'. "Maybe We Didn't Wrap It Right" Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERsITY OF MICHIGAN When Opinions Are Freo 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. IDAY, JULY 3, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: THOMAS HAYDEN University, Legislature Should Seek Cooperation )NSIDERING the raging nature of the for each other. Certainly, from discussion on Lansing cockfight, the University can be the floor of the House this week, all representa- te satisfied, or better, proud, of the record tives are not awfully pleased with the Univer- rating budget it has been given for the sity's operation. sent fiscal year. Some were downright disgusted. phe $334 million University budget is the Some decried the "monster" universities gest single appropriation to any'"state-sup- which are being fed by public funds and wanted ted school in Michigan history. to channel more funds to the smaller schools. the University received enough money to Some were openly angered with the Univer- perly open an Institute of Science and Tech- sity's "snobbery," and "evasive" tactics. og, which is attractive in several ways: "They won't tell us anything about where University's scientific climate will be en- the money goes, unless we threaten them with iced considerably, thus drawing top sci- a budget cut," was the claim of a Detroit Demo- ists here from other parts of the country, crat. proving the state's scientific and industrial To this sort of charge, the University gen- asphere and attracting ilew business and erally replies that sufficient records are always ustry, on hand. All of which leaves one to think a discrepancy HE LEGISLATURE'S appropriation formally might exist. assures the fall opening of the Dearborn iter, which should aggrandize the Univer- EXACTLY WHERE it exists, however, seems r, and, through its work-study scheme in impossible to determine. It is certain that Aness and engineering, eventually further the Legislature sometimes speaks with little it state industry, factual basis. On the other hand, it also seems he appropriation also stabilizes the Uni- certain that the University is reticent about sity's financial picture, which has been pre- handing out information about all its functions. Ious since December. One of the University's greatest future tasks 'inally, and most crucial by far, the $2.8 must be not to "educate" the Legislature by lion ticketed for faculty raises should prac- trying to bring the lawmakers around to the Liy end worries of losing top faculty men to University viewpoint, but to sit down frankly .er schools and business, and honestly to answer all questions and seek t is worthwhile to note that every penny an end to the antagonism which exists. At the )ropriated benefits not only the University same time, the University must carefully avoid t the state as well-both by improving the meekly tuning its operation to the Legislature's rinsic quality of education, and by material demands. ns from the new Institute. Both of these tasks are necessities, but often difficult to blend in proper proportion. However, rHAT SEEMS on the surface to be improved striving for that proportion shoul continue, and agreeable relations between the Legis- particularly at this time, since the Legislature .ire and the University are also heartening, seems unusually willing to fulfill education's wever, it is difficult to determine just how needs. ch warm regard the two units really have -THOMAS HAYDEN AcademicStatus "CAL BEST-SELLER readers will be pleased, the Board of Regents, the President, selected or dismayed perhaps, to find that Vance vice-presidents and deans, and occasionally, a kard has briefly mentioned the University full professor or two of more than passing in- Michigan in his recent book, "The Status terest. kers" BUT HOW EVER MUCH amusing speculation 31scussing the stratification within academic and comment Packard's note on the local Aks, Packard claims that full professors dwell scene will evoke, it remains a disquieting the more elegant regions of Ann Arbor so- thought nonetheless. If the college professor y, associate and assistant professors occupy should become an educated status seeker, the s elevated positions, and teaching fellows "academic community" is in for a pretty grim ight as well be janitors." But even full pro- season. sors have their problems; deans are not A more thorough survey of the campus situa- ily to mingle with them, much less vice- tion would disclose that, there exists at present sidents and presidents. a significant number of faculty and administra- Eention is made of a "drinking and discus- tion people who are not particularly interested 1 club" in Ann Arbor, limited in membership in seeking status via the "selectivity clause" those who are "full professors or of equiva- route. Curiously enough, it is these people who t status." seem to make this University a worthwhile f Packard's observations are true, some stu- place, its have greater social access to the executive Packard might find that any "drinking and tg of our University than most of their teach- discussion club" would be a dull place without . And members of student government com- young faculty members who can drink, and e an imposing, if transitory elite, limiting students who can discuss. ir social contacts to dinners or teas with -DAVID KESSEL INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Me galomani a in AT THE STATE: 'The Horse Soldiers': Civil -War Success "THE HORSE SOLDIERS" is an excellent effort in weaving an "in- cident" into the insane background of the Civil War (or, to euphe- mize and acknowledge positive thinkers, the War Between The States). General Sherman wants to take Vicksburg before the summer 'is out. To cripple Confederate resistance, a raid to wipe out a stifategie railroad center 300 miles behind the Gray line is planned. The marching route traced, the objective stickpinned, the generals, etc., step outside I, << C"' U SSk } . . t; E .',I.F i, ry : F the tent to be photographed by a man named Mathew-something. The rest of the long film covers the march of 800 led by John Wayne, the destruction of that ob- scure stickpinned village, the dash for Baton Rouge with screaming Confederate cavalry on the tail of the decimated troop. TWO WOMEN were made hos- tages; one an aristocrat, the other her devoted slave. They'd cleverly overheard an imperative change in the raiders' plans; the Lady re- fused to give her word of honor to not communicate this intelligence to Confederate armies; would not besmirch her honor by pledging it to a Yankee dog, that is. The interest in "Horse Soldiers" Is in the implications of irony and horror even in a routine raid, at a time (it was said) when the na- tion was emerging from old ways. Wayne is the ironic figure. A; railroad engineer, he is ordered to burn trains, tear up rails, and destroy "contraband," the name given for everything the South possesses. Killing and maiming is not ironic, of course, but bloody and painful and without reason. The. irony of healing confronts Surgeon William Holden as he am- putates, probes and cauterizes men of both sides who moments ago were bent on slaughter. And with- out anaesthetic or penicillin - - though in the film its discovery is foreshadowed by a century. * * * THE MOVIE is filled with pathos' -good and genuine stuff that will tug at you. Perhaps the most pathetic, relieved only by its comic content, is the attack of fourteen- year-old cadets led by a southern gentleman gone to seed, and in murderous and obsolete parade- ground battle formation.' The issue that the whole thing was avowedly fought over is lightly touched upon in the person of the. hostage-slave played, by Althea Gibson. Why the tennis star was chosen for the role is unclear to your reviewer. But the fault, if any, is small enough; what the writers and directors and excellent cast wazit is for you to feel awfully bitter about formal homicide. In this the people who made the movie should succeed. --Ernest Zaplitny AT THE CAMPUS: 'Captain Pointed HE'S A LITTLE man with grey hair, a pointed nose, - and bowed legs, the Captain from Kopenick, and he's a very danger- ous man. Not only might he make you laugh, he might make you think. This apparent good-natured spoof of Prussian achtungism, cir- ca 1900, has an axe not too well concealed behind the wistful fa- cade of a meek little man who wants to be "somebody!" just long enough to get a passport. Becoming important is simple, at least in post-Bismark Germany . . put on a uniform and give orders. Capturing a platoon of very stiff and polished soldiers, the innocuous shoemaker occupies a town, arrests its mayor without giving charges or showing war- rants, and empties the town treasury. THAT NO ONE stops him is the most humorous part of the story. Why no one stops him Is the phil-, osophical point 'of the tale. "Captain from Kopenick" Is laughing not only at Prussia a half-century ago with the ab- surdities of too much militarism. It is speaking seriously of the Germany of 1914 and of 1938 and perhaps in warning tones of all Germanies of all times. Despite sermonizing, subtle and specific, the most illustrative of the moral and the most magnifi- cent comedy scene is delightful In its simplicity. A small man swathed in a floor- dragging overcoat swaggers into the treasury, arrests the Treasurer and dumps the wealth of Kopen- ick into his pocket while the mayor keeps saying, "he must be right, he's a Captain." Moral? One that Pfe's learned long ago, transmitted by a tailor in the movie: "The Army is very nice, but it isn't everything." -Jo Hardee ' <- a:, ;. w :. .. + trtbw't' 'Y'" .. .; Caribbean Can'u4 el By THOMAS TURNER SAN JUAN, P.R.-Summer is here again, to judge by the tempera- ture, and the annual exodus,; of Americans to Europe has taken place. There's no Exposition in Brus- sels this year at last, no Olympic Games as there will be next sum- mer in Rome. But Stirling Castle, L'Arc de Triomphe and St. Peter's are there as always, and hundreds of thousands of Americans have gone to see them. Most of these people are tourists only, visiting a cathedral in one place, buying glassware in another, but making little contact with the Europeans who live there. * * * - STUDENTS ABROAD, though, tend to take a more constructive approach to travel. This is no doubt due to some extent to their youthful enthusiasm, but in large measure it is due to the nonprofit organizations which have made so many of the students' trips pos- sible, setting up for them study or homestays during their summers abroad. Probably foremost among or- ganizations stressing contact with foreign families in their homes is The Experiment in International Living. In the past few weeks 1,290 young "Experimenters" have left the States by ship or plane for one of 24 countries. These include, in addition to those of Western Eu- rope: Russia, Poland and Yugo- slavia; Nigeria, Israel, India and Japan; Chile, Mexico and Brazil. * * * THE EXPERIMENTERS are traveling in small groups with experienced leaders,, and by now will be getting to know one an- other well, a prerequisite to suc- cessful travel. Admission to some groups re- quired fluency in the language of the country; English - speaking groups are led by people with com- mand of the language. Each Experimenter will be placed in a home, and if possible; will be provided with a "brother" or "sister". his own age. Often the Experiment does remarkably well at suiting hosts to guests. For example, I traveled to Po- land last summer in the first Ex- periment trip to a Communist satellite. My Polish brother, Tom- asz Krzeszowski, was just my age (19), was entering the same year of University study (third), and was studying in the same area (English literature). So we were never without topics of conversa- tion, discussing Shakespeare, Faulkner and Salinger at great length. * * * WHEN OUR GROUP got to- gether for sightseeing or parties, and I saw each American with his Polish brother or sister, I could see that my brother Tom and I were better suited to one another than any of the other possibilities would be. Or so it seemed; the beauty of the Experiment is that it convinces participants they have the best possible. Several weeks ago, a group of Experiment alumni were sitting around at a barbecue, discussing the program. A Kalamazoo Col. lege senior, who went to Scotland five years ago, was relating the latest news from her Scottish sis- ter. "How did you find the Scottish people?" a Chicago University grad student asked. "Very friendly," was the reply. IT TURNED OUT each person thought the country in which they had "Experimented" the most friendly they had visited. Since this involved Scotland, Norway, Poland and France, the success,'of The Experiment can be seen. Unless this summer is very dif- ferent from years past, the vast majority of those 1,290 Experi- menters will leave firm friends be- hind them when they return to the-United States. And they won't have acquired these friends at the expense of sightseeing, for a good, intensive tour of the host country is part of every Experiment trip. And there is time alloted at the end for free, travel. * * * FROM TIME TO TIME during the summer this column will be de- voted to my trip to Poland, viewed from the perspective of the inter- vening year. MAN FROM WATERLOO: Gross Keeps Eye On Money Bil By ARTHUR EDSON Associated Press Newsteatures Write IF CONGRESS didn't stress committee work so much, and put More emphasis on floor debate, Rep. H. R. Gross (R) of Waterloo, Iowa. would be one of our best known legislators. Drop in on the House almost any time it's in sesison. Chances are Gross will be there. If the bill involves money; and most bills seem to, chances are he will soon be suggesting ways to cut the appropriations. The House has just considered a billthat includes 4> By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst REPORTS OF what happened between Averell Harriman and Nikita Khrushchev lead na- turally to wonderment whether the Soviet Premier is traveling the road toward corruption by power which has carried other dictators into war. There's the old saying, attributed to lord ac- tion, that "power tends to corrupt; absolute power corrupts absolutely." Harriman is a veteran of long diplomatic service who was once American Ambassador to Moscow, now traveling as a reporter. He is re- ported to have told the State Department after a recent interview with the Soviet leader that Khrushchev emphasized with profanity his country's new power in the world and her ability to enforce her desires, by war if neces- sary, in such cases as the dispute over West Berlin. WHEN ONE of the world's most powerful men resorts to such talk, it's a reminder of the megalomania on the part of the Axis leaders which produced World War II. Concurrently with publication of the reports on Harriman and Khrushchev, Soviet Deputy Editorial Staff SUSAN HOLTZER ROBERT JUNKER Co-editor Co-editor PETER ANDERSON ..............,,.. Sports Editor Premier Kozlov is talking in the United States about building American-Soviet relations on the basis of friendship and trust. This is an old theme of the international Communists. Dmitri Manuilski was an old-time Soviet leader who died last February under circum- stances leading to speculation that he had been purged. He had held many posts in the Soviet hierarchy and once was a delegate to the United Nations. He may have died for telling the truth. He is quoted as saying: ''WAR TO THE HILT between Communism and the free world is inevitable. The bourgeoisie will have to be put to sleep, so we will begin by launching the most spectaculart peace movement on record. There will be elec- trifying overtones and unheard-of concessions. The stupid and decadent will rejoice to co- operate in their own destruction. They will leap at another chance to be friends. As soon as their guard is down we shall smash them with our clenched fist." Reference to the "free world" doesn't sound like a Communist. But whether the quotation is entirely authentic is of less moment than the fact that it describes just what most West- ern students believe is Soviet strategy. If Khrushchev has marred the gloss on this strategy which he has so often tried to en- hance, then he can hardly complain if the West, so often confused by Moscow thinking which is such a strange mixture of the Occi- dental and the Oriental, begins to wonder about his mental processes. Is the mask finally to be cast aside? HOLDS INFORMAL FORUM: Hart Gets Acquainted in Capital By MICHAEL GILLMAN Daily Staff Writer W ASHINGTON.-- "Good morn- ing, I'm Phil Hart." This introduction (for the sake of newcomers), opens the weekly press conference of Michigan's junior Senator. This personal facing of the press is fairly unique on Capitol Hill. When Hart first took office this past winter he was a relative stranger to the Washington cor- respondents from Michigan. Hart, formerly the Lieutenant Governor of Michigan, had spent his political career in and around the state capitol in Lansing, and had only a nodding acquaintence with the Washington newsmen. And so, at the request of the correspondents covering the na- tion's capitol' for the Michigan newspapers, Senator Hart has agreed to meet with them once a week. At these informal morning sessions the Senator serves coffee and spends an hour or more ex- plaining how he stands on various national issues and why he has voted as he has. THIS SERVES a dual purpose: tinuation of the excise taxes passed during the Korean war, which the Senate just renewed for another year. The Senator stated he had op- posed renewal of the transporta- tion excises because they had been passed during the Korean crisis to limit civilian travel and it could no longer be considgred a luxury to "travel a bus from Dallas to Ft. Worth." * * * i HE EXPLAINED why he voted as he did on the various amend- ments to the bill, and went on to say that his "private, but not per- sonal" budget balanced. That is, he had voted to retain more reve- nue-gathering provisions than he had voted to discard. Hart declared he felt the excise levy would have a chance of being lifted entirely in the future if a combination of circumstances oc- cured-a situation in which there would be no great money need (to judge from the collective raised eyebrows around the room, the press~ held this to be unimagine- able), and a pooling of resources by the transportation and com- munication industries. ing about their views on the de- sireability of these jobs. Only the first trickle of mail has come back, but the trend thus far seems to show that businesses would prefer other customers if they were avail- able; that federal contracts are too much trouble for the returns. A number of cryptic letters were returned including one that stated: "We can stand on our own feet without help from anyone. And it only means more inflation." In addition to that undecipher- able epistle, the Senator's office received one reply that favored the government's handling of con' tracts, adding, "But we've never gotten one." * * * MUCH HAS BEEN SAID in Washington about the inability of northern Democrats to pass legis- lation over President Eisenhower's veto when opposed by a Republi-. can-southern Democrat coalition. This was shown in the President's recent veto of the wheat bill op- posed by Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Benson. When Hart was asked about possible defeatism by Congres- sional liberals in the face of this, money for the State Department. Here's a sample of Gross in action: * * GROSS: "THEY are going to spend $263,000 on a dining room?" Rep. Frank T. Bow (R-Ohio): "I think that is included. That is the dining room and an interna- tional conference room." Gross "Are they going to use platinum on the floors and walls? .. I just do not know how any- one can spend $263,000 on a din- ing room." Later, Gross spotted a $1,000 item for entertainment, andsug- gested it be kicked out. "This is for $1,000 worth of Coca-Cola," Rep. John J. Rooney (D-N.Y.) told the House. "It is for the folks we bring from over- seas under our educational' ex- change program and if, along the way, after having spent some four, five and six thousand dollars on them, bringing them from their native lands, they see everybody else at the railroad station or air- port having a Coca-Cola, we should be such good hosts as to give them a Coca-Cola, too. This-amendment involves only $1,000." WOULDN'T GROSS withdraw his amendment? "No," Gross said, to nobody's surprise, "I will not withdraw it. It says 'entertainment.' It does not say anything about Coca- Cola." By their very nature, most of his arguments are lost. But occa- sionally he wins one. "It's hard to tell," he said, "how much you accomplish. But I think there are intangibles." t''T*Yf *L.. ....* . F .. . .: DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan' Daily assumes no edi- torialgresponsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices fordSunday Daily due, at 2:00 p.m. Friday. FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1959 VOL. LXIX, NO. 9-s General Notices Univ. Libraries, including General Li- brary, Undergraduate Library and divi- sional libraries, will be closed Inde- pendence Day, Sat., July 4. Preliminary exams for applicants for the Ph.D. in English will 'e given at 2 p.m. in 2443 M.H. on the following dates: July 17-EnglIsh Literature, 1550- 1660; July 20-- English and Amrerican. Literature, 1660-1780; July 24-English and American /'Literature, 1780-1870; July 27-English and American' Litera- ture, 1870-1950. Applicants planning to take these examinations should leave their names at the English office if they have not already done 'so. Lectures Forum Lecture, Linguistics Institute. "SpaishVerb Inflection.",. Harold V. King, Asst. Prof. of English. Tugs., July 7, 7:30 P.M., Rackham Amphitheater. Music Education Guest Lecture: Dr. Egon Kraus, Cologne, Germany, "Carl Orff as Composer and Music Educator" (The Orf Film "Music for Children" will be shown), Mon., July 6, 4:15 P.M., Aud. A, Angell Hall. °.2_ 4