I 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 "Don't Let It Throw You, Bud. I Been Outta Style rorty fYears" anions Are Fre Will Prevail" °ditorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. CHICAGO SYMPHONY: Bartok Suite DashingConclusion WHEN THE PROGRAM for the Chicago Symphoiy performance was first released, the reason for assembling such a collection of inci- dental music into one concert was far from obvious to me. The Chicago Orchestra is rapidly becoming one of the nation's best, and has already, to my mind, eclipsed the Philadelphia and. San Francisco Symphonies. Although nothing much happened last night to change my mind, it would have been more illuminating to have something more profound to evaluate. Berlioz' "Corsair Overture," which began the program, is a brilliant showpiece for the virtuoso orchestra, while not particularly interesting, melodically speaking. Reiner seems to know what to do with his brass section; a welcome relief from too many pussy-footing Berlioz con- ductors. An arranged "Divertimento" from "Le Baiser de la Fee," came next, for reasons best known to the authorities. This is one of Stravinsky's AY, OCTOBER V, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT JUNKER Board in Review Meeting Repetitious, Unnecessary, DECEMBER 5, 1957, Student Govern- it Council found national Sigma Kappa' Y in violation of University regulations >te of twelve to five. The next day, Dean nen Deborah Bacon, acting at the re- of local Sigma Kappa President. Bar- usch, called a meeting of the Board in to determine if SGC had acted in ac- ith administrative and regental policy. oard decided that it had. Wednesday, SGC found national Sigma. in violation 'of University regulations ote of twelve to five. Three days later, f Women Deborah Bacon, acting at the of local Sigma Kappa Presidenit Joan and Michigan Province President Jane alled a me'eting-of the Board in Review rmine if SGC had acted in accord with strative and regental policy. the board will allow the decision, to hould be a foregone conclusion. There was no difference between the two resolutions, with the exception of a "now" inserted in the second. The Board has nothing to rule on this time that it did not have two years ago, unless it can find some fault with SGC's 'procedure.- This would be unlikely. IN VIEW of the previous board meeting, the question must arise: why call the board again to rule on something it has already ruled upon? Do Mrs. Otto and Miss Taylor expect the board to reverse itself? The only hope for this would seem to be that four of the seven members of the board were not sitting on it two years ago; possibly the new members be- lieve the former board's decision to be in error, and will vote accordingly. However, this too would be unlikely. In short, there seems to be no need for this particular bit of history to repeat itself. -JOHN WEICHER City Editor JAW Drags Economy's Recovery EN General Motors and the United Auto' Torkers finally agreed to a three-year' al contract last Thursday, recession- d business men across. the nation heaved of relief. wildcat strikes at GM plants temporari- ought to a complete halt the production 9 model automobiles. With the nation's ny, struggling to break free from the grip year-long recession, businessmen looked new models as a stimulant to boost ng across the country. GM's labor headache was far from being and strikebound plants were far from open with the GM-UAW contract agree- Instead, GM's major' labor headaele irned into approximately 8,000 minor ches, all clamoring for attention. Pro- n has resumed at only one of GM's 126 1 States plants covered by the national agreement.' mobile production quotas are several behind and demands for the new model obiles are far from being answered. Ap- aately 297,000 automobile workers still i off their jobs while local business in dustrial centers of the.nation continues p with the rate of ren on strike. T'S Walter Reuther called the GM-UAW et settlement a "meeting of the minds" he announced the agreement to an auto- conscious nation. But he failed to stress ct that some 8,000."minds" on the local ement level would have to meet with "AW negotiators before a truce in the deadlock could be reached. LOCAL ISSUES between plant managements and UAW locals are responsible for the continued strikes. These issues cover every- thing from extended lunch breaks to shop seniority., The UAW-GM national agreement will not go into effect until these local matters are settled. And workers will remain off their jobs indefinitely unless these minor grievances have been solved. The decision to continue the strike dead- lock rested with the UAW international union. The UAW decision not to return to work while; the grievances are under study has dragged, a strike on for days which should have been ended last Thursday. THE UNION'S show of might. has seriously hampered the economy of the nation and- the welfare of its workers. It will probably be several weeks before .all the company em- ployees return to their jobs. Had the UAW seen' fit to continue local talks and at the same time issued a call to work, the nation's 297,000 GM employees would still be bolstering the coun- try's economy and demands for the new cars' would be answered. Their bargaining position would not have been seriously hampered. UAW officials could have set another strike deadline for the settle- ment of the local disputes. Their power would still be there in reserve. But instead, the UAW has chosen to 'drag on the walkouts and tem- porarily slow the steadily improving national economy. BARTON HUTHWAITE. .opyright, 1958, The" Pulitzer Publishir§ 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.) CAPITAL COMMENTARY: Absolutism. in Politics By WILLIAM S. WHITE pastiches, based inspirationally if not styleistically on the music ofr Tchaikovsky. It is always remark- able to see what Stravinsky can do with the musical phraseology of another composer. Unfortunate- ly, this one cannot very well sur- vive without the ballet. After an invigorating first section, the Di- vertimento rapidly deteriorates in- to a sort of rearranged "Nutcracker Suite" which must be charming to see, but uninspiring to hear. The excerpts from Manual de Falla's first opera, "La Vida Breve" only served to make me wish to have heard more. Even this brief section contains much of the origi- nality of expression this composer developed into his later opera and: ballets. The rather artificial ending of the "Dance" was heavy and ob- *viously "tacked-on"; an effect, difficult to avoid if you do this sort of thing. * * . S BARTOK'S first published work, the "Suite for Orchestra, No. 1, Op. 3," brought the program to a dashing conclusion. This work is, less well organized than even Bar- tok's Suite No. 2, Op. 4, but con- tains a variety of unusual effects. His orchestrational ability wasE well developed in 1905, as the otherwise ,incomprehensible. pro- gram notes point out. If his early compositions represent Bartok's youthful fling at romanticism, he is certainly in good company: Schonberg, for instance. The music sometimes sounds like, a strangely unmelodic slavonic: dance, sometimes like a Hungarian version of the Virginia Reel. The, main theme, especially in the last movement, has many of the char- acteristics of . a reorchestrated German drinking song. But" .throughout the Suite, there is. al- ways the pervasive Bartok rhythm: even in this early composition Bar-, tok shows his sense of the effect which contrasting rhythmic fig-' ures can produce. So the Chicago Symphony pro- gram was not a complete loss aftei all. Next time maybe they will play something by Richard Strauss, Beethoven or even later Bartok- so that everyone will have an op- portunity to appreciate the ability of this orchestra to play more de- manding music. -David Kessel THE VARIED aspects of the water color medium are repre- sented in an exhibition of thirty- one paintings currently exhibited in the North Gallery of Alumni Memorial Hall. The works are selected from American and Euro- pean artists of the 19th and 20th centuries. The use of the water color medi- um is a later development than that of oil and usually assumed a subordinate role. In the late 16th century a few sketches were often colored with a monotone wash but the medium soon was used more freely. Inigo Jones in England,~ the center of the use of water colors, did some studies using more varied colors. However, not until the 18th century did the medium assume a larger role when it came into prominence essentially in a. topo- graphical funcetion. The more familiar landscape tradition grew with Constable and Turner in the early 19th century and continued with Cotman, Cox, and De Whit. The 19th century works in this exhibit show a continuation of this landscape tradition. An ex- ample is the landscape by Guerin in which he uses pale washes to create a scene of misty serenity much like Turner. The tendency of the 20th cen- tury water colorists shows much interest in experimentation. For example, Nolde paints a landscape but uses a wetter surface and darker colors to present andex- pressive, foreboding mood. Other examples in the exhibition vary from the intellectualism of Mo- holy-Nagy to the wierd surrealism of John Tunnard, from the inti- macy of Paul Klee's "Two Trees" to the melancholy of Pacsin. The exhibition illustrates the persistence of the older traditions but incorporating contemporary techniques and experimentation. The size of the exhibition is lim- ited, but its scope reflects the varied styles and techniques of the water color medium . -Aaron Sheon AT ALUMNI HALL: Landscape Exhibited NTERPRETING THE NEWS: Stalemate at the Straits WASHINGTON - An American political consensus is being reached in the most local and fragmented series of contests in millions of farmhous 1r and thou- sands of hamlets, towns and cities across the United States of Amer- ica. This biennial Congressional cam- paign, like the 85 that have gone before it across a century and three-quarters, 4is leading up to what is always called a "nationas; election"--and never is that at all. What are really coming in Novem- ber, instead, are so many scores of small elections over so many real and open and hidden and some- times merely implied -"issues" as to be quite beyond discerning, let alone counting. The whole present process is one, of vast diffusion, with two excep- tions. There is the Deep South, where Democratic primaries alone have long since settled who is ,to come to the House and Senate. And there is a handful of hard- core Republican areas in the Mid- west and New England .where Democratic challengers run against Republican certainties simply out of duty to a two-party tradition that in these areas is only a chapter in a civics textbook. * * * BUT FOR the vast bulk of the country this is a real election. And the real question in the obvious sense, on all present readings, is not whether the Democrats or the Republicans are to control the new Congress. Rather, it is how much the present Democratic ma- jorities are to be expanded. But men will be elected or re- elected as "Democrats" who are far. closer to most of the Republi- cans than are at least one-quarter of the Republicans tlemselves. Also, men will be elected or re- elected as Republicans who are practically indistinguishable from 80 percent of the Democrats. Perhaps no political way in any free country is so utterly untidy- so withoilt any true pattern-as is the American way of choosing a Congress. All the same, it may be that this is the very strength of the system. Most of the best of all political institutions look planless, though they are not, and seem cas- ual-and actually are. When it is- all over a quasi-na- tional result will somehow have been obtained through a proce- dure that is anything but national and often is as thoroughly local as a high school play in an Iowa vil- lage. ONE PARTY - probably the Democrats-will return here in' January in command of at least the procedures and possibly even the ultimate actions of the 86th Congress. But the total result of the election will have been based upon hundreds of 'candidates' per-' sonalities and promises and public attitudes-and sometimes the total lack of such attitudes. I1 Congressman Jones or Sena- tor Brown returned because of his well-known views on China or Western Europe or something truly important of this sort? The ten- dency is to say he is, and even to believe he is. But very often this is nowhere near the reason. The present senior Republican foreign policy spokesman, Senator Alexander Wiley of Wisconsin, was handsomely re-elected in 1956 aft- er his own state party convention had turned openly against him and the Republican party national or- ganization had seemed to have trouble remembering his name. It was fashionable to see Wiley's struggle as an immensely Impor- tant test of how an internationalist politician would fare in a suppos- edly isolationist state. But this was all much too logi- cal to fit the facts. The facts sim- ply were that people liked "old Alec," as they said in large numT bers upon being asked. Nine times, out of ten they couldn't have cared. less about his foreign policy views. . * * * THUS THE simple truth is that it will be a great mistake to go about reading ,vast national. and international import into the re- sults of this current Congressional election. No doubt it will prove that the country in a vague, general way is more "Democratic" than Repub- lican. But for what'kind of a' Dem- ocratic party will the people have spoken? The party of the advanced liberals? Nobody in the world will know that answer, and thus nobody can know what really happened. Is this bad? Not in this corre- spondent's view. For a truly "effi- cient" party system - in which every sheep is plainly separated from every goat - has often wound up with the goats feeling obliged to destroy every last wrong- headed sheep, or vice versa. It is not too bad a thing to keep every form of the absolute even abso- lute clarity - out of politics., (Copyright 1958 by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) By J. M. ROBERTS, Associated Press News Analyst THREE major powers involved in the nosa Strait dispute have now entered a of feeling each other out, not so much gard to a permanent settlement as to do next. fic events have contributed to 'the situ- t also falls within the usual Communist of building up crises and then easing ff when they become too critical. tary of State John Foster Dulles said de facto cease-fire at Quemoy could a change in American tactics. That to have occurred, though it cannot yet n'for granted. [DENT Dwight D. Eisenhower ripped Nikita Krushchev for'saying a war on ina would be a war on Russia. Chinese Reds have shot up perhaps 50 dollars worth of ammunition. They one so in what more conservative ob- have considered more of a bid for political recognition than a prepara- r invasion of the offshore islands. dy knows what's happened to their gun but the problem of supply could be ig important to both Peiping and Mos-' f it all the Reds have gotten diplomatic bions at Warsaw with the United States, DAILY OFFICIAL, BULLETIN which refuses to recognized them diplomatical- ly. They have. gotten promises of further nego- tiations - important to their political stand- ing throughout Asia - if they stop using force. The have also gotten unwelcome manifesta- tions in the strait of American determination. THEIR blockade of Quemoy, successful for a brief period, was being broken-appeared on the verge of being completely broken - by American supply methods and equipment. Charles Malik, new President of the United Nations General Assembly, said Sunday that pressure of public opinion was building up in the world's chancelleries which might produce "a rapproachment between the parties directly concerned." . Khrushchev accused President Eisenhower of misquoting him. He said he only meant Russia would fight if the United States attacked. Red China. That gives him an out if the attack is by the -Chinese Nationalists,: and an oppor- tunity to equivocate over what constitutes an an attack. MORE THAN THAT, in the eyes of many ob- servers, it gave him an opportunity to cool Peiping off a little. He may have been more specific in private, since the limited cease-fire announcement from Peiping came almost si- multaneously. Since the end of shelling ends the need, there is no trouble about the Red condition' that the United States stop convoying Nation- alist supplies to Quemoy. There is no change, however, in the Red demand for United States withdrawal from the, Strait. and the islands covered by her defense treaty with the Nationalists. As long as that demand stands, no settlement is in prospect. What Is in prospect, however, is that the present feeling out period will mark a gradual return to the stalemate of the past several years. MEANWHILE Russia's propaganda media has been fuming about the Sidewinder air- to-air missiles which the United States has supplied to the Nationalist Chinese Air Force, They are so worked up as to give the im- 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 TYPEWRITrEN form to Room 3519 Adpinistration Build- lng, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. TU3ESDlAY, OCTOBER 17, 1958 VOL. LXIX, NO. 18 General .Notices W.A.A. Swimming Meet-Tues., Oct. 7, 7:30 p.m., Women's Swimming Pool. The next "Flu Shot" clinic for stu- dents, staff and employees will be he in Room 58 (basement) of the Heal1 Service, Thursday, Oct. 9, only. Hou are 8:00-11:30 a.m. and 1:00-4:30 p.: Proceed directly to basement, fill of forms, pay fee ($1.00) and- receive it jection. Arrangements are being mac for a later date when persons who ha' received the first "shot" may recel' a second. The next "Polio Shot" cli2 for students will be held in the san room, Thursday, Oct. 23. The hours an procedures are the same as above R "Flu." Lectures Science Research Club: The Octob meeting will be held in the Rackha Amphitheatre, 7:30 p.m., Tues., Oct. (Continued on Page 5) BEHIND THE SOUTHERN SCHOOL SITUATION: Tradional Church-State Separation May End Editorial Staff RICHARD TAUB, Editor KRAFT JO Director By GEORGE W. CORNELL Associated Press Religion Writer A POTENTIAL POWDER KEG involving church-state relations lies almost unnoticeq today in the Southern moves to subsidize pri- vate education. Authorities said the legal rami- fications, striking a sensitive point in American history, could ulti- mately put church-run parochial schools in line for tax money. "The situation could bring the whole church-state issue into full cry again," said the Rev. Niel McCluskey, a Roman Catholic edu- cation analyst. * * * i THE MATTER has been over- shadowed by the segregation-inte- gration conflict, and religious o..- gration conflict, and religious of- ficials have been disinclined to discuss it publicly because of the mately 52 million private elemen- tary pupils at present are in Cath- olic schools. Lutherans and some other Protestant bodies have size- able parochial eniollments. 4' * *. IN MODERN TIMES, Protes- tants and Jews generally have op- posed government aid to parochial schools, while many Catholics have favored it in limited forms, All three groups, however, include influential exceptions to the pat- tern. { "But we consider it a general problem, not a Protestant-Catho- lic .conflict." The differences arise from vary- ing interpretations of the First Constitutional Amendment, for- bidding any law "respecting an establishment of religion"-the so- called church - state separation provision. olic sources, usually absorbed by the needs of parochial schools, were ringingly championing, the public schools.. "The nation's pride," the na- tional Catholic weekly, "America," called them and complained that Arkansas' Gov. Orval Faubus had "unceremoniously leveled. the 'wall' of separation between church and state." Protestants have frequently employed similar phraseology in parochial school' controversies, Father McCluskey, Education Editor of America, said he thinks most Catholics would "deplore any short-term gains" to their schools --in form of state funds-on the, basis of the present "unhealthy and undesirable situation." B* * * BUT SHOULD state-supported private education eventually be set upo n a workabhl cral haosis' of the constitutional church-state rule. "That's part of- the, dilemma," said Rev. Gill, Associate Secretary of the Public Affairs Office of the National Association of Evan- gelicals. The .constitution, when publie schools are provided, has been ap- plied by the Supreme Court to bar direct parochial school support- but to permit indirect aid to paro- chial children-such as bus trans- portation and textbooks. ''* * * MOST state constitutions also forbid direct support of sectarian schools, but a switch from public to private schooling could require modification of the ban under the equal-treatment .terms of the Fourteenth Amendment, it was said. Arkansas specifically rescinded "Fpr any plan using -funds for private education legal," he said, "those funds be made available to the c] his parents, including thos want to go to schools tinder'& auspices." *' * * MANY CATHOLIC leader favored such a plan general which "the aid follows the wherever he goes to school. Southern leaders also have posed 'a similar system of I grants: The Rev. Robert Drinan, of Boston College, a Cathol stitution, said: "Some Cat are saying, 'maybe this is a in the wall' and 'let's get o bandwagon."' But he added "They should all be a what's happening, and the it's happening. I don't th: OHN WEICHEB City Editor DAVID TARR Associate Editor ,I wwR.....................Personnel Director LOUGHBY...Associate Editorial Director DRGENSON.........Associate City Editor 'H ERSKINE....Associate Personnel Director NES ........................... Sports Editor MIAN..........Associate Sports Editor AN ........*......Associate Sports Editor RNOLD..................Chief Photographer Business Staff