"Nah, You Aint Got Enough Edjiccaslun To Vote" &1 £irhigat DailI 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 'Wb Opinns Are Fre ?'rutb Wil Preval" AT LYDIA MENDELSSOHN: 'Matchmaker' Opens, A Night Well Spent HERE WE HAVE "The Matchmaker," written, plagarized, and adapted by the grand master of such shenanigans, Thornton Wilder, who put out a stage version of "Finnegan's Wake" iThe Skin of Our Teeth) when most of the unwashed set were still struggling with riverun past eve and adam's. "Matchmaker" is an often funny piece, with layers of sophistica- tion piled five deep, all based on an earlier version based on a German comedy based on an English comedy based on a couple of Egyptian hieroglyphics out of Cairo on camel back. The story is as preposterous and far-fetched as ever: a stingy old storekeeper is out after a wife which he does eventually get but not Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. .Y, DECEMBER 12, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: JOAN KAATZ Faculty Senate Resolution Valuable to University CRITICS HAVE often claimed that any time the faculty takes action on a problem it is "always too little and too late." The Faculty Senate recommendation Mon- day urging the Regents to uphold Student Government Council's Sigma Kappa decision violated this tendency - it came through awith the timing and the tonnage (we hope) of a crack express train. If it does not do anything else it show those interested that the com- plaints of Student Government Council are more than just the complaints of a group of petulant undergraduates, that there is a legi- timate issue at stake. This, coupled with the weight that any faculty action has, should go far toward placing SGC in a better position. BUT EVEN MORE important than this is that the faculty expressed concern about an issue which involves a large segment of the campus community and which does not direct- ly involve the faculty. The faculty, we believe, does have a responsibility to the campus com- munity at large, and perhaps this action is a sign that the faculty is beginning to re-assert itself. Taken as a group, the faculty is the most essential segment on campus. It is the quality of the faculty which determines the quality of the University. But frequently we get the feeling that individual faculty members are busily burrowing further and further away from each other and from the University com- munity. Yet, these are the people who do the teach- ing and research at the University, who carry out the functions the University is here to provide. These are the people who are respon- sible for setting the tone of the community. They are also the people, who by their very positions, are most able to do so. IF THE UNIVERSITY is to be truly vital, the faculty members must not only be leaders in the classroom, but, in fact, all over campus. Their stake in many ways is the largest - and their understanding of the goals and values in the community is greatest. The faculty resolution passed Monday was of real value to the University for two reasons. First, it gave SGC much needed support. Sec- ond and most important the faculty demon- strated an active interest in community af- fairs, -RICHARD TAUB Editor -#4 F=IZZ:EeLo+C.V- West Builds New Maginot Line? t + CAPITAL COMMENTARY: Sen. Mansfield Gains Stature r ?. y WILLIAM S. WVIT S NATO ANOTHER Maginot Line? It is just that, Nikita Khrushchev told Sen. Hubert Humphrey over a glass of Armenian brandy the other day. And the West is kidding itself by relying on defensive pacts just as surely as the French did in that faroff day when they tried to pro- tect their frontier with concrete gun emplace- ments, Khrushchev indicated. The totalitar- ian from the Ukraine filled the liberal from Minnesota in on a number of things we hadn't known before, such as performance figures for the latest Soviet ICBM. While the United States Air Force has been patting itself on the back over a 6,235 mile filght by an Atlas last month, a Soviet missile without any mythological name that we know of has traveled 8,700 miles, according to Khrushchev E SOVIET dictator went on to describe "substantial" nuclear blasts which have been detonated in his country's substantial wastelands. Largely on the strength of these revelations, the marathon conversation has made many headlines, But the American press has missed the sig- nificance of what Khrushchev had to say, just There Sure Is "THE UNITED STATES government is es- timated to have given away more than 60 billion dollars in foreign aid since World War I- Now then, Virginia, what was your question? The Wall Street Journal as it has missed most relevant points in the cold war recently. BECAUSE after accusing the West of having "the Maginot Line mentality," the Soviet dictator went on to explain that "We shall fight you with economic weapons. We are al- ready beating you in the Middle East and Southeast Asia. We have made tremendous. strides at home while You are on the down- grade. Ultimately we mustuoverwhelm you..." Then in this context Khrushchev went on first. to describe the military advantage he attributes to his nation, then to present again his ultimatum on the future of Berlin. That the United States should have to be told by the Soviet Union on what grounds the new cold war Is being fought seems incredible. It's been something less than a secret all along -Allan Dulles of Central Intelligence, declared last spring that he considered information on the Russian ten-year plan for economic dom- ination of the uncommitted nations of the world more critical than military data. One ease Dulles cited was pressure on Finland, and It now looks as though the Communists will exercise considerable power in Finnish politics after the latest governmental crisis there. SO THE QUESTION is indeed, what are we waiting for? Only with a solid footing of economic warfare of our own can this country take advantage of Communist weaknesses such as what appears to be a rift between the USSR and Red China, or the current defection of the Soviet intellectuals. Only then can this country afford to bar- gain with Khrushchev, the man who knows what he is talking about, --THOMAS TURNER WASHINGTON - The Far West has a new leader in the Senate and in the highest foreign policy councils of the United States, Sen- ator Mike Mansfield of Montana. Curiously, he has not sought out the honor; actually, it has come and tugged insistently at his sleeve. Indeed, upon the life and times of Mike Mansfield there hangs a tale that might be called paradox triumphant. Nothing about him follows the familiar scripts. For he has come to great power al- most against his will. He has been returned to the Senate with the greatest victory at the polls scored by any Senator in a two-party state in the coun- try - 76.3 per cent of the total vote. This was a more decisive re- election score even than those of two much more publicized Sena- tors - John F. Kennedy of Mas- sachusetts, 73.5 per cent, and Stuart Symington of Missouri. 66.1 per cent. * * * ANY ONE of these figures may speak loudest of all. Nevertheless, he has none of the characteristics commonly re- garded as standard to politicians. He is very quiet and shy, rather than cheerfully aggressive. He is studious and even a little bookish,, rather than hearty and backslap- ping. He speaks briefly and infre- quently, rather than long and oft- en. Sometimes he is unsure about what ought to be done about ma- jor issues - and candidly says as much - instead of being abso- lutely and automatically positive with the answers. In fact, he is a master politi- cian, although, given all his back- ground, he never should have been anything of the kind. He does not really wish to run anything or anybody; to hold a seat in the Senate is enough for his ambitions. In the last Congress he lightly bore and rather apolo- getically used his influence as as- sistant Democratic leader, a post that was pressed upon him in the first place. This time, however, he will have no choice but to use it more often and more openly. For the West is the emerging force in the Senate and Mansfield is inevitably its spokesman. More- over, the greatly enlarged Demo- cratic majorities will provide more work and more problems for all the party hierarchy. Thus an add- ed part of this general load must now fall upon Mansfield. So, too, will an increasing foreign policy responsibility on a man who is. a "strong" member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. AND THE Mansfield who is a reluctant powerhouse has a par- allel in the Mansfield who is an untypical Westerner. To conform to the stereotypes he ought to be exactly what he is not. He fits the pattern only in the physical sense. He is appropriately tall and leathery. But he has no big hat, no West- ern drawl - and no interests that are exclusively Western. In no way does he suggest the wide open spaces and the great outdoors. In- stead, he suggests the library - the college library at that. He was born 56 years ago, not on any range but in New York City. His parents moved to Mon- tana when he was three years old. As a boy he dug in the mines at Butte. It is a high, curiously cos- mopolitan city where the great controlling copper corporations have long since adopted a philo- sophical attitude toward the ne- cessity of having a Democrat - Mansfield - representing Mon- tana in Washington. * * * MANSFIELD never went to high school; he simply read and studied in his own way until he was able to go directly to Montana State University. He took a Master's de- gree there and wound up bearing what is sometimes a fatal curse politically - he was a professor, no less, in Latin-American and Far Eastern history. He is the only member of the Senate who has been a private, or the equivalent, in three of the armed forces - Army, Navy, Marines. As a Marine he served, in the 'twenties, in the Philippines, Siberia, Japan and China. He began his career as an un- qualified liberal but he has pro- gressively moved into the center of the Democratic party. He is, in a word, one of the "moderators." And these, by all present signs, have inherited the balance of power in the Far West. (Copyright, 1958, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) without complications to delight a Mozart comic 'opera love. Nu- merous "asides" to the audience spice things up, then there is a moral at the end to the effect that Adventure is where you find it, preferably at Lydia Mendelssohn "MATCHMAKER" has four scenes,capably managed by Ralph Duckwall, although the usual Set Syndrome sometimes apparent: slam doors hard and the sets shiver and a-l-m-o-s-t butnotquite go TILT. But then, so do we all. Pacing is slow at first, but picks up soon, culminating in an Act III riot scene which is finely put on. Sally Ayn Rosenhelmer (I wasn't wasn't going to mention names but there I go) shows herself to have a marvelous sense of timing and facial expression in the role of Mrs. Levi, the matchmaker. Espe- cially in those "asides" does she excell where other members of the cast seem less at ease. Terry Thure, the Incompetant Assistant Clerk in Vandergelder's 1880 supermarket, shares this tal- ent with Miss R. These two play- ers seem to have come closer to dipping into the essence of this play than anyone else, although no one is really out of the picture. Except perhaps Mr. Shaye who plays an erratic Kemper (a poor artist pursuing Vandergelder's niece), sliding in and out of char- acter like a schizoid calligraphist. Or Mr. Schiller, a strangely youth- ful Malachi Stack. But this is a casting problem really, because Schiller is otherwise quite effec- tive as Vandergelder's decrepit ap- prentice. Speaking of Vandergelder, Don ald Ewing is a fairly forceful Merchant of Yonkers, with a slight tendency to undignified puffing, especially when he barks at poor Cornelius Hackl. Mr. Lovell is a fine figure of a Hackl; a shy and embarrassed Hackl,, but eager to tackl Mrs. Irene Malloy, the ad- venturous milliner. Incidentally, Miss Enggass' bold and outspoken characterization here is much ap- preciated. Aside: (Members of cast just dropped in to tell that the cham- pagne cork in Act II never popped so well as on opening night. Thus: two snappy openings in three hours), -David Kessel AT THE MICHIGAN:, The Worst This Year A LTHOUGH "The Bridge on The River Kwai" ranked among the best of last year's films, and "Camp on Blood Island" will no doubt rank among the worst of this year's crop, there is a simi- larity between these two entries that is so striking that one can- not help but consider this year's "Camp on Blood Island" nothing more than a very dismal carbon of last year's "Bridge on the River Kwai." Why last year's Academy Award winning film achieved greatness and why this year's entry will never be considered a film of more that pedestrian quality can best be explained by noting that while "River Kwai" used its excessive brutality to effectively comment about the devastation of war, "Blood Island" uses its brutality only as a sensational device. And this brings us to a vital criticism of the movie industry today, for far too many of Holly- wood's products integrate sensa- tionalism as a substitute for in- telligent writing and directing. After being exposed to a film such as "Camp on Blood Island" one begins to wonder whether motion pictures like these are produced only because of the publicity its sensational aspects will garner. Certainly, this film goer has no objection to using sensationalism to heighten the effect of a film; the "Vikings" only a few months ago, for instance, made fine use of such effects in unraveling its story. What is objectionable, how- ever, is the use of sensationalism only for its exploitation value in increasing the drawing power of the film. The second picture on the Mich- igan Theater's bill this week is a drab little English entry which calls itself "The Snorkel." In- deed its title is just about its only original quality. Being a murder mystery, the ethics of reviewing do not allow us to divulge much o , t +' " ^ - +1-rr " - n i - INTERPRETING: Finns IBy , M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst THE FINISH Communist Par- ty is putting on a show of reasonableness in te current p0- litical crisis, but resident Xek- konen sounds as though he fears the Russian sickle will cut off the little country's independence at any moment. Because of the rightist com- plexion of the former Helsinki government, Russia has stopped buying Finnish products, produc- ing serious unemployment in an effort to convince the Finns which side their bread is ,buttered on. Kekkonen has called on the middle of the road Agrarian Party to replace the resigned Rightist government. Communist Party leaders have said they will be stisfied, for the time being, just to get the Rightists out, although they do not renounce their intentions of ultimate control. This sounds as though the Finns might be able to work out a compromise with their big neighbor, something at which they have become adept since their war with Russia in 1939 LONG YEARS of reparations shipments have tied their econ- omly closely to Russia, almost to the exclusion of the Western mar- kets they formerly enjoyed. An extremely ominous note has been injected into the situation, however, by a hint from Kekkon- en to the West not to try to in- tervene. It would seem logical, in the trade difficulty, for the United States and other Western coun-, tries to step in and buy Finnish products now xwhether they need them or not. But Kekkonen obviously fears this would produce a crisis which could.very well mean the death of Finland. The U.S has carefully avoided any provocation in Finland However, Mrs. Kuusin, the Com- munist leader, herself suggests de- velopmet of outside markets and mentions the value of ties with the West, This may only mean that Rus- sian designs on the liberty of Fin- land are already taking shape, and that the long-range purpose of her statements fit into Rus- sian policy favoring expanded trade with the West, no matter how conciliatory her words may sound at the moment. Finland fought Russia for her independence after the Russian revolution and again, bravely but hopelessly, in 1939. Since World War II, in the light of what Russia did in Eastern Europe, the little country's con- tinued independence has been al- most a miracle. If it last very long, it will be more so. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is . official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan Zor which Tne Michigan Daily assmes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices sould ' be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preeding publication. Notices for ftnday Daily due at 200 p.m. Farida. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, 195 VOL. LXIX, NO. 71 General Notices Since Christmas and New Year's Day fall on Thursdays, the University will arrange its work schedules so that a skeleton work force will operate on the Fri. after Christmas with the re- mainder of the staff off. Those em- ployees who work on Dec. 26 will have Jan. 2, 1959 as their day off. The student automobile regulations will be lifted for Christmas vacation from 5 p.m.Fri., Dec. 19, to 8 a.m. Mon., Jan, 5, 1959. Summary, action taken by Student Government Council at its meeting held Dec. 10, 1958. Approved minutes of previous meet- ing. Moved into Executive Session. Upon return to regular session the Chairman announced that in action taken in Ex- ecutive Session Student Government Counil a eed to am a oh AWord... ONCE UPON A TIME an editorialist dug up the word apathy and applied it hither and yon. He ought to be the next person hung on the diag .. . and not in effigy. The wonders of human ingenuity have made a tremendous target open for application of this much overused word. People are called apathetic about school spirit, athletics, aca- demics, the world situation, and student gov- ernment. The culmination has now been reached since people are now apathetic about apathy. Apathy has also become the scapegoat-word for everything which might require some exer- tion of effort. Leaders are constantly dismissing projects as useless since ". .. the people are too apathetic about things like that." A few synonyms for apathy might be in order . . indifference, indolence, laziness, etc. Webster's unabridged says, among other things, "... a lack of passion," and certainly no one wants to be accused of that. Let's call a summit conference and ban the use of this word for eternity. Communications might break down somewhat but the change would certainly be refreshing. -RALPH LANGER . . by Michael Kraft LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Liberal Education for Engineers JUST INQUIRING Mutual Obligation To the Editor: I MUST take issue with Dean Emmons' statement on liberal education as reported in Sunday's Daily by Mr. Junker. One would agree that the es- sence of education is in the teach- ing of theory. Orie must also be delighted to note that the Engi- neering College offers courses that' let the student know the College is "interested" in impractical es- sentials-e.g., English. There may also be something in the claim that a student "isn't go- ing to get anything out of" a course for which he has no desire -but I don't know what that something is. If the College re- quired of the student only those courses he desired, most engineers would graduate in less than two years. The Engineering College has at- tempted to provide "well-rounded personalities," claims Dean Em- mons. After attending many cam- pus teas, I can only conclude that the College has too often failed. If the personalities are few, the engendering programs are fewer. How many integrated engineering- liberal arts programs are offered by the College? Two, one each in civil and chemical engineering. I must also concur with Dean Em- mons' statement, ". . . these I nrn rnr..m eI.1 - + vn .nn aA i.'. i be a requirement. If the engineer- ing student interested in obtain- ing knowledge about "English lit- erature or psychology" is expected to be able to gain this by reading "books on the subject after gradu- ation," he had best be able to read rapidly. He will have four years to make up for. -Name Withheld by Request, Frustration . . To the Editor: As AN UNWARY sophomore who has just made extensive use of the new "open stacks" system 'at the Main Library, I feel compelled to write an account of my ad- ventures, so that other' students may be warned of what lies in store for them. I was in search of three philo- sophical journals, so I naively made my way to the card cata- logue to look up their call num- bers. Alas! One of them was not listed in the card catalogue. I walked confidently up to an at- tractive blonde, seated at a desk marked "Information." Upon hear- ing of my plight, she directed me to look for "a lady who must be working in the catalogue," who could tell me where to find my hook T never did find the ladv stopped at the third floor and a young man pushing a cart full of books pinioned I and my hapless companions aboard this infernal contraption to the wall. Gasping for breath, I wheezed, "Ninth Floor, Please." Finally, I emerged from said elevator, and began the search for my books. After getting lost three or 'four times, I emerged from the stacks with the desired books under my arm. Then, into the elevator again, and again I ex- perienced the maddening 'sensa- tion of going up when I wanted to go down, and down when I wanted to go up. Upon arriving at the fifth floor, I raced madly for the exit, where I presented my books. However, the young man at the door in- formed me that the little white slips I had filled out to find the books were not sufficient, and I would have to retire to a little table and make out new ones. Upon doing this, I again presented my books to this young man, who now informed me that my precious journals (publication dates--1908, 1910, and 1942) were overnight books! He must have been feeling generous, however, as it was Fri- day, and he said that I might keep them until Monday. Then his stamping pad went dry, and I COME SAGE once observed that there is no hope for the satisfied man. Perhaps the ame could be said about an institution of 7igher education. This realization of the need for continual elf-examination and re-evaluation is perhaps )ne of the more encouraging attitudes among hose who run the University and perhaps Ilso the most difficult to maintain as Michi- an expands in both size and scope of activities. For in many ways, the process depends upon :ommunication. Sometimes it breaks down, if ndeed it ever did exist, as in the residence ialls where every year or two, officials seem 'surprised" to learn that people don't like the ood or living conditions. (nuclear engineering) and new courses, (Asian Studies, to mention one.) Much of the work of evaluating the present and preparing for the future takes place in small groups and committees, receiving little attention until the changes are actually instituted. Sometimes however, the process of evalua- tion affects large numbers of student and fac- ulty members, as with the course evaluation forms passed out to literary college students this week. The questionnaires provide a po- tentially valuable vehicle for communicating student opinions and suggestions. But their worth depends upon the manner in which they're filled out and the attitude in which they're received. Tndeed if there ares ome 4vtietrnew whn