Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSrY OF MICHIGAN i Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS ath Win Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 ditorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. RDAY, JULY 11, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: KATHLEEN MOORE O'er the Land of the Free And the Home of the Resident Colonial Subjects Miriani's Action Harmful, Discourteous AYOR LOUIS MIRIANI of Detroit has been both censured and praised for his fusal to extend an official welcome from the y of Detroit to the visiting Russian officials, A. Menshikov, Soviet ambassador to the dted States, Frol, R. Kozlov, Soviet first puty premier, and their entourage when ey visited, the Motor City a- few days ago. One of his censors, President Dwight D. senhower-though his rebuke was sort of t-handed-stressed the fact that Ameri- ns are used to extending "common courtesy" visitors to this' country. Miriani's excuse was long and complicated, ing back to the Detroit visit last January of viet Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan. The ayor said that at that- time, the State De- rtment made no official request for the ayor to welcome Mikoyan. Therefore, Miriani said, he felt no need to flcome the Deputy Premier, since the visit s unofficial. However, just before- Mikoyan's rival in Detroit, Walker Cisler, host to 'both ikoyan and Kozlov, called the Mayor apd id he was worried about possible violence ring the Russian's visit. IRIANI THEN CALLED the police depart- ment and it was decided to assign 100 licemen to protect Mikoyan from anti-Com- unist demonstrators. He also got in touch th many clergymen and leaders of nation- ty groups to urge that they attempt to mini- ze any demonstrations. Nevertheless, despite the precautions, hun- eds of jeering, egg throwing demonstrators leashed their wrath at Mikoyan ' outside e Detroit Club, although the Deputy was' t hit. Then, Miriani said, he got a telegram om William Lacy, special assistant to Secre- ry of State Christian Herter, saying that ozlov would' be coming to Detroit as an ninvited" guest, that private citizens had 'epared his agenda, and that Lacy hoped iriani would be able to greet Kozlov. Miriani was thereupon thrown into a quan- ry: " ... I couldn't help but think of the ikoyan visit. What explanation could the ayor of Detroit give if something happened Mr. Kozlov?' IIRIANI ADDED that Kozlov's visit was not "in the best interest of the city." He red Lacy that he didn't plan to receive Koz- r because of the 1*nofficial" nature of the sit, and this time Herter wired back, urging triani to reconsider his decision. In the re,' Herter said that he realized that the sit was unofficial, bu.t that the Russians. ould be extended courtesies customarily own to persons of their rank.- Once again, the Mayor wired back, saying at Kozlov's visit had the same unofficial atus as Mikoyan's and that his course would mai unchanged. He mentioned the Inter- ,tional Freedom Festival, taking place in troit at that time, saying, "If you had seen e parade by nationality groups you would have noticed placards telling of their hatred of the Soviet Union. "Because of the Festival, it was easier to contact leaders of the nationality groups and ask their cooperation so that Mr. Kozlov's Detroit visit would be peaceful. I was assured of that cooperation and that's why we never anticipated any trouble during Mr. Kozlov's visit. The people of Detroit are proving to be reasonable, tolerant and patient. They are treating this gentleman in the customary way he should be treated." MIRIANI was right in one respect-there were no incidents outside of the 25 Hun- garian Detroiters who quietly picketed -the Hotel Fort-Shelby, and this can hardly be called an "incident." One picketer explained the lack of violence: "There are representa- tives of TASS here and we don't want any- thing to- happen to Nixon when he goes to Russia. So we are quiet." Miriani agreed with this eminently sensible point of view, saying that it wouldn't surprise him if Russia welcomed "incidents" during American tours of their dignitaries. Added to the fact that the incidents of the Mikoyan visit were well-publicized in Russia is Nixon's visit to Moscow next month, where similar incidents might occur to "retaliate." IT IS PERHAPS not too obvious to, the Mayor that the State Department does have a policy in cases such as these-"when in . Moscow .. ." And If Mikoyan and Khrushchev will welcome visiting groups of governors, edu- cators, businessmen, and so forth, to the Sov- iet Union, it is perhaps not asking too much for the mayor of one of the larger cities in the United States to extend a greeting to an "unofficial" visitor. Incidents such as Miriani's refusal can make this country lose as much face with the visitors - and their people back home - as can "incidents" of the sort that occurred during Mikoyan's visit and of which Miriani seems to be so afraid. The rule of "common courtesy" has gener- ally been assumed to hold true, especially with foreign dignitaries. Paraphrasing Presi- dent Eisenhower's words, "behaving civilly and c'ourteously toward visitors does not mean that, you approve of their philosophy or their poli- tics." Therefore, welcoming dignitaries from the Soviet Union-which is actually merely recognizing their presence-does not mean that the City of Detroit approves of Russian politics or actions, any more than welcoming the Queen of England connotes sympathy or' desire for a monarchial form of government. Governor G. Mennen Williams, although he became involved in quite a heated discus- sion with Kozlov, was actually behaving much more politely than was Mayor Miriani who refused to see Kozlov at all. Now that the visitors have gone, the damage is done; but it is hoped that the next time "controversial" visitors come through the Motor City Detroit will put out the welcome mat, if only for the few minutes it takes to say a word of greeting. -SELMA SAWAYA -SA-. 4-- e - O--- DODGE RETURNS: American Educator Trained Arab Leaders CAIRO, OP)-An American educator returned home this month after nearly 50 years in the Middle East. Some of his students have be- come history makers in this area. Bayard Dodge was for 25 years President of the American Univer- sity of Beirut. Since he retired in 1943, he has been active in educational and research work, mostly in Cairo. He is going back to Princeton, N.J., with the completed manuscript of a history of Al Azhar University. At least five of Dodge's former students became Prime Ministers. The President of the United Nations, Charles Malik, studied under Dodge. When'the UN was formed at San Francisco, 30 of Dodge's old students were delegates. Countless cabinet ministers, parliament speak- INTERPRETING: 4Q1" Tft W~res444Acta'-o yc'T-Co. PRICES CONTINUE UPWARD: Expensive Food Not Farmer's Fault By OVID A. MARTIN Associated Press Farm Reporter W ASHINGTON-If rising prices and inflation become a major issue in next year's elections-and political leaders predict they will- there can be no finger pointing at farmers. The history of prices since World War II, a period marked by rising consumer prices, and the cost of living, shows that farmers have been more often victims than villains in the drama of the cheapening dollar. Yet the farmer's role is largely played offstage. Certainly, the housewife does not see his situa- tion when she buys groceries. Did not food prices at retail rise to a new record high in 1958? Is not food the largest items in most city family budgets? RISING FOOD prices have re- ceived much public attention as a part of the overall advance in the cost of living and in the decline in the purchasing power of money. This being the situation,, is not difficulthto understand why f arm- yard cries about agricultural prices have made little impression on budget-minded consumers. Per- haps this helps explain why the present.rCongress is reluctant to take broad action demanded by some farm leaders to bolster the, agricultural economy. But it should be pointed out in behalf of farmers that contrary to the prevailing belief, food prices are not as high in relation to the average of all consumer prices as they were in 1952 and several earlier postwar years. The fact of the matter-is lower prices received by farmers in recent years have kept food prices from rising as much since 1952 as other con- sumer prices. * * * RECORDS SHOW that since World War II, consumer prices on the average have stabilized or declined only when farm prices of food raw materials declined. The agricultural marketing service says the relative stability of the consumer price index, as determined by the Bureau of La-. bor Statistics, during the last few months has been associated with lower farm prices. An idea of what has happened to food and farm prices since 1952 is shown by these facts: A given Quality of food termed the "mar- ket basket" by the agriculture department-used for measuring price changes -- cost consumers $1,034 in 1952. The same quantity was costing at the annual rate of $1,065 in 1958. This was an in- crease of $31 or 3 per cent over 1952. THERE IS nothing in these fig- ures to evoke the housewife's sym- pathy for the farmer. But, the government calculated that in 1952, the farmer got $482 as his share of the market basket supply and only $427 in 1958. In other words, his share declined $55 or nearly 12 per cent. By April this year, the farm share had declined to the annual average of $405. But some of this decline reflects the fact that the cost of the market basket had eased off to the annual average of $1,033 that month, giving con- sumers a little relief. Then, why did food prices set a record last year? The explanation is found in the cost of processing, transporting and distributing the food to consumers. In 1952, the marketing cost of the market basket was $552 or $70 more than the amount paid f arm- ers. By 1958, the marketing mar- gin had increased to $638. In other words, the farm take for the. market basket declined $31 be- tween 1952 and 1958 but the mar- keting cost increased $86. -THE Agricultural Marketing Service sees no letup in the rising cost of putting farm raw ma- terials into market. baskets of consumers. A recent report said the upward pressure on marketing costs seems likely to continue. , "More rigidities - on the down- ward side -- seem to be built into the marketing system than ever before. The upward climb of wages has been only slightly re- tarded during recent recessionary periods. The continued growth of fringe benefits adds to the inflex- ibility of labor costs . , . taxes, real estate and capital costs, and transportation and utility charges are other items adding to the up- ward pressure on costs over which marketing firms have little direct control," the report said. Her ter Changitng By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst DESPITE ONE phrase revealing his inner feelings, the Secre-' tary of State was a milder man at his news conference Thursday than when he returned from Gen- eva two weeks ago. He was mild enough to suggest that the signals are on for a sum- mit conference. Pressed . for a word as to his feelings on the eve of his return to Geneva, Secretary Herter at first tried to get away with say- ing he was not optimistic, but wouldn't say he was pessimistic. Then he finally admitted that, a description of his feelings about trying to do business with the So- viet Union would be unprintable. * * * MORE significant, however, was his reversal of a line ini his post- Geneva report to the nation. Then he expressed doubt that the So- viets really wanted an agreement over Germany and Berlin. Thurs- day he said he thought they were really trying. This statement tied in with re- ports from Geneva that the West- ern allies would come up with a slight variation of their previous proposals in order to get every- body out of Geneva and on the road to the summit without loss. of face. W. Averell Harriman, after talking with Khrushchev, and de- spite the very tough line then displayed by the Soviet premier, has suggested that a summit con- ference should be held regardless. All the British leaders are for it, and the wind has been blowing toward a reduction by President Eisenhower of the. amount of progress at lower levels which he will ultimately demand before packing his bags. There are re- ports in London of Soviet willing- ness to freeze the Berlin situation for a while. HARRIMAN'S suggestion of a summit meeting in New York seems likely to get some atten- tion. There has been considerable pressure for putting the negotia-, tions under the wing of the United Nations if not under its di- rect auspices. This would relieve the United States of some of the formal re- sponsibilities connectedwith a Khrushchev visit and still open the opportunity which Harirman mentions of correcting some of the premier's ignorance about this country. Herter will confer with Harri- man today before leaving for qpe- neva, and the estimates made by the former ambassador to Mos- cow will have their influence. ers, senators, and diplomats are numbered among his graduates. "BUT IT ISN'T the prime min- isters and other big names who give me greatest pride," Dodge says. "I consider our greatest con-- tribution the army of teachers, civ- il servants, and professional people who have gone to the remotest sec-. tors of the Middle East to improve this region." Young Arabs who studied at Bei. rut during the Dodge administra- tion did not necessarily come out pro-American. Often the reverse was true. Dodge tried to teach his students to think for themselves. The many times Dodge has had to engage in relief work for various kinds of refugees is a barometer of the sufferings and upheavals the 20th century brought to the Middle East. But he has seen the city, of Beirut grow from a provincial town. to an ultra-modern seaport. He also has seen the emergence of some tolerance- and liberal thinking in an area where bigotry and prejudice once reigned. WHEN THE UNIVERSITY Med- ical School was founded, the old Ottoman Turkish law then pre- vailing forbade dissection of hu- man cadavers. University profes sors had to rob graves under cover of darkness and smuggle corpses into the university on donkeys' back. The university today can con- duct any kind of research unham- pered by the law. By 1924, Dodge opened up the university to coeducation. The first Moslem woman to enroll wore two veils to class. Her husband enrolled as a special student so that he could watch her. Coeds at the university today are as free and relaxed as in most American colleges. THE SCHOOL TODAY has more than 3,000 students. Students and teachers of many different reli- gions mingle without distinction. The school still is largely financel by private American donations, but many teachers, including its Dean of Arts and Sciences, are Arabs. DAILY OFFICIAL -BULLEIN The Daily Official Bulletin is'an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michiga~n Daily assumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices sloul, 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. SATURDAY, JULY 11, 1959 VOL. LXIX, NO. 14- General Notices Classical Studies Coffee Hour: Tues, aJuly 14, E. Conf. Rm.,'Rackam. 4 p.m. Prof. Ernst Pulgram. ,"inoa Linear B". Lectures Forum Lecture, auspices of Linguis- institute. "The Physiological vs. the Acoustical Basis for Phonemic Theory.",Prof. Gordon E. Peterson, Tues., July 14. 7:30 p.m., Rackham Am- phitheater. Concerts' . Brandenburg Concertos: The Six Brandenburg Concertos by Johann e- Bastian Bach, Rackham Lecture Hall,- Sun., July 12, at 3:00 and 8:30 p.m. Music Education Lecture: Donald Shetler. July 3, 4:15 p.m. "Audio Visual Materials for School music Teaching. Aud. D, Angell Hall. Student- Recital: George McWhorter, baritone, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music, Aud A, Angell Hall, Tues., July 14. 8 :30 p~m. Student Recital: Jerrold Lawless, clarinetist, July 11, 8:30 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Mas- ter of Music. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Joan Vir- ginia Williams, Psych.; thesis: "The influence of Therapist Commitment on Progress in Psychotherapy," Tues., ' July 14, 7611 HavenrHall, at 12:30 p.m. Chairman,, E. S. Bordin. Placement Notices Personnel Requests: The, following schools have listed teaching vacancies with the Bureau of Appointments for the 1959-60 school year. Albion, Mich. -- Elementary. Arlington Heights, Il. -- Early Ele- mentary. Battle Creek, Mich. (Pennfield Sch.) TODAY AND TOMORROW: :.. Johnson and His Critics I E HAVE BEEN seeing once again that.this country cannot be governed from the other end of Pennsylvania Ave., that is to say from Congress. The Democrats have big majorities in both houses but they cannot mobilize them to impose a positive program on the President. They can deny him what he asks, and he can deny them what they want. But the center of authority cannot be moved from the White House to the Capitol. This being a presidential system of govern- ment, only the President can govern. The Con- gress can oppose him, it can obstruct him, and it can stop him from governing, that is why Congressional government, as Woodrow Wilson said in his book seventy-five years ago, is bad government. The Congressrcannot take the place of the President in order' to govern- in- stead of him. AT BOTTOM this is, as I understand it, the reason why Sen. Lyndon Johnson defers to the President so much on bills dealing with expenditures. The Democrats with all their majority cannot compel the President to spend more than he is willing to spend. They could compel .him to spend less. But they cannot compel him to. spend more. For spending is a positive act of governing and Congress cannot itself govern. If, theref ore Congress votes money bills that the President vetoes, and if neither then yields to the other, there is a deadlock of mutual obstruction which in the field covered by the bill brings the government to a standstill. A responsible party leadership will not, in Sen. Johnson's philosophy, bring the govern- LLTER LIPPMANN the final showdown they will have to choose be- tween letting the President have the smaller bill which he wants and getting no housing bill at all.. What then would the critics have Sen. John- son do? They say they would have him use the Democratic majority to pass bills that they be- lieve in, and then to let the President veto them, and having made this demonstration for the record, to accept the President's half-loaf rather than no bread at all. In discussing this proposed tactic in another article I pointed out that it is insincere and un- convincing in a time of boom like the present to enact a bill to spend more money unless it is accompanied by a bill to raise more taxes. If the tactic is insincere and also unconvincing it is surely not good politics, and Sen. Johnson has been right to avoid it. But is that all? I think not. The political tactic proposed by Sen. Johnson's critics would be a mistake. But surely they are not wholly wrong in their feeling that somehow a Demo- cratic Congress should be doing something of its own besides choosing between obstructing the President or giving in to him. What could that something be? It would be to prepare public opinion for the future, which is not yet here but is near at hand. It would be to pre- pare public opinion for the decade of the six- ties which, assuming that there is no war, is bound to be an era of great innovation and de- velopment of our public activities. Without doubt, this will require more taxes out of a more rapidly growing economy. It is here that Sen. Johnson and the Con- TRIBUNAL ENDS NINE-MONTH TERM: supreme.Court Conservative Trend Debated By PAUL M. YOST WASHINGTON (-) - The Su- preme Court completed a nine-month term last week amid much debate whether it has taken a slight turn to the right. Some conservatives saw in sev- eral decisions a strategic retreat. They say the Court was trying to (1) placate outspoken critics among jurists, lawyers and lay- men, and (2) take some of the steam out of Congressional threats to cut the scope of the Court's work and override some of its rulings. On the other side of the debate, this is the argument: * * * NO TWO CASES are exactly alike and the Court carefully sifts facts -and law as found in each in- dividual appeal. Different out- comes on issues that seem alike thus may be misinterpreted as sweeping new trends in judicial thinking. Before the Court opened its 1958-59 term last October 5 it was under the heaviest barrage of criticism it had experienced in two decades. A burst of liberal decisions, in- cluding, 5-4 rulings favoring fed- eral powers over those of states, and Congressional committee in- observers, weakened) the Court's earlier rulings in the widely-dis- cussed Watkins and Nelson cases. The new decisions in broad terms upheld the power of Congress and state legislatures to investigate subversion. Justice Harlan said in one of the majority opinions: "So long as Congress acts in pursuance of its constitutional power (to investigate), the judi- ciary lacks authority to intervene on the basis of the motives which s p u r r esd the exercise of that power."~ * * * THE DECISION upheld the contempt conviction of Lloyd Bar- enblatt, former Vassar College professor, for refusing to answer questions asked by the House Committee on Un-American Acti- vities about Communist associa- tions. Harlan's opinion settled ques- tions raised two years earlier aft- er the Court ruled in the case of John T. Watkins, a labor union organizer. The Watkins ruling was that a Congressional committee could not compel answers from a wit- ness unless it made clear to him the subject of the inquiry and the pertinence of the questions to themselves when it threw out in 1956 the conviction of Steve Nel- son, a Communist, under Pennsyl- vania's Sedition Act. The Nelson ruling had been widely interpret- ed as strikingdown sedition laws of many states. Said Justice Clark in the Up- haus case: "All the Nelson opinion pro- scribed was a race between federal and state prosecutors to the courthouse door . . . the - investi- gation (by New Hampshire) was undertaken in the interest of self preservation. This governmental interest outweighs i n d i v i d u a 1 rights." A quartet referred to as the Court's liberal bloc, comprising Chief Justice Warren and Jus- tices Black, Douglas and Brennan, dissented in both the Barenblatt and Uphaus cases. THIS SIDE LOST three'other important cases on the day of the Barenblatt and Uphaus decisions. These were: a decision that health inspectors may enter a private home without a warrant; a ruling that a defendant may be prosecuted by federal and state, courts for the same offense, de- spite the double jeopardy provi- sions of the United States Consti- - , Pffhm nA- n-ti * its 1957 decision on the same pro- cedure, governed the actions of trial" courts hereafter. The liberal bloc went along with the latest Jercks decision, butsaidrJustice Frankfurter went further, than necessary in his interpretation of the act. * * * IN APPROVING the Jencks Law, the Court recognized the right of Congress to legislate in a way which alters or modifies an earlier decision by. the high tri- bunal. Some observers took this as the Court's reply to arguments that- there is something, improper about any act of Congress which overrides a decision by the tri- bunal. But while conservatives were. welcoming the "new trend", War- ren was writing an opinion to up- set the; government's industrial security program covering about three million workers in private defense plants. Warren delivered his opinion on the final day of court. It said neither the President nor Con- gress- had specifically authorized the program. Justice Clark, the. lone dissenter, insisted there had been ample ratification of the program by Congress and by Presidents Roosevelt. Truman and T