Sixty-Eighth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UN ERSiTY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. " ANN ARBOR) MICH. & Phone NO 2-3241 "Oh, Great! - That's All I Needed" niofla Are Free Will Prevail" litorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. STS '\ INTERPRETING THE NEWS: No Political Cold War On Foreign Affairs By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst POLITICAL OBSERVERS in the United States are wondering now jt how far the recent wave of statesmanship in Washington has col shouldered traditional partisanship. In 1954 President Eisenhower predicted a season of political co war and chaos in governmental affairs in case the Republican admini tration had to deal with a Democratic Congress. That has not developed. Instead, from the beginning, Democrat leadership under Two Texans. Johnson in the Senate and Raybu in the House. has avoided extreme partisanship. There used to be a saying that politics stopped at the water's edg meaning that foreign affairs got nonpartisan treatment. But Congre AUGUST 9. 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: EDWARD GERULDSEN College Aid Bill Ignores Many Problems iE COLLEGE AID BILL currently in Con- gress ignores many problems which the act, assed in its present form, will complicate. he billion-dollar measure will provide about 100 college scholarships plus 220 million dol- ; in loan funds. Teacher training will also be ed. The real fallacy of the bill, however, Is t it fails to provide any facilities for the itional students the other funds will send chool. Vith the nation's colleges becoming over- wded and with the increased demand for her education, facilities are being strained. >usands of additional students, while a aocratic goal, is practically impossible. The will add to the already heavy burdens of erican education in attempting to find a e for everyone who can afford a college cation. HE BILL also. seems to be.incorrectly based ideologically. The president has termed it education-for-defense bill, inspired by Rus- s scientific breakthrough. There is no men- 1 of the "ideals" of higher education--edu- on for civilized living and the rest. bill which has as its obvious aim the assem- line production of scientists, without con- a for the humanities or social sciences where eased competence could well mean peace her than war. Education for the masses, if this is part of the motivation of the bill, is a faulty basis for any legislation. Not every member of a society either can, or should go to college. An intellec- tual hierarchy now, and has in the past, been a necessary element in democratic, society. An intellectual mass will need a different basis of government for its continuance. EDUCATION on the basis of intellectual capacity, and regardless of financial con- sideration, should be the goal towards which to work gradually. Throwing 23,000 students at the nation's colleges, however, is not one of the methods to be used. The training of teachers, Which the bill will facilitate, must be kept at a high level to insure the students of the future of capable, quality education. Dilution of educational quality is too great a price to pay for a more widely educated population. Any bill which does not take into considera- tion the facilities available for higher education and which has such a petty aim as wholesale creation of war facilities deserves to be de- feated. The President, as a military man, seems preoccupied with war and peace, refusing to see other areas. Education for the sake of education is a worthy goal in itself-no further limitations need be placed on it, -ROBERT JUNKER ' .J -,° f ,' C L l 3 s q X' - 2 s Hidden Middle Eastern Problem WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Chinese Belligerency Warned By DREW PEARSON JE OF THE most basic causes of Middle last strife has been curiously ignored in recent wave of revolutions and insurrec- s. But India's Prime Minister Jawaharlal ru has brought up the matter again by aring that the Arab nations will have to pt the existence of the state of Israel if real stability is to come to the area. ehru said he did not know what terms d be necessary for peace, but said emphat- y that it "obviously involves the continu- 1 of Israel and its acceptance by the Arab itries and other countries around it." aring the last few months of one continu- isis in the area, Israel has been peculiarly t, and with good reason. The recent events e provided the tiny nation with her best .k since 1948's independence fight. Iraq, non, Jordan - all have taken the minds, he Arab nations off Israel, and given her lef respite which she badly needs. She has the time to advantage, building up het urces, her arms, and her economic strength. T NEHRU'S statement, simply by its be- ng made at all, is graphic enough demon- tion that the "Israeli situation" is not over. problem, lying dormant at the moment, has not been eliminated; sooner or later, as Arab-against-Arab problems simmer down, and tempers cool, interest in the Middle East will once more become focused on Israel, and there is little indication so far that tensions between that nation and her neighbors have lessened. This must come about. If present Arab prob- lems are solved, only to have another crisis spring up in their place, the Middle East can- not stabilize itself. The "world affair" that Nehru predicted would result from an Arab- Israeli war is almost inevitable. Both East and West right now are desperate- ly trying to avoid all-out war in the Middle East, by reconciling the warring Arab factions. But both are overlooking this continuing, fes- tering sore. Both,, apparently, are still refusing to look to the future in that most vital area. And both may find themselves with an involun- tary war on their hands unless the Israeli prob- lems are solved. The problems surrounding the acceptance of Israel by the Arabs are many; some may even be overpowering. But they must not be ne- glected, even now when all eyes watch other I'events. -SUSAN HOLTZER WASHINGTON - The sudden, secret Peking conference be- tween Khrushchev and Mao Tse- tung was preceded some weeks earlier by a confidential warning from Admiral Felix Stump, Amer- ican naval commander in the Far East, that trouble might be brew- ing with the Red Chinese. Admiral Stump flew to Wash- ington to attend the secret mili- tary strategy meeting at Quantico, Va., where he warned our highest military leaders that United States naval forces in the Pacific were inadequate, our carriers wearing out, and that we had neglected our Far Eastern friends. Some of the Communist ma- neuvering on the mainland of Chi-' na especially worried Admiral Stump. The Chinese Reds have a growing economic problem, and war could be a desperate way out. With modern medicine and better living conditions now prevailing in parts of China, the Chinese popu- lation is bulging. ONE THING that alarmed Ad- miral Stump was the statement by Chinese leaders that in case of war China could afford to lose half its population. It would still have 300,000,000 left. Human life in China has long been the cheapest of all como- dities. This was one reason for the waves of suicide troops thrown against American lines inthe Korean war. It is also one reason why American military strategists have long feared the belligerency of Red China more than the bel- ligerency of Red Russia. There have been increasing re- ports from both Moscow and Pe- king that the Chinese Reds were becoming restless with the Krem- lin's more moderate leadership and wanted a tougher policy to- ward the West. Khrushchev's right-about-face regarding a summit conference after conferring with Mao Tse- tung appears to bear this out,. * * * AN AFRICAN workers' delegate to the International Labor Con- ference in Geneva recently com- miserated with Eugene Frazier, president of the United Transport Service Employees, regarding dis- crimination against Negroes in the United States. "Things aren't so bad," replied Frazier, himself a Negro. "They're improving all the time." The African delegate looked in- credulous. "That isn't what I hear," he ex- pressed his disbelief. "What would you think," replied Frazier, "if I took you up for a drink with the American secretary of labor this afternoon?" "I wouldn't believe it," remarked, the African delegate. However, Frazier did take him up to have a drink with Secretary of Labor James Mitchell, who was head of the American delegation to Geneva. Mitchell made it a practice to invite labor leaders, delegates, representatives of all countries to his office regardless of race, creed or color twice a week. The African delegate came away figuring things were not quite as bad in the U.S.A. as the Communists claim. * * * WHILE a Senate committee has been investigating Chicago gang- sters and the Mafia, a Chicago congressman who once defended members of the Mafia and was once seen at a baseball game with Al Capone, tends to his knitting in the near-by House of Represen- tatives. He is Congressman Roland V. Libonati, Democrat of Chicago, whose election caused some skep- tical glances from colleagues. After six months on the job, however, it can be reported that Libonati not only is making scores of friends among once dubious colleagues, but is chalking up a reputation as a conscientious and hard-working congressman. In fact, his record of attendance on the House floor is phenomenal. Libonati has not missed one min- ute of the daily meetings of Con- gress since he took office. He has a 100 per cent voting record on all roll and quorum calls and, because he is always there, has been called upon by Speaker Sam Rayburn and other leaders no less than 20 times to make the motion for daily adjournments. In addition; he has not missed a single meeting of the House Judiciary Committee, of which he is a member. * * * , PRESIDENT Eisenhower has been upset by the misleading eco- nomic statistics he received last winter that made him get out on a limb and predict the recession would end in March. When the recession got worse instead of bet- ter, Ike angrily demanded more accurate economic reporting. As a result, the Commerce Depart- ment has started to revise its sys- tem for figuring the gross nation- al product. The corrupt unions which were kicked out of the AFL-CIO have hired private detectives to snoop on President George Meany. The ousted unions are now comparing notes to see what dirt they can dig up on Meany. Several AFL-CIO unions are defying Meany's orders to ostra- cize the outcast unions. At least a dozenshavetsigned working agreements with the expelled Teamsters - including the Na- tional Maritime Union, office em- ployees, and United B r e w e r y Workers. (Copyright 1958 by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) was slow to realize, after two world wars, that there was no longer any water's edge, that world tides flowed and ebbed across the whole nation in Its new position of inter- national leadership, THE STRENGTH of the nation's economy, the welfare of its people, the factors shaping its domsetic life, became integral parts of that position. There is no longer any clear division between domestic and foreign affairs. That meant that legislative pol- itics, to abide by the old tradition, could not stop merely at the water's edge, which is no longer defined. For America's best inter- ests, it just had to stop. There is an abiding faith among the American people that their in- stitutions,while sometimes sinking to petty levels, will always rise in strength to meet unusual de- mands. Legislative politics hasn't stop- ped, and never will. But in recent years the spectacle of solidly par- tisan votes has been gradually fading from the congressional scene. * * * CONGRESS is about to wind up the present session with a highly constructive record. It has not always agreed with the President on just how things should be done, but has insisted on doing in some way almost everything he said must be done. The acid test will come next year, as the international crisis continues to impinge on domestic affairs while the country goes about choosing a new president. There are going to be some bitter fights. But there are some grounds for hoping that, as the nation becomes more accustomed to its world bur- dens, it will insist on carrying them with a display of continually increasing maturity. Middle East Plan WE SHOULD stop trying to force the Arab peoples to "choose sides" in the cold war and should accept Arab neutrality. The evidence is strong that, other things being equal, a neutral Arabia would prefer to do busi- ness with the West rather than with the Soviet Union; at worst, it would try to play one off against the other.- In the latter case, the logic of the situation gives us certain ad- vantages. Oil provides the strong- est natural tie between the Arab states and the West. Russia does not need oil, Europe does. And the oil must be sold. Whether the Arab states merge or federate, some means should be worked out to pool a portion of oil revenues for the development of the region. To this end, with Britain, France and Holland, we should call' a conference of oil companies in an effort to bring their policies into line with the needs and realities of the region. For a change, let us begin to think of the problems of the, Middle East not exclusively in terms of "vital interests" but also in terms of what is best for the Arabs. And on this they should be consulted through representatives, however chosen, who can frankly claim to speak for them. ' -The Nation DAILY OFFICIAt BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the IUiver-' sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Roonm 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m., the day pieced- ing publication, SATURDAY, AUGUST 9, 1958 VOL. LXVIII, NO 26S Lectures Linguistics Forum Lecture: Bastian Jarvis., Instruc. in Psychology, on "Psy- cholingutistics: Another Look at Struc- ture vs. Function." Tues., Aug. 12, 7:30 p.m. Rackham Amphitheatre. Concerts Student Recital: Sheila Ann McKenzie wll present a violin recital in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music on Sun.. Aug. 10. at 4:30 p.m. in Aud. A, Angell Hall. She will be accompanied at the piano by Carol Papich. Miss McKenzie who is a student of Gilbert Ross, will perform sonatas by Telemann, Ives and Brahms and the Passacaglia for Unac- companied violin by Biber. Open to the general public. Student Recital: Theodore Johnson, who studies with Gilbert Ross, will present a violin recital at the Rackham Assembly Hall on Mon., Aug. 11, at s:30 p.m. He will be assisted at the piano by Patricia Arden, and by Bernard Gal" ler, violin and Harry Dunscombe, cello. Mr. Johnson's recital, which is being presented In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Musical Arts will include Trio Sona- ta in D Majo~r by Corelli, Trio Sonata inx E flat major, by Purcell, Sonata in A minor for unaccompanied violin, by Bach, and Soniata in G major, Op. 30, No. 3, bydBeethoven. Open to the gen- eral public. TODAY AND TOMORROW: Now the General Assembly Student Recital: Earle Boardman, cell- ist, who studies with Oliver Edel, will present a recital in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music on Tues., Aug. 12, 4:15 p~m. Mr. Boardman, who will be assisted by Lucien Stark, pianist, has included on his program sonatas by Beethoven and Hindemuth, and Schumann's "Con, certo inA minor." Open to the general public. Student Recital: Jo Ann Noble will present a piano recital on Tues., Aug. 12, 8:30 parm. at Aud. A, Angell Hail, In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music. Miss Noble who studies with Robert Hord. has included compositions by Beet- hoven, J. C. Bach, Bartok, and Brahms in her program. Open to the general public. Academic Notices Examinations in Eight Week Courses Hour of RecitationiTime of Examination 8 Thursday 8-10 9 Friday 8-10 10 Thursday 2-4 11 Friday 2-4 Hour of RecitationTime of Examination 1 'Thursday 4-6 2 Thursday 10-1.2 3 Friday 10-12 All other hours Friday 4-6 Attention August Graduates: College of L., S., and A, School of Educ., School of Music, School of Public Health, School of Bus. Admin. Students are ad- vised not to request grades of Z or X in August. When such grades 'are ab- solutely imperative. the work must be made up in time to allow your instruc- tortor treport the make-up grade not later than 11 a.m., Aug. 21. Grades re- ceived after that time may defer the student's graduation until a later date. Recommendations for Departmental Honors: Tleaching departments wishing to recommend tentative August gradu- ates from the College of L., S., and A and the School of Educ. for depart- (Continued on Page 4) [AVING DISAGREED on how the meet face to face in a closed mee senhower and Mr. Khrushchev fin ves agreeing that there should be ular meeting of the .eneral Assemb erybody will confront everybody in eting. The previous proposals for a summit Krushchev's, deGaulle's, Macmilla senhower's-had one thing in comm ,s the idea that there should be s rtunity for private discussion and gotiation, even though there was su great deal of public propaganda. But now we have to have a giganticS ich is entirely propaganda, and we etend that we like it. The only visibl ;e is that the President is under no n to attend the meeting and that Mi chev may decide not to attend. The nference which we have never wa en for the noment avoided, and wel ted instead a rough and tumble o ut. UR PROBLEM is to prevent this s the General Assembly from being; al of the British and American mil vention in Lebanon and Jordan. Thi . Khrushchev says he wants and, a Mr. Dulles' press conference last w e for the defense which we shall pre n decided upon and is being worked The official American position seer at, having been widely criticized endly countries, we welcome the c] plain and to vindicate publicly ou the Middle East. P'his is an optimistic view. Possibly n out that Mr. Lodge and Mr. Du i a verdict in the General Assem will not be prudent to rely too muc ic of our case and on the eloque ,gnetism of Secretary Dulles, or+ esident Eisenhower. n the General Assembly we do not A< By WALTER LIPPMANN I y might sue, 'even if we can win the support of all the Ming, Mr. American republics and of all of Western Eu- d them- rope and of the old commonwealth states, Au- a spec- stralia, New Zealand and Canada, and of our bly when client states in Asia. , a public The General Assembly, as it is now composed, Is a very unfavorable forum in which to justify, meeting intervention by British and American forces n's and in two Asian countries. .on. This ome op- SO IT IS IMPORTANT that in preparing for perhaps the Assembly, the diplomats rather than the are to be litigators and the argufiers should take the leading part. One place to begin is to stop spectacle building up the size and power of our military have to forces in Lebanon and instead to begin reduc- e advan- ing them. compul- The newly elected President of Lebanon is r. Khru- " going to ask us to leave, and the sensible thing ssummit, to do is to begin leaving befor~e we are asked. nted has We 'do not need 15,000 troops to protect Mr. have °'ac- Chamou~n for the few weeks he has a legal right iratorical to remain in office. Moreover, it would be a good idea to use our diplomatic influence in Beirut to persuade Mr. Chamoun to leave the ession of country now and to take a holiday abroad. a public Then, we could order the withdrawal of all itary in- our troops before the General Assembly meets,. s is what The problem of extricating the British from ccording Jordan is much more difficult. But there is. Meek, the not much doubt that a way must be found to sent has extricate them. For the 2,000 paratroopers in d out. Amman may be enough to protect the king ms to be frm assassination, but they will never be able even in to make of Jordan a viable and independent hance to kingdom. Sooner or later, but not much later, r actions the paratroopers and the king will have to leave, and Jordan, as a separate and sovereign it miay state, will disappear. files can .. bly. But THE GREAT question is whether Jordan is to h on the be transformed into some kind of neutral- nce and ized territory under the United Nations, or even of whether it is to be broken up violently at the risk of a very probable war between the united Arabs and Israel. . have a ...n , & -- ..., A - r . i i : l p . LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Readers Criticize Daily Review and Editorials; Miscellanea Segregationa. . To the Editor: THE EDITORIAL on segregation in the Aug. 6 Daily is one-sided, naive, and confused. It is one-sided because there is a great deal of concern for the feelings of White Southerners, but nowhere do I detect a concern for or interest in the Negro-who feels the brunt of segregation and is denied his human and citizen- ship rights. The editorial is naive because it assumes that if we leave the South alone it will solve the problem. This is not a Southern problem. It is an American problem. There is a great deal of confu- sion and misunderstanding as to what the problem really is. It is sometimes argued that minority groups segregate themselves any- way; that they are not really "for" integration any more than the Southern White. But. what these WE HAVE A pluralistic society in America. Groups-racial, religious, ethnic-are divergent. This diver- sity promotes creativity. It will al- ways exist and we sljould strive to maintain and promote it. Integra- tion does not mean this diversity will be destroyed. However, there' must be communication between groups; there must be acceptance of group differences; and there must be tolerance between groups -they must have equality of op- portunity. The only way to have equality and a truly democratic society is to have complete integration in edu- cation, benefits, job placement, housing, and so on. Integration is the only mechanism whereby com- munication, tolerance, and accept- ance as equals (in opportunity) can be realized. Segregation is not the issue; discrimination is. If any one can devise a method of insuring com- munication, which brings about proposing solutions. I refer to Mr. Edward Geruldsen's piece in your August 7 issue. In the first place, the AFL-CIO, which lacks all legal sanctions the ultimate one of expulsion, against internal corruption except might have been mentioned as the most vigorous and consistent ex- ponent of cleanup legislation -- since long before Senator Knowl- and decided that this would make a good political issue. Some thought is in order, too, regarding the viciously misnamed right-to-work' proposals. A labor union, like a public utility, is a natural monopoly in a given shop -without a closed shop, labor's bargaining power, it's only tool to defend the workers' right, is crippled. * * * FINALLY, nothing short of abys- mal ignorance can lead one from the corruption of a few in labor Legislation in the field of labor is sorely needed. But let us inform ourselves as to what is wrong be- fore we legislate.' -Karl V. Teeter, Grad. 'Traviata' . . . To the Editor: IF CLOSE-MINDED Kessel can- not appreciate Wednesday's generally excellent performance of "La Traviata" he would do well re- fraining from doing reviews. A review column is not a gossip column. He keeps up the tradition of poor reviews that The Daily publishes day in and day out. The better judgement of the audience was manifest in its spontaneous, heavy and repeated applause throughout and at the end of the performance. Prof. Blatt has, in his latest presentation, reached new heights of professional excellence in pre- senting difficult works on campus. T nr" c , , e . ah A nffnr*,. earyr However, I felt certain that my speed was no more than 35 mph, which would have made the fine $13. Having had no experience with the law, I asked the officer what I might do to have the fine reduced. Whereupon, he told me that I might appear in court and possibly have the fine lowered. What he didn't tell me was that court costs of $4.30 would be made for appearing in Dexter Scio Jus- tice Court. If I did not care to trouble myself I could settle out of court by sending $18 through the mail. So after having appeared in court and having been assessed court costs in addition to the $18 fine and sitting through an im- promptu lecture by the judge on the subject of "Dexter is not a speed trap;" (I said no more than, "Judge, I admit to driving over 25 mph but certainly not more than 35 mph."), I wound up pay- fl