"Happy New Geofiscal Year" 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 "When opinions A" Pr* Trutb ww DPrevalV Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, JULY 6, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: RENE GNAM 'Clean Bombs' and Atom Secrets DTIWo DIfferent Matters IN THE PRESENT controversy concerning week of sharing actual bomb secrets with oth- the sharing of "clean bomb" information er nations - except for a general remark in with other nations, there seem to be two phases the same tone as the "atoms for peace" dreart. to the question, between which scientists and politicians are not consistently distinguishing. CONGRESS, on the other hand, took a giant step forward and began discussing and dis- President Eisenhower, at his news confer- approving any share-the-information plan ence this week, spoke of inviting any inter- with foreign countries. The tone of the con- ested nation to measure the fallout following gressmen's talks indicated that they were in- this country's next "clean bomb" test - if deed concerned, although they appeared to be there is another. His words were definite: "I drawing unwarrantable conclusions. am going to invite," he said. But perhaps it was for the better, as the Then, on the subject of passing along tech- questions will arise in the near future, and the nical information concerning "clean bombs", better informed the lawmakers are, the more his words were less definite. He seemed to be they have discussed the problems, the more in favor of sharing information when the time capably they will be able to deal with the came - if legislation approved it. question. Meanwhile, Congress took the opportunity The President's invitation to other nations to make an issue of the subject, frowning for to measure our fallout can, however, be dis- the most part on any suggestion that the carded. It is merely a way of exaggerating and United States share any information with any- showing pride in what the administration be- one without due consideration - by Congress. lieves to be definite achievement in eliminating radiation hazards. [HERE ARE actually two related issues here, It is very doubtful that the invitation will the proving of the "cleanliness" of the ever be made use of; radiation fallout can al- 96-per-cent-radiation-free bomb and the shar- ready be measured to some extent without fir- ing of bomb secrets with foreign powers. ing a rocket in the immediate area. On the first issue, President Eisenhower is obviously quite anxious to impress the world BUT THE most important question - wheth- with the fact that this country does have er to share information on atomic and hy- "clean" bombs. Moreover, he was more than drogen devices - will be deserving of great emphatic - he actually stammered - to tell consideration when it comes up for final de- his press conference that peaceful uses for the bate within the next year or two. bombs were the major concern of the admin. Then Congress must have assurances of istration's scientists. good faith from participating nations before The President's words were meant to be it shares this nation's knowledge. Obviously, assuring that the United States wants "atoms the key to such assurances lies in the current for peace" only. disarmament negotiations. Yet the President was fully aware that his These negotiations and offers from other words held little actual promise in them. Any nations must be watched carefully --- for major step in that direction would require an therein will lie the answer to whether this na- act of Congress, leaving the President's words tion can safely share its weapons secrets. meaningless but powerful propaganda. --VERNON NAHRGANG The President, however, said nothing this Editor West Germany's Decisionl WEST GERMANY IS in a vise. She wants s peace. She would like to please the West and rearm so as to become an active member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. But most of all, she wants reunification. To Moscow, rearmaments with American weapons and reunification are irreconcilable. To Washington, they are not. London will pro- bably accept the American view. Paris doesn't know quite what to do. Reasons behind Moscow's recent note warn- ing West Germany not to accept American military aid if shewants reunification are fair- ly obvious. Russia probably foresees a reunified Ger- many breaking its bonds with the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and standing firmly with the Western powers. This Russia doesn't want. Russia, too, probably views a reunified, rearmed Germany as another bulwark against Communism. Moscow also might conceivable be concerned with the fear that reunification and rearma- ments of West Germany would buoy the hopes of her satellite nations, hopes of eventual free- dom, hopes that could lead to revolts not un- like the Hungarian riots of last fall. These fears Moscow rightly has. WASHINGTON quite naturally wants West Germany to rearm. United States policy also urges a reunified Germany, and contrary to the Russian view, hopes that a reunified, rearmed Germany will join NATO and 'the Today and Tomorrow By WALTER LIPPMANN ALTHOUGH OUR China policy remains unchanged, there has been a change of feeling about it. The number of true believers, such as Mr. Walter Robertson, have dwindled, and they are now able to control the policy only be- cause no one in a responsible po- sition has come forward with a convincing and satisfying alt erna- tive. That is why there was only a perfunctory reaction in Washing- ton to the Formosa riots and to the British abandonment of the special trade restrictions. There is a general feeling that even if our China policy is still the best possible policy, it has be- come a poor and dismal policy nevertheless. For all our assets are deterior- ating. Chiang is getting older and his chance of ever restoring his power has disappeared. His army, though large in numbers, is also growing older, and it cannot re- cruit from any large mass of Chi- nese. Red China is still being denied a place in the United Nations, but only because our friends, though they do not agree wtl us, are willing to defer temporarily to our pleadings. There is almost certainly an adequate majority to give Peiping the China seat in the U.N. ** * WITHIN Formosa there exists, as the Formosa riots so surely in- dicated, a general sense of frus- tration. The fact of the matter is that while the Chinese who have fled to Formosa are protected on their island, they are also contained in- side their island. This is a very unhealthy situation, to be safe, to be subsidized and to have no hope. Where can it lead? Where ev- entually but to the seduction of island Chinese by the mainland Chinese, and to a deal - after Chiang goes-which would put Formosa under the rule of Pei- ping? This is the prospect, and only a counter-revolution on the main- land, which is highly improbable, could make the prospect different. A reappraisal of our China policy' is, therefore, necessary un- less we wish to throw up our hands, confess that we are help- less, and that we must wait with resignation for the inevitable de- terioration to produce a general disaster. Ifthe best that we can hope to do is to hold fast and to stand pat with Mr. Robertson, the odds are very big that there will be a crash and that our whole posi- tion in the Far East will be in- volved in it. * * * THE GLARING weakness of our China policy is that we are saying one thing about Formosa and we are doing something very different. What we are saying is that Chiang's government in Formosa is the legitimate and rightful gov- ernment of all of China. What we are doing is to keep Chiang securely tied down in Formosa? We won't help his government to recover the territory over which it is supposed to be the legitimate sovereign. We won't permit it to try to recover its territory lest by a foolish adven- ture it would involve us in a war. Moreover, to speak plainly, we have not objected to having the word passed on to Chou En-lai in Peiping that there will be no mili- tary invasion of the mainland. Though officially we do not recognize the government of Mao Tse-tung, unofficially we are compelled to recognize its exist- ence. For some time we have, in fact, been conducting diplomatic negotiations with Red China in Geneva. * * * AND SO while our legal policy is that there is .ne China with Chiang the head of its legitimate government, our real policy is to have two Chinas, separated by the Seventh Fleet, one on the main- land and one in Formosa. Our real policyis fundament- ally sound and right. It corres- ponds to our commitments of honor, to the political realities in the Far East, and to our strategic interests. We should propose, it seems to me, that under the protection and guardianship of the United Na- tions, Formosa be recognized , as autonomous, demilitarized, and neutralized Chinese territory with its own seat in the General As- sembly. If Red China agreed to such set- tlement, it would become the basis of a peace treaty. A settlement of this kind would legalize, regularize and consoli- rlaiath rai ifla-n"x hin .n" LETTER-S to the editor L4 e AT THE STATE- Joe Butterfly's Wrings Clipped West. And, America will probably do all she can, short of force, to see that the objectives of reunification and rearmament are achieved. The British, as indicated by past stands re- garding German reunification, will probably support the Washington viewpoint. The French, still concerned about having their longtime enemy rearmed, are undecided about German rearmament. But, of course, the French government, despite the high number of Communists in its Assembly (25 per cent) would stand with the United States and Great Britain, if for no other reason than to oppose any advance of Russian Communism. West Germany, squeezed between a favorable three-nation contingent on the one hand and domineering Russian dictum on the other, must select an alternative. THE ANSWER to West Germany's dilemma is to go ahead and accept American arms. West Germany should set aside the Russian note, reasoning that even if she refused to accept United States sponsored military aid, she could not count on Moscow to agree to re- unification. The Russian note said should West Germany accept American arms reunification would be impossible. It did not say, in typical Russian style, that reunification would be possible and/ or likely .should West Germany turn down American arms offerings. -RENE GNAM jOE BUTTERFLY has set up 'l operations at the State and his particular brand of humor and shrewdness can be seen through Sunday in the picture of the same name. Actually the central figure of the movie is the Army magazine Yank, but more of that in a mo- ment. Universal-International h a s laid the plot of "Joe Butterfly" around incidents taking place during the beginning of the occu- pation of Japan. Strewn might be a better word to describe the plot, for the adventures of Private Woodley (Audie Murphy), Ser- geant Kennedy (George Nader), and Colonel Fuller (Fred Clark) range loosely around the first oc- cupation edition of Yank. Joe Butterfly (Burgess Mere- dith) might also be said to be working for' the "Yanks," but Henry Hathaway (Keenan Wynn) of Trend Magazine definitely has his own interests to look out for. HERE, briefly, is what happens. The surrender of Japanhas just been signed and the Yank staff is expectantly waiting its shipping orders for home. Colonel Fuller decides, however, that there should be a first occu- pation edition of Yank to greet the newly arriving troops. The small staff, headed by Ser- geant Kennedy, have three days in which to whip this edition to- gether. This doesn't sound impos- sible, but add to the picture the chaos of the first days of the oc- cupation, several G.I.'s each with a genius for ,causing complica- tions, and Henry Hahaway, work- ing for a rival civilian publica- ion and wanting to have his publi- cation be the first to hit the stands. Keeping this weak cup of tea well stirred is Joe Butterfly, who innocently plays both sides of the fence and sometimes even a third side. I SAY "weak cup of tea", for comparisons between this picture and the recent "Teahouse of the August Moon" are inevitable. Unfortunately, "Joe Butterfly* makes a pale carbon, although certainly not an unpleasant one. This is not as bad as it may sound, but often keeps the picture in low gear. U-I often uses the scenery of the Japanese locations to advantage, and CinemaScope is often pleasing to the eye, even in closeups. Perhaps the basic weakness comes from the use of three scen- arists, a technique Hollywood has tripped over in the past. * * * THE MOVIES accompanying this single feature are of some interest, too. The cartoon, if ana- lyzed, could be construed as an Insult to the viewer. Balancing this is a very pleas- ant short on thge wine industry of Portugal. The camera work in this picture gives the fine sensual im- pression of the grapes, the wine and the hard manual labor which goes into the final achievement- the vintage. All in all, ,these ic- tures make up a pleasant program of summer entertainment. -Phillip Burgess (Editor's Note: The Dailyrmaks every effort to print signed Letters to the Editor not exceeding 300 words. The Daily also reserves the right to edit or withhold all letters.) Commuters .. To the Editor: I WONDER whether a conuut- er's clearing house has ever been tried at the University. It might be something useful. It might make it easier to organize motor pools. But beyond that, its use for emergencies should bedam- mense. I happen to be one of the stu- dents, of whom there must be several, who live in Detroit. Some of our cars are not the newest. I am very happy with my vintage automobile and manage to make my eight o'clocks, but what would happen if the car had to go to the garage for a week, perish the thought! I would rise mighty ear- ly indeed. Of course, there are the bulle- tin boards for the exchange of information, but large boards have drawbacks as well as advantages. A little file, however, can prob- ably be kept with practically no administrative effort. Students from the hinterland might fill out slips while applying for driver registrations. -John Neufeld, Grad DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin Is an official publication of the University of Michigan forwhich the Michi- gan Daily assumes no editorial re- sponsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Building, be- fore .2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. SATURDAY, JULY 0, 1957 VOL. LXVIII, NO: 9 General Notices Ushers are'urgently needed for two events to be given in Hill Auditor- ium: the Indian Dance Recital by Bhaskar and Sasha Fri., July 19, and the Count Basie Show on Wed., July 24. Any regular season ushers who are on campus this summer are urgently requested to help with these two events. Any other persons enrolled in Summer School maytusher if they so desire. Please come to the Bo Of- fice in Hill Auditorium on Tues., July-? rWed, July 10 or Thurs., July 11th, from 4:30 to 0:00 p.m. to sign up for these two events. Late Permission: All women students who attended the play "Chaley's Aunt" at Lydia Mendelssohn on Tues. night, July 2, had late permission until 10:45 p.m. Lectures A Symposium on Stellar Evolution and Abundance of the Elements, spon- sored jointly by the Departments of Physics and Astronomy, will be held during the week of July -12 in Aud. A, Angell Hall. The lectures will be given every day at 9:30 a.m. and 2 p.m,. Music Education Lecture, auspices of the School of Music "How I would Build Tone Quality In High School Boys' Voices." Philip Duey, professor of voice. 3:00 p.m., Mon., July 8, Aud. D, Angell Hall. Foreign Language Program: Public Lecture: The second in this series of lectures will be given Wed., July 10, at 4:10 p.m. in Room 429, Mason Hall. Mrs. Angel del Barrio of Cody High School, Detroit, will talk on: "High School Language Teaching: Tech- niques. Frustrations, Rewards." Pub- lic Invited. Concerts Student Recital: Peter van Dyck, or- ganist, in partial fulfillment of the re- quirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music, at 4:15 p.m. Sun., July 7, In Hill Auditorium. He Is a pupil of Rob- ert Noehren. Open to the public. Faculty Recital: The Stanley Quar- tet will present the first In a series of three concerts this summer on Tues., July 9, at 8:30 p.m. insRackham Lec- ture Hall. The members of the Quar- tet are: Gilbert Ross and Emil Raab, violins, Robert Courte, viola, and Rob. ert Swenson, cello. The program includes: "Quartet in B-flat major. Op. 64, No. 3", Haydn; "Five Movements for String Quartet, Op. 5 (1922)," Webern; and "Quartet in C minor, Op. 51, No. 1" Brahms. Open to the public without charge. Academic Notices Topology Seminar: Organization meeting and first talk (Frank Ray- mond: Duality Theory, on Tues., July 9, at 3:00 p.m. in 3010 Angell Hall. French Table: Every Tuesday noon, in the South Room of the Michigan Un- ion Cafeteria, those wishing to speak French will meet for lunch. Placement Notices The following vacancies are listed with the Bureau of Appointments for the 1957-58 school year. They will not be here torinterview at this time. Bound Brook, New Jersey - High School French. Cleveland 14. Ohio -. (Cuyahoga County Schools) - Several vacancies through Kdg. and all Elementary grades. Groton, Connecticut - Elementary (1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 6th); Jr. High Sci- 4 °, AT MUSIC CIRCLE: Can-Can' Pleasant SOME OF the most entertain- ing- summer theater entertain- ment in this area is being pre-, sented nightly under a big green- and-white-striped circus tent in northwest Detroit. The theatrical enterprise in question is called Music Circle and its summer season fare is musicals-in-the-round. To date, Music Circle has put on three f a- miliar Broadway hit musicals- "Plain and Fancy" "The Pajama Game," and the show that opened this week, 'Can-Can." The first two shows were solid successes from a critical point of view. This reviewer attended them both and was impressed by the fact that never before in its pre- INTERPRETING THE NEWS: U.S. Fallout Policy AT NORTHLAND PLAYHOUSE: Will Success Spoil Him? By 3.1. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst YESTERDAY'S big explosion at Yucca Flats is bound to affect the thinking of those who have been questioning American efforts to reach an agreement with Russia for a ban on atomic bomb testing. Despite the efforts of the test authorities to minimize the danger of fallout from this test, its size, the greatest of any previous test in this country, is enough to make the average man itchy, as though he could feel it. Here is a bomb which, though perhaps not so powerful as some exploded in the Pacific tests, nevertheless made its destructiveness felt. It could set fires over a circle 10 or 12 miles in diameter. Its flash was so great that, in a war, it could start people moving over several thousand square miles in fear, hysteria, and perhaps in panic. Editorial Staff VERNON NAHRGANG, Editor A great many people, among them both mili- tary and nuclear experts, think President Eis- enhower has been moving too fast in the ma- ter of an atom test Pan. They don't believe in the effectiveness of agreements with Russia. They think such a ban,,itied to a stoppage of nuclear weapons production and dissolution of stockpiles, will remove the world's chief de- terrent of war. They don't think Britain and the United States can afford to revise their entire defense programs, now based on decreased manpower armed with atomic weapons. They think that elimination of atomic wea- pons would leave the Communist world free to make war as soon as its industrial system is able to support it. They think the West should maintain and develop its military ability, keep up political pressure on the Communists, and allow for time to prove the weaknesses of the Communist system. They do not think Russia would be amenable to any agreement unless it weakened the West relative to herself. The President himself has indicated some doubt about disarmament possibilities. Some of WITH the second show of the summer season, Northland Playhouse has adopted an ap- proach to arena staging quite new to Detroit theater audiences. The new show is George Axelrod's "Will Success Spoil Rock Hunt- er?"; the staging innovation is the fact that Northland plans hence- forth to give their performances under the stars. Last Saturday, the familiar cir- cus tent on the grounds of North- land Shopping Center was exten- sively ripped by an expiring tor- nado, and hasn't been raised again since. Producer Kenneth Schwartz's policy will be to dispense with the canvas and play to good weather. Rain checks are to be issued on the occasion of inclement outdcor conditions. 'Ihe play might have nad some- ti-ing to do with it, but seeing a Brcadway rc'w with P:o.c y.wa , stars given under the night sky was a very pleasant experience. The night was cool and clear; but also collaborating were playwright Axelrod (of "Seven Year Itch" fame), and notably, buxom Marie Wilson and a familiar Hollywood Rita is really a decoration on the plot, but she does have some good lines; and certainly no male in the audience would have chal- lenged her presence in the midst of the gentle satire on the writing racket in Hollywood. Marie Wilson couldn't have been better as the simple girl uninhib- ited in discussing matters pertain- ing to sex, in Axelrod's play which assumes approximately the same attitude. She won the audience in the show's opening moments when, chatty and unaffected, she ap- peared towel-wrapped on a mas- seur's table where she was getting a treatment "to break down the fatty tissues" (the existence of which one could honestly doubt). McMAHON, as an "agent of the devil", was an effective if some- what unconventional figure from Hades. He handled competently the important business of moti- vating the whole escapade. As the soul-vending writer, Chester Doherty was boyish and insecure one moment and lecher- ous the next - as the play de- manded vious two years' existence had the musical-in-the-round enterprise put together a pair of consecu- tive winners of the like of this season's openers. With Cole Porter's "Can-Can", the Music Circle people have run their triumphant series to three. Loaded with some of the most charming of Cole Porter hits ("C'est Magnifique", "I Love Paris", "Allez-Vous En") the show had the potential of an au- dience-pleaser. A young, enthusiastic and tal- ented cast took hold of the situa- tion from the first scene and did the rest. * * * THE PLEASANT and even plau- sible story of "Can-Can" involves romantically La Mome Pistache, a dance hall proprietess and pro- moter of the can-can dance back around 1893, and Judge Aristide Forestier; a young and unworldly started out with the intention of French magistrate who really banning the "shocking" exhibition and closing down Pistache's estab- lishment. Then there's a comical side plot involving a pert laundress-dancer and her dependant Bulgarian sculptor, a cowardly fellow by the name of Boris Adzinidzinadze. The four leads are, by them- selves, good enough to carry the whole show. But, as in previous shows, they have been excellent- ly supported by a handsome and expert secondary cast, singing en- semble, and corps de ballet. Paul Ukene as the Judgewas vincingly susceptible to the charm pleasingly masculine and con- of Pistache, played by Mary Har- mon who had everything but a strong and lasting voice to fit her part. SANDY KENYON played the comical Bulgarian broadly-very broadly-and got the laughs his role called for. Opposite him in the part of Claudine is the brightest star to shine yet at Music Circle: a petite, vivacious and polished actress and dancer, Judy Guyll. Miss Guyll li an to ha csn fn ha h oR.vd I I