Sixty-Eighth Year_ EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHTGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Personal Inspection Tour When Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. ,SDAY, JULY 17, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: LANE VANDER SLICE Michigan Governmental Reform Being Lost in Politics t. BRAVE MAN is Michigan's Democratic Su- preme Court Justice Eugene F. Black. And, .e might add, an inf~ormed man on the >ubled affairs of this State's government. In a speech delivered recently to the Michi- n Association of Justices of the Peace he de- ribed a powerful minority of legislators as urly old dogs growling in the manger of Mich- n's needs" and called for abolishment of the ate's two chamber legislature, replacing it th a single 60 member chamber. He suggest- i a number of other changes in the govern- mt and the State Constitution, but the uni- meral legislature proposal was the most dras- Republican reaction to Justice Black's speech s been disappointing if not surprising. Speak- of the House George M. Van Peursem (R- eland) has said Justice Black's action shows n unheard of lack of responsibility and re- ect for his high position on the Court.'' ' CANNOT very well be denied that the speech, coming from a member of the state's chest judicial body, was a bit more politically astic than is proper for a man of such a sition. But the merits of the suggestions ould not be lost in the cloud of name-calling tween Republicans and emocrats. Many students of state government, and chigan government in particular, believe a icameral legislative system is superior to e two-house method now used in all but braska. First rate arguments for Michigan's esent system 'are still lacking even though been in use for 123 years. 0n the other hand, a single house would obably be more economical, certainly would arly fix legislative responsibility (and pre- it buck passing between the two houses) and generally be considerably more efficient in handling the state's legislative affairs. . But the Republicans have failed to discuss - yet - the merits or shortcomings of the pro- posed system other than a few vague references attributing the faults found by the judge to improper administration and Gov. Williams.-} They spend most of their time claiming Black is a judge and should stay clear of politics, a suggestion of some merit but one which over- looks the fact that Michigan Supreme Court justices are politicians - they are nominated in party conventions with their names placed on a non-partisan ballot. All of this turmoil is part of a more basic issue: revision of the state's constitution by a constitutional convention. The issue of whether to call a convention goes to the voters Nov. 4. For years the problem of governmental reform. in Michigan has become bogged down in pofi- tics. Only seldom, and then usually-only among students of government, has discussion of re- form risen above "what'll it do for the party" to the level where it belongs of "what is best for the state," It should be noted in passing, however, that the legislators are not wholly ignorant of the reform problem. This year they passed a reor- ganization act giving the governor power to re- organize executive agencies of the state gov- ernment -- subject to the Legislature's veto. It is expected the act will have far reaching ef- fects on the structure of the government. However, this action, as commendable as it is, still leaves much to be done; Justice Black's remarks, less the political overtones, should be listened to and heeded. --DAVID TARR Co-Editor (Herblock Is on Vacation) WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: BaseballBDWnEAsSe s Dy DREW PEARSON AT LYDIA MENDELSSOHN: CastOut hies Scrp In 'The Pottig Shed RELIGION'S turn for triumph in the campus theatrical struggle between faith and atheism came last night with the Speech Depart- ment's production of ""The Ptting Shed." Following by one week the presentation of "Inherit the Wind." the story of the 1925 Scopes Trial and the fight to teacf Darwin's Theory of Evolution, "The Potting Shed" portrays a tormented man searching for "what's wrong with me?" who finds the secret to his past and reason for believing in God. Both productions were suitably selected for this summer's theme, "Religion in Contemporary Society." But Graham Greene's "The Potting Shed" is nore than a "faith play." The writer has presented a psychological detective story in which -James Callifer, a middle aged newspaperman (played by Norman Hartweg), attempts to uncover his childh'ood. Rebuffed for years by his parents for some reason he cannot under- stand, James Callifer renews his relationship with the rest of the family, all devout atheists, at the family home just before the death of his father, a "great man" a leader-of the rationalists and idol, of the once flourishing "Callifer Clubs." With quickening pace after his father's death. Callifer's past begins to painfully unfold as he gropes toward his realization. But somehow, the secret of what happened 30 years ago in the potting shed and the shattering of his atheistic creed appear too contrived unless perhaps one has, as Collifer himself put it "a lot of belief." HOWEVER, although the movement of the play and its dependency an a too well made miracle seems unconvincing, the fine Speech Depart- ment cast overcomes the handicap. Much of the dramatic, and as it is later revealed, family burden falls upon the mother, Mrs. Callifer. Bea Minkus magnificently bridges the years to portray the elderly woman who is distraught at losing her husband yet also was strong enough to protect him.for 30 years. Miss Minkus sensitively handles Mrs. Callifer's quiet strength which domi- nates the production as well as the family. Gaining strength after a little preliminary roughness, Norman Hartweg as the tormented James Callifer also gives a outstanding performance, especially in the difficult scene with his psychiatrist, Dr. Kreuzer. (Sigmund Freud, don't you know?) Both Nick Havenga as the doctor and Margaret Forward as the impish school girl niece handle their roles well as two who sought (separately) to help Callifer solve the mystery of the potting shed. The critical scene, when Callifer's uncle, a non-conforming Callifer who became a priest, relates in detail the incident of the potting shed, initially drags somewhat. But James Young in the role of the priest who has lost his faith seems to lose his awkwardness as the revealing meeting with his nephew progresses. Father Callifer in remembering the past, also regains his faith, re-echoing the words in "The Potting Shed." --Michael Kraft AT RACKHAM LECTURE HALL: oodwind Qnt et Stresse Contempotrar IT VERY SELDOM happens that on a program of seven works, five of them should be contemporary and that of the remaining two only one should be familiar. This, in brief was the program presented last night by the Woodwind Quintet in Rackham Lecture Hall, The first work was the short Sinfonia by the contemporary Dutch composer Bernhard Heden. It consisted of a short slow first section and a lively second part with engaging rhythmic and melodic patterns. The Roy Douglas Dance Caricatures were just t ,t. These six pieces were cleverly done in exact time, rhythm and melody with a mocking accompaniment, particularly effective in the Polka and Tango. The three traditional melodies arranged by oboist Florian Mueller proved I I, W ASHINGTON - Calvin Grif- fith got a rough time from Washington ball fans about mov- ing his Washington Senators to Minneapolis. But he got a rougher time from other big league club owners when they met in their inner sanctum in Baltimore. Del Webb and Tom Yawkey, re- spective owners of the New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox, gave Griffith such a hard time that he agreed to hold up the transfer. They were furious at Griffith for springing his fran- chise shift just as they were seek- ing congressional approval of a bill to exempt baseball from the antitrust laws. The bill, 'already passed by the House, is now pending before the Senate - and the baseball moguls . did not want any discordant is- sues, such as taking baseball away from the nation's capital, fouling up their lobbying. Seldom had there been any more private lobbying to pass legisla- tion than there's been to pass S. 4070, the bill to grant the baseball owners (also professional foot- ball, basketball and hockey teams) unlimited powers to extend their monopolistic practices in such things as player contracts, play- er drafts, farm club operations, territorial rights, and TV broad- casts. Under this law, if passed, own- ers could make their own rules on everything. They could even bar a newspaperman from any big league park if, for instance, he exposed baseball graft. ** * S. 4070 is probably the biggest concession any business s.has sought from Congress in this ses- sion - complete exemption from the antitrust laws. Only such op- erations as the sale or lease of ball parks and the operation of peanut and other concessions would be subject to monopoly po- licing. In all other things, club owners would be the sole arbiters of their own actions. Ordinary re- course to the courts would be de- stroyed; so would the bargaining position of players and player representatives. The congressmen chiefly re- sponsible for steering this mon- strosity through the House were Rep. Francis Walter of Pennsyl- vania, Democrat, and Rep. Ken- neth Keating of New York, Re- publican. They had potent lobby- ing help from the baseball own- ers. Virtually all of themwere on the job, pressuring Congress with phone calls and personal visits. (Copyright 1958 by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) * TODAY AND TOMORROW: By WALTER LIPPMANN OT LONG AGO a highly qualified spokes- man on Canadian and American affairs, Mr. ;ob Viner, wrote in ;the quarterly magazine dished by Queens University that"Amen- s are capable of forgetting their common cerns with Canada while Canadians cannot get their involvements with their giant ghbor." This is the essential point in the eral sense of grievance which has been unting in Canada. It led to the President's t of appeasement and friendship. he Canadians have a fair number of specific vances about wheat, oil, lead ard zinc, ut the control of Canadian subsidiaries of erican companies. They are themselves otiable and adjustable provided that we his country pay enough attention to them. the general grievance is more important n the sum of the specific grievances of which President discussed several in his Ottawa ress. The crux of the problem is that the adian economy is highly vulnerable to what one in the United States while the American ernment and American public opinion are tentive and' absent-minded about what hap- s in Canada. s a measure of our inattention, we can take ct which was reported recently to the House. imittee on Foreign Affairs by Reps. Brooks, s and Frank M. Coffin. There is only one rican newspaper, "The New York Times," ch has a news bureau in Canada; "The ago Tribune" and, we might add, "The York Herald Tribune" have reporters; for rest there are the Associated Press and the ed Press International which take their adian news from the Canadian Press Asso- on and' the British United Press. There is, is to say, little popular interest in Canadian irs. PART, no doubt, this lack of interest is due the fact that Canadian-American rela- s have for so long a time been so very good. ons tend to think about what troubles i rather than about what goes well. But e is more to it than that. Canadian concern American inattention reflects the enormous arity in the economic size of the two .tries. le Canadian population is less than 10 per of the American. Their gross national. uct is about six per cent of ours. Yet, as ie Minister Diefenbaker said recently, the adian "trading world has become increas- confined to the United States, which takes t* & Editorial Staff_ ICHAEL KRAFT DAVID TARR Co-Editor Ca-Editor RT JUNKER -.,.... ....Night Editor RD GERULDSEN ....«........ Night Editor NT HOLTZER ......,.Night Editor VANDERSLICE...............Night Editor ARD MiNTZ................... Sports Editor SHIPPEY........,....... Chief Photographer Business Staff 60 per cent of our exports and provides 73 per cent of our imports." Moreover, in a variety of key industries, an impressive percentage of the capital employed is controlled in the United States. In oil it is 68 .per cent, in mining 54 per cent, in pulp and paper 45 per cent, in agricultural machinery 56 per cent, in automobiles 95 per cent, in rubber 84 per cent. Thus while the Canadian economy is much smaller .than the American, it is at the same time vitally related to the American. American inattention crossed with' Canadian vulnerability pose a problem which in any long view is of very great importance. It is that Canadian-American relations, which have been the pride of North America and an example to the world, can no longer be taken for granted- as predestined to be good because the two peo- ples have so much in common. Our relations will have to be cared for and nurtured, will. have to be guided and promoted, by the con- scious action of the two nations. ' THE PRESIDENT'S speech to the Canadian Parliament, though it was ably written, failed, it seemed to me, to recognize that the times have changed and that the old relation- ship which has worked well for so long will not be good enough for the future. Indeed, much of the emphasis of the Presi- dent's speech was on the ideological notion,j which does not happen to be true in this case, that as lovers of a free economy there is nothing much for statesmen to do. What, for example,. was the point of his saying that "the United States and Canada are not state traders" when one of the specific Canadian grievances is over. the United States' state trading operations for the disposal of our surplus wheat. The real long term problem, of disparity in size combined with American inattention, is not going to be solved by occasional meetings at or near the summit, and for the rest by conven- tional diplomatic intercourse. We have to open our minds, I am inclined to think, to the task of creating some kind of new organ, a joint political institution which has enough authority to make both governments listen. The chief reason for thinking that the exist- .ing diplomatic machinery is not adequate lies in the radical difference between the Canadian and the American form of representative gov- ernment. At last week's meeting in Ottawa, for example, Mr. Eisenhower had nothing like the power to negotiate which Mr. Diefenbaker pos- sesses. The Prime Minister could commit his government. The President, who outranks him, does not control Congress and could not com- mit the American government. P R IN MOST of the economic issues which affect Canadian-American relations, the real power in the American government is not the President but the Congress. Obviously, neither country is going to change its form of government. Obviously also, it is not possible for the Congress of the United States to negotiate with the Canadian govern- ment. This leads me to think that it might,. prove to be relevant and useful to establish a AT THE MICHIGAN: 'Rock a Bye Baby' Rolls on Slapstick "ROQCK A BYE BABY," now at the Michigan Theatre is an innocuous bit of ribaldry carefully cloked in Victorian correctness to pass nasty censors and please the young-in-mind.. Jerry Lewis, producer and star, steals the show principally because he's on the screen most of the time, either acting inanely, singing off key or attempting to wring the last bit of sentiment out of, the polite audience. The story concerns' a blond, buxom actress named Carla (Mar- ilyn Maxwell) who discovers she is going to have a baby. Her next picture, an epic, will be "The White Virgin of the Nile," a part she will not be in shape to play. Her husband, it seems, had been a bullfighter, and died the day after the wedding; a secret marriage, of course. She has the baby, which turns: out to be three babies, also secretly, and gives them to Clayton Poole,. her childhood sweetheart, alias Lewis, to raise until "White Vir- gin is completed. . * * * A SINGLE man suddenly finding identical triplets on his doorstep in Midvale, Indiana, creates a small furor, especially since Clay- LETTERS to the EDITOR Sorry Cartoon . . To the Editor: KESSEL! You have failed us, let us down! Your suffering long-lasting public! How could you? I .went to Frankenstein, it was not bad, but fall-down-twice-and- devil-take-me that cartoon! You did not mention it, did neither warn nor caution us that we, fore- armed, might strengthened be against such ravaged nonsense. For nonsense neat, clean fallen from some masters pen is of the best and for the best intended, but tortured sideways into slipshod rhyme, and lisped by bumbling, tumbling puppies it is of the worst and for the wurst, which, no mat- ter how you slice it, is still bologna. "Foxy Pups" from the opening strains of tinkly music is clearly one of those oh-my-god-awful quasi-kindergarten mix-ups. I stood it till three, little head-bob- bing puppies and a crying grand- ton knows Carla's father who notices the family traits in the little darlings. All this is complicated by the fact that Clayton loves Carla, but Carla's little sister, played by Connie Stevens, loves Clayton. Her plaintive song, "If he can care for butterflies, why can't he care for me," rather tersely sums up the whole situation. Meanwhile, back in Egypt, a bevy of Cleopatran cuties are naively hoofing before a Vista- Vision camera chirping, "No one else can hold a candle to the White Virgin of the Nile." What the story lacks in solid plot it not compensated for by the act- ing performances. Lewis is either inane, or in the true clown tradi- tion, pathos-seeking, but his per- formance is dramatically shallow, His ability is in bumbling humor, but the slap-stick variety has been exploited to the point where it fails to please, even in VistaVision. * *- * MISS MAXWELL fills her scanty garments to overflowing, but talent she lacks, if one bothers to search that far. Connie Stevens is almost convincing as a teenager. The act- ing honors .go to Baccaloni who plays Carla's father. His perform- ance is warm, if somewhat pressed, and considering the ridiculous role he was handed, he plays brilliantly. The real stars are, of course, the three little waifs who are usually good natured and always clean and neatly dressed. As two-month- old infants they fail, chiefly be- cause they are at least nine months old, but for somewhat who likes cuddly, personable babies this pic- ture offers it. Color and filming are tolerably well handled, a these things go. The cartoon, featuring Spunky, the horse, is dull and "last week's news this week," a repulsive fea- ture at any movie, belongs on tele- vision, or in the studio library. "Rock a bye Baby" is; despite the level of mentality aimed at, still better than teen-type were- wolf sagas, and babies are more enjoyable than acting anyway. -Robert Junkert INTERPRETING THE NEWS: U.S. NLonger Tryng To Pleae Everyone By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst THE VISIT of British Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd to Washington. presages a quick Anglo-American decision on what to do about Jordan and Iraq. The odds are on British military intervention, with American sup- port and participation if needed. Much depends on whether King Hussein of Jordan is considered to have a chance of reversing the situation in Iraq while at the same time maintaining his position at home. He already has set himself up as the successor of King Faisal of Iraq as chief of the Arab (Jordan-Iraq) federation. The question is to be pleasant, civilized settings of Old Hundred, Danny Boy and Tur- key in the'Straw. The Three Shan- ties by Malcolm Arnold retained all the flavor of the sea. The sec- ond and third movements might have been given the descriptive titles of "The Sea's Lullaby" and "Jolly and Slightly Tipsy." * * * THE ONLY FAMILIAR work on the program was a very competent performance of the Mozart Di- vertimento No. 8 (K. 213). It suf- fices to say that it was a refresh- ing oasis in the desert of the un- familiar. The premier performance of Leslie Bassett's Woodwind Quintet (1958) was enthusiastically re- ceived by last night's audience. It is a short four movement work arranged in the classic alternating slow fast fqrm. The first movement (slow) was very short; interesting is the only word that comes to mind upon first hearing. The second and fourth movements are marked by an urgent and effective drive achieved in part by unison move- ment and repetition. The third movement is very lyrical with plaintive passages for both flute and oboe. THE QUINTET Op. 100, No. 4, in E minor by Anton Reicha con- cluded the program. Reicha, in the Mozart tradition utilizes the en- semble as a whole while giving each of the instruments a chance at a coloratura passage or two. The finale is especially charming. The instruments bounce along in turn with the intricacies of the melody and the ending is a re- freshing dominant-tonic play in the best classical tradition, -Allegra Branson OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan, for wchich The. Michigan Dailygassumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTENt form to Ronom 351 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m., the day preced- ing publication. THURSDAY, JULY 17, 1958 IMPOTENT: By OVID A. MARTIN Associated Press Farm Reporter W ASHINGTON-The future ap- pears rather bleak for the once-powerful Washington farm bloc. It has been split- into angry but seemingly impotent factions by congressional setbacks. The term farm bloc is applied to farm organizations, congressmen from farm areas and federal farm officials who-because of a mu- tuality of interest-have worked pretty closely together, informally, since the early 1930s to get gov- ernment help for agriculture. The recent.action of the House in refusing even to consider an omnibus farm bill approved by its Agriculture Committee perhaps did more than anything else to weaken if not wreck the bloc. Attempts have been made to attribute this action to votes of city congressmen who feared the legislation would boost prices- and taxes-of their constituents. But a more influential factor was a deep-seated division within the farm bloc itself. This division gave city lawmakers an escape from political pressures to support the controversial farm bill. CC* * THIS DIVISION within agricul- ture centers around the issue of how much or how little help the federal government should extend to farmers in the way of price guarantees, production controls and the like. Lined up on the side of less fed- eral aid are principally the Eisen- hower administration, the Ameri- can Farm Bureau Federation and those congressmen from both ma- jor parties who also favor a gov- ernment retreat from agriculture. On the'other side are such farm organizations as the National Grange, the National Farmers Union, the National Conference of Commodity Organizations and, of course, congressmen who favor use of federal powers and money to assure farmers better returns. Some of the proposals advanced whether he can become its saviour.- Reports have come out that there is a sufficient nucleus of loyal Iraqi forces outside Baghdad to warrant a try. An Anglo-Jordanian effort to overthrow the rebels by force would, without the existence of capable internal forces, be a dif- ferent matter. * * * THE ENTIRE strength of the United States was poised behind the Marines in Lebanon. It was like a task force sent out to do a limited job while the army behind it maintains a constant Marines had landed, the situation was not yet well in hand. The unity of Britain, France- and the United States, and the. poise of their arms, might serve' to maintain the present situation. * * * BUT NONE knew what would happen if a "rescue mission' is undertaken in Iraq. Beyond Iraq lie the oil fields of Iran, gnd beyond them, the Soviet Union. And one of the Soviet Unions chief world objectives is to deny Middle Eastern oil to the industry of Western Europe. '1 A *