"You Fellows Serious This Time" Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND IANAGED BY STMDENTS OF THE UNTVERSrTY OF MiCHiGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD rN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MIcH. * Phone NO 2-3241 New Movies Open At Local Theatres 'Oiuonihead'... Goddess' .. . 'en Opininns Are Free Trutb Wil Prevailr Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP MUNCK Anti-Discrimination Promises Remain California Propaganda )I. " i '- . 1T - t ,' , t \ "w .- _=Si" _ . rf i DURING HIS CAMPAIGN for governor of California, Edmund G. Brown, pulling all the punches he could think of, jumped into the middle of the sorority-fraternity discrimination fracas. Setting a solid anti-discrimination plank into the Democratic platform, he told the Univer- sity of California's Daily Californian, "If I am elected I intend to use the powers of my office to see that students are recognized on the basis of individual merit and not race or re- ligion." He said he intended to call for "denial of official recognition by school authorities, stu- dent councils and student government bodies" to student organizations restricting member- ship on grounds of "race, creed or national- origin." With his victory over former Sen. Wil- liam F. Knowland, Brown will soon be sitting in the governor's chair - with the sorority- fraternity issue very nicely sitting in his lap. IT IS RATHER difficult to conceive of any way for him to implement his stand. Perhaps without a thought of putting the statement into effect, Brown has indicated that he does not believe the state of California can or should extend recognition to the "discriminating" sororities and fraternities. But the University of California, which in- cludes most of the state's institutions of high- er learning, has already recognized these groups and through the University of Cal- ifornia, the state has also recognized them. Withdrawal of recognition, as those here well know, is a difficult, delicate, and perhaps im- possible undertaking. Brown has said he will fight "student socia organizations that restrict membership on the basis of race, creed or national origin." But how will he know which organizations are dis- criminating and which merely happen to have a homogeneous membership. The state can- not indiscriminately attack every all white Protestant sorority or fraternity, and it is very doubtful that politicians, a least, would ap- prove such attack. IT IS EVEN more doubtful that all California sororities and fraternities will volunteer in- formation as to their membership policies. If Brown wishes to withdraw recognition, he will have difficulty getting proof on which to le- gally base his decision. Also, it might be noted, university admin- istrators in general tend to be quite conserva- tive in their actions. Particularly with enroll- ments rising rapidly, most of them are in favor of keeping housing facilities status quo. Chances are that they would quietly obstruct. and if necessary, forcefully fight, any disrup- tion by Brown. The newly-elected governor said a lot when he began muddling with college issues. Under- standably, he was anxious to get Knowland down on every possible count. But his stand is unenforceable within the realm of possibility. It \can be discounted as the usual "campaign myth." -NAN MARKEL Os fa 19/ 10 Y THERE MUST BE something better or otherwise more worthwhile to do this week-end than to drop in at the Michigan and see "Onionhead." Anything could be better. Help- ing sweep out Hill Auditorium be- fore the concert next Tuesday would be better. Cleaning the Union Snack Bar grease trap would be better. Trying- to fig~ure out administration policy would be better. but not much better. "Onionhead" is vaguely based on the popular but trashy novel of the same name by some name- less writer. It stars Andy Griffith, a second-rate comic who can usually deliver well-written lines when he gets them. Here, he doesn't get them. Also in the film is Felicia Farr, who looks like every college man's dream of the girl next door, if you live next to a tavern. The story is all about the Coast Guard and ships. sailors, cooking school, cinnamon rolls, officers mess, tropical ham, and all that sort of thing. After a while it gets pretty confused if you stay awake. The characters seem to shift viewpoint every few minutes, so that one sailor is talking like something out of Aristotle one minute and like something out of Smokey Stover the next. t The Coast Guard officers are all either good guys or bad guys; a curious but unlikely situation. And all the girls look jolly. This is unlikely. It seems almost a shame to waste an analytical treatment on this particular film. Instead, let us speculate about just how "Onionhead" came to be filmed. ONE YEAR AGO, five men sat in a smoke-filled ermine-lined office. These men are the notorious Hollywood producing-directing gang of A., B., C., D., and E. A: Andy Griffith done pretty well in "No Time for Sergeants." We should ought to put him in a picture again quick before people go back to watching television. B: How about that. C: Just the other night my wife was reading this book about a Coast Guard guy. Now, with a little major revision we could fit Griffith into the role. D: How about that. E: And you know, that girl I promised a part to? The girl I took to the Script Writers Open House? Could we use her? A: How about that? C: She'd fit right in. B: How about that! This is probably not too far fetched a theory. If you go to see this nonsense, don't say you weren't warned. -David Kessel THE CHIEF VIRTUE of Paddy Chayevsky has always been a sort of se:nimental realism. His chief talent, is the reproduction of everyday talk and mannerisms. This talent has occasionally pro- duced moving if minor, drama. In The Goddess, however. he is apparently trying to create a majfor American work of art. His method is that of the fable. He chooses one particularly adapt- ed to modern American life, whose theme is success, symbolized in the end by Hollywood, The story is one of a soul progressingetoward the city of mammnon in search of life. and finding that it offers only death. Along the way, moreover, opportunities for life have been rejected contrary to all sense and experience. It is a fairly simple and very old fable. It is told by fairly con- ventional means. Character is ab- stracted to the point of carica- ture: patterns of action are brought in and used to produce irony. Irony is essential, for it is a cynical sort of fable, and one of the chief functions of irony is its destruction of a faith in human sincerity. Thus mothers desert their daughters and daughters their mothers for the sake of some far- off romantic goal which in the end turns out to have been the original relationship. The pattern is repeated several times. Its sym- bolic agent is the movie star maga- zine, its end an illusory acceptance of religion. , * * THE PERILS into which this desire for sincerity and egocentric love lead are the traditional one of decadent Hollywood. Thus there is a tantalizing convergence of levels of meaning, since the movie is being made by actors and pro- ducers. But perhaps it is also this fact that seems to dull the point of the fable. For instance, the old en- vironmental excuses for human choice are dragged in, implying another sociological melodrama, and never successfully thrown out. And a general overcast of senti- mentality is created which further obscures the point. In fact, it is implied that the only alternative to romanticism is a sort of plucky sentimentality; the alternatives of wisdom, fortitude and the other virtues are seemingly discarded without the attention due them in a traditionally Christian fable. The general effect is that of a cynical plot battling a sentimental tone to a gawky standstill about halfway through thepicture,and the whole project turns out a failure. --Robert Tanner A Place for Leadership RECENT SUGGESTIONS that the Univer- sity should not raise its entrance require- ments are faulty in several areas. True, the University need not boost its re- quirements merely because Columbia College recently hiked its standards, but to say that the people of the state of Michigan should determine the level of education offered at the University is impractical. Callas Gets Canned MARIA CALLAS is an operatic institution. She has fire, temperament, a voice and acting ability, and these combine to make her the biggest drawing card in opera today. After her late rift with the Metropolitan Opera, she has everything but a place to perform. By her antics, which although colorful and newsworthy, also tend to alienate general man- agers, she has lost her place at two big houses. the Met ant La Scala. Last year Vienna and San Francisco discovered they were safer without her services. All this has combined to make Callas the biggest name in small opera houses around the world. Callas doesn't need the money; her husband is a wealthy Italian industrialist. What she does need is enough contract cancellations to prove the point that she is not the prima donna's prima donna. An artist of Callas' posi- tion is entitled to some say in her performances and an occasional temperamental outburst. When carried to the extremes which Maria has in the past few years, they combine to make her a worse risk than she is a drawing card. Italian street singers are always in demand for tourist atmosphere-type jobs. Callas may soon be the best of them all. --ROBERT JUNKER The level of education desirable and neces- sary to furnish society with competent, well trained, and well educated individuals should be determined and fought for by the Univer- sity. Of course, the University has an obligation to the people of the state but to say the people should determine the educational level ignores the leadership role of the Universiy. The University should take the initiative in the effort to improve education and not mere- ly sit back and wait for he people to lead. The prediction that entrance requirements will go up if the people of the state show an unwillingness to provide the necessary finan- cial support for additional facilities is ludi- crous. Unwillingness to provide funds is a poor way to indicate that a higher level of educa- tion is desired. But also, the University should lead state high schools towards a higher standard of edu- cation in order to prepare for better living and working, the approximately 60 per cent of high school graduates who never attend college, as well as better preparation for ad- vanced study for those who do. MODERN HIGH SCHOOL students have a choice of attending a myriad of higher educational institutions, of high and low standards, and this presents numerous diffi- culties to providing academic initiative. Another possibility is to work closely with all state colleges and universities to develop a more uniform standard which would force high schools students to reach higher aca- demic level. The University probably does not, at pres- ent, need to raise its entrance requirements, but in order to remain a leader among the nation's institutions of higher learning should keep this leadership role in mind and be alert for possible changes in the future. V -RALPH LANGER CAPITAL Cali W ASHINGTON - The political future belongs so far as the eye can see to the middle-roaders- the quiet, reasonable men instead of the angry and shouting men. The American voters are plainly tired of "give 'em hell" in politics, of black-dyed villains and spotless heroes. Call them conformist and complacent. Or call them simply more grown-up now. Whatever the reason, the people no longer look at political candidates and parties as two frantically hostile rah-rah alumni groups look at a college football game. Rather, the people put a cool eye upon candidates and parties and then make their decision on this basis: Which fellow, and which party. will be better for us on the whole and most of the time and taking everything into consideration? ** THESE ARE the real lessons of the recent Congressional cam- paign, which has producedthe largest Democratic majorities in the Senate and House since the Roosevelt New Deal. But these are not New Deal majorities; at most, their total complexion is moder- ately liberal. How did the Democrats win so largely? By having run a solid, unspectacular, unbitter and sen- sible show through two preceding Democratic Congresses. By having got the job done without howling and baying at partisan moons. By having made a record of true pro- fessionalism under highly profes- sional leaders - Senators Lyndon B. Johnson in the Senate and Speaker Sam Rayburn in the House. What has happened in 1958 simply is an extension of what happened in 1954 and again in 1956. In 1954 the Democrats took Congress only two years after the landslide Republican victory for President Dwight D. Eisenhower. In 1956 they again won Congress while the people were giving Mr. Eisenhower an even bigger re- election victory-while he, too, was still moderate. THE WAY FOR all this was prepared in Jan. 3, 1953, to be precise. On that day, Senator Johnson became the Senate Demo- cratic leader. Two minutes later he told his party caucus that he was going to drop most of the old partisanship. The way to win in future, he declared in this private meeting, simply was to do things for most of the people-not to call the other party bad names. The Republicans, he observed, had spent 16 years trying to come back by shouting slogans against Franklin D. Roosevelt, who was manifestly more popular than any- body they could offer. They should have cut their losses early, he went on: they should have forgotten about Roosevelt and prepared an affirmative program of their own, THE DEMOCRATS, he said, were going to forget about Presi- dent Dwight D. Eisenhower. They rtpaign Torchight Dies By WILLIAM S. WHITE he applied to politics. To this cor- respondent he forecast long in advance almost exactly what would happen, and where, in the Con- gresional elections. What did happen was an im- mense rejection from coast to coast of extremists and extremism. Gen- erally left-wingers and right- wingers alike were emphatically defeated. * * * SOME OF Johnson's more liberal party associates, already angry with him for "being too cozy," wanted to adopt the technique of fight, fight, fight. Johnson replied: ''Leave that to the Republicans." And so it was left to them. And the Republicans, including Presi- dent Eisenhower, went out to the country crying epithets-"radical- ism" and so on-that simply would, not stick. The public knew that the Democratic party that had so moderately run two successive Congresses had not now suddenly emerged, bearded and with bombs in hand, from some revolutionary cellar. The one great Republican victor in a national Democratic triumph, Gov.-elect Nelson E. Rockefeller of New York. knew the people's mood. Not for him was the fight, fight, fight. Indeed, it was his opponent, Gov. Averell Harriman, who re- jected the Johnson lines - and went down. Put the torchlights away in the attic; sadly if you wish, for many of us will find dull the new politics of middle age. There will be no more parades-not soon, anyway. (Copyright, 1958, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) COMMENTARY: eI NOVEMBER 11, 1918: 'War To End All Wars' A Forgotten Myth By TOM HENSHAW Associated Press Newsfeatures Writer '"HIS," they said as they fought the Kaiser, "is the war to end all wars." It turned out to be the worst forecast of the 20th Century. World War I - "the war to end all wars" - came to starry-eyed official close 40 years ago next Tuesday. To look back over four decades to those hopeful days is to wonder whether World War I ever really ended at all. The day the armistice was signed in the railway car in Coin- piegne, armistice was farthest from the minds of the rival fac- tions in one of the century's great forgotten conflicts, the Russian Civil War. For nearly a year, Russian ar- mies identified only as "Red" and "White" had been marching and countermarching, fighting and killing, t_ length and breadth ci that huge, confused land. They kept right on fighting and some war-weary Allied armies - Brit- ish, French, American - joined the conflict. Names like Wrangel, Kolchak, Denikin, Trotsky be- came familiar around the world. The war ended in exhaustion with the Red armies of the Bolsheviks victorious. At the same time, the Bolshe- vik forces were engaged in war- fare against six neighboring na- tions, five of them creations of the chaos that followed the col- lapse of Imperial Russia. The battlegrounds were Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Finland, Poland and Romania. * * * BUT post-World War I fight- ing wasn't confined to Europe. Greece invaded its ancient foe, Turkey, and it was two years be- fore the Greeks were driven from the Anatolian peninsula. The Arabian peninsula erupted in civil war with the house of Ibn Saud arrayed against the Hash- emites. The fighti'ng lasted seven years and wound up with Saud in command of a united Arabia. The amir of Afghanistan chose the year 1919 to declare war on the British in India. He called the whole thing off when he found he had underestimated the opposi- tion quite badly. In the mid-1920s, Poland fought Lithuania over a place called Vilna and Greece invaded Bul- garia in the climax of a long series of frontier incidents. Minor wats of the 1930s pitted the South American nations of Paraguay and Bolivia against each other over a territory called the Chaco and Saudi Arabia tested its strength against Yemen. On the whole, the wars that immediately followed World War I were of little importance. They did little more than straighten ut a few loose ends left by the big one. * * * IN THE 1930s, however, one INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Russia Shakes over Tests could sense a change. The loose ends had been cleaned up. The lines now were being drawn for what was to be World War II. Japan invaded China in 1931 and the fighting was incorporated into the greater World War II. It didn't end until 1945. Italy conquered Ethiopia and the East African war all but de- stroyed the League of Nations, The League, once a bright hope for international peace, declared sanctions against Italy and failed to make them stick. Civil war broke out In Spain and other nations used the Span- ish battlefields as a testing ground for their armies. Russian troops fought with the Loyalists and Germans and Italians with the Rebels. Flush with victory in Ethiopia and Spain, Italy overran Albania. In a three-month winter war, Russia vanquished little Finland. Both were wars of maneuver for position in a bigger conflict to come. No one in a world grown wary of panaceas made the prediction that World War II was "the war to end all wars" - and it wasn't. Since that great conflict ended In 1945 there have been two wars in the Far East (the Indochina and Korean Wars) and two in the Middle East (the Israeli-Arab and the Suez Wars.) I- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued tram Page 3) and related metals industry. One-three years experience in development work preferable, but not necessarily in elec- troplating field. Degree in Chemical Engineering. Male under 30. 2) Metal- lurgist to develop new products and processes on wire and related metal 4 By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst THE SOVIET UNION, by continuing nuclear tests while negotiating for a cease-fire at Geneva, is attempting to make people believe she is forced into it by refusal of the allies to accept an unconditional ban, Clinging to her year-long position that she Editorial Staff RICHARD TAUB. Editor MICHAEL KRAFJO JOHN WEICHER Editorial Director 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 -SAc norts R or will not accept international inspection of any sort, she is attempting to save the remnants of her propaganda campaign on this subject. There are overwhelming indications that Russia, trying to do a sword dance between the blades of her desire to play on world fears of atomic fallout and her need for continuing her own development program, has cut herself. The allied report of two more tests in Russia indicate that she is still experimenting with small weapons, a field in which she was be- lieved to be far behind. But Russia, knowing that the allies would not initiate a war, is under no great pressure on this point. She never lets anything interfere with the political war to which she is far more committed than to shooting war, which is be- ing held strictly in reserve. If she wanted a ban she could have it. THE ALLIES recognized quickly at Geneva that they had been caught in another So- viet propaganda trap. Having started the whole buAiness of dis- P. 2-2 s urope . O L W R 9 -b As t 20 2 South America Africa O I I :I ..i I I I