I 014rmlrhlgau Daily Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN "When Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials 'printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This ust be noted in all reprints. 'URDAY, APRIL 25, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: BARTON HUTHWAITE Old Battle Cry, Weapons, Highlight DAR Convention "You Know, I Don't Think The UN Ever Replied To Our Ultimatum Last Year" 1 \Y - - \ N 4- r - iy- 44' yr -- , f --I n & THE DAUGHTERS of the American Revolu- tion try again. Reemphasizing their motion of last year opposing the United Nations, the delegates voted last Thursday in favor of the United States withdrawing from the UN and removing the UN headquarters from American sail. In doing so they expressed pride in their stand., As one member put it, "You can't do business with the devil." This unrealistic, ostrich-like -attitude contrib- utes little to world peace. Withdrawal from an organization because. it is not immediately ac- complishing its goals and because it involves working with the Russians is foolish. It seems that the DAR, an oranization founded in 1890 to "preserve the memory of those active in achieving American indppen- dence, to foster true patriotism, to encourage education" might have a broader picture of the world situation and might regard patriotism as Good Ideas Wor STUDENT Government Council's executive committee is undoubtedly heading in the right direction with its proposed "Point Three Program" to increase student interest in Coun- cil affairs. But the-plan seems very vague and sounds like a desperate measure that won't really solve the problem at which it is aimed. The intent is commendable, but the plan itself leaves some- thing to be desired. The first part of the plan suggests moving at least one SGC meeting a month from the regu- lar Council Room in the Student Activities Building to more strategic spots on campus that would be more accessible to constituents. Suggested meeting places are Club 600 in South Quadrangle, the Mary Markley snack bar, Hillel Foundation or various churches. IP THIS part of the proposal were effected, SGC would run ^the risk of evolving into a huge show, with more emphasis on entertaining the audience than efficiency in conducting its business. The atmosphere of a snack bar or a church basement is just not conducive to a businesslike attitude. Disruption in the proceedings would also re- sult from the transiency of the constituents In the informal surroundings of a snack baror lounge. Furthermore, it hardly seems that this type of audience participation would result in a lasting understanding of the Council. PERHAPS a feasible solution to the problem would be to hold special discussion and debate on items of specific interest in other areas,-but to have the regular weekly meetings at the SAB. This would provide an opportunity more than talking only to Americans or giving high school citizenship awards. HOWEVER, there is some hope. During the latest vote, there was a definite degree of opposition to the motion-much more than is usual among the DAR membership, In their annual meetings in Washington, they usually pass their policy resolutions and decisions with- out much discussion and opposition, but about 100 of the 2,449 delegates stood to oppose the idea. It's "progress," of sorts, but the vast majority of this tradition-bound group's delegates repre- senting 186,000 "patriotic" women in the USA opposed the UN. Undoubtedly, their motion will be ignored, or laughed at ... as it shoula be. But maybe next time they leave the kitchen, the futility of their gestures will ,force them to reevaluate their position. -ELIZABETH ERSKINE Associate Personnel Director th Reconsidering for students to participate in discussions on those areas of great interest, and would main- tm the necessary dignity at Council business meetings. The section of the proposal suggesting an SGC newsletter to be written by a different Council member each week requesting criticisms and comments of randomly selected students also seems to be a commendable, but futile attempt. Although it would probably draw some com- ment and personal contact, the measure would waste a considerable amount of stationary and effort in an unrewarding task. It would be too easy to regard the letter as another mail box filler and toss it unread into the waste basket. If it were read, however, it would definitely be an improvement over the more impersonal Newsletter now published by the Council. THE LAST part of the proposed plan is prob- ably the easiest to facilitate and would probably do a great deal to improve Council- student relations. This calls for the use of existing campus organizations such as various school councils and religious groups to discuss Council action, Information regarding pertinent issues would be sent to the groups and they would be asked to discuss the areas and submit any suggestions to the Council. SGC's executive council is undoubtedly to be congratulated for this move in to general direc- tion toward increasing student interest in the Council. But a few sections of the plan do need reconsideration. -JEAN HARTWIG AT THE CAMPUS: Pather Panchali Beautiful, Deserving PATHER PANCHALI is a masterpiece. But, there are many things about Father Panchali that will repel a campus audience: fine acting, superb photography, and a university that appears only when man, and not machines, provide the 'vision and the 'scope. The crowning insults to a campus audience are two: first, although :.9 CAPITAL COMMENTARY : Herter Has Friends, Flexibilty By WILLIAM S. WHITE filmed in subtropical West Bengal, sex; second, the film implies an audience capable of both thinking and feeling. Since movie-goers in Ann Arbor consist of people on breaks, between the embry quiz and the chem hourly who haven't had a date for a month, Pather Panchali is not what the central committee ordered for spring weekend. Father Panchali demands a good audience. Produced in West Bengal, India, by Satyajit Ray, a young Indian amateur movie- maker, whose efforts were partly financed by his government, Pather Panchali is the first of three films in a now complete series based on a novel written by Bibhuti Banerji published in 1931. * * * THE FILM focuses on the life of a poor family in a small Indian village. The family, father, mother, son, daughter, and aged aunt, are concerned in varying degrees with the essential problem of staying alive. The father, Kanu Banerji, Is a Brahmin priest, a dreamer who is "bursting with ideas for plays and poems." The'mother (Karuna Banerji) is the central figure of the film, the one around whom the other persons and such plot as there is revolves. The boy Apu grows to be a hand- some child whose eyes rcord what he sees, which is everything, with seismographic sensitivity;. his sis- ter Durga as a child (Runki Ban- erji) and as a young girl (Uma Das Gupta) is, early, a vital and loving child and, later, a subtle study in adolescence. * * * THE PLOT is not very import- ant, but the departure of the father tp find work, the quarrel between the mother and aunt, the aunt's death, the death of Durga just before the father's homecoming, and the family's de- parture for Benares, proves the sequence of events. The point is, the poverty and suffering do not depress but exhilarate because the story is so gently played against a background of transcendent loveliness. The film is a vision of life that is large, noble and beau- tiful. There is little more that any art form can provide; one re- greets that Pather Panchali won't find an audience. -R. C. Gregory DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assuires 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. SATURDAY ,APRIL 25, 1959 VOL. LXIX, NO. 145 Lectures Public Lecture: Jacques Duchesne- Guillemin, Prof. of the Religions of Iran and India, U. of Liege. "On Some (Continued on Page 6), nobody strips off saris for a bit of SKIT NIGHT: Balfour Showcase AMIDST THE RAIN and high prices and crowded streets and squirrels that all make up the local scene, there appears every two years something called Spring Weekend. And somewhere between the upside-down cake eating race and the inside-out bicycle and po- tato peeling race comes Skit Night at Hill Auditorium, Skit Night arrives in one large six-act package featuring twelve living groups who collaborate two- by-two in presentation of some- what original skits with scenery and acting and even music. It adds up to something' less than four hours of hilarious confusion. Since the PI Phi's weren't re- presented last night, I was faced with the difficult task of watching comparative strangers, but this turned out to be less difficult than one might imagine. The collection of valuable talent demonstrated once again that imagination is still alive, somewhere. * * * IMAGINATION was best. re- presented by the Gamma Phi Beta-Chi Phi skit "Metropolitan Museum of Art." A. collection of famous and infamous art works briefly come to life toshow 6s, for instance, what the White Rock Girl is looking for, and what the Thinker is thinking on. "Point to Point" by Kappa Del- ta and Delta Sigma Chi attempted a satire on Ed Murrow's show which contained the funniest lines of the evening, most of which can- not possibly be reproduced here. More humor and elegant costumes appeared in the KAT-ZBT "Play on Will" which also resurrected the' old Gargoyle routine of quoting Shakespeare out of context. Still more elegant costumes in the Kappa Kappa Gama - Delta Tau Delta "Search for Beauty," a sort of Petroushka-like affair. Off- stage singing was extremelyeffec- tive here, aiding an otherwise un- imaginative skit. SDT-Phi Epsilon Pi presented Connelly's "Green Pastures" which was mainly not- able for containing the best actor of the evening, Russell Berman, as God, no less. Early in the skit, Berman criticizes the quality of heavenly custard, an old routine for a one-time Union officer, I imagine. ~Smoke Screen" by Geddes-Phi Sigma Kappa had the most am- bitious script, by Robert Tanner. Unfortunately the idea overflowed the form here and there. Tanner's play is not without its significanc, but Skit Night is not the plave for significance. 'Most imposing character of the evening was Steve Williams as the Magician in "Search" and I for- get everything else except that the auditorium lobby at intermis- sion was a Balfour showcase, and a couple of first - rate gymnast provided between-scene. entertain- ment. -David Kessel t' WASHINGTON - Subtle but important changes in our at- titudes in the world will soon flow from the elevation of Christian Herter to Secretary of State. A new day is coming, no matter how earnestly we may say there is going to be no alteration in fun- damental policies. This does not mean a "softness" where once there was strength - as in our views toward the Berlin crisis and our nonrecognition of Communist China. It does not mean that the bad, old "inflexibility" of John Foster Dulles (as some saw it) will now necessarily be at once supplanted by an excellent, new, Herter "flex- ibility." But it does mean that no vital American decision intimate- ly involving the lives and hopes of our allies is likely ever again to be made by a single man, as Mr. Dulles could and did make such decisions as Secretary. IF, IN THE FUTURE, the Amer- ican line here and there should appear less positive and deter- mined, it may well be the strong- er, rather than the weaker, for this very fact: it will now be a line, whatever it is otherwise, to which the whole collective institution of the American government is com- mitted by genuine conviction and prior concert of opiniorr. Some- times Mr. Dulles committed this collective institution by acts of foreclosure; he simply acted and all simply had to go along. In a word, we have exchanged a devoted, powerful, resolute but es- sentially one-man operation of our foreign policy for a no less de- voted and powerful multi-man operation, The Dulles technique had th, advantage of swift, un- hesitant execution. The old gentle- man could move in crisis with the speed and efficiency of a lashing whip. The Herter technique, how- ever, will not be without its own advantages, and it may turn out to be the more effective in the long run. Dulles had on his side most of all his wholly untroubled self- confidence, plus the utter and automatic confidence of a Presi- dential superior, Mr. Eisenhower, plus the guarded a n d r a r e l y wholehearted confidence of the Democratic Congress. Herter will not have quite this degree of self- confidence and perhaps not even quite the same total and invari- able confidence of the President. But he will have something more. * * * HE WILL HAVE the full crea- tive 'and cheerful assistance of the Democrats, particularly those of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. And these are among the ablest men in public life to- day, fully capable both of helping to prepare high policy and of gathering support for it at home. Herter carries the Senate in his pocket ,as Dulles never could. And this, at home or abroad, is a wea- pon whose firepower cannot easi- ly be overestimated. Indeed, some in the Democratically-controlled Senate already refer to him as a "Democratic" Secretary of State. It may seem odd but it is never- theless true that these are factors of great practical, and not mere clubby, significance. Christian Herter years ago served in the House of Representatives in close, pleasant association with two oth- er young men who were faithful, if also less than urgently partisan, Democrats. * * * ONE OF THESE is today the assistant Democratic leader of the Senate and also an influential' member of the Foreign Relations Committee, Mike Mansfield of Montana. The other is the power- ful chairman of that committee, William Fulbright of Arkansas. Anybody who supposes that Sec- retary Herter will have less than the full-time, all-out and highly useful assistance of Senators Ful- bright and Mansfield - and of many others - just does not know the Senate or "The Hill" in gener- al, as the men of Congress call it. And anybody who supposes that Herter will withhold anything from these men has forgotten that Herter, too, is at bottom a man of Congress. If there is anything to the notion that two heads are better than one - and there is - then we can look for this: a for- egn policy deeply protected in its domestic base as it has never been since the war; a foreign policy far more meshed with the wishes of our allies. (Copyright 1959, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) TO VEUNANIMITY and Senate confirmedi th tary Herter are impress were meant to be. Th the damage caused by' gracious way in which made It is not easy to expl and his press assistan much to create the im pointment was beingi with reservations. Arth York Times, in his pen affair, is no doubt right the President was suffer reaction to the vety bi Reed Hospital. But, asF out, this still leaves un of why, after the resul check-up were knowni Dirksen and others in t the appointment would was still casting doubtt A possible explanation was until the last mom sure from supporters o office. This is an unpleasant planation which will do that the President avo5 grim facts until Dulles,u some weeks earlier, insis face up to them. Thes DAY AND TOM ORROW: The Senate and Herter By WALTER LIPPMANN d speed with which the then the President shrank from taking the e nomination of Secre- final step of " naming Dulles' successor. During ive, and obviously they this hesitation he opened himself to pressure e Senate was repairing to appoint someone other than Herter. the funmbling and un- The action of the Senators reflects not only the, appointment was their high opinion of Mr. Hetrer. They have also given notice to the President that he has lain why the President a Secretary of' State who carries great poli- t JimhHagerty did so tical weight, and is not to betreated as a minor ipressionthat the ap- underling. The Senate has not only confirmed madpreluctaioHerter for the office, but it has done all that made reluctantly and it could do to confirm his influence after he ur Krock, of the New isn h fce etrating account of the the office. t that in the beginning Both abroad and at home this is salutary ring from an emotional and important. For in the complicated negotia- ad news from Walter tions which Herter is conducting, it would be Krock goes on to point a fatal handicap if Chancellor Adenauer or [explained the mystery President de Gaulle or Prime Minister Mac- lts of Herter's medical millan were given the impression that the Sec- in Augusta, after Sen. retary of State does not have the confidence he know had said that of the President, and that there is an appeal go kowHrtersagety over his head through others who have the ear go to Herter, Hagerty of the President. The Senate has struck a upon it. mighty blow against such shenanigans. For n is that the President the unanimous support of the United States ent under strong pres- Senate is something that few of Herter's pre- f some rival for the decessors have ever enjoyed. At home, the action of the Senate is a use- and embarrassing sub- ful offset to the thunder on the right. This o the least damage is thunder is still in the distance. But it is un- ided facing up to the mistakable. It is designed to intimidate him. who had tried to resign The purpose of the intimidation is to prevent ted that the President him from negotiating a modus vivendi-the shock was great. Even theory being that in war, cold or hot, anything short of unconditional surrender is appease- ment. % + "m ly IjN TIMES like these the easiest and cheapest position for a politician or a public man is dI Staffto demand the unconditional surrender of the UB, Editor adversary. The extreme position is often re- JOHNWgarded by the gullible, who do not know the tad difference between natrintism and natrioteer. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: 'Radicals, ' Weapons Prompt More Comment To the Editor: THE ABDICATION of moral re sponsibility suggested by the lead editorial in Tuesday's Daily, arrogantly entitled "Pauling Wrong . . . ," by Lane Vanderslice, represents a sad retrogression from the sound thinking expressed in the same columns a little over a year ago by James Elsman. Fortu- nately, recent "Letters' indicate that there are some, at least, to whom the grim effects of nuclear testing, as described by Linus Paul- ing, have more than statistical meaning. According to the figures quoted by Mr. Vanderslice, the bombs already exploded will be responsi- ble for an estimated total number of deaths from leukemia or bone cancer and serious physical and mental deformities of only 240,000 persons. After all, that amounts to merely about the total number of individual students enrolled in the University of Michigan over a 40- year period (at present levels)--or, saw, between now and the year 2000. Casualties numbering in the thousands of children expected to suffer as a result of past bomb testing may indeed be statistically insignifica.nt mnarA xith n11 +he choice whether or not to expose themselves.; What kind of perverted logic is it which claims that because we may not be able to detect whether someone else is doing wrong we ought not to stop doing it our- selves? Tuesday's editorial sug- gests a progressively reduced "quota system" for putting radio- activity into the air. Fine! How about a quota system for, say, the amount of pollution any party may put into the Huron River above our source of drinking water? It should be reduced in a few years, of course, and only a small number of students would likely suffer from typhoid. The arms race cannot be char- acterized as good or bad, necessary or unnecessary. It is simply mad- ness, and there is no such thing as "relatively good," "necessary," or "lesser evil" madness. Madness is madness. I believe there are enough people in the world who recognize this that any nation which tried to break the vicious study of disarmament as much money, time, effort, and personnel as it put into armament would receive unqualified international support and encouragement. --Edward G. Voss fully predicts that "everybody flunks out," the temptation to in- dulge in comments concerning glass houses and people occupying them is rather great. Consider it done. -Paul R. Elliott, Grad. ' Guild-.. To the Editor: FOR Mr, Ohlson's information; and for all others concerned, the Congregational and Disciples Guild is a "voluntary association" but does not have, as Mr. Ohlson implies, "arbitraryqualifications for membership." The Guild seeks to be an accepting community where the person is all-important, regardless of, his color, national origin, political or theological heterodoxy. When these qualifica- tions stand in the way, (and the "radical" label is increasingly ap- plied to all of them if one is seek- S enimore Says ... ing a scapegoat or elects to fear the unknown rather than to seek understanding), the person, is lost. The Guild has sought to practice what it has been espousing through petitions, namely, to end discrimi- nation, segregation or any other injustices perpetrated against people. The motivation is deeply religious. If it stands squarely against the more popular trend or indifference of society, then I guess it is "radical." -3. Edgar Edwards, Campus Minister Redress . . To the Editor: THERE IS respectable authority opposing Mr. Ohlson's thesis that an integration petition and march are radical. The First Amendment of the Constitution says: "Congress shall make no law .. . abridging .. . the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and, to petition the government for a redress of grievances." The Su- preme Court says that "redress of grievances~ includes demands for the government to exercise its powers in furtherance of petition- r*1 *. Editoria RICHARD TA RAELKnAFT anal1 Director n '17 tTn I .; . .. i1 .'df.afil.. #I ยข ~' .; ;