"Really, You're A Mess" AT LYDIA [ Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN ihen Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY Or BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Wil me STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICI. * 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. 'Pirates' Per forman Lacks Enthusiasm ..G /x_ Y, MARCH 13, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: SELMA SAWAYA Hectorians Apply Pressure For Election of Affiliates 'HERE ONCE was a time when student gov-r ' ernment was thought of as a reflector of udent opinion - the student's joint mega- lone. Unfortunately, this description no nger holds. The Council has slowly evolved into a battle- 'ound for campus pressure groups with vested terests. Few students meet candidates indi- dually, even fewer discuss campus issues com-. tently with them, and, as a consequence, the rm "intelligent vote" has become meaning- ss. The big student organizations strongly in- ience the campus vote. Most students seem ntent to let their decisions be made by the aders of the group to which they are at- ched. IXAMPLES are not difficult to find. To take a blatant one, consider the recent doings the Hectorians, the honorary society for aternity men. The group is currently making e rounds of fraternity yhouses, urging, in * Aloha.! [URRAH! A brand new state. Hawaii ended its long fight for statehood ,sterday as the House of Representatives assed the Senate bill in favor of statehood r the island state. For 50 odd years Hawaii has fought, with me 15 petitions and resolutions, for this )al. As the 218th vote for statehood was cast the House, residents of tle islands were lled to set off signal bonfires to announce the ent. The acceptance of Hawaii into the roup" came without much oppositidn - eming a logical follow-up of Alaska's suc- ssful bid last year. However, the addition of the "Sandwich Is- nds" to the United States of America again %ises what seems to be a difficult problem - new flag design. So all those who aspire to e Betsy Ross have another chance. --ELIZABETH ERSKINE Associate Personnel Director. "good faith," that fraternities unite to electj the kind of men "who will willingly serve the general student interest." Who are these men who carry the "general' student interest" in their hearts? One junior, three sophomores, and a freshman, none with previous Council experience. The Hectorians apparently do not feel any of the incumbent Council members are qualified for another term. STRANGELY ENOUGH, none of the three running for re-election voted in favor of the Greek position in the year's two contro- versial issues: Sigma Kappa and Spring Rush. It should also be noted that the five named by Hectorians have one thing in common, aside from a common desire to win the elec- tion: all five belong to fraternities. To conclude, they are not intelligent would be fallacious. However, it seems evident that the factor of affiliation, and not ability to serve "the general student interest," was the primary consideration. The "general student interest" is apparently equated with the "general fraternity interest," or, roughly speaking, "what's good for fraterni- ties is good for the whole campus." 4, EXCEPT FOR the unusual campaign zeal displayed by the Hectorians, this sort of thing is not uncommon on campus. The same practice is carried on in all housing units and influential organizations, although usually to a lesser extent. Seemingly, nothing can be done about it. The students show less and less interest in going out to meet and talk with candidates for the "Student Government Club," making it easier and easier for the pressure groups to operate. And from lazy, malleable University student, it is a simple slide to lazy, malleable voting citizen dominated by the national, state, and local power groups who threaten the, concept of democracy with the influence they wield. --THOMAS HAYDEN ,.:r # " :. , * lq. ... LL ,. " r , ° .. ^ ti-rs,^' ". 4~ ..y ' ,; H r ".,r '" + ;' ' r ' ¢' ti' a si ,,,,,, ''. ,.,.. s = r ." .... . - --' . .._.._.... ..... .. .... . .. -__ . acs .c.A . . A ROUND of roguish sherry be- gan the production of "The Pirates of Penzance" at Lydia Mendelssohn last night, but ap- parently that illicit beverage lacked its usual intoxicating quali- ties. Whatever the reason, "spirit" in most forms was noticeably ab- sent from the production, and for the first time in several years, the' Gilbert and Sullivan Society gave an -neven and generallyunin- spired performance. As. delectably involved as most of W. S. Gilbert's plots, "Pirates" is a satire on the English sense of duty. Young Frederic, apprenticed by mistake to a band of pirates, finds himself torn between a feel- ing of loyalty to them and an un- comfortable realization that he must abolish such an anti-social group as soon as he is released from their service at the age of twenty-one. The action becomes rather complicated, and in the process of discovering that duty is more than skin deep, poor, wander- ing Fred becomes involved with twenty-one lovely maidens, a very model of a modern Major-Gen- eral, and an incredible delegation from the local constabulary. *a a LACK of dramatic material was not the problem last night, and neither, really was lack of talent. The outstanding performers of former years can, of course, be re- called with nostalgia, but nobody in, the current cast is actually bad enough in their individual char- acterizations to evoke personal condemnation or even to affect very substantially the final unity of the production. While on the one hand, Charles Walton (Frede- ric), despite his fine resonant voice, seemed to lack any concep- tion of the proper function of an actor, Lynn Tannel, a G&S old- timer, and Tom Jennings, a rela- tive newcomer, acted and sang with the buoyancy and sparkle one expects at these semi - annual shows. The flatness of the production seemed simply to lie in an absence of real precision and care. The orchestra sounded as if it had sel- dom rehearsed before, and the staging was as sloppy, for the most part, as it had been last fall. Some- how a conscious effort for clarity seemed to be missing, and without the traditional enthusiasm to make it cohere, all individual successes in the work lacked ultimate effec- tiveness. "Richly Rewarded," an original curtain-raiser written by a former pair of University Savoyards be- gan the evening. It contained some clever lines, but lacked much musi- cal or dramatic originality. Dave Schwartz - a real mugger - stole what he could of the show, but one feels the whole thing might have been more enjoyable if fifteen min- utes of the dialogue had been cut out. -Jean Willoughby EB DAL 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 Room 3519 ,Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. FRIDAY, 1ARCH 13, 1959 VOL. LXIV, No. 116 General Notices Residence Hall Scholarship: Women students wishing to apply for a Resi- dence Hall Scholarship for the academic year 1959-60 for Betsy Barbour Resi- dence may do so through. the Office of the Dean of Women. Applications close Thursday, March 19. Students already living in this residence hall and those wishing to live there next fall may ap- ply. Qualifications will be considered on the basis of academic standing (mini- mum 2.5 cumulative average), need, and contribution to group living. Disciplinary Action in cases of stu- dent misconduct: At the meetings of January 8, 15, February 12, 19, 26 and March 3, cases involving8 a8$tudents and 1 fraternity were heard by the Joint Judiciary Council. In all eases the ac- tion was approved by the Sub-Commit- tee on Discipline. 1) Conduct unbecoming students in that Student Automobile regulations were violated: a) Failure to register: One student fined $75.00 with $35.00 suspended (sec- ond offense); one student fined $25.00 and permit revoked for the remainder of his enrollment at The University of Michigan; two students fined $25.00; one student fined, *25.00 with $15.00 suspended; two students fined $15.00; two students fined $15.00, all of which was suspended; one student fined $20.00. all of which was suspended; two stu- dents fined $10.00, all of which was suspended; two students fined $5.00 and one student issued a written letter of warning. b) Driving without autho6rization: One student fined $50.00 with $20.00 suspended; one student fined $30.00 with $10.00 suspended: two students fined $25.00; one student fined $25.00 with $20.00 suspended; one student fined $20.00; one student fined $20.00 with $10.00 suspended;three students fined $15.00; one student fined $15.00 with $5.00 suspended; one student fined $10.00 and two students issued written letters of warning. (Continued on Page 8) AI _,", r,_ i. &6'99 -fT? MA c$l,,4 --c 'pJ rGT r R gion, Pep Rallies and UCLA OFFICIAI cancellation of classes at UCLA to permit, students to hear the Episcopal Bishop of California during the recent "Reli- gious Emphasis Week" at the College aroused some instructors to hold classes in defiance of the shutdown order. "I'm all for upholding moral standards, and giving students religious values," a history pro- fessor who protested against the suspending of classes for the Bishop's talk declared. "But it is not the role of a state university to do it on official school time." This protest would have been valid here if it had been voiced last semester when the Uni- versity also dismissed a class in order that stu- dents, so moved, might attend a discussion con- cerning "Religion in Today's University." It was forecast then that the majority of students would not attend the speech and that if the majority did, the University would be in sorry shape in view of the limited seating capacity of Hill Auditorium. However, there was not need to worry about "standing room only," for the Auditorium hosted a large num- ber of empty seats. In past years, the only class suspension has been for the annual Honors Convocation, which make the additional suspension appear glar- ingly wrong. NOT SO AT UCLA "As long as the school calls off classes for football rallies it is only academic t'6 discuss the propriety of dis- missing classes for speakers such as Bishop Pike," another history professor retorted. This would seem the case. Although it can be argued that the traditional separation of church and state extends to the separation of church and state university, religion is now regarded as an academic concern as well as an emotional one..As long as UCLA also dismisses classes for such things as pep rallies and for "other prominent scientists, poets and educators who come to campus," then it does not seem in the least wrong to dismiss classes for one more "prominent" speaker, regardless of his area of interest. "We think it is in the liberal tradition of great universities for students to hear as many points of view as possible, acting Chancellor Vern O. Knudson, responsible for the class dismissal, said. However, it is a shame that this "liberal tra- dition" can not be extended to classless hours so that students may pick up an education as well as points of view. -JUDITH DONER CAPITAL WASHINGTON - A long time ago in Texas a boy usually knew that the family or some part of it somewhere was in trouble when a laconic uncle or cousin suddenly rode into the yard about dusk and walked into the house as though he had been expected., Such a Southwestern rendezvous against outside dangers were in- frequent and never lightly held. Every member of the family had an equal right to a welcome and to put such a powwow into motion. But some had, so to speak, more equal rights than others. Such and such an uncle or cousin, though always backed up in the outer world, was not felt within the lodge to be really quite sound. SO, WHEN HE came, all would listen politely, but with some in- ner skepticism. Technically, he was given a full hearing. But it was not nearly so thorough a hear- ing as that given to another uncle or cousin whose personal solidity and stability were considered to be of a higher order. But the very fact that the sound- er relative was privileged to have a more attentive audience put a spe- cial responsibility upon him. He was granted a leadership that au- tomatically would have been with- held from the less sound relative. He was, accordingly, put under a special burden to offer only wisely considered proposals and, above all, proposals with which all could go along in the end. For all were well aware that the actions he was recommending would commit not merely the main family but all its second-cousin connections. These, too, had to be considered. * * * BRITISH PRIME MINISTER Harold Macmillan is now prepar-. ing to open a rendezvous of the Anglo-American alliance, in Ber- lin crisis talks with President Dwight D. Eisenhower here later this month. Prime Minister Mac- millan will not, of course, saddle a horse and ride across two or three counties. He will take an airplane across an ocean that al- ways shrinks, as those counties used to shrink, when grave mat- ters had to be talked over with special intimacy. But, apart from methods of transportation, the Prime Minister will be in about the position of the sound uncle who rode up and dis- mounted at twilight. This side of the Anglo-American community regards him as a solid man, not given to undue alarms or impru- dent solutions. The fact that he is a British Conservative and not a Laborite will be immensely help- ful. Whatever he has to say to the President-and no doubt also to the Democratic Congressional lead- ers-will be heard with particular respect on this account. The bulk of the American gov- ernment, in both parties and in both executive and legislative branches, is of distinctly conserva- tive tone by British standards. In- deed, Macmillan's opposition, the British Labor party, has no coun- terpart at all here. In the Ameri- can leaders, therefore, he will meet men who in general political terms talk pretty much his own lan- guage. But precisely because he is so COMMENTARY: ynillan Faces Tough Task By WILLIAM s. WHITE acceptable to the dominant Amer- ican political viewpoint, the Prime Minister will be under heavy ne- cessity to have a plan for dealing with the Russians that will be tol- erable to all the rest of the West- ern family. The \second-cousins who fill out the Anglo-American core of the alliance -- the French, the West Germans, the Belgians, among others - are in this thing, too. And as it happens they stand near- est to the bright eye of danger around Berlin. For one example, the second-cousins are already understandably alarmed at Mr. Macmillan's references to the pos- sibility of a "thinning-out" of Western and Soviet forces some- how in Central Europe. THE WEST'S troops are all too thin already. And any foreseeable thinning out of Soviet forces would still leave great masses of then only a longish leapfrog jump from the heart of Germany. Macmillan, in a word, comes here under the best possible omens and in the best possible human at- mosphere, given the fact that this is a difficult world. His task, how- ever, is hardly less delicate and fateful than were the missions here of Winston Churchill before we had yet made a national deci- sion about World War II. For there are no more severe critics than critics within a family, espe- cially in so large and mixed a family as the eWstern alliance. The only thing more vital than preparing an effective plan against the Russians is not to prepare one that could rupture that alliance. 4 4 TO The Edito Constituents .. To the Editor: AFTER attending the Student Government Council meeting until midnight 'last night as a constituent, I was anxious to know the decision of the council con- cerning spring rush. Due to the lateness of the hour and the hour regulation, for the most part, en- forced, the women's constituent speaking time was at a premium and to the dismay of many, a waste of time. Nothing new was said; the facts are in the reams of reports, if anyone took the time and trouble to read them. The myriad views on spring and fall rush were torn up and down and inside out with no conclusion drawn, apparently, that the same arguments can be logically argued for both sides. If there are excep- tions, these certainly were not presented. There was one valid comment from a constituent which the Council slammed but good. Pat Marthenke and Mary Tower, as representatives of the two factions of women undergraduates, are to be congratulated on having come up with the constructive, well thought out recommendation for a deferred fall rush. It was inter- esting and disappointing to note that no one had a thing or next to nothing to say about deferred fall rush in the affirmative (in comparison to the stagnant com- ments on fall and spring rush). This matter could have been resolved satisfactorily by consider- ing the merits of the recommenda- tion instead of arguing pro and con about invalid factors which cancel one another out. So we have another epoch in dispelling some agreement between affiliates and independents. What's done is done and it is sad to let it rest here. There is one thing that bothered me, though, and I know I do not stand alone in this. The real crux of the matter was discussed in the early morning hours, a "record" length for a council meeting competing with the late, late, TV shows. As one constituent put it, she thought we would be interested in what she had to say. Sure we were, but we would have been much more interested, as constituents, to have heard what the council had to say at a decent hour! -Marcia Murphy, '59 :1 A NTERPRETING THE NEWS: Politics and Morals SGC IN REVIEW: Rushing Debate Raises Problems on Procedure By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst ONE OF THE newly published letters from President Dwight D. Eisenhower's personal correspondence touches upon a matter which has been uppermost in the minds of a major portion of the people who have written to this column over the years. It is the belief that the only long-term solu- tion of the world's problems lies in the spread and application of Christian principles. This was particularly true in the early years after World War II, before the lines of conflict between East and West had hardened to the current point, when there were fewer hard facts of daily life to be met. Any diminishment in later years, has, how- ever, not been great. In a letter written last fall, as published in Life magazine, the President said he had been pondering the value of trying to center greater, attention by the American people and the free world on the predominant influence of spiri- tual values in our lives, and to do this in some rather well-organized way. He thought of try- ing to get the government heads of free nations interested. THIS IS A projection of two ideas of the zation to send word of the American way to people behind the iron curtain. Since his presidency he has spoken regularly of the spiritual motives behind the American world attitude. The idea, of course, is not new with him. Worldwide campaigns of this sort are being conducted by numerous organizations - spir- itual mobilization, moral rearmament, both denominational and inter - denominational church movements, and others. Attracting the interest of heads of govern- ment might be less difficult than the President may suppose. Moral rearmament, for instance, has for one of its slogans "not who is right, but what is right." Numerous high ranking members of governments have accepted it. These include many members of Congress, members of the West German federal government and the heads of German states. PREMIERS and foreign ministers of Japan have advocated it and promised publicly in the diet to apply it to relations with Korea and other countries where there have been postwar disagreements. There is a considerable movement of this type in India and the Philippines, and indeed in almost all free countries. By PHILIP POWER Daily Staff Writer ONE OF the most intriguing facets of last night's decision on spring rushing was the ab- stention of Roger Seasonwein, which led to an eight to eight tie vote, broken by the vote of Stu- dent Government Council presi- dent Maynard Goldman. Seasonwein's action is import- ant both because of its implica- tions regarding his own thinking about the matter at issue, and be- cause SGC elections are only a week away. The election, like its predeces- sors, seems to be turning into a contest largely dominated by the blocks of votes the various asso- ciations, prestige a n d p o w e r groups are able to deliver. Again, as in the past, the two main be- hemoths confronting each other seem to be the affiliates, always united, and the independents. .It is supposed that each of these groups, if they so desire, can de- liver enough votes to insure the election of someone who "plays along" with them. vote was motivated by dissatisfac- tion with both points of view ex- pressed in the debate. Seasonwein said that on one hand, he favored spring rushing in principle. On the other, he felt that the pro- posed solutions for the problems so far encountered in spring rush- ing were not all they should have been. His abstention thus reflected his belief that other solutions more creative and constructive should be explored before a final decision was reached on the prob- lem. C * * TWO NOTEWORTHY factors emerged from last night's debate. Firstly, for only the second time in its history, the Council allotted a specified time for constituents to speak their minds from the floor. The quality of this debate, as was to be expected, was vari- able, but in general it was sur- prisingly high, well informed and vigorous. It is through such procedures, wherein the student body is given a direct opportunity to speak its mind to SGC, that the Council may avoid accusations that it is speech had to say, said "Good God! I have no idea." ** * IT WAS pretty clear that as the members grew more fatigued, their capacity for clear thought was reduced to near nothingness. In cases such as last night's, there should be provision made for de- bate to cover the preliminary busi- ness before the long and exhaust- ing sessions on the main motion begin. Such discussion might be accomplished if SGC scheduled a dual meeting, with one part tak- ing place in the afternoon and the mainportion at the regular time in the evening. In any case, SGC's five hour debate has silenced those critics who accuse it of incomplete and hasty discussion on issues of im- portance. * * THE CHAIN of events leading to last night's action was begun at the Oct. 14, 1955, meeting of SGC, when David Baad, '56, former Daily editor, moved that there be set up a committee to study the University's rushing system to re- port back to SGC in Marchf. In this motion. Baad asked that Board in Review, and it went into force in the spring of 1958. On March 15, 1956, the Council voted, 10 to eight, for deferred rushing, when the committee re- turned its report. It was in the nature of a trial motion, in that it directed that spring rush be reconsidered by SGC after a two year trial period. It was this reconsideration which the Council held Wednesday night. Three O'Clock in, they Morning- 411 *..:. rll