s '7jljg 1micbii"*au t l "We Want To Protect You Against The Possibility That Criminals Might Hide In Here" 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 must be noted in all reprints. CRSDAY, MAY 14, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: SELMA SAWAYA y ,,...-- e...... ,,.,,.,,,,,,ti.., ' ' :. BIG FOUR CONFERENCE: Communists Using 'Snarl' Technique By MAX HARRELSON GENEVA (P)-The slam-bang tactics of Andrei Gromyko have domi- nated the Big Four Conference so far, even more than yesterday's opening statements. His tactics are following a familiar pattern. These tactics have been used with considerable success at the United Nations and in big power parleys like the present one. The main idea: Raise snag after snag, then *# Time To Replace Yost Field House 'HERE WERE some regrets expressed Mon- day afternoon by people who had just heard the news that the morning windstorm had ripped off one-fifth of the Yost Field House roof. They regretted that the wind had not done a more thorough job and carried off or leveled the whole building. The South State Street structure, the show- place of the campus when it was built 36 years ago, is now inadequate and an eyesore. Athletes using the Field House deplore the lack of showers. Spectators at basketball games deplore the lack of good seats. Casual students of design deplore the building as dated. MICHIGAN NEEDS a new field house. The present one is an excellent place in which to hold track meets; but it is hardly a good place for spectators at basketball games because of the large number of seats located in distant corners. If properly designed, a -new building could provide the following: a main arena with more seats located. between the base lines of the basketball court; an ice hockey arena to ac- commodate the crowds the Michigan Rink can't handle; and some smaller auxiliary gymnasiums to alleviate the present intramural department space problems. The athletic department, recognizing these needs, has planned a new and larger field house for the near future. Before the current Michigan cash crisis developed, the plans called for a field house by 1965. IN THE AFTERMATH of Monday's storm, the most cheering news is that all the estimated $100,000 damage done by the wind was covered by insurance. The Yost roof may need just patching, or it may have to be completely re- placed, but the storm damage, however exten- sive, should not delay Michigan's present plans for a new field house. All that is hoped for now is a quick resolution of the University's financial situation, so that a new field house can be built as soon as possible. And when that time arrives, provision might be made to have the Yost bats trans- ferred to the new building, to entertain spec- tators between halves of basketball games as they have done in the past. -DAVID LYON 4"44 lo9 'IY4'>.ij *"OWN ....' 4 t9. ' . - _isLa 1. ~u M P4 T OFFEE ...BLACK By Richard Taub Who's Stubborn? .?CAPITAL COMMENTARY: :Explosive Nomination. By WILLIAM S. WHITE display a willingness to compro- mise or even back down occasion- ally, then raise more snags. AFTER EACH SNARL it always appears that the West came out ahead, but on some issue the Rus- sians have accumulated enough small gains to add up over the years. That is certainly true of the Soviet campaign to give the Com- munist countries a bigger role in world affairs. At this meeting the Russians have raised a whole series of what appeared to be purely procedural questions. These include the demand for a circular conference table and the issue of how many chairs the East and West German delegations should have.' On the surface these look like small potatoes. Add them- to the Soviet efforts to bring in the two German delegations, the Poles and Czechs-as full participants-and you have a major political issue. * * * EVERYONE here agrees that the Russians don't expect to get all they are asking for, -but on the basis of their past gains in pushing for Communist representation it is fair to assume they seek more than publicity. They won for the East Germans a limited right to speak. In their propaganda they claim much more, even insisting the Germans are full participants. It is a good bet that the West- ern powers haven't heard the last of this problem. The element that makes the So- viet snag-and-compromise tactics successful is public pressure for East-West negotiations on Cold War problems. * * * THIS MAKES it difficult for the West to stand firm when it appears a few concessions might yield East- West harmony and avoid a break- down of negotiations. The trouble is that concessions always bring more demands.% An example of Soviet tactics is found in the debate on the U.N. Disarmament Commission. In 1957 the Soviet Union proposed that the old 12-nation commission be ex- panded to include 81 U.N. mem- bers. The Western powers said such a commission would be worthless because of its size. Both sides finally agreed to a compromise, a 25-naion commis- sion. But the Russians at the last minute announced they would boy- cott any commission unless it in- cluded all U.N. members. The General Assembly ignored this and voted the 25-nation body. It was unable to function because of the Soviet boycott. Last fall the Western powers reversed them, selves and expanded the commis- sion. The same situation has devel- oped on the United Nation's Outer Space Commission. The Russians are boycotting it as lacking in Communist representation. They announce they will try to recon- stitute the Outer Space Commis- sion when the General Assembly meets again. AT HILL: Sy/mphony Adequate THE UNIVERSITY Symphony Orchestra last night tried a program which challenged their technical ability but which fre- quently failed to raise the audi' ence to aesthetic heights. The most curious feature of the evening was the programming. Beethoven's "Symphony No. 3" is not a work one normally considers a curtain-raiser. The bombast is so great, in fact, that it is not often played without a carefully built up crescendo of introductory works. The Symphony, however, man- aged to find a work to close its concert which made the "Eroica" seem like a lullaby, Stravinsky's "Rite of Spring." In neither work was technical perfection achieved, but in both the spirit of the en- semble more than made up for its sometimes amateurish perform- ance. AS IS USUAL with the Univer- sity Symphony, its weaknesses were too immediately obvious. The string section, which is normally weak, followed tradition through- out the Beethoven, but seemed:. much less offensive during the brassier Stravinsky. The brass, which is the orches- tra's strength, lived up to expecta- tions, and provided an evening of energy, quality and fine tone. The orchestra last night also did much to eliminate another historic weakness, its lack of co- hesiveness. The group was held in almost perfect control by its con- ductor, Prof. Josef Blatt of the music school. S* * * AFTER A somewhat shaky be- binning in the "Eroica," the group' almost flawlessly followed Blatt's brisk tempo through the first movement. The second mQvenient, the "funeral march," more than lived up to its name. The orchestra could not quite match Blatt's brisk tempos in the last two movements and the finale fell somewhat short of its spirited .potential. The Stravinsky was performed with an energy which provided an exciting climax to the program. The horns brought to the work a full pagan turbulence. The Symphony performed ade- quately, without being either ex- treinely exciting or unnecessarily languid. Blatt's tempos, which fre- quently drag on other occasions, particularly in his opera direction, were brisk without being hurried ,and fitted well the tone of the works. The generally rewarding experi- ence of a University Symphony concert was fulfilled last night, al- though the group has sounded better on other occasions. -Robert Junker I, fI COMPROMISE is a funny word. Generally, it has to do with the ability of two conflicting sides to find some common ground between them, each sacrificing something in order to reach that ground. For some, compromise is a dirty word, somehow related to selling one's soul to the devil. But all too often when faculty and administration are dealing with students the word takes on a new meaning -"take orders."N The recent gyrations of the so-called SGC "Clarification" Committee point this up. When the committee first met about three months ago, the faculty members came rushing into the breach between students and administration, full of good will, myopia, and a brand new SGC plan. Three months later the basic re- quirements of that plan have not changed "one jot or a tittle." Yet, guess who is recalcitrant, stubborn, and unyielding? - the students of course. The students have contributed several plans; they have given ground on one point after another, points which were most important to them-yet, the Clarification Committee simply isn't buying. PERHAPS THE GREATEST concession the students have made, and perhaps the con- cession they should not have made, is in the area of some sort of substantive review. The faculty plan called for a referral board which would consider issues brought to its attention; it would either approve the SGC action, or send it back to the Council with recommendations. The Vice-President for Student Affairs would have power of a final veto. The motives of the faculty plan were admir- able. The faculty envisaged that this board would uphold SGC most frequently, thereby making it more difficult for a vice-presidential veto. They were protecting the students from a sometimes arbitrary administration. But as some wise man once pointed out, a world in which people do things to others for their own good is an intolerable one. The concept of substantive review was a brand new thing for the student members of the committee, and one which they were not so eager to buy. They had always understood that the old SGC Board in Review did not have substantive power, but rather considered actions which were outside the council's jurisdiction or con- trary to administrative policy or practice. Oddly enough the man who wrote the plan, and later served most admirably as Board in Review chairman for four years, thought the same thing, and had conducted the Board in that fashion. WHAT A SURPRISE to all concerned, then, when the Vice-President for Student Af- Editorial Staff RICHARD TAB, Editor MICHAEL RAFT JOHN WEICHER Editorial Director City Editor DAVID TARR Associate Editor DALE CANTOR ....................Personnel Director JEAN WILLOUGHBY .... Associate Editorial Director ALAN JONES .......... Sports Editor 13EATA JORGENSON......... Associate City Editor ELIZABETH ERSKINE ... Associate Personnel Director SI COLEMAN .............. Associate Sports Editor CARL RISEMAN ........Associate Sports Editor ,DAVID ARNOLD ............... chie Photographer fairs announced that this Board had always had substantive power. The students at this point granted some degree of substantive review, many even went for the faculty plan with modifications. But student feeling was that the referral board's action ought to be circumscribed in some man- ner so the hand will not simply be substituting ideas it likes better for rational student action. For the referral board will act somewhat like the old Board in Review. When it disagrees with an SGC action, that action will most likely be vetoed, and when it agrees, the action will most likely be upheld. So students imposed some reasonable limita- tions on this review board. The referral board would consider actions in three categories: jur- isdiction,, procedure, and whether or not the action was "reasonable"-that is, whether or not it was a conclusion that a "reasonable 'man" would have come to-not whether the Board thought it was right or wrong. Jurisdiction is self-evident. Procedure is an important criterion, especially since this is probably the area in which SGC is most culp- able. The reasonable man concept is a little bit more difficult to grasp, but it has validity all the same. It is a basic concept of law in this country, YET, STUDENTS were surprised to hear from two members of the committee that they did not know what a reasonable man was. This is rather frightening at a University, where a premium is put on the human mind; at a Uni- versity, where, in theory atleast, all are com- mitted to the fact that on some issues reason- able men may differ. There is also a Board on this campus, The Board in Control of Student Publications, which in practice works with this concept. Board members do not have to come to the same con- clusions Daily staff members do, before the staff members can carry out their duties. The Board recognizes the fact that reasonable men may come to different conclusions, and unless a conclusion simply flies in the face of all pertinent facts, tit is a reasonable one. THAT THE REFERRAL Board's areas of con- sideration should be circumscribed in some way, is simply a /matter of common sense. I has nothing to do with distrust or suspicion of particular people on such a board, but rather a realistic view of human nature. The students are aware of the fact that faculty members are not all "good guys" who will put the student viewpoint first; they real- ize that most faculty people probably have a- different concept of Student Government than students do; they realize that in many issues there probably is no such thing as one right answer (if there were we could junk SGC and substitute an IBM machine); and they realize that people have passions, and that no matter, how the members of such a board are chosen, if they become emotionally involved they will not be able to see clearly and objectively, They realize, too, that any circumscription of a Board's authority can be overridden in one sneaky way or another; but they also realize that such circumscriptions will at least force the group to slow down, to place itself in a more objective position before it can act. This approach is a basic tenet of any government. BUT THE FACULTY members are not buying such a change, it seems, because they did nnt think nf it Thev hav their nhan-the het WASHINGTON - There is a heavy political fall-out in the Senate's current row over whether President Eisenhower's eight- months-old appointment of Lewis L. Strauss to be Secretary of Com- merce should be at last confirmed. Indee'd, one can readily see in imagination an ominous mush- room cloud rather like those that rose over the hydrogen bomb tests. which Strauss pressed when he was chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission. Unpleasant and possibly noxious political matter is raining down-- upon the Senate Republicans in general, but most of all upon the modern - liberal Republicans. The Strauss nomination is under the most serious attack ever levelled by the Senate at an Eisenhower. Cabinet choice. MVany Democrats are happily pounding away at the nominee, and are not being too choosy about their weapons. Old Guard Republi- cans are defending him without a backward glance. Well they might, ,for this is the most au- thentic "regular" Republican ever to hold high place in the Eisen- hower Administration. Not the least of Strauss' troubles, in a word, is that he himself is a wholly unapologetic Old Guard- ist. * * * THE LIBERAL-MODERN Re- publicans, too, are coming to Strauss' support. But this is with a troubled lack of enthusiasm rather similar to that of some young men in receiving those well- known "greetings" from the Pres- ident of the .United States which draft them for military service. For Strauss represents much for which these moderns do not care at all. & What the attacking Democrats are doing is to try Mr. Strauss not so much for his actions as for his ideas. They are pursuing him for his philosophy; they are indicting him for his thoughts. At bottom they are seeking mightily to prove what is already self-evident and self-proclaimed-that he is a Her- bert Hoover Republican. THEIR CHARGE that on many issues he is politically "wrong" is to many-including this observer --profoundly strong. But their case that he should therefore be denied confirmation is, to this one ob- server at least, profoundly weak. For, all Philadelphia lawyers to the contrary, the custom has been that any President is entitled to pick his Cabinet and that the Senate will not refuse confirma- tion without overpowering reason. There is no such reason here. True, this is. not remotely the brutal persecution directed in the past by Senate Republicans to ac- cused left-wingers of various hues. There is no need to weep over- much at the cries of these Re- publicans that the Democits are pushing them around, as well as Strauss. All the same the Strauss- affair, too, is a persecution, if a far'less savage one. This time the victim is a right-winger. The ob- jections to him have nothing really to do with the President's right to have his services. Strauss' spare, bristling and per- haps unwisely unterrified frame (tact and the soft ahswer come hard to him) is simply being used to hang up to public view certain pre-1960 political garments. * * * HERE, the opposition Democrats are saying, is a Herbert Hoover man, an ultraconservative who does not like public power, a big business type. And he is, in fact, quite all of that. Here, they are saying, is an "anti-intellectual," a man who demanded atomic weap- ons development first and thought{ of fall-out and disarmament sec- ond. This latter, he is. Harsh or not, he fought with courage and strength to protect this country in the atomic race. Maybe he is un- wise at times. But he Was also in- dispensible. And "anti - intellectual" he is not. The odd truth is that he him- self is an egghead, but - rarest of things-a Republican Old Guard egghead. The shaking up being given to- him, and to the issues he typifies, is entirely understandable. It is probably good politics as well. But it does have this one short- coming: it is not fair' (Copyright 1959, by United Features Syndicate, Inc.) . 1~~ f i LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: IAC President Co mments on Analysis To the Editor: AL PHILLIPS' magazine article of May 3, "Give 'Em What They Want,",presents a valuable analysis of the theatre in Ann Arbor. His main a gument is that box-office considerations play too large a part, and I certainly agree that theatre with artistic aspira- tions cannot flourish in such an atmosphere. However, both the Arts Theatre Club and the Dra- matic Arts Center 'came close to making ends meet without choos- ing plays whose sole merit was box-office appeal. Mi. Phillips states that com- petition from student produc- tions and those of the Dramatic Arts Center made difficulties for the Civic Theatre. And yet the Civic Theatre had a period of re- markable growth and success pre- cisely while the Dramatic Arts Center theatre was functioning. Within reasonable limits, the presence of several acting groups in Ann Arbor should increase the interest in theatre and thereby benefit all. * * * TWO MINOR corrections: Con- trary to Mr. Phillips' statement, the houses for the two recent per- formances of "The Bald Soprano" were very good; in fact, some had to be turned away from the second performance, for lack of seats. We find this most encouraging. Mr. Phillips states that children's sight into how a professional repertory theatre can be.,revived in Ann Arbor, the Dramatic Arts Center has invited Mr. Louis M. Simon to come here from New York for a week's visit. On Sun- day at 8:30 p.m. in Lane Hall Mr. Simon will participate in a discus- sion of the topic and we hope all those interested will attend. Wilfred Kaplan, President Dramatic Arts Center 'Solonmton' . To the Editor: AFTER READING Tuesday's re- view in The Daily of Sunday's performance of Handel's "Solo- mon" in the May Festival series, I wonder if the reviewer is an ec- centric with a strong distaste for large vocal groups? His criticism seemed so irrational. In general, one can say of such a review that/it is trite to com- ment on how good the orchestra, say that thewcitlifilu.... JtN conductor and soloists are and then say that the chorus is dis- appointing in comparison. Al- though I disagree with some of his comments regarding the solo- ists, what his review boils down to is that the tenors (both solo and chorus) were not equal to the standards of the other performers. Is the reviewer a frustrated tenor and is this what made the chorus seem inadequate to him? Also, his assertion that the cho- rus performed better in the so- called "more easily mastered" numbers is ambiguous. Are the choruses he mentioned necessarily the easier ones? I personally be- lieye that it may be more difficult in a chorus of 300 voices to achieve the subtleties of interpretation in the softer passages than it is to produce a huge, brilliant tone in the so-called "bigger" or more dif- ficult ones. Strangely, the exact opposite criticism of Choral Union was made by a Daily critic in 1956 -that they couldn't adjust their huge vocal technique to the small- er demands of a Mozart score. Ruth Selby, '62 Wait'Til .. To the Editor: TO THE NON-DORM independ- ents who stood in line for the 500 Glee-Club concert tickets al- lotted to us, only to see them gone by 9:15 a.m., take heart. There's always next year. You might be affiliated and have a crack at the other 1,500. Gene Matecun, Grad. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 3) Hubbard and Co., Chicago, 111. Sumi- mer trainee program for Mechanical Engineers who have completed their Junior year. Trail Blazer Camps, N. J. Dietitian. Girl Scout Camp in Lake Tahoe, Calif. Counselors. Further information about the fol- lowing may be found at the Summer Placement Office, D528 ,Student Acti- vities Bldg. Ann Arbor. Sears Roebuck and Co. Sales position open in consumer wales. Detroit, Mich. The Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Co. Temporary roadmen positions for Civil Engineering students. Chicago AreaS tudents. Checker Taxi Co., Inc. has driving jobs for boys who are at least 21 and have had at least three years of driving experience. Hartsdale, N. Y. Hillard Day Camp. Various openings for men and women as counselors and instructors. New York, Chas. Pfiser and Co., Ie, Manufacturing Chemists. Marketing training program for men who have completed a part of the requirements for a Master's degree in Bus. Admin. Courses in pharmacy, chemistry, or the) biological sciences are helpful. Personnel Request: Business Manager for Cedar Lake Girl Scout Camp, which is 18 miles west of Ann Arbor. This position requires a woman, who is at least a junior and a business major. Salary: $375 plus room and board. Length of time: June 16 to Aug. 8. Contact: Danzy Loomis, Huron valley Girl Scout Council, Tele- phone: HUnter 3-2370. Miss Loomis wishes to interview peo- ple. for this position, Thurs., May. 14,' from 4:00 to 5:00. Beginning with Monday. May 18, the following schools will be at the Bureau of Anointments to interview for the I I ;4 t, S enimore Says 0 " r '4 11iA1i fi7rS -.'C,. ., 5 . .. r -l