a f I I 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 mus t be noted in all reprints. IURSDAY, JULY 3, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: LANE VANDER SLICE Challenges of Independence Ignored by Government ', .. Governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the con- sent of the governed,. ." - Declaration of Independence. One Of Those "Good Republican Cloth Coats" Nixon Was Talking About? ,.15. 44 - - - wti,_u- -trl -t OtJ4IM AT THE MICHIGAN: A Hick Does His Hitch Amid Confusion Fun ALTHOUGH not the "Funniest Picture of the Year" as it has been billed, "No Time for Sergeants," just arrived at the Michigan Theatre, is probably the most consistently funny comedy Hollywood has produced in a long while. Based on the long-running hit play of the same name, (see below) "No Time for Sergeants" follows the adventures (or misadventures) of simple, lovable Will Stockdale, a Georgia backwoods boy who sud- denly finds himself in the Air Force, through no fault of his own. His first day in camp, Will begins his climb through the ranks with a promotion to P.L.O. (Permanent Latrine Orderly), an honor of which he eagerly proves himself worthy by proudly producing the cleanest latrine in the "whole danged Air Force." Having taken his first giant step, Will goes on to greater and funnier things. He soon finds his perfect complement in one Pvt. Whit- A. MAGAZINE ILLUSTRATORS still display a fondness for re-creating the Fourth of July as it was celebrated at the turn o the century. Grass roots America finds red, white and blue expression in the picture of a village square crowded with families in their starched summer best, and cluttered with little kids in short pants or navy suits chasing each other, dodging firecrackers or sucking lemons in front of the struggling musicians in the town band. Part of the appeal of the "good old days" stems from the comparative leisurelyness of the pre-automobile, pre-atomic age. ' But as indicated by attitudes expressed in some areas of Congress, perhaps the greatest appeal stems from fond recollections that, once upon a time, America was able to follow George Washington's Farewell Address advice against entangling foreign alliances. THE VILLAGE greens which have given way to parking lots and alliances are as es- sential today to America's retaining her inde- pendence as aloofness and isolation were at the end of the 18th century. But since 1776, the challenge to achieve and maintain inde- pence has changed only in form, not in serious- ness. This does not mean, as some have loudly claimed in recent years, that the United States is being undermined from within by a Com- munist conspiracy. The real threat from with- in the national borders comes, not from the ef- forts of a few agents to destroy our "way of life, but from the blindness and lack of adapta- bility on the part of those who claim to be defending it. Externally, much of the threat is discour- agingly familiar. Another nation intends to ex- pand its influence and power and now, one is in a position to reshape the world by what- evet means it deems expedient to impose its "way of life." Evident to both sides is that man's civili- zation has developed weapons that can de- stroy civilization itself. This has made the Russians aware that if war is no longer an effective instrument of national policy, there may be other ways of achieving the desired ends. Since the 1955 Geneva Conference, Soviet policy apparently has shifted the offensive to a new front - economics. The code word is co-existence. BUT CAN WE co-exist? Attorney General William Rogers said in a recent address, "You hear a lot of talk these days about peace- ful co-existence.' Maybe for the moment the Soviet leaders do not believe that they can ac- complish their objectives by involving the world in war. Certainly we hope so. But there is absolutely no reason to- believe that they want to co-exist with us. They want to destroy us. This is a time of 'total competition.' The Soviet Union will use every source at its com- mand to beat us And they are prepared to use fair means or foul . .. whichever will better serve their purpose. The most spectacular means have,' of course, been scientific. The 'Sputniks impressed the world and depressed the United States to the point where some outsiders say the country has lost its self-confidence while other claim no, the country never had any. At least super- ficially, the country has been shocked into looking at its educational system and perhaps the challenge to "do something about it" will be met, and maybe, there will be a new and higher valuation attributed to intellectual con- cerns. But the Soviet's less spectacular means of beating the United States can be even more dangerous. The Russian economic offensive is working, and although loans and dams and roads may be unspectacular, the effective manipulation of them reflects imaginative leadership. THIS NEW form of external challenge gives rise to a new internal challenge ... whether the United States can provide equally imagina- tive action for both the improvement of the world's backward areas, and also for its own self defense. Yet adapting to combat the Soviet ap- proaches is not enough. If we fight fire with fire and yet in the process consume the insti- tutions and ideals that are now considered an integral part of democracy, then we have lost, The "consent of the governed" can be grait- ed only with their knowledge of what the gov- erning agencies are doing. Yet, the cloak of "top secret" has been covering more and more governmental activity. A United States con- gressman recently charged that the Federal attitude toward excessive security has gone so far that State Department curbs now include provisions that department news sources must write memos of talks with newsmen at cock- tail parties. To meet the external challenges of an atomic age there must be a willingness to adopt new approaches and drop old ones that have value only as relics of the past, such as tariffs and other trade barriers. But to meet the internal challenges to our own versatility and imagina- tion requires an immunity to soothing phrases of self delusion that so often come from Wash- ington and traveling Fourth of Julyorators. It does require an imaginative, alert and honest approach, both on the part of those giving and those receiving the consent for government. -MICHAEL KRAFT Co-Editor (Herblock Is on Vacation) LOWBROW IN WORLD: Naton SCapital a Cultural Sahara By ARTHUR EDSON Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON - Culturally W speaking, the nation's capital is a Sahara. And some congress- men think this has given us a low- brow name the world over. Nowhere in Washington is there a cultural center adequate for grand opera, ballet, symphonic music and drama. A Senate report glumly notes: "All Americans are very proud of their national capital, yet the cultural facilities here are inferior to all leading European capitals, and numerous smaller European cities." "OUR CITIZENS are not with- qut talent or interest in the arts, and these faculties should be de- veloped," it adds., So the Senate has passed a bill to set up a national cultural cen- ter with the federal government furnishing the land and individual contributors paying for the build- ings. It now is in the House, and whether it will escape in this ses- sion of Congress, no one can say. Which gives us ample time to consider a couple of questions. AT MUSIC CI .CLE- EVEN IF minor league Euro- pean cities have better facilities, yhy is that cause for chagrin, or even alarm, here? Well, sponsors of the bill claim this nation has been maturing culturally, though many of us seem unaware of it. Our big or- chestras, and our young artists, win acclaim abroad, Yet there's no showplace, they say, where this nation's finest efforts can be displayed. As a result, Senator J. W. Ful- bright (D-Ark.) told his colleagues, the international opinion is that "we are a culturally barren people. It is unfortunate that our nation, as rich and powerful as it is, has allowed such a picture to be form- ed in the eyes of the world." * * * THEN, if we're looked on as such cultural dunderheads, why wasn't something done long ago? You know how Congress is. It's nice to love opera and ballet, and many congressmen do, but it's never looked upon as a sure-fire vote getter. How many politicians ever thought of campaigning with a first-rate chamber music group? No, the theory in many areas is that the proper accompaniment to a discussion of this nation's problems is a hillbilly band featur- ing a loud "git-tar." ** * THE TRADITIONAL view of Congress probably was best sized up a couple of years ago when a House committee was considering the national cultural center. Rep, Michael Joseph Kirwan (D-Ohio) saw no need forIsuch a building. "You have to chloroform them to get 500 to look at a ballet," Kir- wan said. "Don't let anybody kid you on that score. It takes a lot of good courage to sit and watch somebody go into a toe dance. "I am like Oliver Wendell Holmes. He said, 'Give me bur- lesque,' He went to them until he was 90." BUT LOCAL promoters said Kir- wan was wrong, that ballet not only is good business here, but all over the country. And promoter Patrick Hayes showed the way the cultural winds are blowing. "Ballet is doing nicely in this town," he said. "It has been years, though, since we've had a theater showing live burlesque." Mikado Begins Weak, Ends Strong ridge, a scrawny, bespectacled little man whose one driving am- bition is to get transferred to the infantry and follow in the glorious footsteps of his six brothers WHITRIDGE'S physique, his serious approach to the many problems of service life, and his comparative sophistication pro- vide an effective counterbalance to brawny Will's perpetual good nature and utter naivete. And so Will, aided and abetted, and sometimes frantically re- strained by his bosom buddy, hap- pily goes about making nervous wrecks of Air Force brass, con- centrating his devastatingeatten- tions on the unfortunate Sgt. King. The unhappy noncom is well played by a properly confused Nick Adams. Sgt. King, a caricature of the legendary Army top sergeant, is a good-hearted soul who spends his happiest hours lying in his bunk listening to sentimental music and gazing at a flowery wall plaque inscribed simply "Mother." In the role of Will Stockdale, "Deacon" Andy Griffith is a nat- uarl. Griffith, who has made a successful career of being a bumbling hayseed, plays the part to near perfection by simply doing what comes naturally. Unhamp- ered by audience memories of previous dissimilar roles, Griffith's Stockdale is convincing and en- dearing. HIS SIDEKICK, Whitridge, is played with equal aplomb by My- ron McCormick, whose portrayal of the serious would-be infantry- man trailing his buddy through a succession of humorous disasters contributes significantly to Grif- fith's success in his part. One of the funniest scenes in the movie comes near the end, when Stockdale and Whitridge, supposedly reduced to a handful of dust and a pair of charred hel- mets in an atomic blast, wander on base just in time to see them- selves awarded the Air Medal, posthumously. A happy combination of expert acting, good writing and well- done production makes "No Time for Sergeants" a thoroughly pleasing evening of entertain- ment. This is one movie well worth seeing. --Edward Geruldsen AT NORTHLAND: 'Sergeants' First Rate "NO TIME For Sergeants" at the revamped N o r t h l a n d Playhouse is first rate summer entertainment. After a few slow opening moments the show pro- voked nearly continuous laughter. A seasoned cast of Broadway actorsakeeps the quality of the show at a high level. Wynn Pearce portrays Will Stockdale - an easy-going, back woods lad who gets drafted into the Air Force. Pearce is quick on the drawl and before the play is very old, is promoted to perman- ent latrine orderly. HE DOESN'T accomplish this singlehandedly, however. It re- quires the assistance of Sergeant King. Despite the show's title, the plot calls for only one sergeant, but when that role is handled by a skilled comic, like Rex Ever- hart, one sergeant is sufficient. Everhart owns the stage. He doesn't have to say a word to get laughs: faceful questions are enough. As Sergeant King, he has the job of getting inductee Stockdales classified for assignments. He coaches Stockdale on the answers to the verbal tests but Stockdale has to fumble his own way through the personality interview. The show's funniest moment comes when, in a test of manual dexterity, Stockdale discovers a newer and more direct method for attacking the problem. He passes the test but only after Ser- geant Kingpromises to replace the test equipment. * * * THE SHOW literally gets off the ground in the second act when Stockdale and associates take up. an airplane on a training mission. What follows disrupts military routine to say the least. Much of the show's effective- ness stems from the superb sets LETTERS to the EDITOR . Religion Gaining .,. To the Editor: M ICHAEL Kraft, your Co-Editor has stated (Michigan Daily, June 27, 1958) "As it exists today, religion becomes increasingly diffi- cult to accept as a valid part of Contemporary Society." May I say that it has been my happy experi- ence, instead, to observe a growing understanding and wider accept- .ance "in Contemporary Society" of the new-old truths found, for in- stance, in the Bible, among other great religious books. Example: Theparable of the Good Samaritan in the tenth chapter of Luke's gospel has been, and continues to be in our day, An outstanding example of complete and unselfed brotherly love, a timeless quality. Indeed, I see everyday more evidence of those who are sincerely living their reli- gion, the fruits of which are joy, charity, intelligence and loving- kindness toward all mankind. --(Mrs.) Dorothy E. Legg Expensive Sport ... To the Editor: IT'S football time 1958 ...so lets go to the MSU-Michigan game. Tickets? Well, two couples would like to attend .. .Prices? Only $80 for the four seats. Of course that ties in three other games also. But . .. it's only money! Let us face a large fact ...MStT stadium cannot seat all of the interested spectators for this an- nual contest ... if we can't, why, just for the sake of pride do we move the game 70 miles north where 30 thousand less will be able to attend? Now that we have eliminated 3 thousand paying fans, let's elimi- nate some more by selling the tickets on a combination basis. Buy the season ticket or you can't see the Michigan game. * * * WHAT was wrong with the lot- tery system used for previous Notre Dame games? Simply pull them out of a hat, with a limit on tickets purchased. Yes, there were faults connected with this system but at least one had the feeling of sharing in an equal chance! Perhaps you -have been mis- guided by reports of economic suc- cess achieved by all graduates ... as for my circle of acquaintances, $40 (we hate to go along) is one large chunk out of a budget. Not to mention the expenses of travel- ing to and from each game each weekend. And if you don't attend every game, give the tickets awayI Have you ever tried to give away a ticket to a Kansas State game? One wonders if several of the larger contributing organizations in and around the Central Michi- gan area will be forced to buy A blockseason tickets to see the "M" game! But of course they contribute to the growth, develop- ment, care, and feeding of ath- letes so as usual those many ex- ceptions must be made. I'M SORRY that I cannot adopt "all's right with whatever the old school does" attitude that so many (from both institutions) have to- day. I feel that another bit of honesty is down the drain for the sake of "king football," and for the sake of selling a record num- ber of season tickets. Well, there is only one thing left . . , travel the hotel ticket broker route, pay the extra, (not as much as season tickets) and help keep the world safe for hypo- crisy. -Ben E. Keeler DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 3) City of Detroit, Civil Service, an- nounces continuing examinations for the following. Junior Typists, Typists, Stenographer, Technical Aid, Junior Accountant, Public Aid Worker, Junior Social Economist, City Planner, Civil Engineers, Electrical Engineers, Me- chanical Engineers, Structural Engi- neers. Architectural Engineers, Sanitary Engineer, Traffic Engineer, Nurses, Electroencephalogrewph Tec hnician, Physical Therapist, Anesthetist, Phar- macist, Dentist, Dietitian, Nutritionist, Medical Technologist, X-ray Techni- ecan, Hygienist, Chemist, Health In- spector, Veterinarian, Public Health TODAY AND TOMORROW: Against intervention By WALTER LIPPMANN rROUGHOUT most of the first act, the Music Circle Theater tent production of Gilbert and Sul- livan's "The Mikado" appeared to be little more than a routine pre- sentation of the famous operetta. A stage with only a, minimum of properties and decoration, and those very drab and functional, helped a not outstanding cast to perform much of that first act with something of a sense of beauty. Even the loss of her wig by one of the performers, Katisha, did not help matters, although the chorus was visibly shaken-with laughter. Then, early in Act II, the princi- pals (Yum-Yum, Nanki-Poo and Koko) turned on the operetta it- self and had some exhausting fun spoof ing themselves. A pleasant but very short number, "Here's a howdy-doo!" was sung not once, but six times, each time with grow- ing resignation and surrender and THERE is a certain vagueness, perhaps de- liberate, in what President Chamoun of Labanon has been allowed to let himself think about American military commitments. He is said to- think that if he asks' for British- American armed intervention, having failed to get United Nations armed intervention, we are in honor bound to send in the Marines and the paratroopers. It is very hard to believe that London and Washington have really put them- selves in a position where Mr. Chamoun can decide to make us take part in the Lebanese fighting. Such a delegation of authority to a foreign politician, who is not even sure of the loyalty of his own army, would be so imprudent that one cannot imagine President Eisenhower and Secretary Dulles making it. If we had made such a promise, it would be beyond anything ever contemplated in any of our many pacts, doctrines, and declarations. For in this case we would find ourselves com- mitted to much more than the defense of a country which is the victim of external aggres- sion. We would be committed to a particular individual in the internal affairs of that coun- try. The Lebanese civil war broke out when Presi- dent Chamoun started to amend the constitu- tion in order to give himself another term of office. While the rebellion has undoubtedly been encouraged and helped from Syria and Egypt, the basic fact is that if the Lebanese army had been willing to act for Chamoun, it could have suppressed the rebellion. Inasmuch as President Chamoun cannot use effectively his own army, there is on the face of it reason to believe that the conflict is, as the United Nations observers have indicated, primarily an internal affair. HAD WE promised Chamoun to intervene if he called upon us, we would have committed ourselvs to the personal fortunes of one Leban- ese politician. There is no public evidence that we have actually done this though it is true that in his recent press conference, Mr. Dulles did say that we might intervene. As against this, we must assume that in supporting Mr. Hammarskjold's efforts, we are acting in good faith, not merely trying to take back a promise that we wish wehad never given. It is said that if Chamoun's administration is overthrown and is replaced by one which is no longer pro-Western but is pro-Nasser, there will follow the collapse of the Western position in the rest of the Arab, perhaps even in the rest of the Moslem, world. Since this will happen if we do not intervene to save Chamoun, we must act or we must lose everything in the Middle East and beyond. T HE TROUBLE with this argument is that if intervention is attempted, as at Suez in 1956, and if the intervention fails, the Western posi- tion in the Middle East and beyond will be much worse than if in a negotiated settlement, Chamoun gives up the three remaining months of his constitutional term of office. Now, there is no certainty that intervention would be successful, and I find it ominous that no one who favors intervention has ever ven- tured to say what the Marines and paratroopers would be told to do when they landed in Leb- anon, and how once in, they would be able to come out again. Presumably, the objective of the Marines and the paratroopers would be to seal the Syrian border, an operation which would require the pacification of the rebel areas behind the bor- der, which are at least one-third of the country. This would amount to the military occupation of the Lebanon. There is no reason to suppose that the rebels would lie down and surrender. There is every reason to suppose that they would wage guer- rilla war, and that the United States Marines would find themselves in the same kind of un- derground war which the French Army has been fighting for several years in Algeria. The true alternatives, so it seems to me. are WORK DONE FOR THEM: Scientists Must R ead Millions of Articles By G. K. HODENFIELD Associated Press Education Reporter WASHINGTON - Do you have a vague, uncomfortable feel- ing that maybe you should read more books, if only you had the time? Or have you turned a maga- zine salesman from the door be- cause "I've got more now than I can read?" The American scientist is in the same sad fix, only more so. He can't take the time to read the millions of scientific articles that roll off the world's presses every year. And yet, he can't af- ford not to keep up with the latest developments in his field. But the scientist has one big advantage over other readers. With few exceptions, he has ab- stracting and indexing services to do his reading for him. They not only read the articles, they ana- lyze them, abstract them in con- densed summaries, and then index them. ** ,* FOR MANY years some of these science information services have been hurting for money. Now, with this country in an open sci- ence race with Russia, the pain is becoming acute. To keep American science even with or ahead of Russia, it seems certain that someone will have to come up with financial help. In- development in fields of science not now covered. They also agreed to try to devise some workable government subsidy plan that will leave their independence intact, but still accomplish the job. * * * IF THEY can agree on such a ;ubsidy plan, governpent help probably will be forthcoming. Congress is well aware of What's at stake. It's no exaggeration to say that American scientific progress is tied directly to'the job being done by the abstracting and indexing services. Where the job is thorough - as it is in chemistry - the American scientist can keep abreast of worldwide developments in his field. Where the job is less than thorough - as it is in most other fields - the scientist is severely handicapped. Abstracting and indexing the world's output of scientific litera- ture is an expensive proposition. The abstracting journals get little if any revenue from advertising. Most have to depend on subscrip- tions and subsidies to finance their publications. Any expansion of the job they're doing now is going to cost money, The Russians, of course, have no such financial headaches. They the assurance that it would be the last time. AS THE SAME words and the same dance pattern were repeated again and again,' the characters, more and more frustrated, seemed to wonder, with the audience, just what was going on-a delightful indictmentdindeedtof all musical comedy and operetta. The second act also had the most ambitious set design in re- cent weeks. Designer Robert Mait- lend came up with a raised court garden that, although it limited the important dancing of the Mi- kado, helped the audience to see better the context of the action and placed fewer demands on the imagination. Of the acting, the most uni- formly excellent characteristic was the ability of each person on stage to sing and speak the often diffi- cult to understand Gilbert and Sullivan verses with clarity and precision - a very welcomed trait, too, for the arena tent theatre where acoustics are rather bad. * * * AS KO-KO, the Lord High Exe- cutioner, Joe Ross was very good at 'times while at others he seemed not to have developed his charac- terization to its fullest extent. His ward, Yum-Yum, who would rath- er marry Nanki Poo, the wander- ing minstrel and second trombone, was excellent as performed by Carolyn Maye. Miss Maye and James Tushar, the Nanki-Poo of the local pro- duction, were best noted for their singing voices, used to the credit of the Sullivan music and the Gilbert words. Jane Connell, in spite of a tem- porarily-missing wig, was a fine Katisha - "the daughter-in-law elect" of the Mikado (emperor of Japan) who wants to marry Nan- ki-Poo, in reality the Mikado's son. Mrs. Connell never lost the chance to be the ugly and despic- able Katasha she was supposed to be. * S * IN OTHER roles Robert Mes- robian was a fine Pooh-Bah, Gor- don Connell an adequate Pish- Tush and Alex Palermo a dis- tinguished but non-terpsichorean Mikado. r r p ( f A, A