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 Time To Clean Fp n Opinions Are Free ruth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staf writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. DNESDAY, JULY 9, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT JUNKER Russell Report Shows Need For Wider Support of Education - u OST LIKELY, anyone who sets foot in the State Theatre thle week has a airly good idea of what is in store for him, It Is EvIa Presley, guitar-strumming. lyric mumbling hero of the high school set. Presley was only last monh made an honorary Doctor of F'nance and Investments at MSU. a highly desirable honor which is awarded occasionally to shrewd investors. In "K:ng Creole," Dr. Presley wanders through a non-Inhibitory but profiable blot, singing and mumbling, to the delight of his friends. It must be said that "King Creole" has considerably more to it than most films designed to exploit the Rock and Roll menace. Presley does, to be sure, find at least ten opportunities to "sing," But we are not spared the unlikely sight of five or six dozen teen-age extras spon- taneously breaking into a primitive dance, to the accompaniment of an offstage maniac. Elvis plays a misunderstood young New Orleans fellow, who would VORDS to the wise should be sufficient, it is said. In Michigan, the dismal picture of higher .ueation's difficulties in maintaining good laries is not by any means the result of a ,k of words. The latest report of the Legislative Study Dmmittee on Higher Education (Russell Re- rt) shows that state colleges and univrsi- s are fighting a losing battle in the compe- tion for brains with business and industry. But this information is hardly news. Uni- rsity officials as well as administrators from 1 other higher educational institutions have en saying the same thing for a long time. st a year ago last spring, Vice-President and can of Faculties Marvin Niehuss said the nlversity's standing among American colleges being threatened by an unprecedented wave competition for its faculty members. The >mpetition certainly hasn't lessened since en and probably has intensified. PROBABLY even more significant, Niehuss .went on to say, "The recent offers (from her schools) to University faculty members %ve been all very substantially above our sal- y levels." The latest Russell Report says that lary levels are a major problem of higher lucation which need immediate and colse at*' ;rtion. The significance of "raids" on faculties, in od part a result of low salaries, is the dam- e caused by the loss of Just one or two key en from a department. A single outstanding gure can provide the impetus to make a ood" department become an "excellent" de-. rtment, even though he may be only one of veral dozen well-known and competent men the department. This man, and probably a w others, often form the core of a depart- Another obvious effect of poor salary scales is the loss to business and industry of both established, well-known educators and young- er men who eventually would take their place. The young men either cannot afford to stay in the education field on the salaries they re- ceive, in the face of industry's inducements or they simply do not get offers of employment from higher education because colleges have no money to pay them even a nominal salary. THIS SITUATION was highlighted this year when the University's 1958-59 operating budget was reduced by the State Legislature to a millio ndollars under the figure appro- priated this year. As one of many belt-tight-. ening operations, the University has been forced to eliminate some 200 faculty and staff positions next fall. The continually mounting array of evidence is making it harder and harder to deny the deficiency of university salary scales. But since the Legislature, with its present composition, probably will continue to deny it, the evidence must be brought, as the Russell Report sug- gests, to the attention "of philanthropic do- nors, alumni, church groups, business, labor, or- ganizations and all citizens interested in the future welfare of their state." If the state government, as is obviously the case, cannot provide sufficient financial sup- port to assure the best in educational institu- tions, then these other groups and individuals, who do and will continue to need college edu- cated young men and women in greater and greater numbers, must take upon themselves a good part of the task of providing money for the schools and colleges. -DAVID TARR, Co-Editor ( r.b okIti 4ain (Hrlc son aealiOil INTERPRETING THE NEWS: U.S.-Canadian Talks' Overdue By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst THE visit of President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Secretary of State John Foster Dulles to Cana- da this week tends to wrap United States-Canadian relations in an atmosphere of crisis which is more apparent than real. There is no question that both governmental relations and the long feeling of friendship between the two peoples have come under a strain, THIS was made clear when con- servative party candidates began playing on Canadian nationalis i in the election campaigns which ended the long-time Liberal ma- jority last March. They made in- dependence from United States economic and political policies one of their winning issues. Candidate, now Prime Minister, Diefenbaker made political hay with general statements about taking Canada back to greater economic reliance on Great Britain and less on the United States, a sure sign of spreading popular dis- affection. Various troubles had been de- veloping for some time. Canada and the United States, both big wheat exporters, had found themselves in competition soon after World War II at con- ferences designed to regularize the world wheat trade.'Itiore recently, the United States adopted what some Canadians and others have called a "dumping" program for its. wheat surplus in connection with the foreign aid program, [ NITER States policy on trade with the Communist bloc was re- stricting the outlets for burgeon- ing new Canadian industry, vital in a country whose population was growing at the rate of 30 per cent in 10 years, The American business recession interfered with Canadian exports, and coincided with the elections, Canada had made great conces- sions to United States policy. Perhaps the greatest of all was the submission of Canadian de- fense planning to a joint com.- mand headed by an American, and establishment of United States military defenses on Canadian soil. . , * * CANADIANS worried about United States domination of the defense picture and possible war situations, but went ahead with old-time trust. Canada also ad- hered. with some protest, to. Wash- ington anti-Communist policy. They now feel that they are not receiving a proper return on this investment of good faith. They are asking in friendly fashion hat joint problems be considered joint- ly, instead of by unilateral at- tempts at solution in Washington. They want to be asked more and told less. The double-barreled Eisenhower- Dulles visit represents an acknowl- edgnment of this right, and a per- haps overdue attempt to work out better liaison and more real co- operation. It is not, however, recognition of anything like an emergency. ' TODAY AND TOMORROW: Ike Evades Moral Question 'HUS FAR, the defense of Sherman Adams, as managed from the White House, has si- iced the President on a moral issue about ich it is his special and peculiar duty to eak out and give the country a lead. The crucial question about Gov. Adams is t, in the field of statutory law. It does not in on whether there was a corrupt relation- p between Adams and Goldfine which could dealt with in a court. The question posed the hotel bills is in the field of manners - at is to say, what conduct is becoming to it atleman who sits at the right hand of the esiden't of the United States. [t is the special duty of any President to swer such a question. And in view of all that has had to say about leading a crusade to an up Washington, it is the peculiar duty of is President to answer the question. But esident Dwight D. Eisenhower has evaded it. matters stand after his public statements, moral judgment is that it was imprudent of ams to accept Goldfine's contributions to s living expenses, but since there is no evi- ace that any law has been violated, the inci- at ought to be considered as closed. In ac- pting Goldfine's money no serious offense' s been committed, so we are asked to believe, long as there is no legal proof that Adams. aid Goldfine by obtaining special favors m a government agency. IS NOT possible to close the incident on his point and at this level. For. that would an that on the authority of the President d with the consent of the country, the stand- d of official conduct in the White House had n greatly lowered and loosened. The rule uld be that money can be accepted from in- ested parties provided nothing is done to >ay them. This is not good enough for the esident in the White House, and it impairs dignity of his office to have to discuss it all. ['he most compelling reason for refusing to the incident be closed is the moral damage ich is being done by the defense and the )logies that are being inspired from the aite House. ['he argument that money can be accepted wided nothing is given in return is an at- apt to befuddle the real issue. It conceals main point, namely what 'is customary and haps tolerable elsewhere may be intolerable the close official family of the President. those who are at the top, the country has ight to demand a self-imposed standard of Editorial Staff LLTER LIPPMANN conduct which is much higher than the laws against bribery and graft. That was in essence the principle on which Gen. Eisenhower ran for President in 1952. The ultimate power of the state cannot be entrusted to men whose conception of public virtue is that their integrity is adequate it they cannot be convicted of crime. It is not asking too much that in the highest places men must be an example of what ought to be the general practice. They cannot excuse them- selves by saying that in fact they have done only as many others have done. IT IS A VERY demoralizing argument, which has been urged since the disclosures, that everybody is doing it, and so why set up a hypo-critical Qutcry because one more official is found to be doing it. This cynical apology is not in fact true. Everybody in the government is not doing it. In politics and in business there is, as we all know, a big trade in influence, and a great deal of loose conduct. But once we adopt the view that loose conduct can be tol- erated by the President in the White House, we have surrendered and we have quit in the un- ending struggle for good government. The line taken by the defense is a greater injury to the country than the original offense itself - than the hotel bills and the telephone calls. Gov. Adams, having confessed to impru- dence, to what is undeniably loose conduct, can only be retained in the White House by tear- ing down the higher standards of conduct. Such a defense, if it prevailed, would be a moral disaster. 1958 New York Herald Tribune Inc. New Books at the Library Barr, Strngfellow-Purely Academic; N.Y., Simon and Schuster, 1.958., Carraty, John A.-The Nature of Biography; N:Y., Knopf, 1957. Fassett, Agatha-The Naked Face of Genius: Bela Bartok's American Years; Boston, Hough- ton Miffin, 1958. Halle, Louis J.-Choice for Survival; N.Y., Harper, 1958. Hanson, Lawrence and Elisabeth-Verlaine. Fool of God; N.Y., Random House, 19,57, Lapp, Ralph E.-The Voyage of the Lucky Dragon; N.Y., Harper, 1958. Morison, Samuel Eliot-Strategy and Com-. promise; Boston, Little, Brown, 1958. Ross, Ishbel-First Lady of the South: The Life of Mrs. Jefferson Davis; N.Y., Harper, 1958. Sinclair, Mary C. - Southern Belle; N.Y., Crown, 1957. Tansill, Charles C.-America and the Fight for Irish Freedom, 1866-1922; N.Y., Devin- Adair, 1957. Teller, Edward and Latter, Albert L.-Our Nuclear Future; N.Y., Criterion Books; 1958. Rouche, Barton-The Incurable Wound and Further Narratives of Medical Detection; Bos- ton, Little, Brown, 1958, Samuel, Edwin-A Cottage in Galilee; NY, Abelard-Schuman, 1958. Swarthout, Glendon-They Came to Cordura; ?lrY Randoam.19743. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: yLebanon Sinks ke's Pledge By DREW PEASOON WASHINGTON - The road from Damascus is a winding high- way that loops around hills and threads its way through country- side resembling New Mexico. Fast- driving Arab chauffeurs and plod- ding camel caravans make the trip in anywhere from four hours to four days; while a little railroad, which now chiefly carries freight, chugs once a day from Beirut and the sea up to Damascus and Syria. Once it was part of the famed Berlin to Baghdad Railway with which the Kaiser dreamed of con- necting his would-be empire. Almost 'every boulder along the roads leading to Damascus is steeped in history. Back and forth. along this highway battled Chris- tian crusaders and Moslem de- fenders. And today, history which upsets the Eisenhower Doctrine as disastrously as the armies of Mohammed upset the armies of the crusaders is being made along that winding stretch of road be- tween Damascus and Lebanon. THERE, thousands of rifles, machine guns, t o g e t h e r with guerilla fighters, are''being smuggled into half-Christian Leb- anon from Moslem Syria, arms originating in part from the huge store Russia has poured into the United Arab Republic in order to bring Lebanon into the Nasser- Soviet orbit and in order to show up the Eisenhower pledge of aid to pro-West nations as a phony. So far it has succeeded. The Eisenhower pledge of aid to any pro-West nation asking for aid has about as much authority as Adlai Stevenson's hopes for vic- tory in 1956. American prestige in the Near East has sunk to a new low. * * *, ALSO at a new low is the word of UN Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold, who recently an- nounced there was no real evi- dence of Nasser-Syrian infiltra- tion of the Lebanese border. Both sides know the real extent of Nas- ser infiltration ,and either Ham- marskjold was blind to the facts or didn't want to admit them. From unimpeachable intelli- gence sources, this column has been able to secure the facts on the manner in which the Leban- ese border has been made a literal sieve. And although the facts are to numerous to rmumerate in person a. letter to a Syrian agent with instructions for the bombing of three main streets in Beirut and the President's palace., Syrian Ammunition Truck-On May 28 a truck was caught near Tripoli coming from Syria. It con- tained 88 BERTHA mortars, one anti-tank gun, 60 cases of hand grenades, 22 rifles marked "Syrian Army" and 28 boxes of BERTHA ammunition marked "Egyptian Army." Syrians Cross Border - On May 3, 200 Syrian army conscripts crossed the border and occupied the village of Kafar Shouba. When driven out by the Lebanese, they entrenched themselves in the hills and fired continuously. * * * THIS IS Just a small part of the evidence available to Dag Hammarskjold, despite which he - claimed there was no real evidence of Syrian-Egyptian penetration of Lebanon. This is also part of the evidence which caused John Fos- ter Dulles to send battle-equipped U.S. Marines to the 6th fleet, and which also induced him to per- suade the British to send 17,000 extra men to Cyprus, most of them paratroopers. The British, who were sere as blazes at the Eisenhower Admin- istration for stopping their attack on Suez, were not enthusiastic about making plans for further intervention in the Near East, but finally yielded to Dulles' request. They now find themselves in, the position of having marched up the hill once again, only to march down the hill once again - all thanks to the vacillating foreign policy of the United States. (Copyright 1958 by Bell Syndicate, ;e.), rather sing than kiss and vice versa whose mob apparently consists of three sophomores and a bookie. Elvis romps through the city slums, singing at a night club conveniently 'named the "King Creole." Occasionally, he meets this ;ocal hoodlum, or, better yet, his moll, a misunderstood P1 Phi from Maine who couldn't find a student leader to marry. And then there's a good girl, who works be- hind the soda fountain at Woo- worths, changing the gas bottles. * * * AFTER finding fame and for- tune at the King Creole, Elvis finds the mob wants to sign him up to sing at a rival Joint. And so he does, once the pressure is on. But soon, Elvis finds it neces- sary to bean the mob leader. After a few more songs, he encounters the three sophomores and the bookie, whom he is obliged to ex- punge. Suffering a minor stab in the left lung, he is rescued by the Pi Phi, and they make for her shack in the swamp After a few quick shootings, there is peace again. The mob leader and the Pi Phi are killed, the police never show up, and Elvis is last seen singing merrily if incoherently, at the King Creole, And what does Elvis' girl think of all this?, "He is impossible," she says, changing gas bottles, "But I need him" --David Kessel MUSIC CIRCLE: 'King and I' Polish ed1 THE RODGERS and Hammer- stein "formula" so successful in "Oklahoma", "Carousel", and "South Pacific" , has more re- cently found difficulties in trying to maintain the high standards set by those earlier musicals. In the "King and I" that for- mula's tried mixture of lo.ve, hu mor, ethics and religion provides audiences with many pleasing mo- ments but fails to accomplish very significant or unified drama, even with the aid of song and dance. At the hands, however, of the talented Music Circle Theatre cast -in this week's production under the tent in Farmington, Just, west of Detroit - those "pleasing mo- ments" are made to substitute for much of what the play itself lacks. While abiding the many rapid changes in scene, the awkward passages in time and the melange of emotions and unfinished ac- tions of the "King and I," the Music Circle players have polished their characterizations, their mu- sical numbers and many humor- ous lines, offering a rather enjoy- able evening's entertainment. In the cast, Byrne Piven as the unbending King of Siam domi- nates the musical. Although his solo performance ("A puzzle-' ment") lacks strength ,he was at other times a commanding, high- stepping figure asking and receiv- ing the audience's understanding and respect, Off to a shakier start than her role required, Joan Fagan as Anna, thekBritish lady who goes to Bangkok to teach the king's children, gained confidence and greater feeling through the play, reaching a peak in her musical duet with the King, "Shall We Dance?" one of the production's most pleasant moments. Carolyn Maye and James Tush- ar, the young lovers TIuptim and Lun Tha, play their brief roman- tic roles well. The audience in .turn, wishes to see and learn more of the lovers, but. the play is at fault for the omission. In supporting roles, John Bay- lis and Faye Elizabeth are stern memebrs of the palace royalty whose maturity balances the flightiness of Anna and the oth-g ers. Gorden Connell and Robert Mesroban are very good indeed in character parts. Heading a large cast of younger actors and actresses, Philip Tor- rey and David Knight displayed polish as Anna's son Louis and the crown prince. The Siamese children, all well rehearsed, are worth many humorous incidents. The ballet, "The Small House of Uncle Thomas," is the success of the evening. Here, as through- out the production, the costum- ing special effects are the most Aoutsnndingr fea',ture from thle 4. i I i . To the Editor: HE CONCLUSIONS reached . ("continuously funny," "Well acted") in Thursday's review of "No Time for Sergeants" were both unexpected and incompre' hensible. Insmuch as The Daily is generally hypercritical of even the best pictures, it is surprising that it should endorse one of Hol- lywood's most unsuccessful at- tempts at reproducing the cream of a Broadway hit. The intimacy between the audi- ence and the characters which is so necessary to the stage is miss- ing from the film: this is usually true, but not always, with stage hits gone Hollywood. In the ab- sence of this intimacy, the por- trayals must be reworked in or. der to make "them even more convincing than those in the plays. Stage humor is not neces- sarily screeh humor, even when the cast is essentially the same. As TIME so aptly put it, ", .eJI too often under Mervyn LeRoy's dull-as-drill direction, the gailus humor does not snap, the slap. stick does not slap." For example, the sergeant's overacting (Jump- ing off the floor when surprised, etc.), though effective for the stage, ranks with Abbott-Costel- los and Laurel-Hardys on the screen. What the stage presented as hilarious comedy the screen has translated into nonsensical,sill attempts at humor, with the ex- ception of a few scenes. It Is ex. cellent child's fare. The Daily should also be tin formed that Myron McCorik' played the sergeant -and Nick Adams was Griffith's pal, not vice versa as reported. --Stephen A. Zefi Grad, Fencing . . To the Editor: IF WE were all "fence-thinkers as Judy Doner thinks Mr. Coss tello's talk should have been , "fence-sitter," then what would be the value of asking any on-the. scene observer to appear before a group such as heard hii talk onM co-existence? This was just an ex- ample of interpretive reporting. I think Miss Doner was wrong in criticizing Mr. Costello"s talk as political, -Pamela Marh Grad. JDAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin Is official publication of the Uni yer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m., the day preced- ing publication. WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 1955 VOL. LXVI, NO. 10-5 General Notices Classical studies Coffee Hour: The faculty, students, and friends of the Department of'Clfacal studies are cordially invited to a Coffee Hour at the Kelsey Museum of Archaeology O Thurs., July 10, 4:15 p.m. University Community Square Dances Tnonsore by the Departments of Phys Edue. and Summer Session. Callers are. all members of the Ann Arbor Square Dance Leaders Ateoc. Thurs., July 1, 8:00-10:00 p.m., Palmer Field. Lectures Music Education-Guest Lecturer: Dr. William Sur, on the faculty of Mich. state Univ., will be presented In the second of the series of lectures and demonstrations sponsored by the Dept, of Music Educ., Wed, July a, "4:00 pm., Aud. D. Angell Hall. Dr. Sur, who is president of the North Central Confer- , He runs afoul of a local hoodlum ne, Chiang To the Editor: SAW recently that Mme. Chiang Kai-shek is in this country to receive an honorary degree from the University of Michigan July 10. As a Michigan graduate I personally am ashamed of this. I hope that The Daily has protested this actIon. Simon Silver, '37 r r No Ful . * * LETTERS to the EDITOR , r CRISIS COOLS: Intervention Unlikely By The Associated Press IN THE TWO WEEKS since United Nations Secretary General Ham- marskjold went.to Lebanon the situation there has boiled down into a hazy mush which may have averted a military crisis. Hammarskjold's position which is backed by a vague report by the UN observations group, is that the shooting there is primarily an in- ternal matter which must be settled by the Lebanese themselves. The United States and Britain think the observations group may be technically correct in failing to find massive foreign infiltration into the rebel ranks, but wIong in issuing a report playing down such interference from Syria as there is. Since the two powers can hardly Justify intrventlon as long as the UN does not overrule Hammarskjold, they have been given an out with the Lebanese government which may be more welcome than is admitted publicly. Expressed doubts as to Beirut's claims may also have served to forestall the expected Lebanese request for a UN police force or for U. S.-British aid under the mutual defense provisions of the UN charter, ONE DAMPER on outside action to aid the Chamoun government has been its reluctance to throw its own army into what it has tried to mae appear as an outside invasion from the Syrian section of the United Arab Republic. The government apparently has feared the effects of division with- in the army itself, and the army leaders apparently prefer a middle course until the ultimate political victor is determined. There was -a report at the UN Monday that Chamoun was con- sidering an offer to the rebels to resign when Parliament meets lateI this month, remaining only as caretaker until the September election,1 The report 'was discounted by many who failed to see Just what it would mean to a compromise, since he has promised to get out in September anyw~ay, and since there is no evidence of central authority -- t. - ~~1 A U ICHAEL KRAFT DAVID TARR Co-Editor Co-Editor 'T JUNKER ...,,.,.,.. ih Editor LRD GEM-LJLDSEN,,,,..r.,f.Ni 'ht Editor N HOLTZER Night Editor VANDERSLICE ,.,...,.,..,. Ngcht Editor ARD MINTZ ....... ,.... Sports Editor SHIPPEY ,........,.... Chief Photographer Business Staff ' J ti1^iAb'tlb J"'ffr'A..RTA7 < " r... .a ®.._.... t s a. v .. .. ,.... i . )rt