RELIGIOUS MYTHS IN 20th CENTURY See Page 2 -da Sixty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom Dait F -WE FAIR, W ARMER .. LXVIII, No. 12S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 11. 1958 FIVE CENTS SIX I .. . . . . .. . . . . . . .. .. . ... . .. . . - . .. . . . . . . . . . --DaiLy-Bruce Baniey DOCTORAL AWARD-Mme. Chiang receives the hood signifying her honorary degree of Doctor of Laws. Prof. Robert Super of the department puts tIle hood in place before an overflow crowd in Rackham Auditorium. C n~ C Mne Chian Sees CrVisis lin tEducation CITATION: MAYLING SOONG CHIANG Member of a family celebrated for its extraordInary intellectual powers and the role It has played in public affairs, Mayling Soong Chiang has cultivated and refined her many abilities and has skillfully polished r the various facets of her personality. In the New Life Movement, a pro- gra*r she directs,, are emphasized the qualities of mind and body that bring freedom and health to her people. Sensitive to all the needs of children, both physical and spiritual, she has provided for the Republic of China a plan of elementary education that has won international acclaim. Her disciplined mind has mastered what it undertakes, be it a foreign tongues, the comman4 of an air force, the art of politics or that of painting. Artist, diplomat, gentlewoman -- The University of Michi- gan happily confers upon her its highest honor. Madame Chiang Kai-shek last night pictured a "crisis" in modern education, and linked to Communism what she called "the gradual annihilation of intellectual courage."e Mie. Chiang's speech followed ceremonies in Rackham Audi- toriumn, during which University President Harlan Hatcher conferred an honorary Doctor of Laws degree upon "Mayling Soong Chang .. - Artist, diplomat, stateswoman." Western education, Mme. Chiang said, is now in danger of suc- cumbing to the same type of "uniformity," for it is no longer "an Earthquake Takes Toll; Three Dead Southeastern Alaska Feels Big; Tremor JUNEAU, Alaska (^)-A mighty earthquake, felt throughout all of southeast Alaska Wednesday night, has left three known dead and two missing. The dead were three picknick- ers swept into the sea when the quake sheared off the tip of an island in Yakutat Bay, some 200 miles northwest of Juneau. Two Missing Missing were a man and his wife whose 44-foot fishing boat was swept by giant waves toward the rocky sides of Lituya Bay, on the coast 125 miles west of this Alaska capital." Witnesses to the island tragedy said about 500 yards of the south end of Khantaak Island heaved 20 feet into the air and then fell into the bay. The island is about a mile bff shore. Nothing but picnic plates were found floating in the water after the severe turbulence had subsided, Couple Asleep A couple near where the fish- Ing boat disappeared were flown to Juneau and hopsitlized yes- terday. The two said they were asleep when the quake hit. They awoke and went to the pilot house to look around. As they glanced toward three glaciers at the head of the bay they could see ice and debris being sheared off "like a gravel truck dumping a full load." "Then a huge wall of water about 50 feet high came racing toward us," they said, "caught our boat, and swept it up to a crest where we saw the Sunmore. The last we saw of the fishing boat it was headed toward a rocky cliff" The quake caused the worst cable break in 'the Alaska com- munications system history. So severe was the tremor when it hit that it knocked the needle off the seismograph at the Uni- versity of Washington in Seattle AF Stop Cone Search CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (M) - A United States ballistic missile has been fired at intercontinental range for the first time, but the Air Force announced yesterday efforts to recover the nose cone and its mouse have been aban- doned temporarily. Air Force officials confirmed that a mighty Thor-Able rocket launched Wednesday night landed in the South Atlantic Ocean near Ascension Island, 6,000 statute miles from Cape Canaveral. That meant United States 'missile men had passed another milestone in their bid to conquer space. As far as it is known, it was the first time a ballistic weapon traveled more than 8,000 miles through outer space and survived the redhot plunge back into the earth's atmosphere. Officials said the search for the top secret nose cone was called off because of darkness in the area. They planne to resume the hunt 'early today. Two aircraft and two ships cruising in the impact area spot- ted the nose cone as it dropped back from space. Sporadic radio signals have been picked up from the cone, but in insufficient strength to pinpoint the location. Joint Cabii On111Defense To %FFY 1t Be Forme Industrialist May Be Held In Contempt WASHINGTON (A) - House in- vestigators held a threat of a con- tempt citation over Bernard Gold fine -last night as he continued to insist that details of his com- panies' transactions are none of their business. To set the stage for a possible contempt citation, the investiga- tors had a signed subpoena ready to serve on Goldfine when he shows up for his fifth day of un- der-oath testimony today. So far Goldfine has been tes- tifying as a voluntary witness. Citation Requires Subpoena, The subpopa was signed after some subcommittee legalists con- tended a contempt citation against Goldfine would not stand up if he were not under subpoena when he declined to answer the disputed questions. A Goldfine attorney indicated the Boston industrialist would not try to dodge the subpoena. Chairman Oren Harris (D-Ark) halted hearings and called the special House investigating com- mittee into closed-door session to discuss whether to move imme- diately against the millionaire gift-giving friend of Sherman Adams. Decide Action Later "After the record is complete," Harris said, "the committee will then decide what action it will take and the procedures as to pos- sible contempt." The 'abrupt interruption in the hearings came only a short time after Goldine had acknowledged more of the kind of generosities that have made his friendship with Adams a national issue - payment of hotel bills totaling al- most $1,200 for three Republican senators. These were Sens. Frederick G. Payne (Maine), Norris Cotton (N.H.), and Styles Bridges, (N.H.), Ike's Trade Bill Changed In Committee WASHINGTON (A)-The Senate Finance Committee voted 12-2 yesterday for an extension of the reciprocal trade program in a form far different from what President Dwight D. Eisenhower asked. In the first place, the proposed extension is for three years. Presi- dent Eisenhower asked for five years, and the House voted five, The Senate Committee wrote in an amendment sharply limiting presidential power to overrule the Tariff Commission on the question of higher tariffs. This was a vic- tory for those who say domestic' industry needs more protection from foreign competition. It is ex- pected to cause a hot fight when the extension bill comes up in the Senate. 'BREEDER OF DISCONTENT': Plant Attacks Round-Robin Games MIDLAND, Mich.-Proposals for "round robin" scheduling oef Big Ten football games xere sharpl criticized here yesterday by Prof. Marcus L. Plant of the law school, University faculty representative to the Western Intercollegiate Conference. Prof. Plant described the round robin as a "trouble maker and a breeder of discontent." He said its adoption would lead to "many trials and tribulations and per- hIaps ultimate disaster" for the Big Ten. Plant emphasized that he spoke1 "solely as 8, private indvidu~al" and that his views did not neces- sarily reflect official University policy. The "round robin" proposal calls for expansion of the Big Ten foot- 'ba schedule to 10 games, nine ofj which would be playedl annuall, with other conference members. If adopted, it would take effect in' 1965, Under present Big Ten rules, members may schedule up to nine games each year and are entitledt to play at least six with other con- ference mmers' Plant told a Midland "Rotary' Club luncheon, "The proposed change is a revolution in the nature of the conference. It means that we withdraw into ourselves and give up our football contacts with other people in the country, For us at 'Michigan, such provin- cialism would be most unfortu- nate." Opinion.Unanimous In addition to difficulties in scheduling 10 games during the This proposal dIanother re- flection, in my judgement, of the Barnum and Bailey 'philosophy of college athletics-that universities exist, in part at least, to entertain the public." Noting the compulsory nature of requiring each school to play all other conference members every years, Plant continued: "In any conference, conditions can develop under which two of the members may find it wise to suspend competition temporarily in a given sport to let the situation simmer dowen. To compel these in- stitutions to play each otherunder any and all circumstances is bad policy." Plant also criticized two pro- posed changes in Big Ten recruit- ing rules. These would 1) permit coaches to make one visit to the homes of students on invitation of their parents and 2) allow mem- ber schools to pay the expense of one visit to their campus by a prospective player. Both proposals were tentatively passed by a split vote of the fac- ulty representatives and have been sent back to the member school faculties. PROF. MARCUS PLANT . . . criticizes round-robin Committe fa se n Plt i. "Ten games is too heavy alvad to ask the play- ers to carry. It is educationally unjustifiable. Opinion on this in Ann Arbor is as close to unani-f mous as I think it can ever get on any subject, LIEU TENANT TESTIFIES: TetlarW sT i Rebels Free One Sailor GUANTANAMO, Cuba ) Cuban rebels yesterday released the first of 30 kidnaped United States Navy men they have been pct t I Un1derworld Conspiracy WASHINGTON ()-A police lieutenant testified yesterday that Abraham Teitelbaum was marked for death in 1954 in an underworld plot to seize control of Chicago's rich restaurant industry, The plan, Lt. Joseph Morris of Chicago told the Senate Rackets 'nvestigating Committee, was to push Teitelbaum from the balcony of his office high up in the Chicago Fine Arts Building and make it look like suicide, Teitelbauxn's office is on the 10th floor. Teitelbaum, a lawyer, then was the $125,000-a-' year labor consultant'for the Chi- e aagv Ref h-urant Assochition. ThereR e T. hs b ti estimony that he exer- t dr n, i; of m , xh~ it Marks Endx Of Sunimii Conference Steps To Be Taket To Ease Troubles Between U.S., Cana4 OTITAWA ( P-The Ottawasu mit conference ended yester with agreement by Canada and United States to establish a Joint Cabinet Committee on C tinental Defense. It ended, too, with assu4x that President Dwight Eisenho "believes very much that this 1 a very worthwhile meeting" 1 tween himself and Prime Mini John G. Diefenbaker. That was the word relaye4' newsmen by White House p secretary James C. Hagerty, Future Brighter For himself, Diefenbaker t the Canadian House of Commi that there has been a spirit of sideration of each other's pr lems during the discussions "Ui bodes well for the future," While there were few spent concrete steps to improve trQlb relations between the two neil boring natiops, ,Hagerty said t topics which have caused conci and friction "are not just going be dropped now" and the dis sions will not be ended just p cause the prese conference 1 ended,. lie added that he thinksI meetings have led "to a prso relationship between the Presid and the Prime Minister that very good for both our eountril Purpose of Meetings That, Hagerty added, is w the meetings were called for. He added there were some i portant agreements which rep: sented good steps forward. I gertymentioned the decision to up the committee on defense, a other to consult on conflicting la and policy on exports, partiula to Red China, and a decision work on plans for inspection a control that might prevent a si prise attack in the arctic. Today, President and Pri Minister part compary. Dief& baker faces a round of questioni in Commons on the course of 1 conferences of the last three da President Eisenhower flies Washington, witih a stop at M sena, N.Y., to inspect the work the St. Lawrence Seaway, Discussions 'elpfu* Spokesmen said President Eise hower and Diefenbaker feel tth discussions have been helpful, Ha resulted in improved relations a have opened the way for furt cooperation. Besides the agreement on a, fense committee, the conferen produced decisions to consult the trouoiesome problem of tr with Red China. Diefenbaker indicated the Uni States has agreed that Canadi subsidiaries of United States c, panies may send nonstrat goods to China. Word News Roundup By The Associated Press ST. LOUIS - Appeal from federal judge's order suspend integration at Central High Schi in Little Rock will be heard Aug. It had been suggested by an a torney for the National Assn.,f, the Advancement of Colon People and agreed to by the Lit Rock School Board. Milford Hits InS1cumbency Desigynation By SUSAN UOLTZER Mrs. Beth Milford yesterday added a Republican note to a Democratic controversy by sharp- ly criticizing the law allowing an incumbent to place his title be- fore his name on a ballot, Mrs. Milford is seeking the GOP nomination to the State Senate for the seat currently held by Rep. Nrwis Christman, her primary opponent. Commenting on the Issue raised by William Johnson, opposing Gov. G. Mennen Williams in the Democratic gubernatorial pri- mary, Mrs. Milford called the designation an "unfair advantage" for the incumbent. Such a privi- lege, she said, amounts to nothing more than "free advertising." Agrees' With Milford Rep. Christman, too, said "I call it free advertising," and men- tioned that "it seems a shame for a candidate to have to go out and spend the money, "I am trying to practice the same economy here as I try to do in the Legislature," he explained. Besides, he added, "I am the Senator. Why not let people know r it?" Would Use Own Record Mrs: Milford declared she "would want to stand on my own rec'ord. If I were an office-holder," she said, "I would want my rec- ord to be known well enough so that people would vote for me be- cause of it." Candidates who do request their title be placed on the ballot, she commented, do so because "they feel they need it." Rep. Christman called the statement "perfectly reasonable," but said the privilege is ,a matter' of law, and "if the Legilature so decreed, that's their business." Hinders Future Candidates 4instrumnent whereby man was brought to know more of himself," Rather, she said, modern educa- tion "has become a frenzied at- tempt to express itself only in the physical, chemical, mechanistic and electronic sense." Attacks 'Stultifying' Education Although saying "there is noth- ing wrong" with encouraging scientific advancement, Mme. Chiang asked "must education be propagandistic, stereotyped, stul- tifying?" For in the attempt to keep pace with the scientific war developments of Russia, she said, such education may easily lead to "petrification of the intellect," This "imbalance of emphasis," by stressing the science of war, has released another threat, MNme. Chiang said. "The horrors of present-day war technology have become so uppermost to the mind that freedom and values of human dignity . . . have begun to be sec- ondary to biological survival." In sharp criticism of this idea of "peace at any price," Mme. Chiang said such reasoning "is .tanta-, mount to telling ourselves that... to exist even on sufferance as beasts of burden is preferable to struggling as human beings." Communism 'Rationalispi' The "basic liberal tradition in our thinking," she said, gives a "fatal fascination" to any utopian system, but said that Communism is simply masquerading as such.. "What Communism actually does," she declared, "is to present its own brand of rationalization, and it1 precludes rationalism as you and I understand it." Mime. Chaing called communist thinking "barren and uncreative," with all ideas made by "the very top few" Any departure from' these ideas, she said, is revision- ism, "equivalent to apostasy.", Very Big Crop Well IfUy vTp Last Big, Crop holding in mountain hideouts for nearly two weeks. Airkr Thmi ' hneaeo came to settling labor disputes. Called before the Senate probers Teitelbauin invoked the protection of four different constitutionall rman.. LZma~ R. Msness~ o Released American Flyers De-- scribe Their Experiences in Ar- .menia,. See Page Six. Ames, Iowa, was flown out of the jungle by helicopter. The bespec- tacled airman posed reluctantly for pictures and told newsmen he felt "pretty good" before intelli- amendments and refused to say whether he knew anything about the murder plot. "Can't you be helpful to the committee?" Chairman John L. McClellan (D-Ark.) asked the big, sweating, florid -faced witness., But Teitelbaum was adamant. He refused to answer more than 80 quest ions on the grounds that gence officers whisked him away. answers might tend to degrade or Mosness was accompanied on the nciimina te him. flight out by United States Consul Morris testified he received in- Park Wollam of Santiago who has formation that Louis (Needle been dickering for release of the No.e L Lr o and James W'en- 30 servicemen and 20 civilians ab- berg, two gangsters who were sub- ducted by the rebels. Wollam told sequently murdered, were plotting newsmen tersely, "I am hopeful of to get rid of Teitelbaum. getting out the rest of the men." The police officer said Tony Ac- Cuban police reported mean- cardo, swarthy king of Chicago's while a Cuban named Angel Seco, underworld, appeared to be be- who runs a string of private ware- hind the move to take over from houses inside the United States Teitelbauim with Sam "Golf Bag" Naval Base, was seized by rebels xHunt slated to be boss of the new during the day, robbed of $200 and asociation. shot dead outside the city, Four Mors said the scheme failed civilians were arrested for the kill- mamily because of internal trou- Know ledge Students retain as much from a 21-inch television set as from a teacher, Samuel L. Becker, direc- tor of the division of television- radio-film, of the University ofj Iowa said yesterday. The findings on student reten- tion were developed from research and the university and borne out by experiments elsewhere, he said. However, he emphasized, we still do not know whether students are able to think, learn, evaluate, or are motivated more by television or by the traditional forms of education. He said that few ex- periments had been undertaken in this field. Reaction from the Iowa student body to television has been con- sistently favorable, he claimed. However, he continued, this re- action varies at other universities. Television has stimulated studies in different teaching methods be- cause educators want to compareE TV with traditional methods of teaching, Becker said. The last day of the two-day speech program will include Upton S. Palmer, chairman of the Santa Barbara College of the University of California speaking on "The' Orator as a Conservatve-" Other speakers will be ,Edward C. Cole of Yale University speak- ing on "The Theatre and the Technological Revolution" and Elise Hahn of UCLA speaking on "Speech Training in the Atomic Age" Alaskan Vote To Be Taken Before Aug.(1 ing, bles. Fernando Says Politics Not Most Vital Bp JUDITH DONER The sooner we believe that political categories are not primary, the better for the world, The Rev. Celestine Fernando, visiting coun- selor to foreign students from the University of Ceylon said yesterday. Referring to the basis upon which students should judge their' contemporaries in other countries, Rev. Fernando said that politics should be sidestepped and human relations should become the im- portant thing. The first Visiting Counselor for the Protestant Foundation of International Students indicated that the very reason for the presence of foreign students on campus should be to establish these human relationships, 'U' Has 'Definite' Responsibility "The University has a definite responsibility to the foreign stu- dent," Rev. Fernando insisted. "Most of the students who come here have come from positions of student leadership in their native countries." Furthermore, they will return to positions of leadership when they return, he continued. WASHINGTON P)- The oo- ernment said yesterday 1958 crop production appears likely to equal --if not ton-the record volImes l SAN FRANCISCO (A') .. ov~. Mike Stepovich said yesterday he will set a date before Aug. 1 for a plebiscite on Alaskan statehood -with an emphatic "yes" vote in- ,dicated. He said he had received official PULA, Yugoslavia - Presid Tito and Colonel Abdul Ga Nasser appealed yesterday to East and West blocs to settle I differences. Winding up eight days of cussion, Tito and the vis: President of the United Arab fig' I'