Sixty-Eighth 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 Free Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. THURSDAY, JULY 31, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: SUSAN HOLTZER Earmarking State Revenues Not the Answer to Fiancial Ills THERE IS A TENDENCY in many quarters to regard more money as the solution of all problems. The attitude sometimes charac- terizes union leaders on the eve of a strike. it also sometimes prevails in the world of edu- cation. In essence, the argument on the eve of a bond issue vote runs: "Spend more money for education and more kids will learn more things in more 'educationally conducive' surroundings and America will be stronger. Often neglected is the question of how can the morney be most efficiently spent. Ann Ar- bor in the last several years has shown the folly of not asking questions soon enough, as voters willingly approved spending for a lux- urious new Ann Arbor High (complete with a soda bar) and later balked at efforts to raise taxes to provide more pay for the teachers. More money in itself may not solve the prob- lems, but in a competitive society, it can at least help cope with some of them. COMPETITION between schools for top flight faculty members has been a recurrent prob- lem, as University Vice-President and Dean of Faculties Marvin Niehuss underlined this week In pointing to a national magazine article quot- ing the University of California's intentions to lure faculty members from other schools, Including Michigan. Yet the statements should come as no surprise. In the spring of 1957, he warned the Regents that the University's fac- ulty was already being raided by other schools. Competition of an even stronger nature comes from another direction, that of business and industry. At all academic levels, the na- tion's colleges and universities continually lose men to the greater material rewards of the Industrial world. In the field of engineering, the number of doctoral candidates is decreasing. Also, in some branches of the physical sciences, the Univer- sity is forced to use as teaching fellows indi- viduals who lack the usually required masters degree because of the much higher pay indus- try can offer for those who already have earned their masters. S IS not merely a problem for the pres- ent: It indicates the shortage of qualified teachers for the future. The Arkans T HE FORCES of what was expected by all won out against the forces of what was hoped for by many when Gov. Orval Faubus received a third-term nomination in the Ar- kansas. Democratic primary on Tuesday. The outcome was never in doubt. Faubus' two opponents, a Little Rock meatpacker and a state judge, had conceded defeat three hours after the closing of the polls. A Democratic pri- mary victory is tantamount to election in Ar- kansas. In his victory statement Faubus said, "The voting today was a condemnation by the people of illegal federal intervention in the affairs of the state and of the horrifying use of federal bayonets on the streets of an American city and in the halls of a public school." It is a statement one -might expect from a person who did not believe in the United States government and its democratic form, but hard- ly from the governor of a state of those United States. It is a statement one might expect to read on the editorial pages of a Russian news- paper, but not in the American press. As INHERENTLY opposite as are the politi- cal and economic views of the United States and Russia, they are no more opposite than are the views of the federal government and a good part of the South. Faubus' victory was merely another indica- tion of the South's determination to remain adamant on its integration stand. Adamant INTERPRETING THE NEWS While the 1 By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst THE COMMUNIST and Arab nationalist countries have recognized the revolutionary government in Iraq and are getting in their licks while most of the West procrastinates. Reports from the Baghdad Pact meeting in London say its remaining members will ex-. tend recognition, but are holding back to ex- press disapproval of assassination as a weapon of revolt. There's probably more to it than that. Hair splitting which makes murder condonable later but not earlier is not practical diplomatic procedure. The truth probably is that the diplomats who first denounced the horrors of the revolt were preparing a tentative record on which to base intervention and have now been caught off base by the apparent reasonableness of the nar -vrm,,-a fu lt .... Yet, the state Legislature, in the words of Sen. Louis Christman (R-Ann Arbor), decided to "tread lightly" in a year of falling state reve- nues and cut the University budget by one million dollars. The University as a result, has eliminated over two hundred positions, a good many of them in the lower ranks of teaching and research which often help support those who are working for higher degrees. As Sen. Christman commented, "Although some people feel we should consider the needs of the next generation, America just isn't doing business that way." A nice bit of rationaliza- tion, but the statement offers little justifica- tion for ignoring the future. Underlying the problem, of course, is the lack of money for education. Most of the state's revenue is earmarked for specific purposes, such as gasoline taxes for highways. Two thirds of the sales tax goes to public schools. LAST WEEK, Sen. Christman, who has long been an advocate of a state income tax, pro- posed that in adopting such a levy, the state earmark the entire three per cent sales tax for education. He contends the earmarking has worked in other areas and should work for education. While there may be merit in an income tax, one must cast a dubious eye at additional des- ignation revenue. Such a method limits the legislature's ability to respond to needs for which regular revenues at a particular moment are not adequate. This year is a case inpoint. Sales tax reve- nue, based in large part on durable goods such as automobiles, have fallen, yet educational needs are rising. Nor even in "good years" does it seem likely that the tax base of durable goods will grow in pace with rising population and educational needs. A revision of the state's tax structure will probably emerge from the efforts of the legis- lative tax study committee. But even ways of providing more money will not overshadow the need for efficiently handling it. Earmarking of funds, no matter for what purpose, will not in the long run provide the answer to the problem of the next generation. -MICHAEL KRAFT Co-Editor 'The Natives Are Looking Kind Of Attractive j A -r- -:x P -s II III f- E ' * +-' o c LETTER FROM ROME: Inviting Fan faniHere a Smart Move miscellaneous others, given them some snappy, clever lines, and called it a play. Barry's play has been success- ful, it is perhaps the outstanding example of its kind that quickly comes to mind, and can provide its audiences with an entertain- ing evening, if well done. Furth- ermore, enough of the author's moral seeps through so that the more garrulous members of the audience get the idea they are mulling over something of signifi- cance. * C C THIS PRODUCTION fulfills most of the superficial require- ments of the play, failing only be- cause it does not provide much of the particular style of the parti- cular set of people Barry describes. Occasional tendency of the di- alog to drift aimlessly, especially at the beginning, did not help, but the main problem was really one of direction. A good set of indi- vidual actors, who are not parti- cularly comfortable in their roles, cannot entirely put a play across, unless they have a definite idea of how these characters are going to act in various situations, how they are going to think, how they are going to move. * * 4. BEA MINKUS played a pretty warm Tracy Lord. This was mostly satisfactory, but there were a few times I wished for the cool ap- proach. She has a very rich voice which young Philadelphia ladies seldom have, and she is much too nice for unreconstructed Tracy Lord. Ann Olson was a real whiz-bang as. Dinah, Tracy's younger sister. She managed to bring some auth- entic full-of-mischief, never-say- PHILADELPHIA STORY: Comedy of Manners Sets Its Own Style "THE PHILADELPHIA STORY," now playing at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, is a 1939 farce by Philip Barry which enjoyed a re- markable success in New York and the suburbs, then got itself filmed with original star Kate Hepburn. Later it was filmned again for Grace Kelly and Bing as "High Society," and now the Speech Department has had a shy at it. This play belongs to the "comedy of manners" category, which means that it is supposed to be long on comedy and short on manners: slyly spoofing the upper crustaceans, while drawing whatever moral the author was infatuated with when he wrote the play. In this case, Barry has dealt out a mess of benevolent hedonist Philadelphians, a middle-of-the-road radical (this was 1939, remember) socialist newsman, a self-made man of high moral tone, and some Tracy Lord...........Bea Minkus Dinah Lord........... Ann Olson Margaret Lord ..... Barbara Kaiser Alexander Lord ..... Patrick Smith Thomas....... ,. Homer M. Story William Tracy .... William Teufel Elizabeth (Liz) liubrie .. Bette Ellis Macaulay Conner J, Rodger Birtwell George Kittredge .. Robert Reynolds C. K. Dexter Haven Joseph Ombrey Seth Lord.....Howard Green Elsie..,..---........Trudy Munro Mac ................ Richard Buck die, not-a-dull-moment, realism to this y oung er-daughter-of-idle- rich role. JOSEPH Ombrey took a while to acclimate himself to the role of C. K. Dexter Haven, Tracy's one- time husband, now reformed, but once he was off, he ran a good race and finished strong. William Teufel, as Tracy's pinching Uncle Willie, seemed to be enjoying himself, and con- vinced me, at least. J. Roger Birtwell (an imposing name) was something of a sur- prise, because he did very well with a part which is one of the play's most awkward. Mike Con- ner is the 1939 version of Steve Roper: he's a good writer, but can't sell, works as a writer for a low-class magazine, leans to the left politically, and is something of an intellectual snob, to boot. Patrick Smith was a tolerably energetic Sandy (Tracy's brother, and not H. L. Mencken by a long shot) ; and Margaret Lord was a pretty insipid society lady, al- though whether Barbara Kaiser is to blame I cannot say. Bette Ellis as photographer Liz Imbrie stole a few scenes in true theatre tra- dition, while Howard Green made Tracy's daddy too pompous for my delicate sensibilities. --David Kessel r i I 1( -' (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the fourth In a series of dispatches fron Daily city editor John Weicher who is touring Europe this sum- mer.) By JOHN WEICHER Special to The Daily ROME-Inviting Italian Premier Amintore Fanfani to a confer- ence on the Middle East was a smart move on Secretary Dulles' part. Fanfani's pro-west regime stood in grave danger of falling when United States troops entered Leb- anon; like won a vote of confidence by the narrowest of margins on the issue (295-287, with nine ab- stentions). By the invitation, Sec. Dulles at least gave the appear- ance that Fanfani and Italy are' important enough to warrant con- sultation on major issues; he gave the Italian a little additional pres- tige at home. * * * ITALY SEEMS split almost down the middle over the Lebanon-Jor- dan-Iraq situation, as the vote indicates. In the press, the anti- government and anti-intervention 'DESTINY' A WORD OF MAGIC: Faubus' Politeal as Election as because it has no stand, in that it does not recognize integration. The word is not a part of its vocabulary. Arkansas is assuring itself that segregation will be upheld, by its sup- port of Faubus. Although some people have attributed Com- munist leanings to Faubus - for reportedly he was Student Council president, a member of the Disciplinary Council and gave the signi- ficant May Day speech at Commonwealth Col- lege, listed as a Communist institution - Ar- kansas voters have apparently placed no worth in these charges. THAT FAUBUS ran on a platform of oppos- ing higher taxes but upon election he in- creased state taxes, apparently matters little to the Arkansas voters. That he opposed higher rates for public util- ities in his campaign, but under pressure from a gas company rushed a rate increase through the state legislature after the Public Service Commission had previously refused the in- crease, does not penetrate the minds of Arkansas voters. What is important, what matters great!A, what gets through to the Arkansas voters is that the name Faubus means segregation. It connotes segregation to them, to other states, to the federal government and to the world. And so to the victor belongs the spoils, in whatever state he happens to find them. -JUDITH DONER cest Dawdles It is too early to accept these promises as fully valid pending more information about the pressures under which the new government will operate. The Allies would like to see a little more, before they go overboard for the new regime. Nevertheless, every day which brings no dis- ruption of former relations - aside from the indications that Iraq will no longer act as a member of the Pact -- increases the prospects for business as usual. The matter of morality is, of course, im- portant to the West whereas it has no meaning for most of the others. There are, however, mitigating circumstances about the assassinations. P HILaOSOPHICALLY, assassination is a more or less accepted practice in finalizing politi- cal developments in every Middle Eastern Future a BigQusestion By The Associated Press victory march of former Gov. Sid LITTLE ROCK, Ark. - Months McMath, now his bitter political ago Gov. Orval Faubus sat enemy. down at his desk and carefully Faubus has described himself circled July 29 on the calendar as as a "child of fortune." He believes the "day of destiny." in a little human help for fate. Tuesday night the mountain boy who made good in his home state IT WAS no accident or impulse exulted as destiny arrived in the in 1954 that sent Faubus scurring form of a smashing election victory to file for governor against incum- that meant an almost unprece- bent Francis Cherry only a few dented third term. minutes before the deadline. But he shed no light on his Earlier Faubus announced he political future. The Senate in would not run. Then he caught 1960? A fourth or even fifth term Cherry off guard by filing-and as governor; leadership of a third to everyone's surprise he eventu- party in 1960? ally won. *y? * Nor was it accident or impulse THE GUESSING has begun in that prompted Faubus to summon earnest now. Faubus' enemies fear the National Guard to keep nine he will gain dictatorial power Negro students out of Central within Arkansas and continue to High School here last fall. For defy the federal government on whatever reason Faubus acted, his integration. move was planned although its His admirers hope he will be the explosive effect was unforeseen. ** * standard bearer of a resurgent states rights movement. VOTERS this summer saw the Destiny is a word with nearly familiar face of their governor in magic overtones for the 48-year- every corner of the state-always old Faubus. It began when he was well groomed with an ever-present born, the first of seven children, smile. Faubus, tall and heavily on a hill farm in the Ozarks. built, was a golden-tongued orator His early education was at a on television and down-to-earth country schoolhouse, now called anecdote swapper in the hills and Greenwood, and at the nearby lowlands of rural Arkansas. Huntsville Vocational School. He based much of his campaign * * on the contention that outsiders LATER Faubus worked his way were attempting to interfere in through western fruit orchards as Arkansas politics by swinging the an itinerant picker, riding from election against him. job to job in railroad box cars He has indicated that if things and sleeping in hobo jungles. are the same at Central High next He returned home, held a few September -- in other words, if minor political jobs, became an Negro students return-he might officer in World War II and then call out soldiers again- "to pre- fell in with the postwar political serve peace and order." forces have been led by the Com- munist "L'Unita,' which de- nounced every Western move and hailed the new Iraq regime as a "people's movement" as soon as it broke out. On the other hand, conservative papers in Milan and here loudly acclaimed the United States and British intervention, and have been assuring their readers that Russia will back down and Leb- anon and Jordan remain free. *. * * DURING the first days of the crisis, large numbers of Italians were gathered around every news- stand and store-window television set; newsboys did a land-office business. Popular feeling follows the government and press splits. A number of Italians termed the United States' actions "very good," and approved the Jordan maneu- vers. However, some hammer-and- sickle insignia have made their re- appearance on the fences and walls of the cities and towns to the south of here, and a riot was staged recently near the American em- bassy. This, however, was the only dis- turbance in Italy, despite a Com- munist call for a general demon- stration. If the lack of response in the other large cities is a gauge of public opinion, the United States may emerge from the situ- ation with Italy as a firmer friend. * * * ELSEWHERE in Europe, reac- tion has been similarly mixed. To many the Britons in Italy, the death of Iraqi Prime Minister Nu Es-Said has been the vital element in the Middle East so far. His and King Faisal's deaths were regarded as more important than either the United States or British troops in the area by men of half a dozen nationalities. To a number of Europeans, the loss of Iraq is still the central matter; without some action by Jordan's King Hussein to recoup the "other half" of his kingdom, the West's bold moves cannot be more than rear-guard actions. OF DEEP CONCERN to the British was the recent conference between Nasser and the Sheikh of Kuwait. The island is Brtain's greatest oil source and a protector- ate of the United Kingdom. De- spite the assurances of Nasser and the Iraqi rebels that the oil pipe- lines will be protected, Britain and the other West European countries dependent on Mid-East oil have grave misgivings about the present situation. The imbalance of power in the Arab States, coupled with Nas- ser's control of the oil flow, makes Selwyn Lloyd's recent comments appear whistings in the dark. The situation is too- precarious to rest where it is, but nobody here seems to be sure what will happen next. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily official Bulletin is an official publication of the univer- sity of. Michigan for which The AT THE MICHIGAN: 'A.Time to Love' -Story Qf Love in War " AMID THE THUNDER and chaos of battle, they found a time to love; and they seized it and held it ... as they held each other, while bhe pounding of their hearts drowned out the sound of the fury around them." Though perhaps a bit overdramatic, this excerpt from the ads for "A Time to Love and a Time to Die" pretty well sums up the story. Although its setting is wartime and its hero a soldier, the greatest battles fought in "A Time to Love" are not fought on the field, but in a man's heart. The familiar battle scenes are there, complete with cold and mud, blood and death, but they are incidental to the love 1 14 4 story of Ernst Graeber and Elisa- beth Kruser, and to the conflicts within Ernst betweenhlove and duty and between patriotism and humanity. The story begins in the early spring of 1944, during the dis- astrous retreat of the German Army from Russia. Ernst Graeber is an Army pri- vate who receives his first leave in more than two years and hur- ries home to his family, to find only a pile of rubble where his home once was, and no sign of his parents. IN HIS SEARCH for them, Ernst finds Elisabeth, the daugh- ter of his old family doctor. Love blooms quickly, as it must under the circumstances, and the two are soon married. The rest of the story is primarily concerned with the lovers' efforts to compress a lifetime of living into the few days Ernst has left. From the time early in the pic- ture when he has to aid in the execution of four "guerillas" of doubtful guilt, Ernst is haunted with doubts about the Justice of his cause and with the futility and barbarity of war. In Ernst, humanity finally wipis out, a decision which ultimately proves his undoing. The objects of his mercy, another group of supposed guerillas, return kind- ness with cruelty, and there comes, for Ernst, the time to die. THE PRODUCERS of "A Time to Love" wisely did not tamper significantly with the original story by Erich Maria Remarque. All the' action and much of the dialogue is taken directly from the book. Their most significant mistake was in casting. The movie features two virtual unknowns, John Gavin and Lilo Pulver. Miss Pulver does a fine Job, and outshines, Gavin. He goes through all the motions, speaks all his lines correctly, but somehow lacks- that extra some-' thing the role demands. Like an AT THE CAMPUS: Don't Mi~ss 'R f if ANOTHER example of a well- planned crime story, filmed on small screen black and white with great effect is "'Rififi," which is currently showing at the Campus Theatre. "Rififi" is somewhat like the American film, "The Killing," in, that it has been put together on a small budget, without any of the recent gimmicks which are sup- posed to tear people away from TV. Stereophonic sound, Panor- amic Screen, Popophonic Corn. Unlike Killing, "Rififi' is leisure- ly paced, but nonetheless exciting. It relates the story of a carefully planned robbery and the unfortu- nate aftermath, when a rival group of thieves tries to rob the robbers. * * * "RIFIFI" was originally done in French; the English speech is carefully put into the actors' mouths so that the result is quite realistic. The heroes of "Rififi" are four likeable French professional crimi- nals who plot out their burglary of a jewelry store with great thor- oughness and seem to be very well equipped for the job. It is all very instructive. The suspense during.the actual robbery is developed with more than enough care. Other bits of suspense are added here and there. The only flaw in the story was a pronounced trend to the overly dramatic near the conclusion of the film. After the suspense of the -preparations and the robbery, the action tended to drag some- what, but then the effort to keep everything moving became all too noticeable. STILL THE overall effect was " , ZL 4 4 # ' i ........... xK. r I ., sf3 I