"Surely You've Heard of Supply-and-Demand" Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN "When Opinions Are Faree UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth WiWl Preva 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. FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP POWER Emphasis on Methods Weakens Nation's Teaching W Y JOHNNY can't read might well be the the same number of credit hours one could take fault of the teachers of American who are a course in philosophy or English-a bit harder, qualified only to instruct, "See Skip run, Jane." perhaps, but somewhat more fundamental. "To prepare University students for the higher Extracurricular Activities, Professional positions in public school service; to promote Growth of the Teacher-the Secondary Curric- the study of education as a science; to secure to ulum, School Plant Planning-all are listed as teaching the rights, prerogatives, and advan- courses of study. Probably they do have some tages of a profession; and to give a more nearly value to the teacher, but certainly not as under- perfect unity to our state educational system by graduate courses. bringing all public schools into close relation- Apparently schools of education are more ship with the University." These are the aims concerned with methods, curriculum, and tech- and objectives of the University School of niques than they are with the actual subject Education as stated in the catalog. content. But of what use to the teacher are the "techniques of communication" if one has Yet In all this there is no mention of being nothing to teach? proficient in a given subject. And all studentsn wishing to secure a teacher's certificate are MEANWHILE America is losing many of its required by law to take twenty hours of educa- M best potential teachers as serious students tion, thus limiting the number of courses in refuse to waste time taking what are labeled liberal arts prospective teachers can take in "Mickey Mouse" courses. Much material cov- their" field of major interest. ered in these teacher training agencies is second It has been suggested that teacher's certifi- nature to most people and can be picked up in cates be awarded only after the prospective the practice teaching experience required by teacher has graduated from a liberal arts state law. Teaching is a real challenge, but the curriculum. This would insure school systems of "methods" courses demanded as prerequisites getting teachers who are well versed in litera- for teaching certificates are discouraging. ture, science, and the arts. Perhaps these agencies should be eliminated. Or the student could be required to take only SCHOOLS of education have been called mere the directed teaching. Or certification could be training fields. When one reads the Univer- made a post graduate study. For if the teachers sity catalog this appears to be only too true: of tomorrow are drawn only from those who "Workshop: Human Relations in School and want to get out of taking language require- Community. Planning instructional develop- ments, and other aspects of the arts and ment in the human relations field. Learning sciences, the Johnnys of tomorrow will not be how to meet problems of inter-group tensions smart enough to even write a book on why and conflicts. Means of evaluating workship Johnny can't read. procedures will be considered in appraising the -BEATA JORGENSON actual techniques used in the workshop." For Associate City Editor Study Now, Py Later-No Solution JUNIOR GIRLS' PLAY: 'Petticoat Platoon' Pretty Preposterous i LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Why Johnny Can't Vegetate THE STATE Legislature, having given up in its attempt to put any proposal on the April 6 ballot which might bail the state out of its cash shortage, has turned to a loan proposal to help students attend college. The plan, pro- posed by Rep. Willard I. Bowerman, Jr., (R- Lansing) would set up an independent authority to guarantee bank loans to college students. This authority would not use state funds, but would be dependent on private contributions. Students would get loans from banks and the authority would guarantee that 80 per cent of the loan would be repaid. Rep. Bowerman said his plan is aimed at the "late blossoming" high school student, the B or C student from a low income family who cannot now get a scholarship and for whom bank loans are too expensive now because of bank stipula- tions that both the student and his parent must have life insurance. TH E PLAN seems fine on the surface but the question arises, as since state-supported universities began: is every student entitled to higher education? Rep. Bowerman's bill would seem to favor intellectual mediocrity, for most of the "late blossomers" will probably not blossom at all. His plan also compounds a pressing problem of higher education today: the need for more buildings and teachers to accommodate ever- rising enrollments. If thousands of only fair students who might not otherwise attend col- lege are thrown 'upon the higher education market, schools will be impossibly hard-pressed to accommodate them. Earlier in the year, Rep. Bowerman proposed a plan whereby every student would pay $45 per semester to finance college building pro- grams, payable after graduation. Bowerman's new plan, which has already been approved by the State House of Representatives, also makes the college loan repayable after graduation. Both proposals are based on the same as- sumption: that the ex-student "in his pro- ductive years" would be willing or able to repay mountainous sums of money over the period following graduation. But this is the, period when money is scarce and the family grows. A lifetime mortgage scheme may mean a college education where otherwise impossible, yet there is questionable wisdom in deferring payment and considering it the panacea of higher educa- tion. CERTAIN objections to Rep. Bowerman's bill have been raised locally. One University ad- ministrator, familiar with a similar loan au- thority plan in operation in Massachusetts, said loans would probably have a much higher inter- est rate than the University's loans, which currently have a three per cent rate. There is also an alternate possibility of private firms donating the money, not to a state authority, but directly to universities to be placed in their loan funds. Thus any student able to satisfac- torily complete one semester would be able to continue his education, and the "never blos- soming" student would not be thrust into the crowded higher education scene. If Rep. Bowerman's proposal is the only alternative to no more additional loan funds, it is better than nothing. The problems it could create, however, would encourage research for another solution. -ROBERT JUNKER To The Editor: T AM WRITING in regard to that most unfortunate young man whose letter you published in last Sunday's paper. I am sadly sure that, despite its strong element of pathos, the letter will receive, not help and "answers," but a deluge of unkind and unsympa- thetic jibes. I know that many un- feeling persons in the engineering and medical schools will belittle his 17 hour course load, and that doctoral candidates will sneer at his 4,000 words of reports. I anticipate that men cramming for their pre-lims will scoff at his complaint of few leisure hours, that they will say they have hardly the time to scribble The Daily a note, much less an autobiography. I foresee that a few may even cast doubt on his veracity, or his dili- gence, or both, saying that he is a lazy oaf who weeps because he is forced to work every once in a while. These things are not only cruel, they are untrue. While I am not personally acquainted with Junior (for such must we call him by de- fault), I am wholly convinced of his honesty; indeed, he has prob- ably grossly understated his case, as befits the true Martyr. Thus we must not abuse him; we must rather seek to give him the help he so desperately requires. Therefore, I would like to make a constructive suggestion, in the implementation of which I will need the assistance of what I am confident is essentially a humane society of students, vitally con- cerned with succoring the unfor- tunate. Since, as has been pointed out, Junior is not lazy, and since, as he himself has said, he is taking but a normal course load, the cause of his distress can only be one fact: Junior is stupid. In the vast mental community of Ann Arbor he stands as one of the underprivileged. This, I believe, becomes patently clear as one reads his letter. The solution is obvious: we must find a place for Junior, a place where he can find rest, sympathy, and - above all - talk. I therefore propose that we estab- lish a fund t'o send Junior to some nice, quiet sanitarium where he will be able to listen to beautiful music, enjoy leisurely discussions with all sorts of people, and set his own pace of living. I urge all stu- dents, as well as those faculty members who may be able, to join me in this eleemosynary gesture, foregoing, for a few days, the movies upon which they lavish so much of their money. Let them take up bridge instead, basking in the warm knowledge that they have been of help to a fellow- creature. -Maxwell Caskie, Grad. Brauo! . . To the Editor: WHEN I first read Name-With- held-by-Request's letter, I be- gan roaring and stamping around and wrote a searing, though in- coherent, letter denouncing the lazy, materialistic student cited by Philin Power i Rnndav's edition. Europeans.. .. To the Editor: T READ the March 11th article, "Africanls Move Toward Full Independence," with amused in- terest. The so-called former residents, namely, Messrs. James Conway and Donald Livingstone represent the group of European Settlers ("European" means the white population in Africa) who will never do any good in Africa. Conway maintains that the pur- pose of the Central African Fed- eration was not the oppression of the Nyasaland "Negroes" as al- leged by Dr. Banda. He will HON- ESTLY recall that the Federation was created without consulting the Africans in Nyasaland and the Rhodesias. This incident justifi- ably aroused fears and suspicions among the Africans as to the real purpose of the Central African Federation. Every enlightened per- son, both in Africa and Britain, knew in 1953 that the Federation was a mere window-dressing to a carefully calculated guarantee for a continued European domination and exploitation of the African majority. Dr. Conway knows very well that in Africa the problem is not how to increase the productivity of the African Laborer or what type of education the African should re- ceive. The problem is rather how to improve the status of the Afri- can without endangering the self- ish aims of some settlers of which Dr. Conway may be one. This type of settler is trying to create a world of total illusion in Africa- a world in which the vocationally trained African, unfit for public office, would not go beyond his brawn in contributing to the pro- gress of a so-called multi-racial community in Central Africa. Un- fortunately it is too late. Many Africans have long ago realized the obvious advantage of "book learning." Dr. Banda is such an example of "book" educated Afri- can whom Dr. Conway fears. Nothing will stop these Africans and this revolution is not going to take five generations. Those who do not believe it should go to West Africa and see things for themselves. * * * I AGREE with Messrs. Conway and Donald Livingstone that pro- gress should be based upon the indigenous African cultures. The type of education which will teach the African his history, customs, sociology and most important of all African morals and values. These are intangible and priceless things which a people cannot af- ford to lose if they want to survive in this barbarous world. Every African knows very well that these ideals cannot be offered by an European settler who has no re-i spect for human rights and throws Democracy in a waste basket. Technological advancement has no meaning if its fruits are not justly distributed. Mr. Livingstone will concede that the appalling slum conditions in the bigger cities of the Union of South Africa is not due to West- ernization, but due to the re- morseless slave wages paid to the African, and also to the notorious "apartheid" policy. Even the .T Jl _ .. . . . The present tension in Africa has not been brought about by an "adolescent African" trying to act in strange ways. It has been caused by the group of disillu- sioned European settlers who are afraid to grow up and face the plain facts. Africa is the native- land of Africans and they are not going to be guests to the continent. -L. A. K. Quashie IIS YEAR, the junior girls have come up with another curious affaire. JGP is tradition- ally limited to an all-girl cast, so certain locales are, ipso facto, out of the question. This one takes place in a WAC barracks and it's full of fun and singing and danc- ing and Kappas. Somehow, JGP's always seem to remind me of the ante-room to the dean of women's office, and when the setting !is a WAC barracks - well! 'Petticoat-Platoon" is mostly about an amazing collection of girls who enlist in the WAC, eventually shape up and burn pro- fessional. This process is carefully regulated by a WAC Colonel (Sherrie Kotzer), a Sergeant (Marilyn Zdordowski), and a nurse (JoAnne Krantz). As for the trainees, they are a gay bunch. Nina Slawson, best voice in the cast, plays a disillu- sioned Vassar girl who has joined up to forget. Linda Crawford is terrific as a sort of female Elvis Presley type of WAC. She spends a great deal of time chewing something or other which may be part of the Union's student spe- cial. * . * NELL HURT turns out to be a Mississippi WAC, wearing a flour sack to bed and a southern accent everywhere else. Mary Wilcox and Jill Bement are a pair of stage- struck WAC's and they dance their way around the stage, trip- ping over footlights with gay abandon. A fresh new paragraph goes to Judy Wilson, who is quite a dolly, especially in a nightgown which she apparently outgrew many years ago. She's a onetime bur- lesque dancer, it says in the script. Most preposterous of them all is Miss Kotzer, a stuffed shirt of- ficer in the old-time tradition. She and Linda Crawford are the sure- fire laugh getters and, except for occasional moments of slap-stick Sometimes the stage grows over- 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- 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, MARCH 20, 1959 VOL. LXIX, NO. 12 General Notices Automobile Regulations: Spring Re- cess. Automobile regulations will be lifted at 5 p.m. Fri., March 27, and will become effective again at 8 a.m. on Mon.,' April 6. "The Resurrection Today," Rev. Rich- ard Crusius. Office of Religious Affairs Coffee-discussion for all students. 4:15 p.m., Fri., March 20, Lane Hall Library. Agenda, Student Government Coun- cil, March 20, 1959, 4 p.m. Council Rm. Minutes previous meeting. Officersreports: President - letters; Vice-President, Exec.; vice-Pres., Ad- min.; Treasurer. ClarificationrCommittee. Committee reports: National and International: Exchange Programs; Inetrnational Student Rela- tions Information Service; National Student Association, Chairman. Education and Student Welfare. Public Relations. Student Activities Committee: Activi- ties. Elections: report. Old Business. New Business: Seating of candidates; Orientation motion (Haber);nWomen's rushing motion (Seasonwein). Members and constituents time. Announcements. Adjournment. The following student-sponsored so- cial events have been approved for the coming weekend. Social chairmen are reminded that requests for approval for social events are due in the Office of Student Affairs not later than 12 o'clock noon on Tues. prior to the event. March 20: Graduate Student Council, Inter-Cooperative Council, Phi Alpha Kappa, Phi Delta Phi, Sigma Kappa, Stockwell Hall. March 21: Acacia, Allen Rumsey Hse., Alpha Epsilon Pi, Alpha Kappa Kappa, Anderson Hse., Betsy Barbour, Delta Chi, Delta Tau Delta, Delta Theta Phi, Hayden Hse. (4th floor) Kelsey se., (Continued on Page 5) crowded with bustling Junior Girls, and sometimes the audience banality, they are fairly success- winces as groups of dancers race up the aisles, 3ostling feebler members of the faculty groping for their seats. But this seems secondary to the main purpose of JGP: entertainment. AndI so it is, * * * MUSIC by Pat Vick and Janice Rose was quasi-derivative but ap- propriate. Best moment here is a song called "Lady of Culture" sung by Nina Slawson in Act I with a Menotti-type melody and an effective orchestral accompani- ment. The orchestra, incidentally, seemed to be made up of, SC candidates; especially some loud fellow on drums who abstained every other measure. After an overlong overture, the orchestra was certainly adequate, conductor Al Werner keeping a steady hand on the switch. Script by Sue Brace had its mo- ments; direction by Karol Buck- ner was fast and furious; Elinor Dodge seems to have kept every- thing under control as general chairman. And so on. JGP is about the last of the tra- ditional entertainments to survive the reform movement. It seems to be good fun, even without men. -David Kessel CINEMA GUILD : Two Hours Too Short SHAKESPEARE did not write literature; he wrote entertain- ments. When his plays are read as if they were long poems, they show a professional smoothness that after a time is sometimes soporific. When one sees them acted, the ac- tion keeps him awake enough to see how professional that smooth- ness is. No production of Shakes- peare can hurt Shakespeare. Some people do not consider the motion picture a legitimate art form; perhaps they feel that at- tempting to film Shakespeare is trying to mix cultural oil with water. J. Arthur Rank will not be- lieve such a mixture impossible; hence, the film "Romeo and Ju- liet." The script' bears some re- semblance to Shakespeare's; the production resembles neither the Globe's or the Old Vic's. That is not to say it is not an excellent version. It is necessary, in order to give proper importance to visual image, to eliminate some of Shakespeare's material to re- main with reasonable length. In Rank's film, most of the favorite lines and scenes are retained-but several omissions are too obvious. The removal of "Sleep dwell upon thine eyes, peace in thy breast! Would I were sleep and peace, so sweet to rest!" is a matter of choice, but the elimination of the apothecary-Romeo stabs himself instead of swallowing poison -is outrageous. After all, what is "Romeo and Juliet" without "O true apothecary! Thy drugs are quick. Thus with a kiss I die." BUT WE must judge the picture ,not -as Shakespeare but as a separate art work. As such, it is superb, from the moment Sir John Gielgud admits himself chorus, The picture is chiefly Italian, from the many Giovannis in the sup- porting cast through the authentic Renaissance Verona; the princi- pals, however, are British. Law- rence Harvey makes Romeo credit- able, although he is rather unbe- lievable in some of the melancholic scenes - he quivers too much. Looking like an auburn-haired Carol Lynley, Susan Shentail plays a wonderful Juliet, but she hardly strikes one as being a fourteen-year-old. The added transitional scenes are not irritat- ingly watery; of course, Renato Castellani cannot write so well as Shakespeare. There is an interesting addition, however: a five-second blank screen as Romeo and Juliet con- sumate their marriage, giving the effect of asterisks in American versions of D. H. Lawrence. -Fred Schaen A :.I 4 A I . I Revolting . . . INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Nuclear Testing Worthwhile To the Editor: A WEEK has passed since Miss Willoughby's review of "Pirates of Penzance" made its appearance. The ineptness of her review was and is still revolting. One wonders just what critera she employed. Can one surmise that the policy of The Daily is to impart criticism, in order that the society may (in Ian Wolter's words) "work harder in the future to eliminate the pos- sibility of such criticism?" Are the criticisms warranted so that the G&S Society can rectify their "flaws?" It is my understanding that a review should include con- structive criticisms; Miss Wil- loughby's are destructive. She uses terms which create a negative tone, and which say nothing con- structively. "Somehow a conscious effort for clarity seemed to be missing and without thehtradi- tional enthusiasm . .." What is a conscious effort and what consti- tutes "traditional enthusiasm." She further stated that "the flat- ness of the production seemed simply to lie in an absence of real precision and care." It seems necessary to remind her that even with precision and care (what- ever that is), a production may fall short of its expectations and be "flat." There are other aspects in- volved in a production that are just as important as the perform- ers, which she failed to mention. Certainly the performance was not without its flaws, and I have yet to be in a performance that is perfect - I have yet to meet a perfect individual. Nostalgia for "outstanding per- formers of former years"~ seemed to overcome Miss Willoughby. Yet, looking over the reviews for the past six G&S shows, The Daily saw fit to mention on the average only two "outstanding performers" for each show. According to her, "no- body in the current cast is actually bad enough in, their individual characterizations to evoke per- sonal condemnation or even to affect very substantially the final unity of the production." Am I to assume then that no one was ac- tually good? She mentions Lynn Tannel and Tom Jennings as buoyant and sparkling, something which "one expects at these semi- annual shows." Mr.,Wolter,. in his "letter to the editor" believed that the review had a good effect on the perform- ers -as Saturday night's perform- ance "had regained all the spirit and enthusiasm of past produc- tions.' If Miss Willoughby's re- view is accurate, the cast was more revolutionary than Marx ever was! -Alice Unemoto, Grad. Please Pay .. To the Editor: a By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst FRAGMENTARY reports on Operation Argus indicate that the United States has found a way to continue testing atomic devices with- out creating fallout, and so has reduced a great world political problem produced by public fear. For years the peoples of the world, and especially the nieutrals whom the United States would like to impress with her consideration for their welfare, have been agitated over what continued testing might do to the human race. Soviet Russia, fishing in troubled waters according to her custom, has sought to play upon these fears by claiming she conducts tests in self defense only because somebody else started it, and by proposing that the practice be stopped. The line sounds good to such people as the Japanese, who have a naturally inordinate fear. 04r Argigatt :43lo THEN,when other nations are pressured into signs of agreement,-Russia, needing to test just as badly as anyone else, finds fault with the methods of control proposed. She prepares to accuse the others of being responsible for continuation. For that reason the West is under political pressure not to break off negotiations at Geneva which never showed any real prospect of agree- ment. Under the new circumstances, however, when atomic explosions can be set off in outer space, with accompanying satellite missiles to report on their effect, tests can be continued while world opinion is reassured. There is a presumption, though not a positive one, that the American delegation at Geneva has been operating with the benefit of this knowledge which was a secret from the Rus- sians. At any rate it has been the Allies who have argued for tests affecting peaceful uses of Atomic Energy under certain controlled circumstances. THE NEW ability, for instance, -provides a means by which the scientists can proceed with their efforts to produce a "clean" bomb and at the same time avoid world criticism. More important, perhaps, is the possibility of using testing for all sorts of peaceful purposes. Concrete knowledge of the means of extract- .4 Unwanted,' Unloved :.:.::.: ........ ......... ......... -a TF .: : vi : i -i :i-.Y . ; ~M4H~STRAT Editorial Staff RICHARD TAUB, Editor XICHAEL KRAFT JO Editorial Director1 * 1~ OHN WEICHER City Editor T]AVTn ?'AR.7?. JJA V 1.U '1'ANIG