"The Critics Don't Like It" AT THE STATE: 40. ' i Z, Mlr~gan 4ally Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. 0 ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone No 2-3241 "When Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. M TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR:, THOMAS TURNER Phoenix Project Forges Atoms for Peace THIS FALL marks the tenth anniversary of technical assistance to underdeveloped coun- the Michigan-Memorial Phoenix Project tries desiring to conduct peaceful atomic ex- and one of the most worthwhile and unusual perimentation. contributions of students and alumni to the In the past two years that the Project has University. had the ICA contract University experts have Briefly, the Project is an institution to study traveled to 13 countries to assist setting up the means for the peaceful uses of atomic en- nuclear research programs - principally, ac- ergy. It is dedicated to the faculty, students cording to Prof. Kerr of the nuclear engineer- and alumni of the University who died in the ing department, to those countries who are Second World War. preparing to build or purchase their first It is unusual in that all the funds for the atomic reactor. project have been donated privately: both from individuals or from organizations, such BUT THE ICA contract does not give funds as the Ford Foundation which donated the to run experiments at the Project; only to Project's reactor., Similarly all the studies and implement the distribution of knowledge of experiments performed by the Project have peaceful uses of atomic energy - the original been financed with donated funds. goal of the Project. In other words, the Project is not a state- This year will see the use of the last of the supported child, subject to the whims of the funds donated with the Project's buildings for state legislature - like the Human Resources actual experimentation. The University's De- project scuttled by Lansing this spring - but velopment Council has taken charge of rais- % private project, given to the University and ing further funds for research and it is to be paid for as a memorial gift. hoped that they can reach and exceed their goal. If necessary the fund-raising should be THIS IS the strength and beauty of the enlarged to an all-University project. memorial and also the weakness. At the mo- The Michigan-Memorial Phoenix Project ment there is only one subsidized unit at t. must not be allowed to falter. It is lasting con- Project - a contract with the International crete proof that out of the hell and atomic Co-operation Administration. ICA is part of ashes of world war a newer and brighter way President Eisenhower's Atoms-for-Peace pro- of life can be forged for mankind. gram, and the Project's tcontract is to providePHILIP MUNCK Gov. Almond's Actions /c IL &'IL" O' ltleS 4d' r CAPITAL COMMENTARY: SCallenge to Democrats By WILLIAM S. WHITE New Twist Fails To Enliven Old Plot "NEVER LOVE A STRANGER," finishes an ample three day run at the State Theater today. It probably won't furnish much entertain- ment for anyone except the most homesick New York freshman, since it is average modern Hollywood all the way, and does not even offer one the unique experience afforded by being part of an Ann Arbor audience at a "monster" show or film of equivalent artistry. All who have seen a gangster movie will find little. that's new in "Never Love A Stranger." Harold Robbins, producer, and author of the novel, has attempted to add a more modern sociological explanation for the development of a gangster than simply the "poor orphan boy who wants money and power, shines big-shot Slick's shoes, is made one of Slick's boys, rubs out Slick, becomes important but un- happy, and finally is bumped off," routine. The twist is this. A poor Catholic orphan is kicked out of the orphanage when it is dis- covered that he's Jewish. * * * THE CONFLICT raised by this discovery eventually drives the honest orphan hero to a life of big-time crime. The hero, John Drew Barrymore, snarls convinc- ingly at those who attempt to im- pede his rapid progress toward the inevitable, violent destiny-death. It is evident (to Hollywood)rthat the hero is a victim of circum- stances-the boy's criminal life is the result of his cruel ejection from the orphanage, although before this he spends his time playing pool or pushing numbers. Julie, the slightly tarnished but almost ever - faithful girl of our hero, expresses the answer to the problem presented by his life as she caresses their illegitimate child a few months after her boyfriend's death. "All he needed was love," says she. THE FILM attempts to empha- size the cyclic nature of life through a quotation which ex- presses the thought that life is both the beginning and the end. This is emphasized by a shot of the hero as a baby, and by the fade-out scene of Julie and her child. Little need be said about the acting. Lita Milan, as Julie is attractive. It is futile to complain 'about the average Hollywood film; simply don't go if you expect any- thing more. However if you have never seen the original Gerald McBoing Boing U.P.A. cartoon, here's your opportunity. -Dan Wolter I 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 forrSunday Daily lue at 2:00 p.m. Friday. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1958 VOL. LXIX, NO. 12 General Notices Student Organizations. Registration of student organizataions planning to be active during the present semester (Continued on Page 5) INTERPRETING: DeGaulle's Victory By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst OR THE MOMENT, General Charles de Gaulle's new con- stitution holds out for France a prospect of governmental stabili- zation which she has not enjoyed for years. For the future, much will depend on precedents which will now be established. Eighty-eight years ago, after the reign of Napoleon III, France tried to make sure that she would never again fall under the power of one, man. In that effort she established a parliament which was never able to coordinate the powers of hun- dreds of men. Now she is to have a President-- presumably de Gaulle-with great- er powers than any since that last emperor. He has drawn the consti- tution, and will himself have wide power to interpret it. The voters have said that they trust him to do so properly, in the light of their known love of liberty and with care for the preservation of democ- racy. But this is a pei'sonal trust, granted without foreknowledge of the stresses which are to come. It cannot foresee the type of national emergency which would make- the powers of the presidency, by his own interpretation, transcendent. ANOTHER outstanding result of the referendum is the defeat of the Communists. De Gaulle has succeeded in arousing millions of voters who, disgruntled over one or another of democracy's seeming failures, went along with the small hard core of Communists in order to register dissatisfaction. These negative voters have offered one of the most dangerous political manifestations in both Italy and France since the war. De Gaulle seems to have shaken them out of that role. No one can yet foresee the effect on France's overseas position from the defection of French Guinea. By refusing the new constitution, she cut her economic as well as political connections with Frence. Other similarly placed territories avoided this drastic step, but nationalism is by no means dead among them. The large vote for de Gaulle in Algeria came as something of a surprise, but by no means marks the end of France's troubles there. In spite of the fact it was pro- duced under French guns, it does tend to support the long-standing French claim that most Moslems would prefer peace in association with France to constant warfare. De Gaulle, who so far has avoided definite commitments re- garding Algeria, will now have to get down to cases there. OV. LINDAY ALMOND of Virginia appar- ently has a little maverick blood in him. Gov. Almond stood by his principles and re- fused to join with Polish diplomats in cele- brating the 350th anniversary of the first Polish settlers at Jamestown, Virginia. Need- less to say, this did not exactly cement friend- ly relations with the Poles . . . something the United States has been attempting to do for three years and 90 million dollars. This is the same Gov. Almond who says he will shut down Norfolk, Virginia schools rath-. er than allow mixed classrooms. While it .is commendable that the governor is a man of his convictions it is lamentable that he seems to manage to do the very things that make his country look bad in the eyes of the world. The Governor's other stand for segregated classrooms, even at the cost of no classrooms at all is. equally ridiculous. Our only hope of removing this cancer from the already pock- marked face of Uncle Sam is that the people of Virginia will not stand, by and allow state closing of the Norfolk schools which would put 13,000 students out of classrooms. Although Almond asserts that state senti- ment is overwhelmingly in favor of separate white and Negro classrooms, perhaps the people of Virginia will have the vision, fore- sight, and intelligence to understand what their governor apparently cannot - segrega- tion is contrary to basic human rights, wheth- er these humans be white or Negro. RALPH LANGER WASHINGTON - The nasty di- lemma of the United States in the Formosa Strait has presented a high opportunity to the Demo- crats to providecreative assistance to the President... The most powerful of them are aware of -this. And, it may be predicted, when Congress returns in January our China. policy will come under a constructive review intended to find a way forward rather than to catch scapegoats. The central problem is to de- velop a policy, in our relations with the Nationalist regime, of Chiang Kai-shek and with the Chinese Communists, that will: * .* UNITE THE PEOPLE of the United States, who seem deeply divided and deeply confused. Draw our Western allies-Brit- ain in particular-far closer to us in Asia. Reduce that part of our com- mitment to Chiang that is merely sentimental. Strengthen both our determina- tion and our ability, however, not ever to see Formosa fall to the Communists. The real need, in short, is to prepare what we have never yet had-a strictly rational approach based upon practical American and Western interests. But, as though all this were not quite enough, many complex and passionate bar- riers must be broken down before we can even make a start. First of all, it must be recog- nized that never on a foreign issue have we had the emotionally em- purpled public and private parti- sanship that so long has cursed us over China.The right-wing Re- publicans years ago made bitter attempts to prove that the Demo- cratic administrations of Messrs. Roosevelt and Truman deliberately turned mainland China over to the Communists. This was the silliest of parti- san melodrama. Nationalist China was lost by Nationalist China, and by nobody else-and all that is water over the dam, anyhow. * * * BUT INCALCULABLE harm was done. For the irrational violence of those who love Chiang far too much has been matched by the almost hysterical vehemence of those who hate and scorn him be- ybnd all reason. The all-out Chiang people are really arguing that he ought to be permitted to involve us in major war, if only for his own purposes. The all-out Chiang antagonists in substance are really contending that because Chiang himself is an ally of doubtful value we should just give up the whole show to the Communists. It seems not unreasonable to suggest that the truth lies some- where in between - and maybe even about. as follows: 1) Chiang himself is certainly not so useful an ally as, say, the British in any case, and we must not do anything in his aid that will leave us naked and alone in the Western alliance. 2) Formosa, all the same, is truly vital to Western security. 3) Just as it was irresponsible to destroy public confidence in the old Democratic civil and military leadership so it is irresponsible now to do the same thing to the current Republican leadership. 4) Because we simply cannot let Formosa go, we cannot afford pub- licly to throw Chiang to the wolves. Whatever he is otherwise, he does at present representd Formosa; Formosa is power and prestige; this power andwprestige is indis- pensable to our Asian allies from Manila to Seoul in Korea to Tokyo. * * * 5) THUS, IN SUMMARY, we must keep the position of power- Formosa-without mortally alien- ating our Western allies and in such a way as not to destroy the position of prestige with our East- ern allies. All this defines the, emerging challenge to the Democrats. No doubt it is a very hard thing. But it will not be impossible, granted adult magnanimity on both sides in wiping the partisan slate clean and in calm, sensible planning for the future. What is needed is to look at the thing for what it is, a great security problem, and not merely as an opportunity either to canonize or to smash John Fos- ter Dulles. (copyright, 1958, by United Feature Syndicate; Inc.) A JUST INQUIRING . . . by Michael Kraft A nother Universtiy? ALTHOUGH they undoubtedly had other in- tentions, the Regents at their meeting Fri- day helped to indirectly light two of higher education's recurring problems. The question of expansion and maintenance standards were implicitly raised when the Regents took another step towards opening Dearborn Center by appointing University Vice- President William Stirton as Director. In 1956 the Regents accepted the Ford gift of land and money for construction of the new campus and the buildings will be ready for use next fall. But thanks to a legislature which talks about the advantages of students going to col- lege in their own community and reduces ap- propriations for the state's higher education facilities, operations at Dearborn will not begin until September, 1960. In the meantime, Stirton will assemble a staff and organize the Center's cooperative program. Stirton's remarks during interviews after his appointment was announced were rather inter- esting, not only for their description of the cooperative work-study program, but also be- cause he stressed the problem of academic standards. There has been some concern that the growth of community colleges, along with the development of branches by the University and Michigan State University, will result in a general, overall lowering of educational stand- ards. THE DIRECTOR of the University's Dearborn Center emphasized that admission stand- ards will be "at least as high" as those on the Ann Arbor campus. There seems little question that unless there is a complete reversal of trends and society's needs, the demand for a place in classrooms will continue to exceed the available space. Of course, high admission standards are only part of the problem; finding and retaining a good faculty is one that grows increasingly difficult in view of the comparative scarcity of those going into teaching and the abundance of attractive offers from business and industry. But the state legislature, by and large finds it easy to overlook the question of maintaining standards in its embracement of a "solution" to the question of how best to expand facilities and accommodate the increasing number of those who want a college degree. Whether or not they get an education along with the sheepskin is a problem still apparently ungrasp- a4le in Lansing. But those in the Legislature do see community colleges as a way to take care of the state's future educational needs for expansion. And for once, Gov. G. Mennen Williams agrees with the legislators, for in a speech last week, he called the community college a large part of the answer to the state's "overwhelming'' educa- tional problem. "It's much cheaper for the tax- payers than the expansion of the big universi- ties and it is much cheaper for the parents because the students can live at home." THERE IS MUCH to be said for halting the expansion of the state's three large uni- versities before they grow even larger. Size in itself may not be a danger as President Harlan Hatcher asserted last year, but the weight of administration and the crushed vitality result- ing from big departments and little intellectual interchange is another danger to educational standards. ' Much is also being said for the community colleges. But the tendency to regard them as the solution is also a danger. Community colleges can absorb only part of the rising number of applicants because to a certain - extent, they create their own demand. The Dearborn Cen- ter, the Flint College and . MSU's Oakland branch, along with the new community colleges may provide educational facilities for those who might otherwise come to Ann Arbor or go to Lansing. But also, by bringing college within communting distance, they stimulate students who otherwise might not apply. THIS IN ITSELF may be good, but to expect AT THE FORSYTHE GALLERIES: Lewis Show: An Experience in Variety, Humor WILLIAM and Ethel Lewis are engaging in a new wrinkle of Togetherness by holding a joint exhibition of their work -- paint- ing and pots respectively - at the Forsythe Galleries in the Nichols Arcade. The idea has possibilities but the present version is rather too uneven. To combine ceramics and paintings in a combined or related exhibition is tricky - the atmosphere for setting of the one is not often good for the other -- and in this case the lack of vi- tality and scope in the pots (fly- ing saucers, pierced and saucers, decorated) is completely 'over- whelmed by the paintings. Mr. Lewis' paintings - oils and watercolors - are an exciting ex- perience. Art is an appeal to the senses and not the least of Mr. Lewis' appeals is to the sense of humor. "Memorial to a Layer Cake" is a solid, weighty piece which reminds one of some of Hartley's mountain studies - the same solidity and quiet dynamism is apparent. "Afterthoughts on Liverwurst" leaves no doubt as to the quality of thoughts, and a soaringly, ethereally lovely piece is called "There Isn't Any Reason, It's Just Our Foreign Policy." Usually such titlings strike one as being pretentious, deliberately obscure and esoteric, or simply nonsensical. In this . instance, however, one is delighted by and completely enchanted with a wry, piquant tongue-in-cheek sense of. his work and his values that he loses his sense of proportion. The results are utter, grinding bore- dom and sterility. Mr. Lewis need never fear this particular fate- worse-than-death. * * * TO PLACE this much emphasis on a sense of humor, only one as- pect of a comparatively small part of the entire show, may seem an exaggeration. It is, rather, a very telling and important aspect of Mr. Lewis' work, and defines, in a sense, a quality that is found in all the pieces shown. This is a quality singular to Mr. Lewis and one that one would hope to see more often. It would seem, from the works shown, that Mr. Lewis is not overly concerned with a particular style, with a particular area of expression or with a par- ticular content. It is obvious on even the most casual viewing that Mr. Lewis has a point of view peculiar to him-. self, but it is not a narrow, one, nor is it expressable in only one style or mode. There seems to be an ability to see the world in its exciting variety (not in terms of a particular stylistic mannerism) and an ability to discuss this world in a variety of ways. Nor, happily, is Mr. Lewis "in the school of" or "after the man- ner of." It is possible, if one chooses, and probably one will, to see elements and bits which are reminiscent of all sorts of things --the trains in "Trr adv Wil-n IT MIGHT be possible to call Mr. Lewis a romantic (indeed, it has been done), if it were neces- sary to give him a tag or put him in a niche, and if one were willing to qualify one's meanings for the word sufficiently. Certainly the effete, languishing attributes of the romantic are not in evidence anywhere, although a near Vene- tian quality and voluptuousness of color can be seen. There is, in one sense, a tendency to idealize, to- represent more dramatically than in reality, but this is saved from bombast or the sheer baroque by a fine and virile sense of design and appropriateness. There is great tenderness in many of the pieces (particularly in "A Long Way From the Ocean" - a rich and haunting landscape of farm land in, one wants to assume, an early spring thaw), but it is not sloppy or sentimental. Nor are the satiric works simply bitter. Not of least interest is the va- riety in the technical virtuoity of tie pieces. Not only are the works vigorously and delicately rend- ered, but the variety of styles is stimulating and not the least self- conscious, or, rather, not overly self-conscious. * * * A NUMBER of the paintings deal with seascapes - mostly battle ships and various harbor scenes. As a group these evoke for us a nostalgia for the world of Teddy Roosevelt and the Great White Fleet and the, in retro- spect, security and solidity of that period. Especially interesting in this group is the large, violet and rose "Vicksburg Bluff" which shows some several harbor craft in a dramatic swirling of smoke and haze and thin, clear light. "Sea Monuments" and "West Coast," semi-abstractions rendered in rich, low-keyed colors, have a firmness and dynamism of struc- ture and concept that is electri- fying. "West Coast" is also, and almost paradoxically, strongly reminiscent of the finest Chinese or Korean painting with its ex- quisite brush work so strongly used and so perfectly controlled. One of our favorites, "August," is particularly notable for its clear, Venetian sense of light. The present showing, after opening last night, will continue until October 17. -David Guillaume Editorial Staff RICHARD TAUB, Editor IdICHAEL KRAFT JO Editorial Director HN WEICHE City Editor DAVID TARR Associate Editor DALE CANTOR... ...............Personnel Director JEAN WILLOUGHBY...Associate Editorial Director BEATA JORGENSON ..,.......Associate City Editor ELIZABETH 'ERSKINE.... Associate Personnel Director ALAN JONES ................ Sports Editor CARL RISEMAN....,...Associate Sports Editor SI COLEMAN .. ..... ... Associate Sports Editor DAVID ARNOLD,................Chief Photographer Business Staff ."i Li V._ : { i !ACS: .. ..li.." "'. v{"??.? "Fii!:% _ _ w R IM