Sixty-Ninth Year '2 "This One Is in Your Department" St Len Opiniona Are Free Truth Will Prevail" EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS S'TUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3 241 Despite Surgery Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SEPTEMBER 18, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP MUNCK 'Go Slow' Advocates Ignore' Facts of Southern Integration 71TH ALL the furor in the South, and throughout the nation over crisis after re-. ated crisis ir) Southern school systems, an greasing. number of people have begun to say, at perhaps. integration should proceed more wly. This feeling has spread .from the hard core Southerners, who claim that there should no integration whatsoever, to many classes people in many sections of the nation. These w' converts to a "go slow" policy are alarmed the increasing tension in public schools, and :y heed Southern claims that school integra- n is proceeding too fast, that the South needs re .time to get' ued to the idea of Negroes Ing to school with whites. ntegration, far from proceeding too fast, has ually slowed to a snails pace., XCEPT for a f w districts in Arkansas, Ten- nessee and North Carolina, nearly all the. gress in integration! since 1956 has been de in the border states. Only 400,000 of arly 3,000,000 Negroes enrolled in' Southern blie schools will attend integrated schools s year. 'hese facts are hidden by the tensions in ne school districts currently in the process integration, but the facts are there, and >uld slow that on a quantity basis, integra- n. is proceeding- very slowly. A Southerner could still maintain that, no matter if there are only a small number of schools being integrated, the number is still more than the people of the South are willing to put up with. But it has never been demonstrated that acceding to Southern demands, especially the demands of a vocal minority, would lead to increased Southern willingness to comply with the Supreme Court ruling. In fact, it appears that giving die-hard Southerners some of what they want only increases their resistance to integration. This year, for example the number of schools being- integrated dropped sharply,, while the number of uncompromising Southern speeches stayed very nearly the same as last. year. Last year 738 school districts were integrated; this year, the total is 777, only 39 more than last year. At that pace, school integration would take approximately 55. years. Taking 55 years to integrate Southern schools would make a mockery of the phrase "with all deliberate speed." It is difficult to see how school integration is proceeding too fast. Perhaps if more people realize exactly how slowly integration actually is proceeding in the South, there would be fewer saying that it is going too fast. -LANE VANDERSLICE JT HAS BEEN SAID that Tennessee Williams is singing the s song of naturalism. His characters are decadent, his passions animal, and the questions he raises are often left unanswered. Four years ago he wrote "Cat on' a Hot Tin Roof,"' a prize-winr play that was very depressing and fairly naturalistic. But when play was produced on Broadway, director Elia Kazan had .the tl act revised so that the ending was a little more hopeful and not naturalistic. Now MGOMI has rewritten the play again for the screen: so' tha has a very happyending indeed, and is not the least bit naturali The swan song has apparently been sung. But "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" has weathered the strain of repei revamping rather .well,-andit appears as quite a good motion Pict 'The sexual implications of the original play have been toned d .drastically, but.strong acting in supporting as well as leading *roles succeeded in preserving the spirit of violent, tormented passions. "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" i a drama of character revelation, cen ing about the disgust and revulsion felt by Brick for a world he, fi filled with hypocrisy and greed, a world he tries to escape through coholism after the death of his perhaps too-beloved friend Sippe Brick finds the courage to live in such a corrupt, world only fter witnesses the courage of his father, Big Daddy, to face death f cancer, and the determination of his wife Maggie, the Cat,. to st beside him despite his rejection. ELIZABETH TAYLOR, as Maggie, has shown once again that sh not only a beautiful package of womanhood, but shy can handle a fa difficult bit of acting as well. Paul Newman, as her husband Brick,e a fine James Dean of brooding contemptuously throughout the en film. In the same role he played on Broadway, Burl Ives portrays Daddy, perhaps Williams' finest male character, with magnificent derstanding. He' bellows, he swears, he acts every bit the bomba fool. But beneath this, there is the sensitivity and magnaniinity c great tragic figure. Judith Anderson presents perhaps a little too sophisticated portri of Big Mamma, but she does convey some of the pitiful tragedy of' woman who has loved desperately, but has'never been loved in turn. Jack Carson, 'as Brother Man, and .Madelaine Sherwood, asSi Woman, add grotesque comedy to the drama. And not to go unmentioned are five of the most delightfully det able children ever to appear-on a mhovie screen at one time. k F CAPITAL COMMENTARY: -Democrats Face Bitterness By WILLIAM S. WHITE nother Contract; Another Round LTER REUTHER HAS TERMED the new, Ford-UAW agreement beneficial to the n, Ford and . to the general economy of nation. While the contract may well be )orarily beneficial to the union, the nation uindoubtedly pay through higher prices for JAW's never-ending demands. e UAW strategy in selecting the Ford Mo- :ompany as the strike target has paid off e company selected lost money in the see- quarter of this year; it began new, model iction just two days ago. The combination actors could only spell success for Reui- e union avoided General Motors, which made large profits this year despite de- ed sales, apparently because a strike of lore than 200,000 workers would have cost union a great deal in strike pay. Chrysler, current poor brother of the Qutomotive stry, while .not the easiest bargaining aer from past negotiations, is having fi- ial trouble due to a hold on the market hi has been slipping since 1955. JS FORD, a strong company 'despite its sses this year, and employing many work- ut not too many, presented a choice plum. ompany, after a hundred _million dollar tment in new models, can look forward to 'ike with anything but dread. Thus the athon" negotiations almost had to end in a quick settlement; Ford was in no posi- tion to quibble. 'Reuther's rewards from the talks, the con- tract sections, are not to be applauded. Far too many exhorbitant demands had to be met, and the end result means another large bout with inflationary trouble in the months. ahead. Wage increases, added supplemental 'unemployment "'benefits" and the rest mean higher priced cars for the American public, and in .the near future, inflation enough to, erase the short run union gains and set the leaders searching for new ways to get more for their members. .PARTICULARLY RIDICULOUS was the. UAW's -demands s that these benefits be made retroactive to June 1, when their con- tract expired. The union continued to work for three months without a contract. To now, desire added benefits for -these months, as if they had been exploited, shows again how' powerful 'unions injudiciously wield their, power. Reuther has helped milk American wage earners of some of the value of their dollars. Next come the steelworkers who will undoubt- edly win higher wages to pay for more ex- pensive cars and so the story goes. The. dollar is' not yet the German mark of the 1920's, but the resemblance is growing. -ROBERT JUNKER (Editor's Note: William S. White, The Daily's newest columnist, is the author 'of the Pulitzer Prize winning biography "The Taft Story" and the best seller, "Citadel: The Story of the United States Senate." Until he began writing his three-times-a-week' column this year, he was Chief Con- gressional Correspondent for The New York Times, having joined the paper in 1945. Born in. DeLeon, 'Texas, White attended the Universitysof, Texas, joined the Associate4 Press in 1927, and soon transferred to the Washing. ton Bureau. where he began his career as a political correspondent.) WASHINGTON - The Demo- cratic party's ablest minds. are occupied only on the surface now with the Congressional cam- paign-which the Democrats be- lieve at this point they have as good as won. These minds are mainly turned instead toward a less obvious but an incomparably more important matter: the racial crisis, which raises the greatest long-term dan- ger to the party since. the Civil War. They see only partial, but nevertheless chilling, parallels With the destruction a centuryr ago of both the old Democratic and Whig parties. ,* * THE BASIC cause of dissolution: then was the inability , of the moderates in either party to pre- vent the extremists from violently exploiting the issue of slavery. The Whigs broke apart in 1856. The Northern Whigs went -over. largely to the Republican party, which for the first time became a truly national power thereby. The Southern Whigs went_ over prin- cipally to the Democratic party. But that party, in turn, was cut right down the middle on the same issue in 1860. One of the results was the election to the Presidency of Abraham Lincoln. Thus, the present Democratic problem is very similar' to that of a hundred years ago-this time to accommodate the school inte- gration issue as between Northern liberals and Southern resisters. A further complicating factor, moreover, is clearly present now. This is .the probability that No- vember will bring heavy Demo- cratic victories in both Senate and House from the North and. West. Such victories would en- large the influence-and the de- mands-of the all-out integra- tionists. The all-Texas Democratic Con- gressional leadership caused the last Congress to break' materially, if not quite mortally, with the Old South and to pass the first major, civil rights bill in eight decades. It was even then touch-and-go as. to' whether these leaders-Speak- er of the House Sam Rayburn and Senator Lyndon B. Johnson - could fend' off a fatal party breach. They did so, indeed, only by. taking great personal risks. and by a virtuoso performance in persuasion. * * * THERE IS the gravest doubt that such a compromise will .Ie possible in the new Congress con- vening in January. And this is so, even apart from the basic fact that this new Congress will be - more impatient for'quick integra- tion than was the old. For the old-guard Southern position against any kind of inte- gration and the advanced North- ern liberal position against any kind of delay have both hardened in the meantime. So, the Democrats are in one 'of the oddest positions in history. Fortune smiles broadly ;and. brightly upon them-for 1958. But there could well be a frightening look on' fortune's face for the Presidential year 1960 and per- haps far beyond that. The new Congress could so rub up and inflame the civil rights issue as to make the Democratic national convention of 1960 hard- ly less destructive than that of 1860. Of this the Republicans are fully aware. Already, they are maneuvering to drive every pos- sible civil rights wedge into their Democratic opposition WHAT ARE the Democratic leaders to do about all this? This is the question that engrosses them, at this very moment, far more even than the already con- solidated Democratic gain in .,Maine and the prospect of many other gains in November. Here are some of the tentative answers worked out by powerful Demo- crats: They will be compelled next year to give more ground on civil rights; they can only hope not to htave to give up so much as to repeat the intra-Democratic civil War of 1860. They will be compelled - and, indeed they will not at all mind this-to take up a much more critical 'attitude toward President Eisenhower. But it well may be that, apart from civil rights, the great run- ning issue will be foreign policy and peace or war. On this issue' the Democratic leaders cannot, in temperament or in conviction,' adopt a merely partisan' line against the President, 1960 or no 1960. And this they will not do. A rare and bitter dilemma may await them, and they know it. (Copyright, 1958, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) AT THE STATE Comedy Classics Stlcood Fun A GOOD TIME for all is being offered at the Campus Theatre week, in the form of two contemporary near-classics of comf "Mr. Hulot's Holiday," now so old that it is about to appear on Det television, features Jacques Tai in some great slapstick routines re niscent of Charlie Chaplin. The plot is nothing: Tati goes to a re: by the sea frequented by Englishmen, meets a girl and a waitet, and. trouble with his car. It is Tati and his brilliant cohabitants who m the picture, building up "from sequence to sequence, ending in uproarious episode in a shack full of fireworks. Along the way, Tati goes through a series of misadventures, play tennis, helping a man catch a bus that has, left without him, hunting a ping-pong ball. And so on. The material is old; Tati has affinities with the Keystone Kops and the silent films. He is a mime of the first order, and the little bit" of dialogue ,he includes in'the film could as well be dispensed with Fernandel is the other attrac tion, playing the title roles in "The Sheep Has Five Legs," a tour de force which is uneven. but often first-rate. He opens as the father of five male quintuplets, all of whom have deserted him in his old age. The rest. of the story concerns~ the efforts of an old friend of his to find the quints and reunite'them for a great celebration on' their 40th birthday. This provides plenty of scope for Fernandel's talents. PARTICULARLY humorous are the stories of the third and fourth brothers, a hard-gambling smug- gler and a lonely-hearts columnist. Too much of the rest, however, merely takes up film footage, with the fifth brother especially being a rather useless character. Another chapter in the decline. and fall of Mr. Magoo rounds out the program. --John:Weiclier DAILY OFFICIAL BUILLET'IN- '-"' ' ' .1' .. JUST INQUIRING ... by Michael Kraft' Ti meforQ uestioning. ... " 6t':R!fi: "' iY.: r . ,.;":' fi ;': ":"C . ',, "C' ''g '. ' ---------- - - " +., RING ONE WARM, tieless and coatless lay this past August, a faculty member, in issing the difference between summer 0l and regular sessions, sighed and quipped, the summer, they even write down the way y 'good morning."' Ms brought up the subject of "steno-' heritis," the weakness some students have recording a professor's every utterance. that accurate notes aren't' desirable, and aps it's even a little flattering to a faculty, iber when his words are taken so religiously, it sometimes, the copious notes, when equently memorized for ready reproduc- indicate something more than respect. although another registration period is r way, supposedly marking the beginning semester's academic life, the' academic ude and spirit of inquiry does not neces- y continue past the process of finding out t courses and professors. E IC49gt ZiAtau~d IN A LARGE UNIVERSITY, with numerous lecture sections, the easiest way to "get" an, education is to absorb it; This means a sponge- like tendency towards "stepographeritis" an assumption that. a lecturer's precise and com-j plete meaning is fully conveyed in fifty minutes of talking, and'that' the printed word of the text is the last one. This also means that college is a farce. ForI a real education cannot be "absorbed," it must be pursued. To accept facts without question, to accept interpretation without explanation' is to accept a thin, weak flicker of knowledge's lamp. THE INFLUENCE of one's four years at college vary; surveys have indicated that few student attitudes undergo much change during the time supposedly spent in intellectual activities. Part of this may be attributed to the initial attitude itself-the lack of a ques- tioning attitude' allows the absorption of facts and does little to encourage an understanding of their nature or meaning. Reflection of this all too prevailing approach to attaining a degree is evident throughout the year, not just during the summer when even the "good morning's" seem to find their way into notebooks. The dull discussion sections with the blank response to "any questions," and the scurry to get out of a lecture hall mirrors the interest:of a generation that justi- fiably is called silent THIS DOES NOT DENY the assumption that y the faculty knows more than the students. It is merely "to emphasize that the approach to better understanding often lies in interested, intelligent questioning. To be sure, the questioning mind is not always the traniull mind. mBt the mee deciinn 'HIGHER' EDUCATION: Kremlin Puts Soviet Youth To Work By The Associated Press THE KREMLIN is having prob- -lems with young people who leave secondary schools but can't get admitted to higher education -and don't want to become man- ual laborers.. Nikita Khrushchev reports So- viet institutions of higher educa- tion are currently accepting about 450,000 new students a year, only half of them for full day courses. With secondary school graduat- ing over one million students this means, according to Khrushchev, that about 700,000 cannot get in- to higher educational institutions or technical training institutions. For comparison: Government estimates indicate that slightly more than 12 million Americans will graduate from high school this year and around 740,000 will go into institutions of higher edu- cation as first-time students. * * * THE 700,000 Soviet graduates .unable to continue their educa- tion, at least for the time being, will have to seek jobs, most of them as common laborers. Few of these 700,000 'will have had any intensive vocational training. The Kremlin is trying to solve the problem of what to do with these young people by mass labor mobilizations. The Soviet government has sent many young people to construc- tion projects in -remote areas of the country -- Siberia, the far north, central Asia. Others have' INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Russian Reversal Seems Possible, been mobilized since 1954 to till lands in central Asia and Siberia under the Khrushchev plan for use of these areas for grain pro- duction. These labor mobilizations con-' tinue. Moscow's Komsomol Prav- da reported May 13 that 50,000 young Communist league mem- bers will be sent to build chemi- cal industry factories, and gas and oil pipelines this year. NOT ALL the young people in- volved are inspired by this sort of future. The Teachers' Gazette of Moscow reported: "Unfortunately not all pupils- at completion of school want to go to work at production." Khrushchex recently noted that certain youths go to work unwill- inglY in factories, 'and the like, considering such work insulting. The remedy which Khrushchev has proposed is drastic reorgani- zation of secondary education so as to provide all students with vocational training the last years of the course. There is a political angle in this. In 1956-1957 it became ap- parent' that Soviet students in The Daily Official Bulletin is an ~official publicatiion of the Unive;- sity of Michiiganfor which. The Michigan Daily assume's no ed' torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form 'o Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday" Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1958 VOL. LXIX, NO. 1 General Notices The Audio-Visual Education Cent formerly located at 4028 Admnin. Bldg, has ymoved to a new location in. th Frieze Bldg., 720 E. Huron St. Tele- phone numbers. are University exten. sions 2664, 2665, 2666. Academic -Notices Orientation Tests for New Students: Make-up testing session, Fri., Sept. 19, Rackhani Lecture Hall. Freshman engi- neers report at 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. Non- engineering freshmen report at 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Non-engineer transfers re- port at 1:45 p.m.' Placement Notices 'PERSONNEL BEQUESTS: The Kaydon Engineering Corp., Mus kegon, Mich., is looking for a man with a d6 ree iu Engineering,'Physics, or related" mechanical fields who gradu- ated 3 or 4 years ago with a mathe- matics major. This company is a manufacturer of large special. bearings. as well as bearings for the automotive field, Bausch &.Lomb Optical Co., Roches- ter, N.Y., has positions availale" in the Research and Engineering Division -for thie following: Mechanical Engi- neers, exp. in working with equipnent for mechanical measurements, to assist in developing new optical and elec. ' tronicmethods and devices for measur- ing in m'etal-working industry. Me- chanical Engineers, college degree, $ or more years industrial experience preferable in creative design of instru. ments or mechanisms. Model Engineering and Manufactur- ing Corp., Boyne City, Mich., is looking for a Project Engineer and' an Assist Project Engineer. Design work in- cluding layout. Will consider experi-. enced and non-experienced applicants, or Feb., 1959, graduate. U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, New York, -N.Y., has position vacant for a. Contract Specialist in the New York office of the A.E.. .Background should include experience in research and development, type contact negotiation and administration, preferably in pro- grams related to the'work of "the Atomic. Energy Conmmission, or the Department of Defense. This is not a classified position under the Federal .Civil Service system, but includes many benefits. Lever Brothers, Taylor Center, Mich., has a position available fo0 a Salesman Editorial Staff RICHARD TAUB, Editor A.EL KRAFT jo oial Director )HN WEICHER City Editor DAVID TARR Associate Etor ANTOR ............. ..... Personnel Director 'ILLOUGHBY.......Associate Editorial Director JORGENSON.........Associate City Editor ETH ERSKINE....Associate Personnel Director ONES......,......... Sports Editor ,ISEMAN......*....Associate Sports Editor EMAN..................Associate Sports Editor ARNOLD................ .Chief Photographer Business Staff STEPHEN TOPOL, Business Manager HECHT............Associate Business Manager By S. M. ROBERTS Associted Press News Analyst AMERICAN DIPLOMATS are assuming that Russia's propos- al for a United Nations debate on suspension of nuclear testing is just a propaganda side issue not intended to substitute for the in- ternational conference already set for Oct. 31 in Geneva. The United States considers the The Geneva conference was ex- pected to follow up politically the agreement among nuclear experts' at Geneva recently that it is pos- sible to set up a workable system of inspection to see that nobody violates a testing ban. The United States had made considerable concessions. She agreed to a tentative ban for pur- poses .ofnegotiation. She agreed ago on the proposed Middle East. ern Summit conference. There was no unanimity of opinion as to whether the pro- posed United Nations debate was merely (an effort to squeeze out one last drop of propaganda val- ue, or whether they were actually setting the stage for a cancella- tion of or a disagreement at the Geneva conference.