Finally, his old cellmate re- appears to punch him in the larynx. For five happy minutes there is the possibility that he may never sing again! But as luck would have it, he recovers and learns manners. At the end he has achieved his great goal-he is not a slob anymore. Gosh, it's a touching scene. The songs are all based on the same three chords, done in the usual way, and the Jailhouse Rock num- ber is, at least, well staged. Poor Elvis. He just doesn't seem happy in Hollywood. Maybe it's all above his head. -David Newman LETTERS to the EDITOR Allegore . To the Editor: There is a Daily reporter named Kraft. (Perhaps the poor man's daft.) He delights in making an allegore. (The editors cry for more.) Now the allegore is a beast of hideous mien. Useful for subtly venting one's spleen. x FOUR YEARS AGO on this cam- pus, there was an ambitious outfit called The Student Players. Independent of any Speech Dept. connection, the group was com- posed of people interested in acting good plays. Their first play was to be Chris- topher Fry's "The Lady's Not for Burning" and they were well along in rehearsals. Then, quite suddenly, they disbanded. The reason-they d6uldn't get a stage. For that one reason, the Student Players disappeared. For that same reason many another budding theatre project has been stopped in the first planning stage. It strikes us as more than incongruous that such a community as Ann Arbor, with all its potential talent and cultural activity, has only one decent, albeit small, theatre. Bless- ed be the Lydia Mendelssohn, but Square Garden. Speech Depart- ment plays, Gilbert and Sullivan, Ann Arbor Civic Theatre, Drama Festival, Soph Show, J.G.P., Opera. even the Spanish plub play and the French Club production-all use the Lydia, when and if they can get it. The Lydia is a pretty nice house, but its small seating capacity has lost many a good show its profits. People get turned away at the box-office fairly regularly. The backstage facilities are too limited for sets to be built or stored there, although the technical equipment, including the cyclorama, is excel- lent. We wonder why, when the Uni- versity is building everything from libraries to bike - racks, we must make do with one little theatre? Occasionally, groups will try al ,m n,,,+,ill Aw A, mnr , mo nr. Union Opera, manages to get the Michigan Theatre. But that takes an assurety of Very Big box-office power, which MUSKET has, and Very Big mon- ey, which MUSKET also has. We doubt whether the Butterfield chain could be easily persuaded to turn its theatre over to every group that wanted it for a weekend. We visited Oberlin College in Ohio, a decidedly small school, a few years back. The Oberlin cam- pus has a theatre that makes the Lydia look like a broom closet. It is big, modern and well-suited to production needs. Its backstage area is bigger than its audience area, so that sets can be built and kept there. Here, groups squeeze into the Lane Hall attic, the SAB basement and other impossible places to con- struct their sets. The Oberlin house h a 1Valr uknnr.pheitrat nit- mwe