M171 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 'When upnions Are Fre 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. )AY, OCTOBER 19, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP MUNCK Dulles Visit Should Fasten Chiang to Leash OFFICIALLY it is not yet known exactly what Secretary of State John Foster Dulles will discuss with Chiang Kai-shek when the two meet in Formosa next week. But unofficial re- ports on the conference indicate that nothing about the basic problem of the offshore islands -i.e.-who is to control them-will be con- sidered. Certainly this will be true if Chiang really means what he said Friday in an inter- view with The New York Times: "We are not making predictions but we are definitely deter- mined to hold the offshore islands." The talks should be partly intended to re- move misunderstandings about American com- mitments to the Formosan regime which have resulted in good part from Secretary Dulles vacilating positions and ambiguous press con- ference statements. BUT 1MORE IMPORTANT, the talks should be directed primarily at how Chiang's troops can be removed and how the islands can be turned over to the Chinese Communists with the least loss of face for Chiang and the West. Currently there is discussion among officials and in the- press about an exchange of man- power for firepower on the islands, about the most effective, efficient use of available forces and about a, continuing, unofficial truce over the islands. While all of these factors must be considered, overemphasis of them will continue to obscure the key issue of island control. The offshore islands are really in a most un- tendable position; as military observers have already said. Their importance to Chiang strategically is nil except to use as a base for offensive assaults on the mainland-something almostveveryone considers impossible. Even though Chiang claimed in the Times interview that Nationalist forces have "proved" that they can hold the islands and that the United States need not become involved, it is extremely doubt- ful if this will be true in the future. A concen- trated, continued heavy shelling of the islands The 'U's Legislati AST WEEK the University sent its annual headache-the budget-to Lansing. The re- quest, filed with State Controller James Miller, asks for $37 million dollars to continue opera- tions in the 1959-60 year. A capital outlay re- quest has also been filed, seeking $19 million for construction. While any conclusions may be premature, it is likely the pattern of recent years will be repeated; in other words, the University re- quest will be slashed by the legislators. Admittedly, several factors make this con- clusion tentative. In the first place, November elections are due to somewhat revamp the roster of the two standing committees-the House Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Appropriations Committee-having pri- mary power on budget matters. What will hap- pen to the University's request when studied by a partially changed group is, of course, a matter of speculation. A; SECOND VARIABLE which makes predic- tions tentative is the awaited report of the Boyer committee on higher education. The re- port, based largely on the educational surveys made by John Dale Russell, will be made before the legislature, probably during the January session. Its effects-if any-on legislative think- ing may influence the final appropriation. Another report, from the House general taxa- tion committee, may have the most significant effect on the University budget. Headed by Rep. Rollo Conlin (R-Tipton), the group has surveyed the state's current financial crisis, probably would eventually either starve out the Nationalists or force Chiang to retaliate against the shore batteries with his air force, an action that surely would require the United States to come to his rescue. CHIANG CLAIMED in the interview that evacuation of the islands would cause "all the people of Asia (to) lose confidence in Amer- ica" as well as disillusion all anti-Communists on the mainland. However, determination to stand up against the Communists has been shown and this argument sounds much like the ones used by Americans against United States recognition of Communist China. Its validity is as much a matter of speculation. It seems, however, that a gradual withdrawal from the islands would not have such an effect. On the other hand, evacuation will get the United States out of the doghouse with its other allies who have no sympathy for risking war over a few hunks of desolate rock. The Chinese Communists have put the finger on the West by halting their bombardment of the islands. Now Secretary Dulles is under pres- sure to resolve the problem rather than let it drift until the Communists decide to bring it up again. THE WEST is in an untendable position; the only practical solution-although it may not be a very pleasant one-is to draw back. To do so will not be an abandonment of the Western position in the Far East; American commitments to Formosa will be just the same. The task Secretary Dulles has before him is to bring Chiang into line with American and Western interests, as odd as that may sound. Only if Chiang is brought under control, will the United States be able to achieve a fairly stable situation in the Formosan area. -DAVID TARR Associate Editor ve Responsibility concentrating specifically on the tax situa- tion. Shortly after elections, they are expected to announce their findings and recommend revision of the statewide tax structure. If such changes were adopted, it is conceivable that many more dollars would be available for higher education; in fact, this may be the University's only real hope for funds. However, the proposals of the Conlin com- mittee, if they do call for a sweeping change, may require some time, perhaps two years, to effect. In other words, the state financial picture temporarily is liable to become darker than it already is. WITH SUCH EXISTING conditions, it is doubtful that higher education-at least at the University and Michigan State Univer- sity-is going to receive the funds it requests. One must not hastily accuse the legislators of begin anti-intellectual ogres, either. They have a practical pressing problem-that of trying to fit budget requests to the realities of revenue. Since there is no revenue, cuts must be made. And since no taxes are earmarked specifically for higher education as gasoline taxes are pegged for highways, the field becomes par- ticularly vulnerable. In a final sense, one must admire the Uni- versity's persistant hammering for more funds, for a better quality of education. It is their important duty, even in the face of slash after slash, to continually remind the legislature, and ultimately the public, of higher education's needs. THOMAS HAYDEN Faculty Art THE ROLE OF HOST provides an excellent opportunity for showing off in one way or another. Host-playing also necessitates an inspection of one's house, an eval- uation on one's resources, a general pulling together of one's wits. It is a time for taking stock and putting in order. The art department and the School of Architecture and Design is making the most of such an opportunity right now, the excuse being the three-day Midwest Col- lege Art Conference which ended yesterday. In expectation of this visit by art educators and their guests, the architecture and design building has been turned out with showing of student works in its hallways and lobby from the sev- eral departments of the school. This project is in itself large and important, worthy of notice by our recent visitors and, it is to be hoped, interested members of the University community. The collec- tion provides an excellent oppor- tunity to see and study the quality and level of student work being done here. If it were not for an even larger and more important showing being exhibited concurrently, this stu- dent presentation would merit con- siderably more attention here. Al- most unfortunately-for the stu- dent show alone would provide wealth enough for the moment-. there is also showing of works by the faculty of the School of Archi- tecture and Design. *4* * THIS FACULTY SHOW fills al- most the entire second floor gallery space of the Alumni Hall galleries of the Museum of Art and also is in the exhibition area of the Un- SPRING DANCE dergraduate Library. Size alone ... by James Miller would indicate the importance of BOSTON SYMPHONY: "M A Munch, Programingf Mar Performance the show, quality and variety es- tablished it as an exhibition of major importance in the develop- ment of the school as well as a high point on the calendar of the Museum. The show is by invitation. Each member of the faculty was allotted a maximum of space which he was asked to fill with works of his own choice. Such a procedure has a triple merit. There is no necessity in this system for a selections jury (thus avoiding bruised sensibili- ties), and the viewer sees what each faculty member feels is his important recent work (the ma- jority of the works were produced within the last year). Probably most important, how- ever, such selection of work pro- vides an insight into the capacities and directions of the individual members and of the group. These considerations are of the utmost importance both the functioning of the school and to the under- standings of the student of the show. In attempting some comment on the collection as a whole, one is confused by the very richness and variety of the offerings. The gallery visitor is overwhelmed with the volume-the works of some thirty- seven men and women in a tre- mendously broad range of areas and media are on display. One can only compare the pro- fusion, and one's feeling of near bewildered satiety, to the Christ- mas holidays when one is glutted with too large outpourings of good will, music, fruit cake, port wine, relatives, and festivitiy. There is a feeling in the galleries (even without the presence of visi- tors) of a rush hour subway, some of the works are almost crowded out, or are in competition one with another. Perhaps, in view of the particu- lar timing of the show with the conference some likening of it to a potlatch would not be inappro- priate. Certainly, the conferees will have a long way to go to meet or top this expression of hospi- tality. ANYONE wishing to savor the show properly would be well ad- vised to view it in several visits rather than trying to encompass the whole in one session. To a de- gree such a procedure has been facilitated by the hanging of the show, works of a similar nature being hung, for the most part, together. This has not been en- tirely possible, however, nor has each of the works been afforded the space desirable for its most advantageous presentation - far greater floor and wall space would have been necessary. The hanging committee has managed nobly, however, and has achieved a de- gree or order and poise that is little short of miraculous. A serene and spacious atmosphere-usually con- sidered the best for viewing art works-is lacking, but one is vivid- ly aware of the dynamic and un- regimented personalities which have gone to make up the show and, of course, the faculty. IN ONE SENSE the show is too big, too disparate. There is no theme or continuity that one can usually find in a one man or small group show. It cannot be ques- tioned, however, that the exhibi- tion is one of the highest quality. Viewers may be more or less at- tracted to certain works for any number of reasons. It is to be ists Lxhibit Woris EARLY STAGE-Above is a model for a fountain and pool designed for a department store in University Heights, Cleveland, Ohio, by Richard Jennings. A large percentage of the works being exhbited in the current faculty art show have been done within the last year. UNEXCITING is the word for it. The Boston Symphony Or- chestra last night played three symphonies spanning nearly two centuries in time, but all on the same emotional level. Mozart's "Haffner" Symphony comes mod- erately late in his symphonic out- put, being 35th of 41, but it is far removed emotionally from the great final three. The fast move- ments are bright and charming, but do not achieve any dramatic intensity; the slow movement is lovely and lyric, but is not brushed with brooding introspection. Honegger's 5th Symphony seems the output of a dreary man. Not in evidence are the youthful bounce of "Le Roi David," the surging power of "Pacific 231," or the forceful religiosity of the "Sym- phonie Liturgique." And as for Beethoven's sixth: it has been dis- cussed and analyzed by many, and all agree that it is pleasant, per- haps great; fine' as background music for a day in the country, or for an evening at home; fine to listen to and perhaps analyze, but not dramatic, not exciting. * * * ' THESE three works perhaps de- serve individual replaying, but not on the same program. With the "Haffner," give us some nice tight Stravinsky; with the Honegger, some sturm und drang Beethoven; with the Pastoral, some vigorous Brahms. The significance of pro- gramming in the overall effect of a concert seems often -underesti- mated by those in charge, which is a pity. One left Hill Auditorium last night quietly rested, almost asleep; occasional moments of sonic hysteria in the Honegger were rousing, but one was never stirred. The Haffner is gay but not re- plete with meaning. It should be performed with delicacy, and it was not. The fault, it seems to us, is with Munch, who has lost much of his early fire and brilliance in recent years. The first movement was dry and a bit slow; the Minuet, positively stodgy, with the Trio emerging as a dirge. It was not until the Finale that things finally began to sparkle and the conclusion was joyful. * . * THROUGHOUT the concert one was conscious of a curious fact; apparently Munch's tenure has been beneficial for the orchestra itself. The string section has lost none of its famed luster, but it is now equaled by the wind section, now one of the finest. It is difficult to fathom what has happened. In rehearsals Munch must be ex- cellent; such sound as were pro- duced last night do not come easy nor without arduous study. At performance time the orchestra responds to his commands with precision and devotion; unfortu- nately the commands are often wrong. Munch seems in control of the orchestra, but no of himself. * * * THE HONEGGER 5th Sym- phony, unfamiliar to me, was a disappointment. There was little in it that the composer had not said before, and said better for is freshness then. The opening is a heavily colored, slowly moving chorale, with dissonant harmonies. It Was a reminiscent of Hinde- mith's Matthis der Maler, or of the Orestes music of Milhaud, and not 'significantly better than them, which would have excused its de- rivation. Later in the first move- ment and again in the last there were unnecessarily blatant trum- pet noises which were of little musical effect. There were some lovely moments in the performance of the Pas- toral. I remember particularly the magical woodwind thirds over run- ning thirds near the end of the second movement. But then, curi- ously, in the dance-like movement there reappeared the heavy- hand- edness which had plagued the Mozart Minuet. Something seems wrong with Dr. Munch these days; we hope it is temporary. -J. Philip Benkard hoped they will be aware of the over all excellence of the show. * * * THE CONNOTATIONS of such an exhibition as a criteria of merit of a faculty are obvious. The fact that an individual produces works of a high competence does not guarantee that he will be a great or even adequate teacher, that he will be able to lead the guide stu- dents. This is true in all fields, but especialy true in creative areas, and teaching competence must be judged on other than production lines. The quality of production and the variety of production do indi- cate, however, pertinent considera- tions for a school. Perhaps most important are the qualities of thinking engaged in by the indi- vidual faculty members in the production of their art expressions. Of equal importance is the breadth and range that these ex- pressions cover, and the breadth and range of personal and social uses in and through which the ex- pressions are embodied. The quali- ties discerned in the works are the raw materials of the staff as teachers, being their various ap- proaches to and understandings of their world. The calibre and virtue of the members of the Architecture and Design faculty are here dis- played for examination in terms of concrete objects. The show is a clear revelation of the values, in- sights, and abilities the various members of the faculty bring into play in their various interpreta- tions of the teacher role. THE RECENT conference has afforded the School of Architecture and Design an opportunity to properly strut its stuff, and, in so doing, has necessitated its pres- entation of itself openly for inspec- tion. Submission to such an lnspec. tion takes courage. To pass such a test should be not only a vindi- cation of ones presumption at undergoing the test, but should also provide a secure footing for further evaluation and develop- ment. To attempt a listing of the works included in the show would be boring and unnecessary-the items are on display and can be seen. To introduce comments or personal criticism would be, by the nature of the exhibition, largely irrelevant and inappropriate. The totality of the exhibition, rather than its de- tails or the idiosyncratic lacks of some component parts, are the im- portant considerations . The exhibition will continue for six weeks. IN ADDITION TO the faculty showing features a group of photo- graphs of the artists taken by Miss Sara Schwartz, Senior in photog- raphy, School of Architecture and Design. Miss Schwartz has the rare insight of not only recognizing the various artists' peculiar qualities; but has also been able to catch these in her portrait studies; These photographs should not be passed over simply as program notes- they are top level art works in their own right. --David Guillaume STILL IN STUDIO: Preview Look at Library Sculpture OFFEE ..BLACK By Richard Taub Fraternity Education WITHDRAWAL of a charter last week from a Lambda Chi Alpha local fraternity points up something many people have known for a long time: That when a fraternity removes a bias clause from its constitution, it frequently just places t somewhere else. And that the typical fra- ernity argument about wonderful progress hrough education is largely myth. The Lambda Chi case is a good example of how this works. The Hamilton chapter (which aad its charter revoked), did not even pledge a Negro. It Just passed a statement which said hat membership would not be restricted "for my reasons of race, religion or color." Bruce Johnson, president of the Lambda Chi chapter on this campus explained, "they re- .used to abide by the membership requirements >f the national fraternity." These requirements are: "qualifications for nembership are to be acceptable to the gen- ral fraternity, to believe in the principles of Christianity and to be of the white or Ameri- an Indian races." Yet. Lambda Chi does not have, as ter) had bias clauses in their constitutions. Through a policy of education the number is now down to four. This is progress." Lambda Chi is one of the fraternities that "used to have a bias clause." THE IMPLICATIONS are great. If Lambda Chi is at all representative, and it appears to be, hardly any progress has been made at all. Whether or not a bias clause, or as it is euphemistcally called, selectivity clause, is in the constitution is relatively insignificant. Be- cause, so frequently, when it is removed it is placed somewhere else. The methods of re- placing it are legion. One can read it into the national minutes, or it can become a by-law, or some practice can be placed in the ritual wrhich encourages racial prejudice-or there can be a "gentleman's agreement." Sororities have found an effective method of avoiding non-segregation. They just require alumna approval for every member. This is not to say that all affiliated groups ±- - -i-,- - .".- --. - DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an otficial 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. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1958 VOL. LXIX, NO. 29 Lectures Sir John Gielgud, noted British ac- tor, will be presented Tues., 8:30 P.M. in Hill Aud. in a solo dramatic per- formance "Shakespeare's Ages of Man." Tickets will be on sale in the Audi- torium box office tomorrow 10 A.M.-5 P.M. and Tuesday 10 A.M.-8:30 P.M. Students are offered a special reduced rate on all tickets. . 7 s a - _T The following companies will be in- terviewing at the School of Engineer- ing on the following dates: Oct. 23: University of Calif., Los Ala- mos Scientific Lab., Los Alamos, N.M., B.S.: Ch.E., Elec., E. Phys., Mech. and Met. M.S.: Ch.E., Elec., Mech., Met. and Nuclear. Ph.D.: Ch.E., Elec., Mech., Met. and Nuclear for Des.; Res. and Dev. Must be Male U.S. Citizen. Also summer seniors and grad. students. Oct. 23, 24 Lockheed Aircraft Corp., Missile Systems Div., Sunnyvale, Calif. BS: Civil, Elec., Mech., Aero MS: Civil, Elec., Mech., Met lb Nucl, Aero PhD: Civil, Elec., Mech., Met., Nuc., Aero. February Graduate. Must be U. S. citi- zen Des; res. and Dev.; Production. Oct. 23 Minneapolis-Honeywell Regu- lator Co., Minnesota, Ill., Fla., Calif., Pa., Md., Mass. BS: Aero, Elec., E. Phys. & Mech. MS: Aero & Mech. PhD. Aero and Mech. Must be male U.S. citizen. Des; Res. and Dev.; Sales. Prod. Oct. 23, 24 Square D Co:, Detroit, Cleveland, Milwaukee, 60 sales offices. BS: Elec., Ind. & Mech. Must be male SOMETIME THIS MONTH, a large slate base will arrive from Vermont and workmen will move it to a location just inside the front windows of the Under- graduate Library. The base is destined to support the gift donated by the Class of '58, an as yet unnamed sculpture by Prof. Thomas McClure of the Architecture and Design school. A preview look at the work, still in the sculpturer's studio, reveals its complex content. The subject is not indefinite but it does require a personal, subjec- tive interpretation. The contest is such that one can't casually glance at it and say, "I like it." It re- quires contemplation. Discussing his work, Prof. Mc- Clure says, a library is a place that opens up the mysteries of the world and the universe. He therefore chose a theme of the moon and bands of stars as symbols of the universe. His sculp. tune tries to symbolically capture the significance of the heavens that has been a mystery to all cultures. To form an image of this idea is very difficult; to succeed, as he does, is still more of an ac- complishment. HIS IDEA is conveyed as an or- ganization of volume by thin brass rods supporting small star-like dots. The central part of these cross shaped bands of rods sug- gests moon crescents. The effect the space in the studio seemed ex- cited by the object, especially by the slight movements of the rods suggesting rays from the moon. The feeling of mystery and need for interpretation in quiet con- templation seemed inescapable. One wants to walk around it, to see its changing silhouette. There is an appropriateness in the senior class gift since it en- hances the functional appearance of the library lobby. At a univer- sity, awareness of sculpture is particularly necessary, but unfor- tunately most of it is condemned to a museum, case or obscured by sprays of water. Here is a work that can be observed and studied during the course of each day and it assumes a part in the environ- ment. The sculpture is a welcome ad- dition to campus and admirably fulfills its function of represent- ing the contemplative spirit in- herent in a library. -Aaron Sheon a X;