"It Seems To Be Kind of a Favorite Theme" Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICaIGAN Vhen Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staf writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. _ 1" 0- r d t' " 11 AT THE MICHIGAN: Darby O'G ' Provides Delightful Diversion AY, JULY 28, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: THOMAS HAYDEN Institute Points Up Need for More Funds ,::W / t + f THE REGENTS have established an Institute of Science and Technology at the Univer- sity. With a brilliant, able director, $500,000 for the first year's operation and a statement of purposes to guide it, the Institute has every- thing but housing.for its soon-to-be-vast sci- entific research program. The Institute will be good for the Univer- sity and good for the state of Michigan. Its scientific work will hold, and attract, many able scientists to the University. It will offer the opportunity for research work which may yield lasting benefits. And the hope exists that the Institute will attract much new in- dustry to the state to utilize the findings, fa- cilities and brains of the scientific establish- ment. The formal founding of the Institute brings up two problems, however. It points up sharply the great need for research space on the cam- pus. Vice-President and Dean of Faculties Marvin L. Niehuss has called this lack "criti- cal," and has suggested the Institute rent space to conduct its first year's work. He for- merly cited cramped research facilities as a major factor for losing men of science to gov- ernment, industry and other educational in- stitutions. Now the need is greater; but with the State Legislature obviously on the Institute's side, a. nlew building should be forthcoming soon. Wanted: Pla T'S TOO DARN HOT for studying anyway, but the academic rigors of the University are as real now as in the regular fall and spring semester. Professors are putting on as much Steam as ever, despite competition from sizzling sidewalks. So whether or not the temperature permits, Summer Session student must tackle the texts in the humid afternoons and balmy nights. But an ever-recurrent problem this summer is finding a place to carry out this endeavor. It's been tried, and the conviction is - Silver Lake is not, never was, or ever will be a study hall. It was thought a possibility, though, knowing that Northwestern people return home in the summer already well tanned from studying all spring on the shores of nearby Lake Michigan. But one finds here that the lakeshore does not permit the concentration necessary for the academic rigours of Michigan. DESPITE THE TIME of year, these academic requirements remain unslackened, so we THE SECOND PROBLEM is potentially seri- ous to the University. This year the state appropriation was divided for use in running central campus, the Flint branch, the Dear- born Center and the Science Institute. As more "special" appropriations are needed, such as for branch schools or special institutes, the need for more money for the University be- comes more critical. And the funds become more inflexible, with certain earmarked sums necessary for "special" areas and the remain- der needed to run the Ann Arbor campus. If next year the University's record appro- priation were cut $1 million from this year what would be the result? Would the Dearborn Center be closed? Would the Institute of Sci- ence and Technology be unfounded? The prob- able result would be an "austerity" year here in Ann Arbor. While some of these new- fangled "special" projects may be desirable, too many might well be. too much of a good thing and lead to harm for the University which started it all. The Institute is desirable in many ways. It may well be this newest newcomer to the Uni- versity community which makes the Univer- sity a forerunner in the space age. It will be an interesting project to watch developing. It' the results of its work are spectacular, the Uni- versity might well be the scientific leader of the nation. --ROBERT JUNKER Co-Editor ce To Study must find a place to sit down and study. Fra- ternities and sororities are noisy, dorms are clamorous, and apartments are hot. The un- dergrad and general libraries are available from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m., Monday through Thurs- day, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Friday, and 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday. But if your classes run aU afternoon, you happen to live several blocks from campus and eat dinner until 6:30, you are left with barely two hours to study there in the evening. The Union ist primarily meant to be a recre- ation building, and studying there is not en- couraged. And the din of music, laughter, and talking in the snack bar can be too much com- petition for many students. The League is closed for redecorating this summer, so that rules out the study rooms available there dur- ing the regular year. But the second week in August is not too far distant, and there remains plenty to be done beforehand with no convenient nook in which to bury oneself with the books. -STEPHANIE ROUMELL ~FOM THE oFLCT0 i " @ o ' f' \ NbE5D / THERE ARE Leprechauns, and those who disbelieve will have to consult with the Michigan Theatre, or Walt Disney, or bet- ter yet, Darby O'Gill. Any blood of the Irish variety will be stimulated byDarby O'Gill and his friends. This picture is perhaps the freshest and most delightful bit of nonsense to hit the Ann Arbor scene this summer. Darby O'Disney has been to Ire- land, and along with securing his own pot of gold, he collected some "wee people" and a group of Irish folk tales. With these he has com- bined some excellent faces and humorous acting into an almost believable tale of the Irish hin- terlands. THE-CHARACTER of Darby is reminiscent of the Bing Crosby films which co-starred Barry Fitz- gerald, except that Darby is the most mischievous man possible. The Irish girl who gets involved is lovely, and the supporting cast of Irish characters is wonderful. As the picture progresses there is no doubt in one's mind about the existence of leprechauns. The picture reeks with sentimentality and oozes blarney for an hour and a half; it makes Ireland seem better than Cape Coral. The cred- its for the picture are punctuated with so many O's and Mc's and Flanagans that you, would think the Potato Famine had caused a mass migration to Hollywood. The usual Disney perfection is displayed in relation to special ef- fects which account for some of II / < 44est TA 'o zs ugs+t.QQ rc W4 pl; .srr C_ ft. CARIBBEAN CAROUSEL: Puerto Rican Estadistas Gain in Strength By THOMAS TURNER SAN JUAN, P. R. - The State-, hood Party is gaining adher- ents rapidly in the cities, but Gov. Luis Munoz Marin's Popular Par- ty retains much of its rural strength. I want to make it clear right now this is no carefully reached conclusion based on research - it's a logical notion, and the in- terviews tend to confirm it. An hour spent in Old San Juan tagged nine Estadistas and only, two Populares, And a few minutes in the little town of Toa Alta showed less party identification generally, but considerable con- fidence in Munoz. We (an interpreter and I) first walked up to an old man waiting for the bus at Plaza de Colon (Columbus Square), San Juan. "I am 83 years old," Francisco Nieves said, "and I've seen two flags in Puerto Rico - the flag of' Spain and the flag of the United States. "I love the American flag," he said. MUNOZ MARIN was also born under the Spanish flag and raised under the American flag, old Nieves said. "But he does not love the American flag.". Munoz is a "communista," the old man said, growing more ex- cited; Munoz takes "mililons" for himself. "And you, senor?" we asked the man 'sitting next to Nieves, "what do you think?" "Iagree," he said, nodding vig- orously. We then asked a third man. He replied that he considered him- self both a Puerto Rican and an American at the same time, un- der the Estado Libre Asociado (Commonwealth). The Common- wealth is the best status for Puerto Rico, he said. He shied away then without elaborating further -- perhaps he was a little intimidated by old Nieves. * * * NIEVES THEN told an incident from Munoz's youth. M u n o z1 CAPITOL COMMENTARY: Five Congressmen on a Raft changed his name when he re- turned from studying in the States, Nieves said. His father, who was very sick, called Munoz Manin to come to him, and the son hesitated be- fore finally coming, Nieve con- tinued. The father (patriot Luis Mu- noz Rivera, whose birthday is a Puerto Rican holiday), was very upset by his son's behavior, Nieves declared. Now Puerto Rico should follow Hawaii and Alaska and become a state. More money will come in than before, he said, because people here are "sharks." By this time a crowd had gath- ered, and one member of it spoke up. "Make Puerto Rico independ- ent for five years," he suggested with a grin. No one took him very seriously but the old man, who was horri- fied. THEN WE turned to a fellow standing farther back in the crowd, listening. "Americano," he answered promptly to the ques- tion of whether he considered himself a Puerto Rican or an American. This man, Antonio Serrano, said he wanted statehood for Puerto Rico not only for the money, but because Puerto Ricans don't feel "complete" now. Something has been instilled in them, Serrano said, p e r h a p s through the schools, which makes them feel distinctly American. Munoz Marin is a "wonderful" man, he said in answer to a ques- tion, but doesn'th havethe feeling of the people in his heart. He has done a great deal for Puerto Rico, Serrano conceded, By WILLIAM S. WHITE FIVE COMPARATIVELY young and com- .paratively unknown members of the House of Representatives, four men and one woman, have deliberately leaped from cabin berths to safety upon a raft that bobs now in a wide and dangerous political sea. Whether they will come to safe harbor or sink in the next election will not be the least important of all the tests at the polls in 1960. For what they have done is to take a great risk in defense of a principle bigger than all of them or any party. Theirs happens to be the Democratic party. But the question they embody is not partisan, nor even ideological. They. have assumed, these five people on a raft, that in the end the voters will permit politicians to act on tough national issues in the public interest, rather than only in some group interest. They have assumed that in the end Congress has an inescapable duty to per- form on such issues, come what may. THESE FIVE are Representatives Stewart Udall of Arizona, Carl Elliott of Alabama, Edith Green of Oregon, James O'Hara of Michigan and Frank Thompson Jr. of New Jersey. It was they who, through five weeks of bitter, cursing wrangling, of harsh competing labor union and pro-management pressures within the House Labor Committee, stood steadfast upon an unalterable position: That the committee must bring out a labor reform bill. That it must be a bill actually do- ing something to curb labor abuses. That it also must be a bill that would not destroy la- bor. That, above all, it must be a bill - simply Editorial Staff SUSAN HOLTZF ROBERT JUNKER Co-editor Co-editor PETER ANDERSON .................. Sports Editor THOMAS HAYDEN...... .........Night Editor KATHLEEN MOORE ................. Night Editor a bill -- to prove that Congress was strong enough to legislate, not merely to talk, in an area of extreme pre-Presidential campaign sensitivity. It is due most of all to these five that the committee has come through with a measure on which the House itself can act. It was long touch-and-go as to whether the extremes within the committee would not paralyze it beyond any action at all. THE LABOR COMMITTEE has 30 members. All have, in one degree or another ,prob- lems of political survival, convictions and prejudices. But it was upon this small band of five that beat the fiercest and most pitiless of all the pressures of these five weeks. And it was at them that the bitterest cries of "be- trayer" were flung by labor spokesmen. For these five are all liberals. Most - if not all - never would have been in Congress with- out labor support. In the ordinary definition they were "pro-labor." Thus against the violent oversimplification which politics produces on issues of pay and pocketbook, they had to run perils of special poignancy. They knew that the national good, the good of their own party and the good of Congress as an institution of representative government required something more than the simple either-or attitudes of other partisans. It is easy, as a "labor" Congressman, simply to say, no, no to each and every proposed re- striction upon labor. It is easy, as a "business' Congressman, to cry yes, yes to every one. But it is not easy to draw a middle line which, in a matter such as this, pleases no pressure group on either side. THIS, ALL THE SAME, is where the five took their stand. What they said to labor was about this: We are still basically for you and not "against" you. We have no intention to destroy you. But you will not even listen to any real chance of any kind, even though we know -and you really know, too-that some changes must be made. You will denounce us? Very and the people respect him for it, but "most countries" have pros- pered since the war. * * * STATEHOOD would help bring "democracy" to Puerto Rico, ac- cording to Serrano. "I own a taxi," hetsaid indicating thenve- hicle parked nearby. He explained that he is limited to an area within eight miles of the city, and though he lives farther out, he can't take his cab. "On Father's Day I wanted to take the cab into the country for a picnic," he said, by this time in such a hurry that he couldn't wait for my interpreter and so was us- ing English. "But I couldn't find the guy that issues passes, so I had to stay in the city." Then we turned to the fellow who had earlier suggested a trial pe'riod for independence. "Now people can come and go as they wish (to the States)," En- rique Fernandez said. "But give them independence for five years. Then they would feel the grip of the tyrant (Munoz) on their shoulder," and appreciate state- hood. Who does Fernandez want for governor instead of Munoz? "Don Luis Ferre." "Es un millionario," a voice from the crowd interjected. But Fernandez interjected that so too were Rockefeller, Eisenhower, Harriman and Truman million- aires. Ferre in his opinion is a "just" nian, "religious" with a nice fam- ily. * * * A YOUNG FELLOW, Jorge Luis Rodriguez, was standing nearby without saying anything. We asked opinion. Statehood would be "best" for Puerto Rico, he said earnestly: the United States government has always been "kind," and has united the people of Puerto Rico. Independence would be the "saddest" status, Rodriguez con- tinued. People in Puerto Rico do not know how to govern them- selves, in his opinion. Munoz Marin is now trying to foist independence upon Puerto Rico without the people knowing it, he said. Munoz has done much good, he admitted, but most money still goes to "important people," not to the poor. * * * WE WERE turning to leave this part of the Plaza, when a fellow with no teeth insisted on being heard. He too was an Estadista, he said, and pointed to the red, white and blue ribbon on his lapel to prove it. His name was Pablo, he said. Someone in the crowd told him he had to give his full name, so he said, "Pablo Varquez Ortiz," although it was hard to tell for sure what he said. In the center of the Plaza is a monument to Columbus, discov- erer of Puerto Rico. On benches nearby we saw two men sitting, each reading a newspaper. The first fellow, reading El Mundo (the paper our family takes) said he was an Estadista. Puerto Rico is a "colony" now, he said. "Ttc "nrn a . ... .x.« . THE OTHER man was reading the tabloid, El Imparcial. He identified himself as Pablo Guz- man. Guzman said he wanted Puerto Rico to be an "Estado." "Eighty per cent" of the people don't want independence, Guz- man said. Munoz, according to Guzamn, actually favors statehood (I don't know whether the fellow thought Munoz was being tricky or just didn't realizethe Commonwealth was a third alternative). Then we asked another fellow whether independence or state- hood would be better. Puerto Rico is not ready for either, Nestor Ortiz answered promptly. "We have a Democratic gov- ernment in all phases,' Ortiz said "the Estado Libre Asociado." Munoz has, done more for Puerto Rico than anyone else, he said. (All this time Ortiz had been glancing around apprehensively. Suddenly we realized why, as the fiercest rainstorm in months broke loose. This terminated the' interviews in Old San Juan.) * * * TOA BAJA is a typical small town, except perhaps that it has no doctor currently. We stopped the car in front of the local beer- hall, a quiet place where 'the cronies get together to drink beer, play dominoes and discuss the lottery list. Two fellows were standing outside. We asked the first what he thought of state- hood. "No sabe," he said. "I am not a political man." The second at first said noth- ing, then said he thought most people think Puerto Rico should be a state.G And what did they think of Munoz Marin? The first, Dionisio Navedo, said "He has done a lot of good." A THIRD FELLOW came up to listen. He said he had no opinion. Then a fourth, a farm worker named Apolonio Clavoterro, said Puerto Rico should stay the way it is. Munoz has fought many fights to get what he's trying to get, Clavoterro continued, and has finally gotten it. the more delightful aspects of this picture. There is a realistic creation of the little people which is carried out so well that one accepts the reduction as normal. This perfection is exhibited in the underground Leprechaun palace where a dance and riding scene is cleverly executed. * * * THE ONLY difficulties which are encountered in this picture is the differentiation from Gaelic to English. The brogues are so thick that at times it is hard to under- stand what is being said. This picture has everything; there are Banshee wails, Bullies, Brian the Leprechaun King, and the greatest witch image ever. Darby O'GiI, along with Steve Reeves, "Ain't goin to win any Oscars" but still this picture has a refreshing atmosphere which is a relief from the usual fare being offered. -Michael Hermanoff AT THE STATE For Lewis F ans Only IF YOU'RE a Jerry Lewis fan, there is an hour and a half of pure, una11 o y e d, caramel-corn slapstick at the State which you'll probably love. Otherwise, stay away. "Don't Give Up The Ship" is the story of a young naval officer, Lt. John Paul Steckler (the Sev- enth), who is trying to go on his honeymoon. It seems that the Navy is try- ing to get its appropriations in- creased. And there's this Con- gressman who asks some embar- rassing questions about the where- abouts of ,a destroyer escort ship, the USS Kornblatt. Nobody knows where the Kornblatt is, but the last officer known to be respon- sible for, it is - you guessed it. * * * SO THE NAVY tears Lt. Steck- ler (the Seventh) away from his panting bride, assigns a volup- tuously female ensign to help him, and gives him ten days to find the Kornblatt. The trail leads through flash- backs of the ship's loss, through Miami Beach, a wrestling arena, a pullman compartment, and an aqualung journey. In between, Lt. Steckler's wife keeps pouting, whining and vamp- ing as her honeymoon collapses and the Shore Patrol comes for her husband, at the critical mo- ment, three different times. Hers, in fact, are the most nerve-shat- tering antics of the movie - and that's going some, for the great, portion of the film will set your teeth on edge. There are some funny spots - n o t a b 1 y the flashback scenes aboard ship and on an improbable island in the Pacific - but in general, give up on "Don't Give Up The Ship." -Susan Holtzer OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no ei- toral responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. TUESDAY, JULY 28, 1959 VOL. LXIX, NO. 25-S General Notices Department of Classical Studies Cof- fee Hour: Tues., July 28, E. Conf. Rm. Rackham Bldg., 4 p.m. Elizabeth Per- Guson "Summer Session--Greek Style" The Master Breakfast, honoring stu- dents receiving masters degrees in the 1959 Summer Session. 9:00 a.m., Sun., ( *1 t( r , ' I I r 4 LANGUAGE BARRIER: Congress Wants Hike In Language, Ability By ARTHUR EDSON Associated Press Newsfeatures Writer ALL AT ONCE everybody seems eager to learn a foreign language. Enrollment has soared in high schools and colleges. Two years ago, a handful of high schools taught Russian; this fall around 300 will. Other languages also show increases, though not so dramatically. Drop into any bookstore, and you'll have trouble finding the books because of the teach-yourself language records. Learn Cantonese, Madam, as you wash the dishes. OUR LEADING tourist, Richard M. Nixon, learned to say, "da zdrav- stuvuyet mir!" In Russian this means, "long live peace!" Judging by the argument that began almost immediately, Nixon must have said it badly, or maybe the Russians weren't listening. Yet for all the excitement over languages, a check around town today shows the linguistic battle is far from won. Take Congress, for instance. Sen. Alexander Wiley (R-Wis.) has this warning: "Of the 2% (Continued on Page 3) Willie's fWords 0 0 0 f. I MAI INt I