Sixty-Eighth Year EDITED AND \1A"AGED BY STUDENTS OF THIE UNIVERSITY OF MICH3IGAN, UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MicH. * Phone NO 2-3241 "Great System" lben Opinions Are Free Trutb Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This mus t be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, JUNE 27, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: EDWARD GERULDSEN Religion in Contemporary Society Becomes Increasingly Unacceptable RELIGION. undoubtedly plays a smaller role in contemporary society than it did in earlier times; this alon should be reason for re-examining it. It seems particularly appropriate that a close look at religion be taken by an institution of higher education, for the universities and col- leges, an outgrowth of 12th-century cathedral schools, have perhaps played the largest single role in shaking belief in traditional Christian- ty. "We are faced today with a re-evaluation of the dimension of life that gives it meaning and value," University President Harlan Hatcher remarked during the opening lecture of the summer theme, "Religion in Contem- porary Society." INCREASINGLY, however, there are those who question whether religion does give meaning and value to life. Henry Ford, a man who introduced mass production techniques on a large scale and probably contributed as much as any other single person to molding our contemporary society, once declared when questioned on his knowledge of the past, "his- tory is bunk." A, growing number of others, with more in- telligence but who also live in this "practical" age would say the same of religion. For in an age when the "scientific" and "objective" ap- proach is valued above all others as the only "realistic" way of examining or explaining life, the words of the past become bits of historical literature, interesting perhaps, but easily de- bunked by scientific analysis. Man in the Judaic-Christian sphere of influence once be- lieved God had created the world in six days. Some even said women possessed one more rib than man because the Bible told how God created Eve out of Adam's rib. However, mod- ern science, in the form of geology and X-rays present a different explanation., East Germany: AFTER MORE than two weeks, five Amer- ican airmen in an East German prison cell still find themselves seated on a political gambling table, the targets in a coldly practi,. cal game of Russian roulette. If the ball falls in the wrong chamber, they and not the gamblers will be tie real losers. In the contrast between the United States and the Soviet Union, the sky is the limit, and the State Department just as much as the Kremlin is staking the lives of five men on the race for the blue chips. For, one of the very few times in the last six years, realism has invaded the Eisenhower administration. The United States government has assessed the issues involved. It has counted the cost of five men's lives. And it has reached the only possible conclusion: THE COST of acceding to Soviet demands and granting recognition to the East Ger- man government is one which this country cannot afford to pay. There is, for instance, the sum of West Germany, now one of the world's great in- dustrial powers. It is a - country the United States canmot afford to alienate by tacit ac- ceptance of its partition, and all concerned realize that, once recognized, East Germany would be here to stay. There is the high cost of backing down in any argument with Russia or her satellites. Each time the Kremlin's demands have been met, or the United States has gone more than half-way, that expense increases and American bargaining power goes down. Indeed, the very fact that the Soviets are attempting to obtain recognition thfough blackmail is proof enough they feel this coun- try will eventually give in. Should it do so, there will be another "situation," and anoth- er, each with the same doleful result. T HE QUESTION then arises, "If we can't believe Genesis, how can we believe the rest of the Scriptures. Religion's answer was indicated by President Hatcher who noted re- ligion is changing as much as anything else. Now, organized religion adapts to the "scienti- fic" explanations by saying the Bible should be used for its symbolic rather than its literal content. Yet this change itself destroys the "eternal" qualities religion professes to have. This is only one example of religion's adap- tation to contemporary society; however the changes have not been fast enough to counter- act increasing secularization. Religion today plays a smaller part in men's lives; even the American ideal of separating Church and State was something unthinkable a thousand years ago when man and his religion were in- separable. BUT.MAN'S increasing questioning and ex- amination, a process led and stimulated at centers of learning, have separated him from the blind acceptance of the past's dogmas. There is no such thing as a little questioning; a result is the multitude of Protestant inter- pretations and denominations that have de- veloped since Luther. And when the "eternal truth" is described in so many ways, how can a person who tries to be "objective" and "openminded" put faith in any one of them as a "dimension of life that gives it meaning and value?" Behind the questioning is a search for some- thing eternal, for in embracing something he considers everlasting, man gains a feeling of permanence in a constantly changing and transitory world. But organized religion no longer can answer the questions. As it exists today, religion becomes increasingly difficult to accept as a valid part of contemporary so- ciety. -MICHAEL KRAFT Daily Co-Editor Political Bluff There is, also, the cost in world opinion and national prestige which, like a sales tax, seems insignificant in small charges but becomes an appallingly large figure on the final bill. It doe not seem important to lose a bit of pres- tige when it will save five lives; it becomes vitally important when it is tacked on to other such bits and tears a dangerous hole in the nation's defensive power. This it would do; this it has done in the past. And this is a trend which the United States must halt now if its position vis-a-vis the Soviet Union is to be maintained. It is a dangerous game being played, but it is, at least, being played equally by both sides. East Germany, too, must weigh the cost of defeat, and tally it against the value of what could be a Phyrric victory. SHOULD United States policy remain con- stant, the German government would be faced with the choice of either "losing face" by returning the men, or, by killing them, ac- cepting the anger of world opinion. United States policy, at present, is - as it must be- a case of taking the risk, and calling their bluff. The German Communists have built their attitude toward this country on the same basis as their Nazi counterparts, and they have reached the same erroneous conclusions. The American government, they feel, is "soft;" it can be forced to accept outrageous demands if an American life is involved. They were proved wrong in 1945; they have so far been proved wrong in 1958. The United States must of course be willing to compromise, but only in the strict meaning of the term. There must be a withdrawal of demands by both sides, for this country has done all the compromising all the time for far too long. -SUSAN HOLTZER ^ "'' °'y..,,' "1' . y'r jJ I /'rMYls'/. °""gilYw4 ",+ IMrrrry. . r vir- rr..... daft rlrr < I _ FORTY-NINTH STATE 'Seward's Ice Box' $Contains Two Texases By A. RT111R EDSON l_~oc1,.ted Press Staff Wruer SASHINGTON - The Aleuts had a word for it. They called it Alakhskhak. or "The Great Land." Alakhshak never became a pop- ular word, fortunately. and the great land now is known as Alaska. No one here seems to know the Aleut term for "49th state," which is too bad. For the Senate is again debating whether to admit Alaska to statehood, and the word, or words, might come in handy. The House has voted to make Alaska a sae siblyte.mosts gthing about Aitsast size. It's so big it could even, but undoubtedly won't, humble a Texan. Wypaer -oucol car twvo Texases out of Alask a, and have enough trimmings left over for a couple of dozen Delawares. Plop Alaska over the United States proper, and you'll fill most of the Mississippi Valley. The right-hand tail of Alaska, the part that stretches along Canaa's western border w.ul reach to the Atlantic. The left-Handl tail of islands would reach to the Pacific. Alaska has had a hard time liv- ing down the legend that it's ex- clusively a land of ice and snow. It gets cold up there, all right, but it can get hot, too. In Fairbanks it has been as hot as 99 and as cold as 66 below. Loyal Alaskans maintain that anyone who can live through a rugged New England winter will have no trouble in Alaska. The main problem, they say, is get- ting used to these long summer days and those seemingly longer winter nights. *9 ** MODERN history began in Alaska at 4 a.m., March 30, 1867. Even then, it seems, the Russians were great ones for doing business in the dead of the night. Baron de Stoeckl of Russia and William Seward of the United Sta tes signed the papers that completed a fantastic real estate deal. The whole place, 375,296,000 acres, had been bought for $7,200,000. At that time Alaska had a pop- ulation of 30,000, Eskimos, Aleuts -who are closely akin to the Es- kimos - and assorted Indians, The Tlingit Indians had a cir- ious custom. They didn't want to get rich. So when one of them got in the chips-or, more specifica-- ly, in the blankets-he held a pot- latch'and gave them all away. Clever people, these Tlingits, For those who received the pot- latcher'sigifts had to come to his aid when he was in need. This may have been one of the earliest social security systems. Oddity: After all these years, the native population still is reck- oned at 30,000, out of an estimat- ed total of 200,000. Living in Alaska is no bargain. Ninety per cent of all perishable produce is imported, and trans- portation costs on all goods are high. Potatoes grow well there, but the season is too short for corn or tomatoes. STATE: 'ort Dobbs' A Notch Up CLINT WALKER, veteran TV Western hero, galloped across a local movie screen Tuesday for the first time, accompanied by an attractive woman and a pint-sized sharpshooter, and hotly pursued J as every Western hero at one time or another must be) by a, screamning band of bloodthirsty Iniuns. "Fort Dobbs". Walker's first full-length feature, is a pretty much run-of-the-tnll western in that its plot is mostly of the standard formula variety, but it does manage to rise a notch or two above the traditional horse opera. This thanks to a few com- paratively novel plot innovations, generally good acting, and just a touch of sex, The story picks up Walker's trail as he sets out across hostile Comanche territory, followed by a murder charge and a posse. In quick succession, he eludes the posse, tries to steal a horse from Virginia Mayo. is shot by her young son (Richard Eyer), fights of f an Indian attack on the ranch, and leads his new charges through the Comanche lines and off on the long trek to Fort Dobbs and expected safety. * * * FORT DOBBS, however, turns out to be defended only by a de- tachment of corpses. Things soon perk up a bit with the arrival, in a cloud of dust and Indians, of a w agon train, headed by - you guessed it - the sheriff. Half the Comanche nation then lays siege to the fort, and . . . Well, it all works out in the end. Most outstanding performance of the show is turned in by Brian Keith, who provides the plot with a bit of villainy and a dash of humor to offset Walker's sobriety. Virginia Mayo turns in her usually competent performance, though her transformation into a hard-working frontier woman sadly covers much of her beauty and all her glamour. -Edward Geruldsen f 10. ROCKEFELLER REPORT ON EDUCATION: America Needs Quality and Quantity By LANE VANDERSLICE Daiy Staff Writer ANOTHER vessel was launched this week into the sea of American apathy about education, /t was manned by fifteen out- standing men, and it bore a good name, but indications were that it would flounder without having reached its destination - that of providing impetus and direction to American education. It is christened the Rockefeller Brothers Fund Report on United States Educational Needs and prepared by 15 men including John W. Gardner, president of the Carnegie Corporation of New York, Prof. David Riesman of the Sociology Department of the University of Chicago, and James R. Killian, Jr., President of the Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology. Equal Opportunity ., , The essence of the committee's report: take extensive measures to provide equal - but not simi- lar - opportunities for the full- est development of everyone. Rejecting the idea of separated schools for the "gifted student," the report says the advantage of the conception of equality of op- portunity is that it recognizes dif- ferences in abilities and motiva- tion yet "preserves the freedom to excel which counts for so much in terms of individual aspirations, and has produced so much of mankind's greatness. The committee recognized the apathy present in the American public but insisted that the na- tion's leaders join in a campaign to bolster the nation's schools. "At stake is nothing less than our national greatness and our as- pirations for the dignity of the individual," the report stated. Financial support of this pro- gram the committee indicated could be provided in one of two ways; increased federal aid, or a "thorough, painful, politically courageous overhaul of state and local tax systems. The nature of the challenge, as the committee sees it, is to pre- pare the educational system for a population rise of 2,800,000 a year. The report predicts there would be almost 225,000,000 in America by 1975 with especially large increases in the age groups from 15 to 24 and the age group of 65 and over. "Our schools are overcrowded, understaffed, and ill-equipped," the report said. In the fall of 1956, the committee said, there were 1,943,000 pupils in excess of "normal" classroom capacity. 'No Choice ' In addition to the bnefits to the individual, the reasoning be- hind educating all of the people all of the time, the committee said, is to prepare the United States for "the growing range and complexity of the tasks on which our social organization depends." "One of our great strengths as a people "has been our flexibility and adaptability under the suc- cessive waves of change that have marked our history," the com- dividual's creativity with an in- tensive education. The committee delivered a hard-hitting section on the iden- tification of talent. "Testing pro- cedures unwisely used can do harm," the report said. The "basic considerations" that must be un- derstood according to the com- mittee are 1) tests are effective on a limited front, 2 no single test should become a basis for im- portant decisions, 3) test data should be used along with other kinds of data. Academic aptitude is the one thing measurable by tests, said the committee, and that is not the one factor that produces great men or deeds. Thus, there must be a "merciful" application of test judgements and then only as on criterion of a student's pos- sibilities. Identification of talent should be no more than the first step, the report states. It called the fact that a substantial fraction of the top quarter of high school stu- dents fail to go on to college a startling indictment" of our edu- cational system. One third to one half of all the college graduates of every kind will be needed for teaching until 1975. The committee said that there seemed to be "little or no likelihood" that we can bring into teaching anything approaching the number of qualified and gift- ed teachers we need." Teaching Requirements It recommended that the re- quirements for teacher certifica- tion be made less technical and trivial and that many of the petty tasks a teacher is confronted with be eliminated and that television be employed to teach more stu- dents, The committee insisted how- ever that the root problem of the teaching profession remains fi- nancial. It recommended that an immediate and substantial boost be given teachers salaries. Stiff courses in high school for the academically talented student were prescribed - with four years of English and mathematics, three to four years of social studies and science, and at least three years of foreign language. The committee recommended revamping and modernizing many out-dated courses. "All of the problems of the schools lead us back sooner or later to one basic problem - fi- nancing," the committee said. "An educational system grudgingly and tardily patched to meet the needs of the moment will be per- petually out of date." The committee held that many educational problems affecting the national interest may only be soluble through federal action. Federal Action . . Four principles were outlined for application to federal suport of education. 1) The federal government should be concerned with high- priority educational needs. 2) Other sources should con- tinue to be the main factors in providing funds for education. see themselves as participants in one of the most exciting eras in history and to have a sense of purpose in relation to it." The committee rejected the contention that people want merely security or comfort or luxury. They want. meaning to their lives, the committee said, and it is the responsibility of their culture and their leaders to give it to them. If "great meanings, great ob- jectives, great convictions" are not offered, th people "will then settle for shallow and trivial meanings. Those who live "aim- lessly" have not been stirred by any alternative values, and this is a failure of society, the com- mittee says. The report concludes that "ev- ery young American will wish to serve the values which have nur- tured him and made possible his education and his freedom as an individual." I BEHIND THE NEWS: Lebanese Dangers Slow U.S. Actions A A.. INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Russian Co7ld Front Expected r- LEBANESE PATROL-An armored car aids attempts to enforce security measures in Beruit. Firing again broke out Wednesday, shattering an uneasy truce. By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst TIHE ATOM-POSSESSING powers of the West will stage a conference of experts at at Geneva next week ostensibly to see if they can find reliable means of policing a ban on nuclear bomb tests. Experts from the Soviet Union, Czechoslo- vakia, Poland and perhaps from Romania had also been expected to attend, but now that is doubtful. After the arrangements for the conference were believed all set, and some of the Ameri- can delegation already on the way, the Soviet Union said the Reds would not go unless the Editorial Staff MICHAEL KRAFT DAVID TARN West would agree in advance to base a testing ban on the conference findings. The United States had said all the time, and Khrushchev had agreed three times, that dis- cussion of a ban might later be based on the findings of the exaerts. Technical arrange- ments are not all that are needed. Few people believed the Soviet Union was going to submit to any workable system of in- spection or check anyway. Having broken every agreement she ever made, if it later proved detrimental to her objectives, she still wants the world to take her word. She has a phobia against admitting that anyone might 'want of need to check up on her. Nobody is surprised any more when primi- tive Soviet politics fails to produce parlor man- ners. When she talks for years about interna- tional accommodation and meeting the desires of peoples for an end of tension, then shows up anew with bloody hands and muddy feet, the world can only check its powder. The reasons behind the Soviet reassumption By The Associated Press THE VERY SERIOUSNESS of the Lebanese situation itself seem to be promoting second thoughts on every side. Despite continuing reminders of the violence of the dispute, the presence of United Nations Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold has provided time for all to see where they are heading. If President Chamoun asks for intervention by Britain and the United States, he will be cutting his relations with the Arab states, which are closely tied to the Lebanese economy, and throwing himself on Western charity. The Arab-Christian split in Lebanon would become complete, whereas now its overtones are primarily those of a pre-election dispute there indicate this could be done - only by a force of some thousands, not by a handful of neutrals such as went to Egypt and Gaza. This brings the matter back to the United Stated and Britain. Everybody stands to lose unless the Anglo-American posture it- self can hold down the rebels and produce an atmosphere for free elections before a fatal outbreak or fateful physical intervention. If the Arab nationalists capture Lebanon, their next objective will be the oil of Iraq and Arabia. This knowledge has contributed heavily to mounting tension in Anglo-American diplomatic circles as fighting was resumed in Beirut. One of the great questions was whether the United Nations could and would act quickly enough to give the organization's name to , e coupled with Arab nationalist agitation aggravated by Syria and Egypt. If Britain and the United States answered the call, sending in troops now poised not far offf- shore, they would face a complete break with Arab nationalists. Western interests would become i~innf f" . , n rr l l1 -. i down. Nasser has been trying to limit his association with the Communist bloc and return to a more neutral relationship with the West, and the West has be- gun to meet him half-way,. The West has not entirely swal- lowed the Lebanese government's r