~Iw irl ugttrc tti1 Sixty-Seventh Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD+ IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS StUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 is Aro vr oUrewalo us printed in.Th Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all re prints. I JULY 27, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: RENE GNAM I - An American Attitude And How To Purge It SUCCESSFUL? Soil Bank Efficienc By OVID A. MARTIN Associated P-ress Farm Reporter WASHINGTON (A)-The contro- versial soil bank subsidy pro- gram shows an efficiency rate of about 46 per cent in the matter of reducing the nation's overproduc- ing crop acreage. The soil bank program was au- thorized ,by Congress last year with major provisions set to expire with 1959 crops. It directed the. Agriculture De- partment to offer payments to farmers who planted less than their assigned allotments of cotton, ,wheat, corn, rice, and tobacco. With cropland producing more than could be sold at government- supported prices, surpluses were piling up in the hands of the de- partment. The objective .of the soil bank was to help bring about a cut in farm production to a point where supplies balanced output. [ING next month, one of the few good >f the present Administration will be ffect when new passport recipients re- :ig with their passports, a form letter sident Eisenhower ,concerning inter-. ,oodwill. ter designates the traveler as a sort 11 representative of the United States. is out the responsibilities of the in- oward caring for this country's good reputation in the other nations of the cluded in the form letter is the ad- that the traveler should' be careful eate any adverse impressions in the he visits. The good side of the ates should always be reflected abroad, lent's note says. y, this sort of letter should have been ars ago. Its need in the cases of hasty, and often thoughtless Americans nnot be doubted; its use should save ican government countless dollars in hal relations. . USUAL, the President's note is only -way attempt at the solution of a oblem. Much more remains to be done e the people of America in the ways erateness toward persons of other h the 'American doesn't usually realize ndling of visitors to the country or f countries he visits is often shame- fully reflective of his haste and lack of thought- fulness. And it isn't only in other countries that Americans can become offensive through care- .lessness, but here in this country, too. The South Quad food line worker who makes no attempt to understand the broken-English request of an English Language Institute stu- dent, the saleslady who doesn't stop to make clear the price on goods to one unfamiliar with our monetary system, the man in the street who doesn't even try to understand where it is the passerby is asking directions for, all these Americans contribute to the adverse impression visitors to this country are receiving every day. Reports from overseas indicate equally im- pressive concepts of the American people are being received through actions resulting from the American's inherent and unshakable notion that he is better than other people. ALTHOUGH such feelings are certainly not intentional but, in a-way, natural-seeming,. they are certainly ones that should be recog- nized and eliminated to every extent possible. President Eisenhower's form letter is at least a start in the right direction. Yet even more can and should be done, prob- ably on a more local level. Indeed, this attention toward an American consciousness of foreign people should be a definite part of Human Re- lations Commissions in cities throughout the country. -VERNON NAHRGANG Editor Student Exchanges ,OTE that the State Department has iallenged" Nikita Khrushchev to 'make ific formal proposal" for exchanging So- d American students. ig all other State Department chalt- this one is as spineless. as all the rest.. call that the State Department pooh- Khrshchev's Kremlin interview with affers, and that the President irrespon-. >oke of it as "a commercial firm trying er its commercial position." again, Khrshchev made a proposal, or t broached the matter, to Americans - s in this case. He suggested to them that I hundred" students be exchanged. And ate Department responded in typical -- with a "challenge" at a press con- 5EE NO REASON why the government, it the State Department, the White or any agency of our streamlined ad- ation, should not immediately sit down um up its proposal. On the student ex- though, it's already too late, for a officer has already sabotaged any firm which might have been taken.' led with the somewhat patrician reac- the CBS interview, this latest precipi.- tation of cold water makes us feel that the gov- ernment (or its press officers) is deliberately sealing off every approach to understanding, with Russia. Certainly 'nothing is being accomplished at the disarmament talks with Harold Stassen di-: recting. ,The UN drdnes on. Nothing at the summit. Tourists and newsmen are quietly, din a gentle, human American way are trying to find the Russian heart. We think they've succeeded, if only microscopically. But a State Department press officer or a golf-playing President seem to delight in short-circuiting them. HERE ARE, of. course, burrs in the student exchange proposal. There is the matter of visa fingerprint regulations which Russia finds distasteful, and our abhorrence of Communists in our midst. It is these specific problems we should attack, and not condemn ideas and suggestions wholesale. Is -it unthinkable that the administration. recommend specific legis- lation to allow Russian students to come here? We think- the State Department should stop acting as though it believed or is afraid that our grandchildren will become bad little Coin- mies. -ERNEST ZAPLITNY TAKING the crop acreage in 1955 as the base-that being the last year prior to inauguration of the soil retirement program, the new measure will get a net reduc- tion of about 13 million acres this year. Year before last farmers har- vested about 333 million acres of various crops. The government's recent crop report estimated that about 320 million acres will be harvested this year. But farmers had signed agree- ments to retire 28 million acres from production. For doing this they were offered payments ranging from an average of $18 an acre for wheat, $37 for corn, $50 for cotton, $64 for rice' and $220 for tobacco to much smaller amounts for retiring lands from 'other crop uses. The government's total obliga- tion for this year is about 700 mil- lion dollars, or an average of about $25 an acre for the idled land. * * * BUT FOR every Acre farmers took out of production under the soil bank, they added slightly more than half an acre of other lands to the production of crops. This added land-much of it having been pastures, meadows and the like-was not put to the big surplus crops but to others. However, from the standpoint of reducing the size of the farm plant the government is paying an average of about $53 an acre. Farmers cut this year's corn acreage about 7,241,000 acres or 9 per cent from 1955; wheat about 4,124,006 acres or 8.7 per cent; cot- ton about 2,124,000 acres or 16 per cent; rice about 478,000 acres or 26 per cent; and tobacco about 566,000 acres or 24 per cent. But these decreases have been offset in part by increases in a number of other crops not covered by the soil bank or by the produc- tion controls that govern wheat, corn, cotton, rice, peanuts and tobacco. These increases include 3,030,000 acres or 16 per cent for soybeans; grain sorghums, 4,805,000 acres or nearly 25 per cent; barley, 400,- 000 acres or nearly 3 per cent; flaxseed, 454,000 acres or about 9 per cent; and lesser amounts of acreages for ,a large number of minor crops. PRODUCTION e s t i m a t e s for these various crops indicate there is a possibility that some headway may be made this year in reduc- ing surpluses of cotton and wheat. But the corn oversupply situa- tion may not be improved because of the prospective increase in pro- duction of competitive livestock feed grains, such as sorghum grains, oats and barley. There also is a possibility that an increase in soybean plantings may toss this crop into the surplus troubled group. The future of the soil bank will be determined by its accomplish- ments this year. On this both the administration and Congress are agreed. BUT HOW will its failure or success be judged? If it is judged on this basis of the net over-all reduction in acreage, it faces trouble. If.it is judged on the basis of production volume, the r e s u t might be a little different. The department's latest produc- tion report forecast over-all crop production this year at about 6.7 per cent below the record high volume produced in 1955, the last year prior to the soil bank. Thus, this report indicated that with a 4 per cent drop in total harvested acreage, the production would be down 6.7 per cent. But whether this production forecast will be borne out at har- vest time is a question. The department attributed much of tha nrennntiv dcline in "'° 'iii i RYAN AND THE NEWS: . Solican AT NORTHLAND PLAYHOUSE: Coca.Inimitable in Jans' FOLOI.JOWING a week of mid-sea- THE INIMITABLE Miss Coca who also flushes the uair in their son s i 1 e n c e, the Northland was ably supported by Jules Mun- secret nest, Gordon B. Clarke was Playhouse theater-in-the-round is shin who gave the part of the good-though he tended to lit up and bustling again, and with wounded husband the sense of mumble at times, and lost one of the current show has set out con- humor and toucr of crudity that it the show's best laughs because of fidently on the second half of its requires. John Scanlan played the summer program. role of Jessica's collaborator with tJanus" will play through Sun- Much of the light and bustling control and a sort of European day. Peorge Jessel, Vivian Blaine, on the stage this week is due to finesse. and Olsen and Johmso are se- the presence of Imogene Coca who As t coupls ery ag duled for later appearances shere. has arrived to play the female lead Gubi Mann was properly worldly: a-paraes in Carolyn Green's comedy "Ja-'And as the income tax investigator -DonaldA. Ta nus." "Janus" is a laugh-packed show CEMENT INDUSTRY:- when it is played by people who can make the odd triangle it pro-gaal poses seem alternately believable ,T ~ O and ridiculous. Especially impor- tant is the role of Jessica, the faithful (for ten months per year) By RUSSELL LANE ed on a local basis, and strikes wife who "thinks like other people (A)-A strike in the have been spreading throughout dream." Imogene Coca was the CHICAGO(M .Aing in tye the industry as stalemates devel- best Jessica this reviewer has seen cement - making. industry is pdsneMy15 ites Je. thi reiewerhasen playing hob with building and road oped since May 15. m th roe' onstucton obsHowever, settlements have been in th«oe construction jobs, reached with 10 companies ope- It has slowed or stopped work agd pats Thesemand oter THE RECENT Broadway hit 'on military projects, roads, fac- ating 30 plants. These anv er- comedy proposes a husband and tories and housing worth more fined on the job with assurances wife writing team that spends two than a billion dollars. that management will sign when months out of the year in a se- These effects have turned tens the industry situation jells are pro- cluded New York flat writing of thousands of construction work- ducing~on an overtime basis. "lusty, busty" historical novels. ers out 9f their jobs, and scores of « * The catch is that they are not thousands more may be idle soon. REGIONALLY, the strikes are each other's husband and wife. The nation's cement output to- concentrated in the : East and Jessica and Denny (a mild-man- day was running about one half Southeast, with a spotty situation nered French teacher from An- the normal volume. prevailing in the Midwest, and the dover) are just about settled for Approximately 70 of the 140 majority of Southwest and Far their seventh summer of romance plants which turned out 316,465, West plants in operation. (real as well, as fictitious) when 000 barrels of cement last year Some trade sources have report- Jessica's husband, who had sup- were shut down. Of 36,000 per- ed that a.cement black market is posedly embarked for South Amer- sons employed in cement manufac- developing in the East. ica, puts in an unannounced and ture, some 16,000 were on strike. Producing- c 0 m p a n i e s are delightfully catalytic appearance. * * * swamped by orders, and have an- The shots that the rivals get THE UNION'S dispute w i t h nounced their regular customers off at each other and at women manufacturers involves renewal of come first. in general, and those that the free- one - year eniployment contracts, What cement is brought into thinking Jessica gets off in all the majority of which expired May scarcity' areas often costs a sub- directions constitute three hours of 1. stantial premium, including freight outspoken comedy. Negotiations have been conduct- charges. DETECTIVE BOOKS: Mike Shayne Returns Again, WEEP FOR A BLONDE, the precocious boy who reveals a MURDER, ON DELIVERY. By Brett Halliday, Dodd, Mead. considerable understanding of By Spencer Dean. Doubleday. ETECTIVE Mike Shayne hero adult weaknesses as well as a re-. Don Cadee, store detective, finds DETmretVE Mikozen hro- markabie flair for detection, that the object of his latest case hitting adventures in and around Young Frederick French parti- is a stolen fur coat that, no one Miami, takes on this new case as cipates fully in the investigation, apparently would want to steal- a gesture of friendliness toward a and makes for an entertaining, if despite its price tag of $100,000. lovely blonde who had been an unorthodox, gumshoe. A rare crown sable coat destined acquaintance of Shayne's late * * * for voluptuous TV star Lily Inez wife. She seemed to be in trouble, HUSH-A-BYE MURDER. is spirited away just before- its de- and Mike was always a little soft By David Alexander. Random livery to its recipient. Detective when it came to things related to House. - d Cadee discovers unusual motiva- ion behind the gift of the fur to his beloved and bereaved Phyllis. Detective n o v e 1 is t Alexander Miss Inep by an admirer, but re- With a neat twist of circum- who, after nine crime adventures ceies no cooperation from any stance and a master work of under his belt, is still unchal- party in the attempt to recover framing, it was soon Shayne him- lenged as the most naive writer the merchandise. self who was in hot (and cold) about a traditional world of vio- Murder soon compounds the water. A murder rap was tagged - lence, offers in "Hush-A-Bye theft, but Cadee's effort8 seem on him, and he was forced to es- Murder" a new adventure of pointless -made af they are cape arrest long enough to pin Broadway newspaper editor Bart amidst a grop af people who down the shrewd killer of the Hardin and his Homicide side- amids a go fe blonde who had too many inter- kick, Lt. Romano. *,never come to life. ests outside home. This Hardin novel is distin-" CANDLE FOR A CORPSE. This is the best Mike Shayne guished mainly for its imagina- By Stewart Sterling. Lippincott. story in three years, with an un- tive handling of the antagonist of Ben Pedley is a New York City usually good middle section. Mike the editor-detective. Hardin is Fire Marshal with all the equip- is a little more brutal than we'd pitted against a police detective ment of a Centre Street detective. like in this adventure, but perhaps who is mentally unbalanced and A fire in a Bronx candle factory it's being tough that's kept him is determined, for his own special sets Pedley irto action in search in the running with his perennial- reasons, to- send Hardin to the of a firebug and murderer. ly fast company. electric chair for a murder he His subsequent investigation * didn'tcommit. brings him into association with WITH MY LITTLE EYE. As. it happens, there's a pretty the strange members of the Ko- By Roy Fuller. Macmillan. good stack of evidence .at hand pate family which owned the By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press Foreign News Analyst ITED STATES policy in the Middle East is unning into aperilous squeeze because of a pllcated dispute involving goats, camels the promise of oil. Oman the British are making a deter- d bid to retain their precarious position in Persian Gulf area, with its oil riches im- mt to Britain's economy. the background is the old Arabian Penin- feud over the Buraimi oasis area. volved now is a suggestion of clashing Brit- kmerican oil interests. Mixed up in the bble also are the political ambitions of it's President Nasser and the territorial of King Saud of Saudi Arabia. ithout some basis for a common British- rican viewpoint, there seems little hope lispute can be settled. ,rring a settlement, this new little war be- :s a valuable gift to the Communist policy wing chaos and confusion in the area. ie fighting flared at an awkward time. The ed States had just eased another dangerous tion -by bringing Saud together with the s of Jordan and Iraq in a common front ast Egyptian-Syrian designs. yptian propaganda welcomes the fighting man as evidence 9f Western imperialism a rallying poin for that elusive commodity d "Arab unity." iro propaganda beamed to the Arabian Peninsula calls the Sultan of Muscat and Oman, Said bin Taimur, a traitor to Arabism. It. hails as hero the rebellion leader, the de- posed Imam Galeb bin Ali. Evidently hopeful of wooing Saud back into the,. Egyptian-Syrian bloc; Cairo propaganda calls the fighting a battle of all Arabs against Western imperialism. In Arabic-language broadcasts, Moscow glee- fully labels the crisis the result of "plotting by American monopolists to eject their British competitors from an area with the smell of oil." The British profess to believe Saud is behind the rebel imam. They link the uprising with Saudi efforts to extend the area of Aramcd - Arabian-American Oil Co. - operations and thus pin down Saudi sovereignty. The United States State Department says while the tribes may receive arms from the out- side, "inner Oman is not an area where Saudi Arabia has claimed sovereignty." The fighting broke out in inner Oman, which a State Department spokesman says "appears to be clearly within a concession area of the Iraq Petroleum Co.," a firm owned by British, French, Dutch and United States interests. While the fighting may be centered now in the inner part of Oman, the whole Buraimi quarrel appears to be involved, and with it the future of sheikdoms and sultanates rim- ming the Arabian Peninsula. Buraim is a cluster of villages in an oasis. The Sultan of Muscat and Oman controls the village of Buraimi. Other villages are controlled by sheiks under British protection. The villages' livelihood de- pends on grazing for their camels and goats. Buraimi has the only good water wells in the whole northeast area of the huge Rub al Khali Desert. At the south of this desert Saudi Arabia emerges along poorly defined lines with Oman. r~--.,.,. ...,..1....4- Ai a mh n trr hn Ie Alr4igalt Bally I EditorialStaff VERNON NAHRGANG, Editor N HILLYER....................Sports Editor 1. fNA.K -.-.........-........... -Night Editor