.1 Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSIrY OF MICHIGAN 2L~ i Ihen Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Trntb 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. , JULY 10, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: THOMAS HAYDEN Israeli-German Trade Beneficial to Israel TWENTY YEARS AGO, in Nazi Germany,, the brutal destruction of 6,000,000 Jews in nassive ovens and gas showers began. Today hese pogroms are not without repercussion. The matter at issue now is a moral one, in- 'olving the right of the Israeli government to urnish arms to West Germany. The result is he resignation of the man who has served as Premier for nine years of the youthful country's 1-year history. Political parties opposing the negotiations of remier David Ben-Gurion's government to ell. 250,000 grenade launchers to the Bonn gov- rnment object, basically, on moral grounds. 'wo members of Israel's four-party coalition ave denounced the transaction which would urnish arms to the nation that had formerly ttempted to obliterate the Jews of Europe. ?REMIER BEN-GURION defended the sale on several justifiable grounds, including ,revious acceptance -of the plan by political, arties now raising the loudest objections. First, he distinguished between "the Ger- any of yesterday and the Germany of today," Tiirming that the German government of day and the future is not and will never re- irn to one of Naziism. In doing so, Ben-Gurion recognized the olitical and economic implications of initiating id maintaining favorable relations with Ger- MyGoddess! 'HE CHARM, the grace of it is gone. Alas! This is the on-the-spot reaction of students' the razing of the ROTC Rifle Range which s elegantly smashed between the West En- aeering Building and the Undergraduate Li- ary. First the Romance Languages Building, en the Pharmacology Building and now the fie Ranlge. Oh, the horror of it all! Some observant administrator probably saw e chance to add 200 square feet of cement to Itral campus by the demolition. And the ry of the wooden and stone architectural n fades into the tradition that is Michigan, ddess of the Inland Sea. many. He cited Bonn's position in the councils of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, as well as West Germany's close ties with France, Israel's closest ally in :Europe. Economically speaking, the contract would mean 3,300,000 dollars for this first transac- tion of arms, as well as a future market of unlimited promise. IN ADDITION to "morally wronging" his country, Premier Ben-Gurion, who doubles, as Minister of War, has been called "material- istic" because of the arms transaction. Ben-Gurion has been with the young gov- ernment since its prenatal stage. He organized a group in the United States to encourage im- migration to Palestine after World War I and was on the executive board of the official body in charge of Jewish immigration, settlement and welfare. Perhaps the Premier's action was in light of the fact that the population of Israel has in- creased threefold since 1948. To absorb these newcomers, the country has been increasing its productive capacity-in agriculture-turn- ing former swamps, deserts and stony hillsides into fertile fields-and in industry, where the average gross industrial output per hour in- creased 4.4 per cent annually during the six years following 1950. BUT DESPITE ,the growth in national in- come, the country has a long way to go. Families are still pouring into the "Promised Land;" they must be housed. Port and aircraft facilities, in addition to highways, have shown great strides over the past 11 years; as more people immigrate, further areas are developed and industry continues expanding, means of transportation must be bettered. There are still children to be educated, other social sciences to be rendered and greater ef- forts to be made providing employment for the eyer-expanding population. Above all, there must be money in the Israeli bank in case of attack by the Arab nations. If Premier Ben-Gurion's action was "ma- terialistic," such materialism will at least in- sure the next 11 years in the life of the State of Israel.- "Just Half a Gallon - W e're Saving M oney" i- \. y WI L AM S WH TE Bule et ig t z> By WILLIAM S. WHITE e t R ENUNCIATION of ordinary pleasures is always difficult (smoking), and in some cases noble (celibacy). And because a nun disavows life's daily rewards without even the promise of glory or recogni- tion, that renunciation is holy and noblest. Male clerics may, after all, aspire to Infallibility, or to adulating congregations of a hundred thousand individuals. Such purity of spirit as this The Nun's Story sets out to tell, takes you through some fine in- terludes of feeling, and then secu- larizes. It attempts, in the end, to make you feel that Sister Luke's renunciation of her. vows is something noble and uplifting. * * * THE FAILURE is certainly not in the acting. Audrey Hepburn's performance invites superlatives and Oscars. She surpasses in sub- duing speech to expression, this being necessary and laudable since we're told that a nun must, never speak unnecessarily. The story takes her through training as a secular nurse, but this is subordinate to religious duty. She is caught in this struggle from the beginning. Missionary service in the Congo brings the film to a delicate high point, and we feel that Sister. Luke succeeds even though her passions are understandably aroused by a doctor's worldly sympathies. But later, when the Nazis machine-gun her father in the war, she cannot summon enough will to forgive the enemy. * * * * THE FILM is not, then, a nun's story, but a biography of a wo- man of ordinary spirit who weak- ens in what might have been an admirable victory. The book is probably followed; this is one time Hollywood could have im- proved on the book. It must be the book that pro- vides authenticity, and this is one reason The Nun's Story should not be missed. Otherwise, the picture does little more than remind you that we are less than perfection. Ex- pect nothing as transcendental as promised by a quotation from the Gospel at the outset of the film. --Ernest Zapiitny AT THE STATE: 'Nun's Story' Sensitive, But Has Contradictions Y, : x YABLOCHNYI PIROK: Apple Pie Founded In Distant Russian Past By ARTHUR EDSON Associated Press Newsfeatures Writer ONE AFTER ANOTHER our beloved cliches prove to be not- only tired but erroneous. "It's like owning a gold mine," everybody once said. Now gold mine owners come to Congress and complain they're losing money. "You're just shooting for the moon," we would say. Yet here our spacemen are, shooting at the moon, and with some hopes of hitting it. * * * * BUT TODAY came the unkindest cut of all. It has always seemed that when the last American entered the last diner his last order would be, "I'll take a piece of that apple pie." That overworked comparison, "as American as apple pie," looked as if it V f --R-A -NORMA SUE WOLFE France Overrates Itself WAKE UP and stop dreaming, France. And admit that long experience has shown it is not possible for any nation to become a power in the world by merely issuing a state- ment to the effect that they are one. But in the past few weeks it seems that France, or at least President de Gaulle, feels this is possible. Initially he - demands France should have atom bombs which the three pres- ent nuclear powers have spent billions of dollars in development. When this did not work he tried to show his new found strength by de- manding concessions from the United States if it wished to keep its forces based in France. The United States put up with this as long as they could but at last has had to rebel. And so, on Wednesday the free world lost some of its front line force when it was necessary to withdraw planes from France and base them in Britain and Germany. And all because a second-class power chose to assert that it was still first-class. IT IS TRUE of course that France has pro- gressed greatly since de Gaulle took power, but only in stability and economic growth. This alone is not enough to justify the demands that France has made. In demanding that France be considered on a level with the United States and Britain in the North Atlantic Treaty Or- ganization, France is acting very much like a spoiled child. To be considered a first-class power today-- to make decisions effecting the world as a whole-it is necessary that a country have the power and strength to back up their demands. In the case of the United States, Britain and Russia the power is there. All three nations with their nuclear weapons have the power to destroy one another. If for no other reason, this entitles them to the greatest share in the making of decisions. SINCE FRANCE does not have this nuclear capability and thus the necessary force to back up their demands they must remain a second-rate nation. With the war that France is presently waging in northern Africa they do not even have enough forces at hand to de- fend themselves adequately in case of an at- tack from Russia. Certainly it would be possible for the United States to give France atomic and hydrogen bombs, but this would not be a wise decision to make. Not only would there then be a fourth nation that had the power to start an all-out war but it would be giving it to a nation that is even now engaged in a war that is draining its manpower and resources. What guarantee would the world have that France would not use such a weapon in order to end the war in northern Africa. But this is not the only fear that must be considered. If France is given nuclear weapons Russia will be tempted and in fact even have justification to give nuclear weapons to its satelites. Such a move would further endanger the delicate balance which now exists between the free and Communist sections of the world. The dangers involved do not justify giving atomic bombs to France merely so it can take the position in the world de Gaulle feels the French deserve. A position is not deserved un- less it is earned and this is something that the French must learn if they wish to regain the power they held in decades past. -KENNETH McELDOWNEY 1 1 1 a j NATIONAL Democratic Chair- man Paul Butler is moving with unexampled self-assurance to control the 1960 Democratic con- vention for purposes that are quite clear but in behalf of men whose identities are not clear at all. His central motives are plain enough. He wants to discredit the party's "moderate" elected Con- gressional leadership - and in- evitably the record of the Demo- cratic Congress itself - both within the party and in the eyes of the country. He intends to destroy that lead- ership's influence at the conven- tion and thus to open the way to the nomination for President of some person deemed by him to be "liberal" enough in his definition. He is attempting not only to drive from the convention all the con- servative Southerners, but also to make powerless even the party's moderates-Northern as well as Southern. * * * THE CONSERVATIVE South- erners have long been fair game to nearly every Democratic fac- tion outside the South, and un- derstandably so. For these con- servatives for years have brand- ished the threat of party bolts to try to force their way, even as a minority. But Mr. Butler has now gone far beyond these favorite Southern whipping boys. He is hitting, in a word, not merely at the top Congressional leaders from Texas, Senator Lyn- don B. Johnson and Speaker of the House Sam Rayburn. * * * AND HE IS ALSO cutting, if more obliquely, at four of the five present real Democratic Presi- dential "possibilities": Senators John F. Kennedy of Massachu- setts, Hubert H. Humphiey of Minnesota, Stuart Symington of Missouri and Johnson. For if the Democratic Congressional per- formance is as poor and timid as he says it is, no man who is a part of that record can escape some measure of blame for it. Two large unanswered ques- tions, however, remain: In whose convention interests, precisely, is Butler operating this curious cam- paign? And how does he feel qualified to take the whole con- duct of the party into his own hands? AS TO THE first question, the suspicion is wide among national Democratic politicians that But- ler is running an operation in aid of a third nomination for Adlai E. Stevenson. This is assumed mainly because Butler is much influenced by politician Paul Ziffren of Cali- fornia, who is supposed to be a "Stevenson man." Even this ex- planation, however, is not too plausible. For Stevenson as titular party head was ready to discharge Butler as national chairman in 1956 until he wept to be kept on THE SECOND question - how does Butler think he alone is com- petent to dominate the conven- tion? - is a good one even if the Democratic Congressional leader- ship is worse than he says it is. That leadership, after all, has presided over three successive, Democratic victories in Congres- sional elections. Butler presided over a catastrophic Democratic Presidential defeat in 1956. And in 1958 he was repudiated in his home state of Indiana in trying to block the successful Democratic Senatorial candidate, Vance Hart- ke. No one can say absolutely that Mr. Butler is not alone right about party matters now. But no one can again say that never in memory has a salaried, unelected employee of a national party' sought to grasp so much personal power in such enigmatic circum- stances. There is room for one larger, and final question: Who, on bal- ance, are benefiting most of all from the Butler strategy? Answer: The Republicans--and well they know it. (Copyright 1959, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) would last forever. That's how it who cans pie filling in Newark, N.Y. Comstock decided it would be nice to send some of his prepared apples and pie crust mixes to the Moscow Fair. * * WELL, HE SOON learned un- officially that the Russians weren't too impressed. It seems that before the Pilgrims set out for New Eng- land the Russians were making something called yablochnyi pirok, which vaguely resembles our apple pie. Comstock'doesn't know whether or not a man in Moscow, when he wishes to say that something is typical of his country, says, "why, it's as Russian as yablochnyi pi- rok." Yet much can be said for the distinctiveness of American apple pie. Early settlers, having neither time nor resources for fancy fix- ings, turned naturally to apple pie. Cherry pie is now traditionally associated with George Washing- ton. But when Mrs. W. Wanted to make a big, splash at her first inaugural dinner, what did she serve? Something as American as apple pie. 'DIATRIBE, NOT DIAGNOSIS': Wilensky Says 'Look Back' Not Really Sociological looked, too, to Richard Comstock, DAILY OFFICIAL The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Rooms. 3519 Administration Build- Ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. FRIDAY, JULY 10, 1959 VOL. LXIX, NO. 13-4 General Notices Aug. Teacher's Certificate Candidates? All requirements for the teacher's cer- tificate must be completed by Aug. 1. These requirements include the teach- er's oath, the health statement, 'and the Bureau of Appointments material. The ;oath can be taken in Em. 1439 U.E.S. The office is open from 8-12 and 1:30 to 4:30. Astronomy Dept. Visitors' Night. ri., July 10, 8:30 p.m., Rm. 2003 Angell Hall. Benjamin F. Peery, "The Milky Way." Student Observatory, fifth floor, Angell Hall, open for inspection and telescop- ic observations of the Moon, Venus, and Jupiter. Children welcomed, but must be accompanied by adults. Lectures conference for English Teachers: "Release from the Lock Step: The Ad- vaned Placement Program in English." Dr. Isabel S. Gordon of the Bronx High School of Science, New York City. Mon, July 13, 4:00 p.m., Angell Hall, Aud. C. Concerts Brandenburg Concertos: The Six Brandenburg Concertos by Johann Se- bastian; Bach, Rackham Lecture Hall, Sun., July 12, at 3:00 and 8:30 p.m. Student Recital: Willis Patterson, bass, Wed., July 10, 8:30 p.m., Aud. A, Angeli Hall. Student Recital: Jerrold Lawless, clarinetist, July 11, 8:30 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall, in partial fulfillment: of the requirements for the degree Master of Music. Student Recital Postponed: The pi- ano recital by Laurie Lindemulder, ori- ginally announced for Fri., July 10. has been postponed until Sunday, July 26, at 4:15 p.m., in Aud. A; Angell Hall. Academic Notices Mathematics Colloquium: Fri., July 10, Rm. 3011 Angell Hall, 4:10 p.m. Prof. G. Hochschild, Univ. of ,Calif. "Al;, gebraic Structures on Complex Analy- tic Lie Groups." Refreshments: Em 3212 Angell Hall at 3:30. Doctoral Examination for Thomas Natsoulas, Psych.; thesis: "A Study in the Perception of Causality: Principles of Momentum and Kinetic Energy ini the Perception of Collisions," Fri., July 10, 7611 Haven Hall, at 3:00 p.m. Chair- man, J. D. Birch. Placement Notices On Tues., July 14, there will be a representative from the Detroit Public Schools at the Bureau of Appoint- ments. Candidates will be interviewed In ail"fields for the 1959-60 school year For appointments contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., NO 3-1511, Ext. 489. L x' , By KATHLEEN MOORE Daily Staff Writer A DISSENTING voice in the crowd proclaiming John Os- borne's "Look Back in Anger" a sociological play has called this a mislabeling. Informally commenting on the play's implications after seeing the speech department's presen- tation, Prof. Harold L. Wilensky of the sociology department sug- gested "Whatever its 1i t e r a r y qualities, it is hardly an analysis of a segment of the social order." "Not even a responsible piece of social criticism . . . more dia- tribe than diagnosis" were some of the professor's objections to looking to Osborne's work for an analysis of the social ills of Britain. * * * OSBORNE'S hero, Jimmy, in Prof. Wilensky's view, "thrashes about, lashing out at class distinc- tion, Christianity, the Cabinet, the atom bomb, the mass media, his wife and her family (for their higher social status) and every- thing else in sight. "Only the proletariat," he said, "which is somehow more vigorous, and lovable, more 'scruffy', comes off well." The sociologist commented on the "sustained whining and nag- ging," which he said in general is the offering of Osborne, his hero working class, the strain of social mobility." Prof. Wilensky's suggestions of contemporary British works with the "sociological flair" he finds lacking in the Angry school in- cludes C. P. Snow's novels "with their subtle dissection of elite groups" and the "satirical expose of an Orwell or a Huxley - men whose anger is more sharply fo- cused and has some intellectual accompaniment." He was quick to add "there is surely room for social criticism of the successful, democratic welfare sttae. What 'Brave New World' did with totalitarianism some tal- ented social critic should do with the society now taking shape in the free West," Prof. Wilensky noted. "But the Angry Young Men don't seem to me to have suffi- cient command of the social facts to produce such a work." * * * WHAT ARE the necessary so- cial facts? In answer, Prof. Wi- lensky suggested a few queries, adding "I'm afraid the Angry Young Men won't muster the questions, let alone the answers." "For instance: In what ways precisely are security and free- dom incompatible? If equality and quality are at war, how, and INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Premonition from the Past Willie's Words . 0 what social mechanisms can re- concile them? Are increased equality coupled with an inflexible status system paradoxical (one of Jimmy Porter's- many problems), or have equalitarianism and sta- tus consciousness always been natural allies? "If the balance between tradi- tion and change is unhealthy, what reforms are possible and de- sirable and what are the costs and gains of each? Are more men alienated from self and society now than, in times past? If so, where lie the roots of alienation--- changes in work, mass entertain- ment, the threat of war, or what? If modern society, in contrast to pre-industrial societies, pro- duces malaise in family life and leisure, where is this most and least developed and why?" RETURNING to an attempt to "locate both the play and this group of writers in social con- text," the sociologist wondered that more writers have not "found rich dramatic material in the thwarted intellectual, the declasse, the marginal man - in light of the increased levels of education and high rates of social mobilityj which produce such types. "Sociological" novels and TV shows, he commented, "are al- most exclusively preoccupied with. the nsvcnhn1noxica1 straim. ofr '1 ,: / By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst EVERY NOW and then a name rises out of the past to remind one of the French saying that the more things change the more they are. the same. To most Americans today the name of West Berlin means a very great deal, the name of Swatow nothing, and the name of Harry E. Yarnell not too much. But 20 .n rs naiod amrinea mni THE JAPANESE captured the city and de- manded that American and British naval ships leave. Yarnell, then Commander of the United States Asiatic Fleet with broad powers to meet an emergency, replied with action which paralleled the famous "nuts" which McAuliffe gave the Germans at Bastogne. The 1939 issues are dead, and Yarnell died Tuesday. Yarnell moved fast when the Japanese sank an American nat in +th e ngfivm Rvarin .,. .:< a -