Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVEFSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 "Help! Man-Eating Tiger!" I. -- hen Opinions Are kre, Trutb Will Prevaill Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. IDAY. JULY 20, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: ADELAIDE WILEY Con'sequences of Ground Force Reduction Need Consideration T HE POSSIBILITY that the United States may cut its military manpower has serious consequences of which the American people should be made aware. A reduction in ground forces means the de- fense establishment will turn more and more to nuclear weapons as primary instruments for waging hot war. This poses two separate but allieq questions, one political, the other military. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles stated Wednesday that the decision on reduction is a military consideration and should be left to competent military authority. Although the Secretary lent his implicit, if not explicit, sup- port to those who favor reduction, he also dumped into the Pentagon's lap the political aspects of the question. THE American people must ask themselves if this stand by the Secretary of State means that the United States is now committed to a concept of total war in preference to the policy of local war followed during the Korean" po- lice action." Does this now mean, with the deemphasis of ground forces, that should the Communists renew the war in Korea or launch an attack on Taiwan, the United State will retaliate against the China mainland with nuclear weapons rather than confining itself to the immediate area of hostilities? If the East Ger- man paramilitary police force invades West Germany, where will the United States strike with its modern weapons? The question of whether or not a given clash is to be confined to one region or is to be fought strategically wherever the enemy can be found and damaged is not one for the Pentagon to answer. Rather it is for the elected political representatives, primarily the Presi- dent, to decide. Mr. Dulles has passed the buck on this one. MILITARILY, one must pose the question- has the day come when wars will be won by push-buttons and high powered weapons rather than by men bearing small arms? In the Second World War, Hitler amassed the most highly mechanized military machine yet seen by man, one that far out-stripped the contemporary armed forces of his enemies. Despite this mechanization, the Nazis were able to subdue neithey the tight little islands of Great Britain nor the vast land mass of Russia. Eventually Germany was defeated by the crushing onslaught of massed land armies - armies of foot-soldiers slogging through the mud with rifles and fixed bayonets. This is not to depreciate the part played by Allied mechanized and air forces. Far from it, they bore the brunt of much of the war and may well have turned the tide of battle. But in the last analysis, it was the foot-soldier who tipped the balance, who took possession of the ene- my's territory, denying him all use of it. IN KOREA, the importance of the foot-soldier came even more into the limelight. Here, in terrain so rugged that mechanized forces had linited capabilities, the struggle developed into an almost exclusively infantry battle. Not even the overwhelming tactical aerial superior- ity enjoyed by the United Nations forces could turn back the hordes of the Chinese and North Korean armies. It is entirely possible that the role of the ground forces has been lessened with the ad- vent of the atomine age. But is it not also doubtful that its role as the final factor in deciding the difference between victory and defeat, in either a local or a total war, has been diminished? These two questions, affecting our national security as drastically as they do, need the most serious consideration in the highest coun- cils of the nation before a decision is rendered. With the objections of several of the mili- tary leaders and the ducking of . the issue by the Secretary of State, this apparently has not yet been done. -RICHARD HALLORAN i ~ I 44 \n /r AO- " -e.f.. ±. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Morse Kids Wht House A ides By DREW PEARSON Use of Taft-Hartley Act Will Not Settle Steel Strike~ AT THE MICHIGAN: 'Eddie Duchin Story' Brings Tears to Eyes THERE wasn't a dry eye in the house last night as the Eddie Duchin Story opened at the Michigan. This is a tear jerker from the word go. Sentiment is laid on with a heavy hand, standard procedure for "story" moving picture. Yet the music and the basic story make this one of the better film "biographies" thata we have seen. Tyrone Power in the title role does a workman-like job in portray- YESTERDAY President Eisenhower gave union and steel industry negotiators warn- ing that he might take action if the present contract negotiations prove fruitless. Joseph J. Finnegan, Director of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service has delivered a note to representatives of both labor and the steel industry telling them that they had better pro- duce results toward ending the eighteen day old strike by the end of this week-or else. Such action can concievably follow one of two courses. First, the President can seek an 80-day no-strike injunction under the national emergency provision of the Taft-Hartley Act. On the other hand, he may be thinking of turning the negotiations over to the Federal Mediation Service, should private negotiations fail. It is difficult to see how the President will justify the use of the Taft-Hartley Act at the present time. With the recent announcement of possible cuts in the army, there is little justifi- cation for invoking the Act on the premise of defense needs. Moreover, it should be noted that fifteen percent of the steel industry's capacity is still in operation. This itself should be more than enough to cover the current needs of defense production. MORE PROBABLE, the President is concern- ed with the prospects of what a prolonged strike will do to the general prosperity of the nation. A drive into Detroit will convince the most skeptical onlooker that the economy of the nation has hardly reached the emergency stage. Automobiles are rolling off the assembly lines at a highly normal rate. Although a prolonged strike would most cer- tainly strangle the economy, that point has hardly been reached, nor does it seem likely that it will arrive in the next week or two. Steel users have had a great deal of advance notice and have stockpiled huge piles of steel for the strike they knew was coming. Invocation of the Taft-Hartley Act will solve nothing. Under the law, an injunction can have a duration of only eighty days. After that, the same problems will have to be faced again. NO MATTER what course of action the Presi- dent chooses, he and the Republican Party are faced with trouble. If the strike drags on, busness levels will drop and unemployment will soar-hardly a cheerful prospect for an election year. Moreover, the Steel Workers undoubtedly realize the possibilities inherent in this situa- tion. - On the other hand, use of the Taft-Hartley Act will not perceptably increase the President's popularity among those who have any sympa- thies for labor. It could only destroy any semblance of the President's Middle-of-the- Road Policy and remove many independents to the Democratic camp. --DAVID GELFAND SEVERAL days before he left for Panama, President Eisenhower put in a phone call to Senate Dem- ocratic Leader Lyndon Johnson and talked to him about various legislative problems, from the closing date of Congress to for- eign aid. They also kidded each other about their cardiacs, both having had heart attacks. At the last Gridiron dinner Ike brought down the house when, referring to John- son, he said: "My fellow cardiac." In phoning to Johnson, Eisen- hower's chief concern was getting his foreign aid bill passed. He also asked whether it was important for him to be in Washington when Congress adjourned, and wondered whether adjournment might take place before he left for Panama. This proved to be impossible. Finally, the President urged Johnson to pass the executive pay raise bill at this session. When Senator Morse of Oregon heard about this latter request, he remarked: "This is where I came in." He recalled that on the closing day of Congress one year ago, White House aides had com- mandeered Vice President Nixon's office just off the Senate chamber from which to buttonhole Senators to put across the executive pay raise bill. Their activity caused Morse to remark: "If they worked as hard for the rest of the program as they do to get their salaries raised, they'd have more of the program passed." * -* * WHILE THE German lobby has been able to get a bill for the re- turn of alien property before the full Senate, the one bill of vital concern to small business has been blocked in the Senate. It's the Patman "Equality of Opportunity" bill. * * * And though it passed the House of Representatives by the over- whelming vote of 396 to 3, power- ful big-business interests have been pulling wires to keep the bill from reaching the Senate floor. Once that bill reaches the floor, few Senators could vote against it. The bill, which prohibits price cutting whenever it tends to create a monopoly, is backed by thous- ands of small business firms all over the country - gas-station op- erators, retail grocers, food brok- .ers, and others who have suffered froim price cutting by the big chains and the big oil companies. SMALL BUSINESS men gave over a thousand pages of testi- mony before the House; over a thousand before the Senate. They showed that if the bill was not passed, thousands of retail gro- cers operating on a one-cent mar- gin would be wiped out before the, end of the year. They cited case after case where big companies had lowered prices, forced smaller competitors into bankruptcy, then, having secured a monopoly, raised prices. However, it looks as if the bill would now die in the Senate -- for two reasons: The White House is quietly pulling wires to kill the bill. Second, Senator Johnson has passed out word that he only wants to consider must legislation. Democratic Chairman Paul But- ler has sent word to Senate Demo- cratic leaders urging that they pass the bill, pointing out that the Democrats will not be able to pin the big-business label,.on Eisen- hower if it doesn't pass. However, the bill is still stymied. Democratic leaders have done little to pry the bill loose, and Senator Eastland of Mississippi, Chairman of the Judiciary Committee, has been dragging his heels. PRESIDENT Somoza of tiny Ni- caragua will arrive in Panama in an airplane as plush or plushier than anyone else's. Texas oil ty- coon Clint Murchison has placed his private plane at Somoza's dis- posal. An elaborate suite in the Gorgas General Hospital in Panama has been put in readiness for President Eisenhower - private lines in- stalled, special staff assigned. Fellow officers of Lt. Gen. Sam Sturgis would like to retire him as Chief of Army Engineers for ill health. They feel he's not been as dynamic a dam-builder and flood- preventer as were some of his pre- decessors. Democrats claim that for the first time in history the Salvation Army is playing politics. When you get a meal from the Salvation Army you eat on a place mat fea- turing "Presidents in military uni- form" with the statement: "Pres- ident Eisenhower is the 19th Pres- ident with a military record. Over one-half of the Presidents served their country in uniform. The others were Washington, Mon- roe, Jackson, W. H. Harrison, Ty- ler, Taylor, Pierce, Buchanan, Lincoln, Johnson, Grant, Hyes, Garfield, Arthur, Benjamin Har- rison, McKinley, Theodore Roose- velt, Truman. (Copyright 1956, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) ing the Horatio Alger story of the York by storm an wins tame and boy from Boston who takes New York by storm and wins fame and fortune and Kim Novak. Kim Novak looks pretty, in her own emaciated way. In accord with her usual roles, this is all re- quired of her. Victoria Shaw doesn't live up to the press notices and the spe- cial short which has been used to advertise the show. The supporting roles are ably handled. For a change we have a father of "son who makes good" who isn't a complete bumbling idiot, one of those small marks of progress in the movie that we are always happy to see. The por- trayals of Duchin's son and his manager are also convincing. * * * STILL IT IS THE MUSIC which determines the rating of a mu- sical and Carmen Cavalero makes this one good with his recordings of the piano solos. He deserves a large vote of thanks and a revival of interest in his own orchestra for his labors. Also, contrary to the expected, the script allows the orchestra to play for pleasantly stretches at a time. The cameramen proved what can be done with the addition of a little imagination to the usual stock of camera and technicolor film. The scenes shot in Central Park during a rain storm are es- pecially worthy of mention. All in all, the present program at the Michigan is good, but not quite excellent. People who choke up in movies better bring a spare handful of Kleenex. -Ken Johnson LETTERS to the EDITOR Chinese Syntax . .*. To the Editor: write with reference to your ar- ticle of the 10th on Chinese lan- guage reform. The reporter claims that the Chinese ideographs "defy all rules of grammar, syntax, or logic." If by "all rules," he means charac- teristics of the English writing system, it is a bit of absurd eth- nocentrism. As in any orthography, the in- divdiual Chinese symbols are nec- essarily an arbitrary representa- tion of a language without any inherent or logical correlation be- tween sign and meaning. However, it takes no more than a moment's reflection to realize that no system, oral or written, can effectively communicate with- out such structural elements as grammar and syntax. The writer betrays further lin- guistic naivete to assert that one language can be more "backward" than another. With so many top linguists assembled on campus this summer, it seems almost ironl- cal to have such biased value judg- ment expressed as fact in your newspaper. -William S. Y. Wang rise of Eddie Duchin, immigrant DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial respons- bility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN from the Room 3553 Administration Building before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. FRIDAY, JULY 20, 1956 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 185 General Notices Golf Clinic, auspices of the Office of the Summer Session and the Depart- ment of Physical Education for Men, Conducted by Bert Katzenmeyer, golf coach, 7:30 p.m.. Thurs. July 18 and Fri., July 20, U-M Golf Course. Concerts Organ Recital by Frederick Marriott, guess organist, 4:15 p.m. Sun., July 22, In Hill Auditorium. Compositions by Purcell, Kerl, Sweelinck, Mandel, Bach, Franck, David, and two works by Mar- riott. Open to the public wthou charge. Collegium Musicum, 8:30 p.m. Mon., July 23, in the Rackham Assembly Hall, directed by Louise Cuyler; performed by Jane Stoltz Michael Avsharian, violin, Charles Fisher, piano, Francese Watson, Cynthia Allen, flutes, Wiley Hitchcock, harpsichord, and singers Margaret Eddie, Monica Wildfang, Judy Tatham, Elizabeth Wehrman, Lloyd Ketterling, Norman Bradley walter Collins, Marshall Franke, Charles None- man, David Strickler. Donald Pltt, Conductor of the Summer Session Choir, will conduct a group of madri- gals on the program. Open to the gen- eral pulblic. Academic Notices Students, College of Engineering: The final day for dropping courses without reco"d will be Fri., July 20. A course may be dropped only with the pennis- sion of the Classifier after conference with the Instructor. La Petite Causette, informal French conversation group will meet in the Snack Bar of the Michigan Union Mon., July 22, at 4:00 p.m. All persons wish- ing to talk French are invited to join the group.d Classical Studies Tea: The staff and students of the Department of Classi- cal Studies and others interested In the Classics will be the guests of th Kelsey Museum of Archaeology at an informal tea on Tues., July 24, at 4 p.m. Doctoral Examination for Carson Mahan Bennett, Education; thesis: "The Relationships between Responses to Pupil Aggression and Selected Per- sonality Characteristics of Student Teachers," Fri., July 20 East Council Room,aRackham Bldg., at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, W. R Dixon. Doctoral Exanination for Marion A. Niederpruem, Education; thesis: "A Study of the Educational Values of College Retail WorkeExperiences for Graduates in the Field of Retailing" Monday., July 23, 31 Business Adcimin- istration Building, at 9:00 a.m. Chair- man, A. D. Henderson, Placement Notices The following schools have listed va- cancies for the 19566-57 school year. They will not send representatives to the Bureau of Apointmens to inter- view candidates at this time. Addison, Michigan - Teacher Needs? Athletic Director/Industrial Arts; ie- mentary (6th grade). Argo, Illinois -- Teacher Needs: In- dustrial Arts (Electric Shop). Clio, 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, Hlume, Illinois - Teacher Needs: Ele- mentary Music. Cedarville and Hessel, Michigan - Teacher Needs: Elementary (2nd 3rd); High School Science/Math or Math/oth- er subject, Newell, South Dakota - Teacher Needs: High School Math; Science; Band/Glee Club (eleven months); Speech; Homemaking. Traverse City, Michigan (Old Mis- sion Peninsula School District) - Ele- mentary (1st grade) Newark, Ohio - Teacher Needs: Mu- sic (Junior High). Owatonna, Minnesota - Teacher Needs: Elementary (2nd, 5th); Junior High ScienceSocial Science. White Plains, New York - Teacher Needs: Elementary; Vocal Music; Ju- nior High Social Studies/English; Math; High School Chemistry/Biology; Coor- dinator of Diversified Occupational Training: Attendance Teacher. For additional information, contaco 4 k MODERN THEATER: American Theater Far From Dying Today INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Unification Question Revived? By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst THE PENTAGON'S decision to consolidate the Army and Navy commands in the Pacific seems likely to revive the recent discussion of consolidation in the Pentagon itself. During World War II, before there was a single Department of Defense, the United States adopted the policy of consolidating area com- mands under whichever force was dominant. In the Pacific, however, Army and Navy LE ditErial Staff LEE MARKS, Mfanaging Editor commands remained equal, cooperating, through Washington. There was a big fight over complete unifi- cation when the Department of Defense was established, with creation of a third depart- ment for air. Creation of this third department caused many observers to discuss the ultimate result as disunification. IN THE YEARS that have followed, with development of the Air Force as carrier of the atom bomb and spearhead in the production of long-range guided missiles, the fight over de- partmental jurisdictions has revived the dis- cussion. The first question suggested by the consoli- dation of field commands to end divided re- sponsibilities is whether the system is needed from the very top. Critics of the many Pentagon squabbles point By OSCAR HAMMERSTEIN Written for The Associated Press THE strangest thing about the theater's history is that it is always about to terminate. Com- mentators are traditionally ob- sessed with a conviction that the theater cannot possibly live more than a few years beyond the time at which they write. I don't believe the theater has ever been as sick as they have thought it to be. It is the com- mentators who have been sick with a kind of chronic necrophilia. The sources of this disease is not a wish for the theater to die. Almost all critics love the theater. Loving it, they fret over it like an anxious parent. The most radical changes of all have been wrought in this century with the development of electronic science. Many who are predicting the demise of the theater are ex- cluding from their considerations the electronic media of radio,.tele- vision and the movies. IF YOU accept this limited con- philes is the habit of comparing the output of any one season with golden ages of the past. The ancient Greeks had their bad seasons and bad plays as did the Elizabethans and the Restora- tion dramatists. The way to ap- praise the theater's health is to examine its output over a few de- cades. One season will tell you nothing one way or the other.- I have been working in the theater for about 40 years. During those years I don't think the American theaterdhas done so bad- ly. * , ,* LEAVING OUT workers who were merely successful in their time- I mean men like David Belasco, Flo Ziegfeld, Avery Hopwood-and limiting myself to men who have written plays that have become part of our national theatrical lit- erature, I give you Eugene O'Neill, Sidney Howard, Robert Sherwood, Maxwell Anderson, Marc Connelly, Lindsay and Crouse, George Kelly, George Kaufman, Moss Hart, William Inge, Arthur Miller and of European importations and imi- tations, the only indigenous thea- trical creations were the minstrel show and the "black crook" type of extravaganza-dubious contri- bution to theatrical art but, at any rate, gay, lusty and certainly American. * * * IN THE LIGHT musical theater we have evolved-without any de- liberate intention that I know of- a form that is-neither opera, oper- etta nor straight musical comedy. We call it a "musical play." Good examples of this type are "Show Boat," "Oklahoma!," "South Pacific," "The King and I" and thL current "My Fair Lady." These works are a kind of hy- brid opera and play. They do not take the licenses claimed in opera. They try to toe the mark on legiti- mate characterization and story motivation. The dialogue seeks to be as real as in a non-musical play. The songs carry forward the story development and are never arbitrarily interpolated. No librettists or composers in meet their situations head on, not concerned about the embarrass- ment of the more timid in the audience. Our acting has less polish than Continental acting or English act- ing. It is becoming progressively more vigorous and less elegant, and at a rate' which may be a little dangerous. The vital, virile, slugging per- formances that are coming out of the Actors Studio and similar groups might well be accompanied by a little old-fashioned Shakes- pearean training. This seems to be exactly what is in the wind at the moment. There is a growing interest in Shakespeare and a growing desire on the part of our theatrical pro- ducers and actors to go in for some Shakespearean training. This is a good idea and a needed antidote. Perhaps we have been becoming too strong, too rough and tough. In our dramatic t'heater, then, our playwrghts, directors and ac- tors are earnest, virile and rich in