Sly t{rdigat Daily 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 Are Fre Truth Wit. Prevault Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. HURSDAY, JULY 11, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: RENE GNAM Human Relations Group Has Educational Work To Do NNN ARBOR'S C ty Council this week set the city's new Hunan Relations Commission n action by approving the mayor's appoint- nent of ten members to the group. A representative collection of community eaders, the ten-member body for the most part ncludes knowing and understanding persons [uite familiar with the human relations scene n Ann Arbor. It 'is a group entirely capable of roviding leadership and obtaining achieve- nent within its sphere of occu' tion. Although the Commission's work, like that >f the Human Relations Board here, will neces- arily be somewhat investigative and there- ore secretive, there can be no doubt but that he Commission will at all times be working n and for the best interests of the Ann Arbor ommunity. The objectives established for the Coin- nission and affirmed by the individual mem- >ers as they assumed their positions further ndicate the good intentions of the group. Most important of these objectives concerns he aiding of private organizational activities iaving to do with human relations and the lissemination of educational and informational natter on the subject. HUMAN RELATIONS is an interesting field -just as curious and complicated and need- ing of understanding as humanity itself. The importance of education in that field cannot be overrated. Because man is the animal he is, his education determines his attitudes and his way of life - and once he learns some- thing one way, he is not very likely to change that way. There is only one method of changing a per- son's ways or attitudes, and that involves the various forms of education. Yet even that,; coupled with persuasion, is not always suc- ressful with older, more physically matured persons. Obviously, a commission for human relations intending to do effective work must concen- trate its long-range efforts toward the edu- cation of the coming generations. While many immediate matters will un- doubtedly occupy the working hours of the newk Commission, it should always be aware of its informational and educational purposes and be continually working toward the illumination of community members - particularly the youth --in matters of human relations. -VERNON NAHRGANG Editor A Question of Meaning AUTHORS in the right-wing press are mak- ing increasing use of the vague term "left- ist" to describe activities, which are to. be prima facie condemned. Through all the cracks in the literary basement come seeping references to "leftist progressive education", "campus leftist liberals", and similar curious species. This is a most useful device, freeing the author from the beastly necessity of offering any proof of this "leftist" malfunction. The poor reader more or less tends to identify that word "leftist" with the whole essence of evil: the grim Communist spectre, the Hungarian massacre, purges, Soviet armies on the march, a vast network of secret spies handing out reams of secret documents, Uranium and vita- min pills, from our fast diminishing supplies, to the Russians. With this picture in mind, attaching the label "leftist" to any activity cannot fail to bring with it something of a taint. THIS PROCESS of establishment of guilt by adjective is about to engulf the unaware reader in a sea of slander. The exact meaning of the phrase is so delightfully obscure that it can be used to almost any end. If a Georgia editor refers to a local citizen who advocates limited integration in railway stations as "of a leftist nature", do his readers interpret this to mean that the citizen is per- haps too broad-minded and naive for his so- ciety? No.! The reader only sees the Soviet army sweeping in from the Sea to enforce inte- gration. When a writer in a digest-size magazine claims that the "leftist" influences in American colleges are in control, do his readers under- stand this to mean that the faculty is preach- ing Welfare-State again? Do they deduce that some muddy thinkers have been praising the UN again?. Or do they see Red stars on every book bag, wtih little Student Soviets already forming and pictures of Khrushchev smiling from the walls? "LEFTIST" has many meanings. It can mean that someone once voted Democratic, or is opposed to tax relief for oil speculators. Or it ,can point out members of the NKVD. If the man down the street is a believer in "leftist" doctrines, does he send guided missile data to Bulganin, or does he subscribe to The Reporter? Clearly, the word must be defined with each use. Curiously enough, if this suggestion were fol- lowed, one might find most often, at the bot- tom of any number of so-called interpretive news reports, in very small type: "Leftist: used here to indicate unfortunate individuals not in sympathy with arguments here stated." -DAVID KESSEL Union Cafeterias In Tradition of Service THE UNION cafeterias must be heartily con- gratulated, if not for the quality of the food served therein, then at least for the quality of service provided.. We had the occasion the other week to find a fly in our raisin pudding - not, of course, an alarming or very unusual occurrence at the Union. But the unquestioning alertness with which our request for a refund was met de- serves only commendation. The Union has ap- parently prepared for such happenings. Another consideration of the punctual Union cafeteria workers is to turn out the lights sharply at closing time. Indeed, "Your Michi- gan Union" has services galore, -VERNON NAHRGANG AMERICAN SOIL: Guam Has KeyRole In Pacific By JIM BECKER AGANA, Guam 'P)-Bitter agita- tion against American bases in Japan, Okinawa, Formosa and even the Philippines has suddenly spotlighted the key role of this West Pacific possession in the United States defense picture. Guam already is the hub of a Pacific defense ring, site of a first- class harbor and home base of the mightiest American bombers in the Far East. But more important, Guam is American sail. As such it presents a firm footing for American strik- ing power in the Far East-one not subject to cries of "Yankee, go home." or other political pressure. This fact emerges strongly from the series of recent developments that have included anti-American riots on Formosa, hassles over American bases in Okinawa and in the Philippines, and the agreement to withdraw promptly United States combat troops from Japan. * * * GUAM is about 1,700 miles from Red China-three hours by jet bomber-and about the same from Tokyo and Manila. The island is 30 miles long, sev- en wide, and is shaped like a kid- ney bean. It is half volcanic, half coral rock, covered with a mixture of palm trees and stubby under- growth. Carabaos, the beasts of burden, and high-speed American cars mingle in traffic, over superhigh- ways and dustry jungle paths. Some 70,000 persons live here. About 30,000 are Guamanians. Another 15,000 are Filipinos, hired by the military forces for chores ranging from driving bulldozers to tending bar. The other 25,000 are sailors and airmei, and their families, plus a Guard personnel and American ci- scattering of Army and Coast vilians. * * * MIGHTY Andersen Air Force base, where the swift, swept-wing B-47s of the Strategic Air Com- band - the supersecret nuclear wing of the Air Force - are sta- tioned, is on the island's northern tip. The screaming jets make daily practice bombing runs. It seems logical that their nuclear weapons are nearby. New crews are flown in every 90 days, to replace the ones here. This rotation plan will eventually give every career pilot in SAC intimate knowledge of potential H- bomb targets in the Far East. The Navy's role here is one of standby readiness. "We have to keep things running, and ready for the enormous expansion that would come if something broke out, out here," says Rear Adm. William B. Ammon, Navy commander. "We have a 300-million-dollar investment on Guam," he said. And he hammers home the point heard throughout the Far East these days-"Guam is American terri- tory, the most western American territory in the Pacific." THIS IS NOT to imply that all is completely serene between the military and "islanders" here. Some Guamanians talk of "American imperialist tactics," which they feel favor "Statesiders" in business and military relation- ships. Others, educated in American universities, are vehement about what they consider a tendency by some military men to look down on them. There are also some ob- jections voiced to the importing of Filipino workers. In turn, some "Statesiders" say the islanders are "lazy." They say the Filipinos were brought here because the Guam- anians did not possess the neces- sary skills. And they feel the gov- ernment leans over backward to be found in all the rest of Asia. The islanders all were made American citizens in 1950, and there is no serious desire here to be anything else. English is be- coming the major language. A good portion of the people work for the military, directly or indirectly. The island is not self-supporting. United States military expendi- tures keep it running. Very little farming is done, which gives rise to the theory that the Guaman- ians are "lazy." SOFT-SPOKEN Joe Flores, a Guamanian who runs the Guam Daily News from a modern plant in the main business district of Agana, the capital, says it is true that the islanders show little en- thusiasm for farm work. "But," he savs "n.lmrt anv .j-JR$t..oC AT THE CAMPUS: 'Samrai' Moving, Enjoyable "Collective Leadership" 4-. ~~ -f -:F "SAMURAI," the second Japanese film to run at the Campus in the past several weeks, is as mov- irig andpowerful as its predecessor, "The Magnificent Seven." The cur- rent movie is more poignant in many ways, and more complex, but . both are clearly produced with the same careful, almost painstaking skill that seems to characterize these Asiatic imports. The movie might well be titled in the American idiom, "The Out- law." It is the story of a man possessed by some devil of brutality and strength who leaves his home in an effort to find recognition as a. man of power, a warrior. Driven by his ambition to be- come a Samurai, a soldier devoted to a lifetime of ascetic patriotism, he fights against acceptance of the very qualities that would make him one. The hero has strength bit not wisdom, and he finds that strength is not enough to guaran- tee a virtuous life. After the desertion of a weaker comrade in the search for adven- ture, the man, the hero, returns home to perform a comparatively Financial Roundup NEW YORK (M--The stock mar- ket came within striking dis- tance of its all-time bull market high yesterday as it reached an- other new peak for 1957. Trading was the heaviest since June 10, the day of President Ei- senhower's "upset stomach" as prices rallied after early irregu- larity. The quoted value of stocks listed on the New York Stock Exchange added an estimated $1,860,000,000 based on the rise"in the average. charitable duty; he kills a man, several men, and is outlawed by his townsmen. He flees into the mountains and despite the ap- parent invincibility of a primitive dragnet, is captured only through the peaceful intervention of a Buddhist priest. * * * THE PRIEST, a marvelous char- acter, attempts to force repentance upon the outlaw, but the immedi- ate effects of his endeavors are not entirely evident. The man is released by a lovely orphan girl, an assistant to the priest, and with her, for the first time, he finds and accepts love. But women are not for the hunt- ed, or even, tie picture seems to imply, for the strong. He is re- captured and re-educated to a moral life. After the rejection of his pride and his love, the hero finally becomes a Samurai. There is more depth to this film than a mere outline of the plot might seem to indicate. Admit- tedly, an excess of gore and mock heroics is occasionally noticeable, but this over-vitality seems ex- cuseable as a necessary embellish- ment to the moral theme. Fine act- ing and the delicate fragility of Japanese scenery add perspective and beauty to a thoroughly enjoy- able movie. -Jean Willoughby ii rn ~- Washington Mery Go- Bound By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON - One thing you can expect to come out of the crisis in the Kremlin is a visit by Eisenhower's old wartime friend, Marshal Zhukov, to Washington. It has been known that the President has been talking for some time about inviting Marshal Zhukov to the United States. He felt that the former Russian commander in Berlin was a man who would understand straight- from-the-shoulder old soldier talk. And the President, as an old soldier, cherishes as his dearest ambition the hope of bringing peace to the world. In the past, however, state de- partment and central intelligence advisers have discouraged an Invi- tation to Marshal Zhukov. They said he wasn't important enough in the Soviet set-up. Now things have changed. Zhu- kov has been elevated to the Pre- sidium, has thrown his weight be- hind Khrushchev, is one of the top men in the Kremlin. He could now be invited to Washington as Russian Minister of Defense with- cut any necessity of a return visit by Eisenhower, as would be the case with Khrushchev and Bul- ganin. So don't be surprised if Marshal Zhukov comes to Washington. * * * NONSMOKING CABINET -It won't please the tobacco com- panies, but a majority of Ike's cabinet has sworn off cigarettes. Following the American Cancer Society's alarming report on smok- ing, the President asked his cabinet how many still smoked. Only four admitted they did: Secretary of Defense Wilson, Attorney General Brownell, Secretary of Labor Mit- chell and Secretary of Interior Seaton. The remaining six mem- bers, plus Vice-President Nixon, claimed they don't smoke. Ike said. he handed his last pack to a friend several years ago and hasn't touch ed a cigarette since. * * * PENTAGON CENSORSHIP - Secretary of Defense Wilson has been blue-penciling his subordin- ates' speeches. Most often gagged have been Adm. Arleigh Burke, the Navy chief, who has had nine speeches censored, and Secretary of the Army Wilbur Brucker who has had to revise seven speeches, all since the first of the year. Wil- son ordered them bluntly to change their speeches or throw them away. Burke has had trouble before. He was head of the secret navy pro- paganda office "operation 23," set up to. work against the air force. As a result, President Truman re- fused to promote him, finally did so after great pressure from the naval lobby. Idaho's 32-year-old Sen. Frank Church, the baby of the Senate, wowed his colleagues with his maiden speech on Hells Canyon. Even Sen. Russell Long of Loui siana, who's been against Hells Canyon, listened carefully. Later he voted with Church. (Copyright 1957 by Ben Syndicate Inc.) ]DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily 'Official Bulletti to an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michi- gan Daily assumes no editorial re- sponsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Atoom 3519 Administration Building, be- fore 2 p.m. the day' preceding- publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. THURSDAY, JULY 11, 1957 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 12 Lectures Eighth Summer Biological Sympo- slum, auspices of the Division of Bio- Vgical Sciences: Thurs., July 11 morning session. "The Humoral Control of Regeneration in Insects," Dietrich Bodenstein, Medical Laboratories, Army Chemical Center, Mairyland; "Hormonal Regulation of Plant Morphogenesis as Observed in Tissue Culture," Folke K. Skoog, Pro- fessor of Botany, University of Wiscon- sin. 9:30 a.m., Aud. C, Angell Hall. Asian Cultures and the Modern Amer- ican. "Japan: A Society in Transition." Edwin O. Reischauer, Director, Hare vard-Yenching Institute. 4:15 p.m., Thurs., July 11, Aud. B, Angell Hall, Prof. Henry M. Hoenigswald, Univer- sity of Pennsylvania, will speak on "Syllabic Structure in Indo-European and Greek," in Summer Linguistic In- stitute Forum Lecture at 7:30 p.m., Thurs., July 11, Rackham Building Am- phitheater. Astronomy D e p a r t m e n t Visitors' Night. Fri., July 12, 8:30 p.m., Rm. 2003, Angell Hall. Dr. Kenneth M. Yoss, Loui- siana State University, win speak on "Planets." After the lecture the Stu- dent Observatory on the fifth floor of Angell Hall will be open for inspection and for telescopic observations of Ju- piter and Saturn, Children welcomed, but must be accompanied by adults. kI .. }Y " . AT THE MICHIGAN: Ring Without Musioc "MAN ON FIRE" is Bing Cros- by's claim to being dramat- ic, whatever that is. He glows with gentle, reassuring confidence and speaks in a folksy, casual way. He's no different. The dialogue is spoken a little faster and a little louder at times, but it's still Bing. And that's fine. The story, however, is not among his better ones. Bing, a manufacturer for auto part, di- vorced from his wife (Mary Fick- ett). Both want custody of their only child (Malcolm Brodick). Who should get him? * * * THE BOY wants to remain with his father. Even so, his mother gets custody so that she can show the boy she cares for him. Just why she hasn't established this previously is a mystery. Anyway, the mother gets him; then Bing gets him back; then - oh, well. The point is that the decision is not easily settled because each. parent is real swell. In fact, so swell I don't exactly know why they divorced in the first' place. (Bing worked too much and his wife accidently fell for someone else, I think). In a Crosby picture it isn't vital to know these details. As the has- seling moves along, s e v e r a charming human interest se- quences are included. These scenes are the most enjoyable feature in a Crosby vehicle, especially this one. Inger Stevens, who is being rah- rahed as the new Grace Kelly, portrays a brilliant legal expert who spends her time throwing herself at Bing. She says she doesn't know why. Miss Stevens is very attractive, though she isn't the Princess. But I imagine she'll do very well even if she doesn't become one. --William Hawes N {4 The Ole Ball Game 4 HOW IS THIS for a romantic setting: a summer's evening, 'a velvety verdent valley upon which brilliant stars shine, a sea that sometimes lashes forth in fury and other times remains as hushed as a sleeping babe, and a monstrous mountain encircling this scene in much the same way a golden frame will entwine around a Rembrandt? Lest you be disillusioned into believing that you are alone with you sweetheart in some wonderful fairyland, we'd better awaken you from your trance and inform you that you are seated in your buck-and-a-quarter grandstand seat, right behind a terribly annoying post in the converted cow pasture in which the Detroit Tigers wait with ravenous hunger for such delicacies as roasted Orioles, scalped Indians, and, when things get tough, even old Sox (Red and White). HIS, FANS, is Briggs Stadium, where the green garden is the outfield-where Al Kaline and company roam, where the sea is the 20,000 or more faces gazing intently at the stars (baseball heroes) and where the mountain is the ominous wall that begins at Michigan and National .Avenues and continues uninterrupted for two square blocks. Editorial Staff VERNON NAHRGANG, Editor Only at the "house that Briggs built" can so many rare phenomena be found, with the possible exception of 15 other major league parks. After all, where else in Michigan can you purchase a box of popcorn for 25 cents (un- buttered yet!)? Or hear the sound that resem-' bles some rare African animal's mating call, but is only the frantic -cry of the hot dog ven- dor ("Gyett yo raid hawts!") ? There's fascination expectation, and hope here at the ole ball game, and that's the secret of its being the National Pastime. The people come to see Billy Hoeft hit a homerun, to see Frank House steal home, and to see J. W. Porter play a complete game in the outfield without making an error. Can you imagine the delight to be ex- perienced in telling your grandchildren 30 years from now that you were actually there when Hoeft blasted one out of the park? JUST AS INTERESTING as what's happening on the field are the fans around you and their actions. There's the tot, complete with Tiger cap, who, because he didn't take an afternoon nap, hasn't seen a pitch since the second. inning. Anyway, a general admission ticket is cheaper than a babysitter. There's the group of boys who have success- fully ditched their wives for the evening, have indulged in just a little too much liquid re- freshment and have made their presence ap- parent to one and all. Then there's the poor guy who wasn't so WHY SO DIFFERENT? Cuba's Revolutionary Students II h (EDITOR'S NOTE: The author, an instructor in the English Language Institute, has just returned from a year as associate professor of English at Oriente University in Santiago, Cuba. While there he gathered the material for the fol- lowing article through personal ob- servation and interviews with ex- perts in related fields.) By DAVID A. MUNRO Instructor, English Language Institute THIS IS an attempt to explain why it is that Cuban university students, who outwardly look so much like American university students, are so revolutionary.... why they risk their lives in the Sierra Maestra mountains .... why they have remained out of their classrooms since last November 30 and are not now predicted to return until President Batista is no longer president .... and why this flaming spirit goes down to include high school and elemen- tary students, both boys and girls. Something more than "the radi- calism of youth" or "the -revolt against parental authority" is in- volved. With nearly 100 per cent of the students out on strike, it is obvious'that the naturally radi- cal as well as the naturally con- seemed to seep in at classroom windows. But the university students have been the leaders who clearly sensed the cause. The others, down to my own anti-Batista kinder- gartner, have been sympathetic revolutionaries. The truth is that the youth are against government precisely because they are so much like North American youth, with a very similar background. Rock 'n' roll has swept the island and so has the motor scooter. Handling machine guns and bombs in defiance of the National Police is just more of the same- with the difference being that revolution is "necessary" within the world as the Cuban sees it. LIKE THAT of the United States, Cuba's has been a boom economy. With 80 per cent of the world's export sugar, Cuba pro- duced along with it an annual crop of millionaires. But all this was before 1925, when the boom was on. Since then, Cuba has slipped among the nations of the world. One reason has been the rise of THE VIOLENCE is directed against the dictatorship of Presi- dent Fulgencio Batista, a former army sergeant who once left the country with the millions he had taken from it, but who came back --evidently for more. In President Batista the youth have a con- venient target. He represents the graft sys- tem, that deadly sickness from old Spain. Under him, graftees have infested the government and the services of government have de- teriorated in consequence. The graft system, incidentally, goes down to include school teach- ers who are involved in the pur- chase of classrooms, or synecures, which they often thereafter pay no attention to. Batista is likewise a convenient target because of his rule by vio- lence, his use of gangsters in uni- form to terrorize the people by in- discriminate tortures and murders. Batista's violence, of course, in- cluded violence against the Cu- ban constitution and the usages of democracy. He seized power from Dr. Carlos Prio in 1952 by violence and he shamelessly rigged II A I