Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD 1N CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 I Can Do It For You Wholesale" hen Opinions Are Fre, Trutb WiD Prevai1 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. CINEMA GUILD: Alastair and Margaret, 'Highly Amusing' BY ALL MEANS see "The Happiest Days of Our Lives." even if it means leaving the children with Clifton Webb, or studying all weekend. It's a riot. Not to be confused with "Best Years of Our Lives," this film deals with more obscure problems. Specifically, problems of Socializa- tion, creeping or otherwise, brought about by the ill-fated administra- tion of C. Atlee, in England. Alastair Sim, an incredibly remarkable Headmaster of Nutbourne school for boys, and his equally remarkable staff of stuffy young men, is dismayed to find that Ministry oversight has moved a gifls school, THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: MARY ANN THOMAS Moscow Negotiations Important To U.S. Far Eastern Policy THE NAMING of Foreign Minister Mamoru Shigemitsu of Japan to be chief negotiator in the Russo-Japanese talks expected to reopen within the next two weeks indicates that Japanese government is being heavily pressed to make a settlement. Coupled with the fact that the talks have been transferred from neutral ground in Lon- don to the capital of one of the participants, Moscow, it seems apparent that the Japanese government has come to believe that it can afford little more delay in renewing relations with the U.S.S.R. Japan and Russia are still technically in state of war resulting from Russia's entry into World War II against Japan in the dying days of the conflict. Negotiations were begun last March in an attempt to return relations to normal diplomatic status but were broken off after' several months of unsuccessful talks, the Russians showing no willingness to meet Japan's terms even halfway. Speculation from Tokyo now advises that Japan may agree to a quick settlement-the reopening of diplomatic channels and the exchange of ainbassadors-rather than hold out for the solution of all outstanding problems prior to the revival of diplomatic relations, as she had earlier, demanded. MART OF the pressure of Premier Ichiro Hatoyama's government comes from the opposition Socialist Party's gains in the upper house of the plet, Japan's parliament. The Socialists, in a'ddition to calling for renewed relations with Communist China, have made a settlement with Russia a priority point in their program. This question has been one of much conten- tion in Japan, mostly of the "get something done" variety. The Socialists have used the issue to flail at the incumbent Conservatives while the Hatoyama government has been seeking a solution in order to strengthen its domestic political position. The renewal of Russo-Japanese diplomatic relations and the manner in which the differ- ences between them are subsequently resolved will have an important bearing on the course of the Cold War in Asia. Russia has the means-- such as the estimated 10,000 Japanese prison- ers of war believed to be still captive in Si- beria-and admission to the United Nations to coerce the Japanese into coming to terms which would be most disadvantageous to both Japan and the West. The Russians will undoubtedly exert every effort to woo Japan away from her alignment with the 'West. THOUGH IT IS highly doubtful that 'Japan would move into the Soviet orbit, should the Russians succeed Japan would drift away from the American-led group of nations into the middle ground, into the camp of the so-called "neutrals." Based as it is in Japan, American foreign policy in the Far East would receive a serious setback.' The negotiations in Moscow will be watched with some anxiety here, in the hope that Japan can win for herself an honorable settle- ment which will contribute to her efforts to rebuild a nation devastated by the Second World War and to remain a diplomatic ally of the United States. -RICHARD HALLORAN Foy POSSISO LIM170 R/ c Y 4 Tos WA-0AWiTO1.I PAS . WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND -* Utilities and Hell's Canyon By DREW PEARSON Keeping Michigan Cosmopolitan MANY STATE-SUPPORTED universities are curtailing expansion by limiting their out- state enrollments. As the college population surges forward, it has become increasingly difficult for universi- ties to get proportionately increased state funds for out-of-state students. Taxpayers are reluct-. ant to support the education of non-residents, and legislatures have bended to their pressure. Here in Michigan, both the University and the state legislature deserve high praise for their refusal to follow the trend. Estimates indicate the University will continue to enroll one-third of its students from out-of-state, the highest of any state-supported university. The basic rationale for limiting out-of-state students has been that a state-supported insti- tution is first obligated to the taxpayers. With this we have no quarrel. But the obligation is qualitative as well as quantitative; it entails giving students the best possible education as well as giving an education to the greatest number. A DIVERSIFIED student body increases edu- cational opportunity. The University's cos- mopolitan air is due in part, at least, to its large out-of-state and foreign contingent. It would cheapen the University to cut this con- tingent. The State Legislature has in the past recog- nized the value of diversification. It is to be hoped they continue to do so in the face of increased pressure from Michigan residents to increase proportionately the number of resident students. --LEE MARKS IN the files of the Federal Power Commission are significant facts about certain lobbyists now en- gaged in one of the biggest legis- lative battles in Washington. The big private utilities are re- quired to publish the amounts they pay various people, and if you take the trouble to look at the 1955 annual report of the Idaho Power Company, on file at the FPC, page 56, you will find this notation: "VII. I(A) Guy Gordon- Washington, DC (B) Retainer (C) Basis of charges - time required and expenses incurred (D) Ac- count 796." Guy Gordon, of course, is the amiable ex-Senator from Oregon, Republican, defeated in 1954 by Senator Richard Neuberger during a campaign in which Neuberger accused Gordon of being friendly to the big private utilities and against federal development of Hell's Canyon on the Snake River. Gordon denied these charges at the time. However, if you look at account 796, page 81, of the Idaho Power Co. report you will find listed dis- bursements for legal services of $31,999.95, of which $18,348.75 went to Parry, Keenan, Robertson and Daly in Twin Falls, Idaho, and the balance to ex-Senator Gordon. * * * FURTHER SEARCH through power commission files shows that Senator Gordon also is being paid by Washington Water Power com- pany, another big utility which is fighting against Hell's Canyon, Both Idaho Power and Washing- ton Water Power were once part of the giant holding company, Electric Bond and Share, before FDR's holding company act broke them up. Gordon is paid a "retainer fee for 1955 of $10,000 in equal month- ly installments." Further search of the FPC rec- ords shows that Portland General Electric, which also has joined Idaho Power in financing the campaign against public develop- ment of Hell's Canyon, lists ex- Senator Gordon as getting a re- tainer of $10,000 per year, "com- mencing January 1955 as per oral agreement." January 1955 was immediately after Gordon stepped out of the Senate. In other words, he retired on Dec. 31, 1954, and immediately began picking up retainers from the private utilities to help them defeat public power at Hell's Can- yon. You don't hear much about it, but one of the most poteht and carefully greased lobbies in the nation's capital is now buttonhol- ing Senators to defeat Hell's Can- yon. They are making none of the mistakes of the natural gas lobby which stubbed its toe when it tried, in effect, to bribe Senator Case of South Dakota. Guy Gordon, who as an ex- Senator, has the prvilege of ming- ling with his former colleagues on the Senate floor, is part of this lobby. But he's only relatively a small part. Private utiltiies in the East, South, and Midwest have ganged up with utilities in the' Northwest to stop Hell's Canyon. Nor is the issue of federal de- velopment of Hell's Canyon solely involved. The basic backstage is- sue is whether the Democrats or the Republicans will control the Senate next year. For Hell's Canyon is a fighting term in the Northwest, and its defeat in ,July might well mean the defeat of two key Democratic Senators, Magnuson of Washing- ton and Morse of Oregon in No- vember. These two votes would mean the Democrats would lose control of the Senate next year. REASON for political passion over Hell's Canyon may not be easily understood on the pave- ments of New York or on the prairies of Kansas. But federal power from some of the biggest dams in the world - Grand Cou- lee, Bonneville - has made the Northwest blossom beyond humn dreams, and the Northwest wants to keep on blossoming. Idaho Power is not dealing in big dreams. It has a license to build one small, relatively cheap dam on the Snake. Once this is built, a big federal dam will be out of the question. It would in- undate the small dam. The Northwest knows that Hell's Canyon is the last remaining big dam site in the U.S.A. It also knows the Eisenhower Adminis- tration will spend $800,000,000 on a public power dam on the upper Colorado which private utilities don't want to build themselves be- cause it's too expensive to be econ- omic. Meanwhile they see the admin- istration giving the choicest dam site of all, Hell's Canyon, to the private utilities. (Copyright 1956, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) St. Smithins, into his establish- ment, Margaret Rutherford, Headmis- tress of St. Smithins, and a fierce old goat, incidentally, is equally horrified, but in a less frantic manner. The situations which naturally develop are pumped for all they are worth by unspeakably clever direction; thus do we see poor Alastair sleeping in his bathtub while Margaret gets the bed, and the girls cooking class making breakfast an inedible episode. NEEDLESS TO SAY, some par- ents of the girls arrive, so the boys must be hidden, and a few visiting dignitaries come to inspect Sim's teaching methods, so the girls must be hidden. This touches off a closely timed parade' whereby the two sets of visitors are guided into quickly re- hearsed situations, and the boys and girls change places with amaz- ing position as one group leaves and the other arrives. Mainly, the important charac- terizations are marvelous. The old porter, the Ministry official, the visiting Board of Governors; where must one look for charac- ters like these? The children are all too good to be true. It is somewhat amusing to con- trast the well-done British comedy with American-type comedy. All too often, home-grown attempts rely upon the abilities of a couple of star performers, while the rest of the cast is more or less on hand to take up space and provide straight lines for the comics. The casting often appears to have been done by drawing lots. Not so in "Happiest Days." Every role is well filled, and every line well spoken. It's better than Gargoyle, almost. -David Kessel LETTERS to the EDITOR Distortion .,.. To the Editor; YOUR publishing together (July 13) of paragraphs six and seven of the article "Negroes in Govern- ment Vital Today," by Judge Mc- Cree gave a meaning to paragraph six that he did not state. Between the two paragraphs, Judge McCree told the number of Negroes who served during reconstruction days in the legislature of the United States Congress who were college trained. He named one man that was educated in England at one of their colleges. The speaker said he cited the facts concerning the college train- ed men to refute the myth of men of ignorance, etc., being the only persons sent to the United States Congress. Your writer certainly distorted the statement. So often it isn't what one tells, but what one leaves out that causes so much trouble. -Mrs. Mabel D. Edwards DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin Is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN from the Room 3553 Administration Building before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. THURSDAY, JULY 19 1956 VOL. LXVII, NO. 175 General Notices Golf Clinic, auspices of the Office of the Summer Session anid the Depart- ment of Physical Education for Men. Conducted by Bert Katzenmeyer, golf coach. 7:30 p.m., Thurs., July 19 and Fri., July 20, U-M Golf Course. Lectures Patterns of American Culture: Con- tributions of the Negro. "TeNegro Press." W. Beverly Carter Jr., Publish- er, The Pittsburgh Courier. 4:15 p.m., Thurs., July 19, Auditorium A, An- gell Hall. Linguistic Forum Lecture. Rackhara Amphitheatre, 7:30 p.m., Dr. Robert B. LePage, University College of the Wet Indies, will speak on "Creole English in the British Caribbean." Concerts Carillon Recital by Prof. Percival Price, University Carillonneur, 6:30- 7:15 this evening: Introduction, Seven Andantes, Sonata for 47 Bells co- posed by Professor Price. The Summer Session Band will pre- sent a concert on the Diagonal, near Haven Hall, on Thurs., July 19. t 7:1 p.m. If it is raining at 8:45, the on- cert will be moved into Hill Auditorium. The conductors will be Erik Leidzen and George Cavender. Academic Notices Schools of Business Administration, Education, Music, Natural Resources and Public Health Students, who received marks of I, X or 'no reports' at the end of their last semester or summer session of at- tendance, will receive a grade of "E" In the course or courses, unless this work Is made up. In the School of Music, this date is by July 20. In the Schools of Business Administration, Education, Natural Resources and Public Health, this date is by July 25. Students wish- ing an extension of time beyond these dates in order to make up the work, should file a petition, addressed to the appropriate official of their School, with Room 1513 Administration Build- ing, where it will be transmitted. Le Cercle Francais weekly meeting Thurs., July 19, at 8:00 p.m. in the Vandenberg Room of the Michigan League. Dr. C. G. Christofides will pre- sent a talk illustrated in color on "Paris et ses peintres." Games and conversation._ La Sociedad Hispanica, Department of Romance Languages, weekly "Tertulia" (informal conversation in Spanish), Thurs., July 19, at 3 p.m., in the Snack bar of the Michigan League. Refresh- ments available. All interested are In. vited. Doctoral Examination for Carson Mahan Bennett, Education; thesis: "The Relationhips between Responses to Pupil Aggression and Selected Per- sonality Characteristics of Student Teachers," Fri., July 20 East Council Room, Rackham Bldg., at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, w. R. Dixon. Doctoral Examination for Maron .A. Niederpruem, Education;rthesis: "A Study of the Educational values of College Retail work Experiences for Graduates In the Field of Retaling, Monday., July 23, 31 Business Admin. istration Building. at 9:00 a.m. Chair- man, A. D. Henderson. Placement Notices The following schools have listed va- cancies for the 1956r-57 school year, They will not send representatives to the Bureau of Appointmens to inter- view candidates at this time. Addison, Michigan - Teacher Needs Athletic Director/Industrial Arts; Ele- mentary (6th grade). Argo, Illinois - Teacher Needs: In. dustrial Arts (Electric Shop). Cilo Michigan - Teacher Needs! Elementary (Kdg., 2nd, 4th, 6th). Cooks, Michigan -- Teacher Needs: Commercial; Home Economics; Music (band/vocal); English. Coopersville, Michigan - Teacher Needs: Elementary (3rd, 4th, 8th); High School Librarian. Cordova, South Carolina - Teacher Needs: Band. Edina, Minnesota "- Teacher Needs: Band, Junior High. Hudson, Michigan - Teacher Needs* Band: Elementary (7th grade); High School English. Hume, Illinois - Teacher Needs: Ele- mentary Music. Cedarville and Hessel, Michigan - Teacher Needs: Elementary (2nd 3rd); High School Science/Msath or Math/oth- er subject. Mr. Williams Hits Number 400, TED WILLIAMS, for over 15 years considered one of the greatest hitters in baseball, has reached another milestone in his illustrious career. Ranking fifth in all-time home run slugging, the 37 year old Williams slammed his 400th homer into the right field seats of Fenway Park in Boston Tuesday night. He thus joined a select circle which numbers only four earlier members. What was even more significant about Williams' blow was that it meant the difference between defeat and victory for the Boston Red Sox. Ever since Willilams came to the Sox, the squad's fortunes have paralleled those of its star. When the "Splendid Splinter" is physi- cally able and present, Boston is a pennant contender. When he's on active duty in the Marines (this has happened twice) or injured, the club flounders. T HERE CAN be no denial that Williams is the key to the Red Sox fortunes. He is also one of the top drawing cards in the majors. Fans flock to any park in the league if Williams is known to be playing there. They come to see the result of his career-long effort to achieve perfect batting form. Wililams has had his troubles in the past because of an uninhibited desire to speak his mind at inopportune moments. He has tangled with booing spectators, legislators who called for drafting more ball players, and sports writers who reported his action in an uncom- plimentary fashion. Despite this, he has been a distinct credit to our national pastime. Men like Williams, imbued with strong ambition and perfectionists at heart, often become controversial in their drive to the top. In all walks of life, men of this nature are judged by what they accomplish and certainly in this respect, Ted Williams deserves continued fame as a baseball player. His 400th home run is proof enough. --DICK CRAMER TODAY AND TOMORROW: Dulles, On Neutralism, Looking For A Black Cat INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Khrushchev's Irresponsibility By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst NIKITA KHRUSHCHEV, now having down- graded Stalin and Molotov, begins to sound like them. As he does so, the smile offensive looks more and more like a leer. Speaking primarily to official visitors from puppet East Germany, Khrushchev deliberately -took note of the fact that there were repre- sentatives present from non-Communist coun- tries. (7 .. ~ Editorial Stafff LEE MARKS, Managing Editor Night Editors Dick Halloran, Donna Hanson, Arlene Liss. "If representatives of those countries think I speak too sharply, they should understand I speak as the Communist party secretary," he said. As much as to say "I give no quarter." THEN HE launched out on the old familiar Stalin-Molotov-Vishinsky-Pravda line. He said East German Communists must wait patiently for diplomatic recognition by other powers, as much as to say that there would be no reunification of Germany. He said Soviet Russia waited 16 years for recognition by the United States, not mention- ing the lying promise she made to get it-that she would stop interfering with America's in- ternal affairs. He bragged about Russia's "liberation" from the free world to which she could not be tempted back "if they handed it to us on a By WALTER LIPPMANN MR. DULLES on neutralism has been behaving for all the world like the man who went into a dark room looking for a black cat that wasn't there. The black cat that Mr. Dulles has been look- ing for is a universal all-purpose definition of neutrality which will announce the exact temperature of our official moral disapproval. He seems to feel that it is some- how the business of the United States, and of himself as Sec- retary of State, to pronounce a wholesale blanket verdict on all countries which do not belong to NATO, SEATO or METO, on countries as diverse as India and Ireland, as Sweden and Egypt, as Switzerland and Yugoslavia. Because this cannot be done, he has within the past month or so found it necessary to contradict the President, to contradict the Vice President who had contra- dicted the President, and to Con- tradict himself. Such a thing ought not to hap- pen in a well conducted govern- ment.F hrietravs, r onnfiinn attacking Indian policy when he was in Pakistan. So Mr. Dulles had to go back into the dark room looking for his black cat. Last Wednesday, at his press confer- ence he emerged with a new ver- sion of the Dulles doctrine. As of July 11 countries belong- ing to the U.N. (which includes all countries, excepting only Swtiz- erland, that are able to get them- selves admitted) are no longer im- moral neutrals, and Switzerland is not an immoral neutral because it has been neutral for so long a time. THIS REDUCES to absurdity the attempt to generalize about the morality of neutrals. For hav- ing started with a blanket disap- proval, Mr. Dulles has ended with a n o t h e r generalization which leaves him with no neutrals to dis- approve of. The official doctrine at the momentis that neutrality is immoral but that there are no neutrals who are immoral. Now that we have arrived at this thundering anti-climax, the question is how did we become en- +n r- ,, ;, 2 .+tii t2r . ,r . t.- influential has been the attain- ment of nuclear parity by the So- viet Union, the success of the forced industrialization of the So- viet Union followed by the reac- tion against Stalinism and the consolidation of the Red regime in China. These developments in their combined effect have work- ed for neutralism, have worked against the idea that nations which have no nuclear weapons can find security by joining one or the other of the two military coalitions. In the face of this new situation there have arisen in Washington two schools of thought. The one, represented by Sen. Knowland, would like to refuse American aid to any country which does not join one of our military alliances. The other, which has had encour- weak and under-developed coun- agement from the President him- self, would recognize that the tries may have good reason for not joining militar alliances, and would nevertheless give them economic aid. a generalized policy which is equally good for both. The root of the trouble about defining neutrals has been the practice, unfortunately rather common in our inexperienced dip- lomacy of trying to deal with spe- cific and diverse and hard prob- lems by sweeping them under the rug of a moral generalization. This is a political vice which can be, and frequently has been, ruinous to an effective and realistic and genuinely moral policy. It is the business of the states- men to work out an Egyptian pol- icy, and a Yugoslav policy, and an Indian policy, and a Swedish pol- icy and an Irish policy, and to re- frain from upsetting the apple- cart by pronouncing moral judg- ment on "neutrals" as such and in the abstract. There are people who, when they hear an official use of the word "moral" feel that morality is be- ing promoted and defended. It may not be so. Nobody thinks it to be moral and high-minded for a man to issue blanket moral judg- ment on his fellow men. He is ,I -A