"Think He'll Thaw Out And Come To Life Again ?" zh nthgalt BaAi IIy Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN When 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 staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. ESDAY, JUNE 23, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: THOMAS HAYDEN - a I NOVEL SITUATION: Maldives Want Closer British Cooperation By PHILIP SHERMAN Daily Staff Writer A NOVEL SITUATION has arisen in world politics: a small Asian nation has been the scene of a rebellion because its government is not cooperating with Great Britain. In the Maldive Islands, south of Ceylon, a rebel group has set up a government with a program of cooperation with Great Britain. Because the established government is dragging its feet in negotia- tions with Britain for the construction of a big air base, the rebels' desire ot replace it and speed along the talks. The base, which is to be built on Addu Atoll, would bring new prosperity to the population of 80,000. Addu Atoll is by nomeansunfamiliar to British armed forces. In the early days of World War II, Britain's Vice-Admiral Somerville used it as a fueling base, and his slow battleships used it as a haven from the Japanese aircraft, but he always considered it as a secondary ex- pedient. The change from an emergency wartime base to a front line in- stallation illustrates the fortunes of British armed forces in the area, and poses a serious strategic question. In the old days of the Empire "on which the sun never set," there was a chain of island bases stretch- Strauss Rejection A Da ngerous Precedent t f a I E 1 [HERE IS something almost frightening in the Congressional rejection of President isenhower's nomination of Lewis Strauss as ecretary of Commerce. The worst part of the affair lies not in the ation's loss of Strauss himself, although this an be argued strenuously. Nor is the worst f it even in the messy political work by which he appointment was defeated. Politics, some- ow, have a way of carving their own tortuous alleys, even through the tough, resistant rock ff "clean-government" adepts and political lealists. It has become rather clear that the tanners and methods of politicians will never eally change. O, THE GREAT LOSS to the nation in the rejection of Lewis Strauss is the privilege of he President to have in his Cabinet any person e chooses, so long as that person is, in the ld phrase, "of sound mind," and not blatant- 7 incapable of performing his duties. It is a ss that is neither the first nor the last in a eries of steps that is more and more swinging he United States toward full legislative su- r.wm.v _ s This is not a new idea, nor is the fear of complete Congressional supremacy a new fear. Yet it continues to get worse. It seems foolish, somehow, for anyone but a Supreme Court Justice to refer back to the original purposes of the framers of the Amer- ican Constitution. Yet ultimately, this con- cept - purpose - has come to be, accepted as' one of the bases of constitutional interpreta- tion. And the avowed purpose of the Constitu- tion was, of course, to provide for as much separation as possible. THIS MEANS that the President must be able to maintain his executive department almost entirely as he wishes, so long as he ad- heres to democratic and Constitutional pro- cesses. This he will not be able to do, unless he is empowered to surround himself with the men he wants. And the Strauss case, if it becomes a precedent, will have deprived him of this right. -SUSAN HOLTZER Co-Editor r* - :- >. ~HO of. 4. T CAPITAL COMMENTARY: Senate Mistake .y WILLIAM S. WHITE Reappraisal? ON THE SURFACE, the three per cent drop in freshman engineering 'enrollment is a pity, for it seems to reflect a decline in interest in an important technical area. However, in- ferences discovered below that surface make the picture look a little brighter. It is possible that the reasons for this de- cline, as listed by deans and presidents in a national survey of 151 engineering colleges, are valid. They claim that a "false appraisal" of an engineer's long-range career opportunities, the rumored difficulty of the curriculum and a marked increase in student interest in other scientific fields are responsible for the change. But, rather than having somewhat limiting implications, the trend may indicate a broaden-, ing of horizons. THE FIRST INFERENCE is the realization of the role of a university. Students may suddenly have decided that college is more than a factory for mass-producing people in the pro- fessions. The trend towards increased total freshman enrollment, with a corresponding de- crease in freshman engineering school matricu- lation, may indicate that students are using college for a well-rounded education. Second, as opposed to the survey's conclu- sion of a "false appraisal" of engineering op- portunities by counselors and students, the decline; may indicate, this assumption's very anti-thesis. Students, with the aid of high school advisers, may be abandoning the ma- terialistic, "that's the career to make- a pile of money in" approach. And, utilizing the advice of counselors and the results of aptitude tests, they may be choosing to follow careers for which they are better suited. -NORMA SUE WOLFE TODAY AND TOMORROW: THE REPORT of the Pr visory Committee, of w the chairman, was publis' a general blessing from th that he hoped it wouldl that it would stimulate a of the importance of exce tional system. Among the crucial idea understanding is the co port that "doubling our vestment in education isl rather than an extravagan This does not mean, of spent twice as much on ou automatically become twic sors of the report are an tinguished men in America make it clear that to imp cation very important ref the recruiting of teachersf which they teach. What they do say is tha have to be paid for and one is really serious aboi of education who does not raising more money. ][HE BEST discussion money and education i Rockefeller Brothers Repo "The Pursuit of Excellence lem clearly, says the rep that since 1870 "we have h cators one of the most h society could have invent The assignment has be whole mass of the Ameri 1870 and 1955 our populat plied by four. But the nu our public high schools has mately eighty times. In a period of three-qu "we have taken into the sc er proportion of our youn kept more of them in the any other nation." Sheer si Funds for-Education By WALTER LIPPMANN esident's Science Ad- the only, but surely they are the main reasons, hich Dr. Killian was why our educational system is so far short shed recently. It had of being excellent. e President who said Education on such a scale, if it is to be be widely read and good for the great mass and excellent for the wider understanding very gifted few, is bound to be expensive. As llence in our educa- of 1955, the most recent year for which the figures are available, the total spent in this s that need a wider country on education was 14 billion dollars a rclusion of the re- year. This breaks down into 9.4 billions for current annual in- public elementary and secondary schools, 1.2 probably a minimal billions for private elementary and secondary ptro y mal."schools, 1.5 billions for ;public higher educa- course, that if we tion, and 1.9 billions for private higher edu- it schools, they could cation. re aschoodTheyspound- aThe President's Science Advisory Committee e as good. The spo-and the Rockefeller Brothers Report agree that nong the most dis- the total of 14 billions will have to be doubled rove American edu- if education is tohbe good enough for the times Form areneedd in we live in. As the two groups which concur in orms are needed in this conclusion are composed of eminent, very highly qualified, and widely experienced men, we may assume that they know what they are at these reforms will talking about. Indeed, so far as I know, no one they imply that no has seriously disputed their conclusion. ut the improvement want to think about fJ7HE REAL QUESTION is how to raise the money. Here, we may begin by insisting that this country can indubitably afford to raise of the problem of the money. From. 1930 to 1957 the expenditure s to be found in the onheduton was more or lesshstationr a rt under the title of about three and one-half per cent of the Gross "rT esee the reaob- National Product. It has now risen to about rt,w must realize four per cent. As the Gross National Product eaped upon our edu- has risen since 1930, the amount spent on edu- eroic assignments a cation has risen too. But it has not risen fast ed" enough to keep pace with the rise in enroll- een to educate the ments. can people. Between Thus, in fact, less money Is available for ion has been multi- each pupil. There is more money. But the ember of students In - meruo tdentsroin school population is much bigger. There is, multiplied approxi- therefore, a growing shortage in our educa- tional facilities, in classrooms, and in teachers arters of a century and the like, to deal with our expanding popu- hool system a great- lation. gsters and we have If we adopt the conclusion of the President's system longer than Committee, we should be prepared to spend, by ze and mass are not say 1967, something like 30 billions. It Is gen- erally estimated that by 1967 the Gross Nation- al Product will be around 600 billions. Thus, tn 1t the expenditure for education would rise from about four per cent, as at present, to about five pet cent of the Gross National Product. taf This percentage looks small, but the real ROBERT JUNKER figures are big, and the most difficult question Co-editor- arises as to how these extra 15 billion dollars a ........ Sports Editor .........Night Editor year are to be raised. Most of us would prefer IFE DEMOCRATS have won a costly victory in an unneces- sary war in the Senate's rejection of Lewis L. Strauss to be Secretary of Commerce. They have refused President Ei- senhower the privilege of any President to have a man of his own choice in the Cabinet so long as that man is not morally or men- tally unfit. And they have made this great demonstration over what usually is politically the least significant post in all the Cabinet, that of commerce. A Strauss confirmed would have created for them a far more use- ful issue for 1960 than a Strauss repudiated-and repudiated, more- over, on grounds so thin as to have no example in our history. For the very qualities the Demo- crats attributed to the nominee would have been endless bad news for the Republicans had the Demo- crats allowed him to be confirmed in office. They found him "ar- rogant" toward Congress. They found him "deceitful" (though to an onlooker his "deceit" seemed to lie most of all in his refusal to' cooperate with his Senate prose- cutors). THEY DISLIKED him as an Old Guard Republican, a Herbert Hoover Republican, an anti-public man, as indeed he was and is. Every shortcoming they attributed to him would inevitably have weakened the Administration po- litically had he remained in it. For his basic political philosophy has been a handicap'at the na- tional polls for at least 20 years. In plain words, the Democrats have rescued President Eisenhower from the consequences of what was, politically, a poor appoint-' ment in the first place. For the first personal defeat of President Eisenhower they have attempted in his six years in .office they have chosen the worst possible vehicle. For wherever elser it may lie, the true vulnerability of the Ad- ministration surely cannot be said to lie in the less-than-burning question as to who is to run the Department of Commerce. Mr. Strauss is incomparably mote 'im- portant politically as a symbol of harsh Senate veto than he ever would have been as a recipient of Senate approval. .E * * IN FACT, in looking back the whole affair really was a series of blunders -- by the President, by Strauss himself in his human but unwisely belligerent conduct be- fore the Senate, and by the Demo- crats. The Republicans would have been the losers had the Demo- crats allowed him to be confirmed. But the Democrats are the net losers now. Why, then, did it all happen? It happened most of all because of the long frustrations of many Democrats, mostly liberal Demo- crats. For years they have been clamoring that the party must "fight Eisenhower." Now, at last, they have prevailed on calmer colleagues to "fight." Their motive was understandable, for politics cannot and should not be simply, an unending, polite minuet. *But the trouble was that the Democrats oversimplified. To "fight" is one thing. But to fight at the wrong time in the wrong place and for the wrong reason is quite another thing. THEY GOT the whole question confused. The point never was whether Strauss would be a "good" Secretary of Commerce. The point never was whether he had the truly "sound" political ideas of the present. There were only two sim- ple and related issues: Did the President have a right to Strauss if he wanted him? And was there against Strauss' fitness to serve (not his ideas or his personality) a case so overpowering as to just- ify turning him down? The answer to the first question was plainly yes. The answer to the second question was plainly no. And when the passions have died, some of the men who voted against Strauss will regret it, for simple human reasons if not also for po- litical reasons. For, politics aside, the Senate, simple did not live up to its best traditions; the Senate simply was not fair. (Copyright 1959, by United Features Syndicate, Inc.) ing from Gibraltar to China and Australia which served to protect British commerce. Ceylon was the center of the complex where routes split, north to India, east to China and south to Australia. THERE IS no longer a base on Ceylon (Addu Atoll is to serve as its replacement), there are no In- dian bases, Singapore is to be turned free, Suez is gone forever, and Aden threatened. On the ends, only Gibraltar, Malta, Hong Kong and Freemantle, Australia remain of this once indivisible chain. The chain was once so strong that the Royal Navy con- trolled the Indian Ocean with a few cruisers tied up in Trinco- malee and Colombo, its former Ceylon bases. Now it would need all of Britain's resources to be maintained. Though the Maldive installa- tion will again serve to tie to- gether the "imperial lifeline," it is very small in comparison to the huge facilities onCeylon and can be expected to be less useful. Brit- ain, as can be seen, is rapidly becoming weaker in the Indian Ocean because of the loss of bases, so essential in any sea war- fare and in modern "limited war." The question is, who will fill this power vacuum, left by the exit of British military and naval strength? The standard answer is either India or China, and cer- tainly this seems correct. Who- ever win the powre struggle going on right now will control the In- dian Ocean, as the British once did, and reap the full benefits of the possession of one of the world's potentially most valuable areas. The consequences, if China were to win, could be frightening. NASSER: Influence Declining By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press Foreign News Analyst AMMAN, Jordan - Here in the heart of the Arab East, a con- viction is growing among quali- fied observers that P r e s i d e n t Abdul Gamal Nasser's leadership is going downhill. Propaganda of his United Arab Republic is losing its punch - so much so that Jordan's govern- ment, long one of its chief tar- gets, claims it can consider Cairo broadcasts more or less a minor problem. If this is borne out, it promises to be one of the most important developments in the Arab world since the drift in Iraq toward Communism. Indeed that is considered one of the reasons behind Nasser's gradual decline as a spokesman for Arab unity. Jordan's new prime minister, youngish Hazza al Majali, specu- lated in an interview today that the spotlight more and more is turning on youthful King Hussein of Jordan as a spokesman for logical progress toward Arab uni- ty. "IN OUR estimation the only sure way to Arab unity is through mutual understanding, not through domination by one side or the other," Majali said. "His- torically King Hussein is the logi- cal choice since, as a member of the Hashemite family and a des- cendant of the Prophet Moham- med, he claims support of the whole Arab nation (sphere)." The King's position is strength- ened by the shock throughout the whole Arab area at what hap- pened in Iraq, Majali said. Referring to Nasser, Majali.said Arabs will not forget who gave the Communists their first big opportunity to gain a foothold in the Arab East. In short, he said, Arabs are be- ginning to ask "will it happen here?" * * * IN A DISCUSSION on this change of attitude even in the Palestine area nf Jordan where DIFFICULT: Best Shot At Ventus', By ALTON BLAKESLEE Associated Press Science Writer SOMETIME this month Ventis invites a come-see-me rocket visit from the Earth. There are strong hints the Rus- sians will try this first flirtation w i t h a n o t he r pl'a n e t, when chances are most favorable for reaching Venus. But there will be no United States rival. Despite earlier hopes, United States scientists won't be ready for this difficult space shot. And difficult it wil be, for three main reasons: 1. The awful truth is no one knows exactly where:VenuIs, within about 50,000 miles. 2. The space probe has to b launched with fantastically pre- cise speed. An error of one foot per second in final speed means missing Venus by 25,000 miles. Lastly, the probe must carry a powerful enough, radio voice to report back millions of miles what it learns. YET THE RUSSIANS- might succeed, scoring another first in space. Some problems in shooting for Venus are outlined by Homer J. Stewart of NASA, the National Aeronautics and Space Adminis- tration. Distance to other planets are measured by angles from 'Earth. But it's a short base, and ,the exact size of the. Earth Isn't known accurately and the angle measurements have small errors, Stewart explains. This means measurements to Ven'us' can be off by 50,000 miles, to Mars by 20,000 miles, or Saturn by 200,000 miles. Space probes, carefully tracked, can measure the actual distances accurately. Tthat's one reason for shooting them. Radar waves, bounced from Earth to Venus to Earth -- as scientists of Lincoln Laboratory of Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology did - can pinpoint Venus' within 200 miles or so. That re- cent experiment can help future United States space probes. Whether the Russians have used radar this way is not known. * * * A ROCKET PROBE for Venus has to be shot fast enough notta be pulled back to Earth. Then it must fall into an orbit so' it in- tercepts Venus. Final speed and direction are highly critical. The problem is simpler if yoid can put some brains or controls over speed and direction into the probe itself. Then you can "steer" its course better. But the United States doesn't have big enough probes ready yet. The Russians may. Stewart thinks they had some guidance in the last stage of their Mechta rocket, whose probe missed the moon by only 4,000 miles before going on to become an artificial planet of the sun. Without guidance in the last rocket stage, our -Pioneer IV missed the moon by 37,000 miles before going on to circle the sun. But Pioneer IV did keep broad- casting signals for 406,000 miles, well beyond the last voice heard from Mechta. * * * THE RUSSIANS are silent on whether they have big enough solar batteries to broadcast radio signals all the way from Venus, or, even if they're ready to' try. Somevrumors arerthat they have tried already, missed, and kept quiet. June is a most favorable time to shoot, for the probe can fall into a wide orbit until it inter- cepts Venus when Venus is on the opposite side of the sun from Earth. That trip would take about 150 days, but offer the biggest navlnnr for the least ncot in snr1 '4 i INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Soviets, Still Aim at Summit Talks, 'N By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst A PLUGGED NICKEL will easily get'you a plugged dime's worth of opinion today about the future course of East-West diplomatic negotiations. Some say Nikita Khrushchev's recent statements indicate an in- tention to try to frighten the West's leaders into a summit con- ference despite the breakdown at .Geneva. Among those holding this opin- ion are some who think the So- viets are less eager on this point now, being willing to wait for de- velopments in the political divi- sion which has recently developed in West Germany.and in the dis- pute between the United States and France. *, * * OTHERS EXPECT the Soviets to make some gesture indicating that, since Kh rushchev has proved himself right about the in- Quotes from the Bug 0 # ! ability to reach agreements at lower levels, he is now prepared to do some bargaining at the top level. The British are still inclined to think this is a good idea, though somewhat shaken by the totality of the Geneva impasse. France and the United States are convinced the whole Kremlin objective is the engulfment of West - Berlin by Communist-con- trolled East Germany, something they will not permit. The best bet is that the West, which has succeeded for seven months in stalling off a crisis over Berlin, will cling to the tactics which have proved successful so far. These are to display complete firmness about staying in Berlin, and to talk, talk, talk. * * * A TEST may come when and if the West German Parliament meets in Berlin July 1 to elect a new president. The East German Communists have threatened to blockade the city if the West Ger- mans 'go through with their an- nounced intention. Chancellor Konrad Adenauer has tried, so far without success, to avoid what he considers such a provocation. ii DAILY I n r.1mot '4 Editorial S SUSAN HOLTZER Co-editor PETER ANDERSON ........... THOMAS HAYDEN ........... I~ x \U - U