"Backward, Turn Backward, 0 Time in Your Flight" 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. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 ?' At' "When Opinions Are Free Truth Wil Prevai" AT THE MICHIGAN: Harrison and Kendall Bring 'Deb' Out "T HE RFLUCTANT DEBUTANTE" is all about coming out parties, "The Season," and things like that. It all happens in London, 1958, and the plot is incredible. A half-American, half-English debutante is "coming out" and she meets a half-American, half-Italian musician who is staying out. Her mother doesn't like him because he is supposed to decorate his bedroom with gin-soaked girls. In the background are a whole collection of Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP MUNCK -4 Attention: John F. Dulles AN OPEN LETTER: Gadzooks Mr. Dulles! Your possible quenching of Nationalist China's Chiang Kai-Shek's plans for kicking the communists off the Chinese mainland is an about face and three giant steps from the old "don't irritate that nice old man Chiang"' policy. Of course, telling a news conference that Chiang was foolish to commit one-third of his armed forces to a couple of teeny-weeny non- strategic islands is quite another thing from telling the old boy face to face, but it is a start. JUST OUT of curiosity, Sir, why did the United States agree to this buildup of Quemoy and the other islands? A few people were quite stunned at this admission. Your statement that "I don't think they (the Nationalists) are going to get there (the mainland) by just their own steam," shows that you are really a fox underneath it all. Of course they're not going to get there by their own steam. They aren't even planning on it. Naturally, you know that all that is neces- sary to get the United States to do it for them, or at least try, is to very politely shove Uncle Sam off that "brink" he's so delicately balanced on. This isn't the original "brink" but one is as good as another. He's now',in the position of being unable to control whether he gets into war or not. But, you say, "The United States has no commitment of any kind to aid" in attacking the mainland. A formidable truth, but what if Red China (heaven forbid) should commit aggression? W ITH UNCLE SAM's neck stretched clear across the five miles of water between Quemoy and the mainland it is very easy for Chiang to maneuver a war. And that most charming of charmers, Chiang Kai-Shek is just the boy to do it. He's been waiting for a long, long time for a chance to draw us into a war with China thereby giving him a chance to regain the China mainland. But of course you are aware of that. When you say that Chiang's return "is a highly hypothetical,matter," it worries some people, Sir. They can't seem to understand how you could have given him such a wonderful opportunity to do just that when it is merely a hypothetical matter. The United States has been bowing to Chiang for nearly 20 years now. Maybe your statement does herald a major change in our China policy. If not, good grief, Mr. Secre- tary . . . when? Editorially yours, RALPH LANGER r - R: 'All t M L I other mothers, busily trying to snare hungry young men for their own daughters. There are dances every night and headaches every morning. And life is glorious. The original play, by William Douglas Home, was a fairly frivo- lousgaffaire, and so is this film, but it is first rate comedy, too. Kay Kendall and Rex Harrison are a first rate comedy team. They play Lord and Lady Broad- bent whose daughter is "coming out." Exactly what she is coming out into is not always clear. But that is no problem. Not with Kay and Rex in the film. They have that indescribable sense of tim- ing which is wonderful to see. Shrugs and twitches, shudders and gasps, significant expressions and gestures are exchanged as} Kay and Rex struggle through the agonies of this "coming out" business. THE SUPPORT they get from some of the cast is fine. Angela. Lansbury is a dandy example of the scheming, calculating, gossip- ing mother of a debutante. She is a holy terror, a potential Dean of Women. Peter Myers plays a stuffy young man who is quite impos- sible. If he is typical of what you find at parties during "the Sea- son", stay home. Myers' routine about how to drive around Lon- don without getting into traffic jams is a classic, though. Diane Clare plays Lansbury's daughter; a typical English girl, according to William Douglas Home. She does her best with Home's curious concept of typi- calness. AND NOW.,. Sandra Dee, as the reluctant debutant, and John Saxon, as the half-breed drummer, are hopeless. Cute but hopeless. Simple but hopeless. They are said to be pop- ular in teen-age circles. The teen- age circles are hopeless. When Saxon discovers that he is sud- denly the Duke of Pizzeria, or something like that, thanks to a fortuitous death in the family, he is not even flustered. He can look at charming Sandra without even licking his chops. And she is pretty shallow, too. But Kendall and Harrison bring it off. They really bring it off. Even with Saxon and Dee in the company, they bring it off. -David Kessel AT THE CAMPUS: 'Red, Black' -Diverting IT IS dangerous and usually im- possible to adapt a novel to the screen. Moviemakers, how- ever, seem to find it profitable and are constantly doing it, a favorite vehicle being a reputable reading-list classic such as Sten- dahl's Rouge et Noir. That The Red and the Black (the." Gone With the Wind of art pictures) now playing at the Campus, is based on that novel is proclaimed by the credits and by a facsimile of the final page of the book for a finale. As with most movies-from-the- novel, the claim is best ignored. The Red and the Black is a come- dy of manners and, at times, a very funny one. Basically it is the story of a social-climbing car- penter's son under the nineteenth century French monarchy Caught between his egocentricity and his naivete, he plambers up- ward from bed to bed on his way to an eventual trial for murder. THE FILM'S chief' distinction lies in its comedy of procrastina- tion. A mocking cynicism cuts away all the glory of the dreamer and romantic and makes the hes- itation more important than the action. But it is neither great comedy nor effective cynicism. The possibility of nobility is re- jected before one can believe in it; the audience is not caught and involved in the sentiment. Rath- er, the comedy is found in the situation that implies slapstick. In several scenes, Gerard Phi- lipe proves his adeptness at this type of comedy. The slapstick works. Ladders quiver, palpitate at window's. Society is entered by a series of mildly ironic pratfalls. Comic situations, arise between church and state, man and wo- man, amorality and puritanism. It is all very French. But that is not quite enough. The advertised pretensions are unjustified, except, perhaps, by the music. There is nothing awe- some or spectacular about the movie. In fact there is little par- ticularly good about it. But it is diverting. -Robert Tanner -- ^- SGC's Formal Decisions Copyright, 798, The Pulitzer Publi shng Co. St. Louis Post-Dispatch (EDITOR'S NOTE: Bill Mauldin of the St. Louis-Post-Dispatch is temporarily substituting for Herbiock who is absent because of a death in his family.) NOW THAT SGC's momentous meeting is over and the more momentous one of de- ciding what to do with Sigma Kappa almost on them, it is challenging to wonder if the laggard members of the Council will get around to having their debate speeches pre- pared or if they will try to get along with mere extemporaneous thinking at the debate. With a few exceptions, most of the mem- bers of SGC came to Wednesday's council meeting prepared to weigh the facts present- ed and then deliberate them to a just conclu- sion. This at least was the tenor of their pre- pared speeches. This, however, gives rise to a trivial but somewhat interesting paradox; namely, what did these speeches do to help them reach their Just, accurate, unbiased decision? Or would it be too daring to propose the 'idea that they might all just as well have mailed in their ballots and not even bothered to come? FOR EXAMPLE, Dean Leslie dropped a minor bomb on the proceedings by reading a por- tion of the Sigma Kappa National constitution --a constitution which has been entirely se- cret except to the' Dean of Women's office. Yet who mentioned this passage, vague as it was, and try to integrate with the total prob- lem? Surprisingly enough, not even those who ultimately voted in favor of Sigma Kappa did not discuss it. Perhaps then this is a sign of the adoption of an old parliamentary procedure; that of the "maiden speech" or first formal speech made by a member of the body. It does lend considerable dignity to the proceedings and has the added virtue of making the discussion un- commonly logical if not always pertaining to the newest developments at hand. Perhaps, indeed, this is the forerunner of a + whole new age of dignity for student govern- ment in which robed and bewigged members sit around the table discussing problems with the prepared, enlightened lucidness of real- life legislative bodies. SUCH moves could lead to all sorts of valu- able improvements. For added clarity it might be advisable for SGC members to con- sult with ghost-writers and speech experts to make their speeches as clear as possible to the listener. With proper time limits on the length of the speeches one could know when to drop into the meeting to hear one's favorite speaker. Perhaps make-up could be used to provide the best possible appearance for press photographers. All of this would lend dignity and solemnity to the proceedings of a body which we all know to be open-minded, fair, impartial, unbiased and ready to revise their opinions the moment new and pertinent information comes forth as they continue in their search for truth, jus- tice and humanity. --PHILIP MUNCK CAPITAL COMMENTARY: By WILLI an's Aid to Ie AM S. WHITE WASHINGTON-The Eisenhower Administration now appears likely to emerge in good order from the Formosa crisis and to be able to protect true American in- terests there without either war or a diplomatio rupture within the Western alliance. If, happily, this is indeed the outcome, the President will have well earned the praise of reason- able and responsible men every- where. But it is time somebody said what the Administration itself is never likely to say. This is that a great contribution to this pros- pective Eisenhower triumph has been made by a man named Harry S. Truman. * * * MR. TRUMAN is held in such low esteem by the Eisenhower Ad- ministration thathe has never been invited to the White House even for routinely social reasons. Nevertheless, he has been a rock- like ally to President Eisenhower in the Formosan troubles-as he was earlier when we risked war in the Middle East to rescue Lebanon. Mr. Truman's backing of Presi- dent Eisenhower in the Formosa Strait has been without ifs, ands or buts. The temptation to dor otherwise would have been great. For the Truman Administration was belabored by the Republicans over the same issue-China policy -as no other administration has ever been belabored on any ques- tion beyond our shoreline. All the same, when President Eisenhower shoved in his stack of chips over Formosa, the spry, elderly man now living in Inde- pendence, Mo., came forward to stand at his elbow. And Mr. Tru- man stands there still, though partisan Democratic interests would have been better served by howling at the White House. A few supposedly less "partisan" Demo- crats have, in fact, done so. And Mr. Truman has done more. than refuse to be a bitter second guesser. He has used his still-im- mense weight within the Demo- cratic party to mute criticism from others, even including his much- beloved Secretary of State, Dean Acheson. There is hardly the slightest doubt that a critical Truman atti- tude toward the Eisenhower Ad- ministration would have all but paralyzed it; the going has been hard enough even with the former President's help. ** * ALL THIS has been an act of bigness. But to those who really know him this was the entirely predictable course of Harry S. Truman. For the odd truth is that Mr. Truman is two men all at once: he is on manymissuesthe very model of the "give 'em hell', partisan-ready to pick up any handy club and apply it with happy vigor to any Republican skull. But thus he will act only when the issues are domestic. In such fields no "good" Republican ever lived, or ever could. There will be no effort here to sentimen- talize Mr. Truman or his adminis- tration; he and it had faults, and plenty of them. But in the great foreign matters, upon which as a nation we might live or die, this was one of the most responsible and least partisan Presidents in our history. This correspondent asserts as much not only on his own observation but also on the authority of a most- elevated Washington veteran, Speaker of the House Sam Ray- burn. In 45 years in the House Ray- burn has known many President- and has been extremely close to some. He is a man with a sense of fairness to history and has an absolutely impartial way of view- ing even his friends when he thinks in historical terms. And the Speaker once told me that of all the Presidents he had known only one was totally indifferent to par- tisan gain or loss in foreign policy. This was Mr. Truman. "THE FIRST TIME the Con- gressional leaders were called to the White House after Harry be- came President," Rayburn recalled with a slow smile, "was on a for- eign crisis. "Harrysoutlined what he pro- posed to do. We all listened. Then Harry asked if anybody had any questions. Somebody (from the Congressional group) asked him what the domestic political reper- cussions would be-what the poli- tics of it would be. Harry turned on him and said: 'Let's get one thing straight. I never want to hear that damn word 'politics' mentioned here again when we are discussing a thing like this.' "And," Rayburn went on, "never was it mentioned again, in my hearing at least, in any of the many other foreign policy meet- ings between the President and the Congressional leadership." (Copyright, 1958; by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN TODAY AND TOMORROW Formosa's Future By WALTER LIPPMANN AT HIS PRESS conference, Secretary of State relieve the 7th Fleet of the need to take great John Foster Dulles went a long way to show and incalculable risks to defend an indefensible that he is now genuinely interested in negoti- isla'nd. ating a settlement of the Quemoy affair. This With a hundred miles of water and the 7th is the first time he has done that. In all of his Fleet between Formosa and the mainland, previous statements, including the speech pre- Formosa is invulnerable to invasion. pared for the President, he has been talking as if he expected the Chinese Communists to back A WITHDRAWAL from Quemoy to Formosa down unconditionally, to give up the blockade of will liquidate a dangerous liability and will Quemoy, and to get nothing in return. OnTues- consolidate the strategic position on Formosa. day he let it be known through the veil of To what end? To establish a position in which diplomatic language that a bargain might be we have the time and the opportunity to nego- struck in which Chiang's troops would be with- tiate without too much pressure and with delib- drawn and saved and the offshore islands eration about the future of Formosa. would be evacuated. Thus it may be, as many believe, that It is evident, however, that Mr. Dulles is Chiang's regime will be deeply shaken by a troubled in his mind about this retreat from a withdrawal from Quemoy, especially as it must defiant showdown into the give and take of now be accompanied, as Mr. Dulles implied, negotiation. What troubles him is whether in by a renunciation of the hope of reconquering making concessions, his'adversaries in, Peiping the mainland. But even if Chiang's regime is may not be encouraged and incited to raise shaken, the width of the Formosa Strait and their demands. "We are having," he said, "a the power of the 7th Fleet would mean that very critical negotiation with the Chinese Com- the future of Formosa can be determined not munists. They are pushing and probing to find by flat from -Peiping but by an international out whether we are weak, or whether we are treaty, agreed to by the victors in the war strong." It is evident that Mr. Dulles takes it against Japan. for granted that to offer concessions for a If we were disengaged from Quemoy and dis- bargain is to be "weak" and that to refuse entangled from Chiang's ambitions, there would them is to be "strong." be time to consider calmly what in the long run is truly important to us in Formosa. We THIS, IT SEEMS to me, is not a fully con- know that in the long run our interest in For- sidered view of the actual problem in Que- mosa cannot be tied up with Chiang's govern- moy and in the Formosa Strait. From the ment. For that government is manifestly living American perspective the true view of Quemoy on borrowed time. We know, too, that Formosa is that it is a dangerous liability which weakens is much too near the mainland ever to be con- our power and our prestige in the whole area, sidered as an American strategic base. In time and that to liquidate the liability is in fact to of war, Formosa would be a costly liability, strengthen, not to weaken, our position. for the missiles that could devastate it and sub- For Quemoy is an exposed and vulnerable marines could blockade it. salient from which a good general would cer- tainly withdraw if and when he was able to OUR TRUE INTEREST in Formosa, having do it. And when he did withdraw, and had done our duty to see that Chiang's people straightened his line and consolidated his posi- have a safe asylum somewhere, is that the tion, he would know that he was stronger than island should not be militarized for an advanced he had been before. Strategically, a withdrawal Chinese base against the Philippines. Our best from Que~mov Uill rplipvpu thea 7th 1 'Lf an nipt-ive i .,. - ; +i,'. ; 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. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1958 VOL. LXIX, NO. 16 General Notices In cooperation with the local banks, the University provides a payroll check depositing service for all permanent employees. Those employees who wish to use this convenient method of de- positing their checks may .do so by stopping at the Payroll Office, 3058 Admin. Bldg., to complete the authori- zation form. Information regarding this service may be obtained by call- ing Ext. 2270. Women's Research Club will meet at 8 p.m. Mon., Oct. 6 in the W. Conf. 4mn., Rackhamn Bldg. 'Velma Pickett of the Linguistics Program *ill speak on "Linguistics, Literature, and Life among the Mexican Indians." Lectures University Public Lecture, auspices of the Depts. of Fisheries and Zoology, "Propagation of Fish for Food in In (Continued on Page 5) LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Sigma Kappa, Library Draw More Reader Comment To the Editor: AS I SAT with the other con.- stituents listening to the Oct. 1 SGC meeting, I felt both ashamed and disgusted. I was ashamed to be part of the student body who elected 12 of the mem- bers of the council, ashamed that others, coming in contact with the decision they made that night, would think that it represented the majority of student body opin- ion. But the disgust I felt for these 12 was much greater. Here were 12 people who refused to allow them- selves to hear and think anything except-Sigma Kappa is guilty. Some of these people,' for reasons unknown to anyone but them- selves, had made up their minds before the meeting not to back down. They all completely ignored the fact that the University of Michi- gan Administration found Sigma Kappa completely in accord with University Regulations. Who has more authority, is more experi- ence, is wiser, the administration of the university or SGC? Is this college or university regulations, which National Sigma Kappa has agreed to respect. The Sigma Kappa chapter on.- this campus should be applauded for their outstanding achievement. This achievement meant that National Sigma Kappa would ap- prove the membership of a Negro girl, along with the several other races already in their fraternity, if she were pledged at this univer- sity or any other which does not allow discrimination. The representatives of the stu- dent body voted not on the Sigma Kappa resolution, but on a totally different issue. These little nickle plated gods took the powers given them by the administration, and set out to prove how much power they could wield. After two years of fighting Sigma Kappa they could not back down. We can only speculate about the' many other personal biases of these twelve individuals which influ- enced their vote. Also, we can only speculate on their peace of mind, in the face of their great accom- plishment. in the world, the students are faced with the dilemma that due to a lack of funds the operating hours of that library have been cut drastically. This presents a sad state of affairs for an enterprising student. One of the current educational theories which is becoming promi- nent throughout the nation is that college faculty should not "spoon feed" the student, but should merely give him food for thought, thus encouraging him to work on Senimore Says .. his own. According to this philos- ophy the student should be given more opportunity for individual initiative through supervised read- ing and independent research as- signments. This philosophy has much merit to it, but the budget cut has certainly diminished its efficacy. A library is the basic place in a university in which the student can study, learn on his own, and prepare his daily; assignments (none of which is mutually exclu- sive). Yet this fountain of knowl- edge-here I refer specifically to the Undergradtate Library - is closed to interested Michigan stu- dents at relatively early hours. Patently it is not realistic for such an institution to be closed at 6 p.m. on a Friday evening. Any student who came to the library on a Friday evening during the past spring semester found it heavily attended. The same capn be said for Saturday afternoon, but never- theless, on that day the building is to be closed at one P.M.! 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