HOUSE BATTLE: Committee Stymies Liberals o Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS uth Will Prevail STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDGi * ANN AaBOR, MICH. " Phone NO 2-3241 torials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This nus t be noted in all reprints. DAY, JANUARY 7, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: SUSAN FARREIL (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second in a two-part analysis of the current liberal efforts to weak- -en obstructionist tactics in the. Senate and House of Representa- tives.) By HARVEY MOLOTCH Daily Staff Writer FOR YEARS, the House Rules Committee has been spectacu- larly successful in blocking pro- gressive legislation in the House of Representatives. No matter how strong the liberal faction in the House has been, the six conser- vatiVes on the all-powerful com- mittee have been able to defeat the concept of democratic major- ity rule. The Rules Committee decides which bills will go to the House floor, in what order they will ap- pear, the methods of debate al- lowed on each proposal, and the limitations of amendment. Due to the complex context which each bill usually appears on the floor, the committee can easily kill any measure by submitting it with im- possible rules qualifications or merely by never reportng the bill out of committee. ** * MEMBERSHIP ON the mightly group is a true political plum, distributed on the traditional basis of seniority. Thus, congress- men from safe, one-party districts, who are guaranteed-continuous re- FLORIDA WAITER: One Cuban's View Of Revolution (EDITOR'S NOTE: During Christ- mas vacation the reporter discov- ered three Cubans working as wait- ers in a Spanish restaurant In Florida. Hampered by no knowl- edge of Spanish, she was unable to communicate with two of them.) By PAT GOLDEN Daily Staff Writer THE FIRST grinned broadly and said, "Castro no, Batista si, The second growled, "Castro Communista." The third said, "Castro Com- munista? That other man isn't even Cuban," and gave me the fol- lowing interview. "The poor people in Cuba never had it so good," claims Raoul Boeras, who left his native Cuba three years ago to become a waiter in a Florida restaurant. On a visit to his former home in Oriente province two months ago, Boeras noted great changes in the economic level of mountain farmers. Most of them, who had always lived in dirt-floored huts, now have small sanitary homes with concrete floors. "If this keepsupsI may go back in a year or so," he added. BOERAS THINKS the farmers now are in better condition than city workers. "Castro promised to help the mountain people first; they were the most poverty-strick- en and the most unhappy under Batista. When he came into power, Castro immediately set up agrar- ian reforms for the benefit of the farmers and improved their con- ditions." He said the Castro government is now aiding the economic plight of the small villages by opening new industries. Boeras' own town has three new factories, which will ease unemployment consider- ably. The threat of unemployment played a major part in Castro's nationalization of American in- dustries, he explained. During Ba- tista's regime the American com- panies had contributed to the Cu- ban treasury in no way other than by hiring Cubans. They paid no taxes to Cuba, yet drained the country's resources for export. * * * DESCRIBING THE situation in a nickel plant in Oriente, Boeras said that Castro demanded a one per cent tax from the company. Thereupon the American concern threatened to close the factory rather than pay the one per cent. This would have created much un- employment, and turned the job- less against the Castro govern- ment. To avoid this situation Cas- tro took over the plant's opera- tions and kept it open., Boeras' logic followed the line that Castro was accomplishing the things he had specifically prom- ised the people, and could not be condemned for what he did or did not do outside this framework. He justified restriction of free- dom of speech with. the comment, "Castro thinks that since he is doing what he promised no one has a right to complain.". The 1,000 refugees per week who are pouring into Miami "must be former members of Batista's army, who would now find it very diffi- cult to get work, and those people whom Batista was supporting." Hundreds of people had received monthly support from the Batista government and consequently did not need to work at all. Many of these were wealthy already, so the situation was not like wel- fare or social security payments, he said. OF COURSE, Castro has been hard on the rich people-those who were rich because of Batista. But rich people gave much to the revolution, too. "The opposition from the Church is related to this. It was the rich people who supported the Church. o naturally they are now bitter," he observed. Boeras felt that Castro had turned to the Communists simply as an economic measure. "They are asking countries to trade with them every day. The Russian gov- ernment has been very coopera- tive in this respect, while the Americans have broken off all trade. " s BOERAS WAS most impressed with the opportunities that Cas- tro has provided for poor people. In Oriente, he had been employed as a bus driver for a private school. Public education was ex- tremely limited at that time, and only the rich could provide a good education for their children. The professions were accessible only to the wealthy, also. "Castro has built schools througout the country, and his government will pay for profes- sional training for anyone who is qualified," he said. Boeras left Cuba when Castro was fighting in the hills. His re- cent visit provided the opportuni- ty for a contrast, but did not ne- cessarily make him an impartial observer. Probably the most valu- able factor in evaluating his im- pressions of Castro's government is that he expresses an interest in returning to Cuba to live. election, dominate the Rules Com- mittee, just as they rule other important congressional groups. And since these safe-districts are either the conservative areas of New England or more importantly the far right-wing region of the South, liberals have had little chance of gaining important com- mittee posts. The standard break-down of the rules committee allots eight posi- tions to Democrats and four mem- berships to the Republicans. All the Republicans are conservative; the Democrats are split with six liberals and two Southerners. Thus when a progressive bill, such as a civil rights measure comes before the committee, the usual result is a six-six deadlock which is always a victory for the conservatives. o The current congressional furor was probably touched off at the Palm Beach rendezvous of Speaker Sam Rayburn and President- elect Kennedy. Kennedy knows that the Rules Committtee will be the biggest House stumbling block to his "New Frontier" legislation. It is more than possible that the two Democratic leaders at that time mapped out their strategy for ending the conservative grip on Congress. No doubt it took much Kennedy convincing to convince the elderly Texan to lead the fight against the omnipotent seniority tradition and his fellow southern co-horts. NEVERTHELESS, RAYBURN joined the liberals and on the first day of the convening of the 87th Congress, began pressuring House Rules Committee chairman Howard Smith of Virginia for an expansion of the 12 man panel to 15 members, giving liberals a definite majority. When Smith refused, the matter was dropped and tactic number two was in- itiated. Under the approach now being used, the Democratic Committee on committees is being pressured to purge 70-year-old William M. Comer of Mississippi from the Rulesgroup. He would be replaced by a liberal, thus giving the Ken- nedy party-liners a 7-5 majority to back the president-elect's pet pro- jects. Ostensibly, the basis for the ouster is Colmer's active opposi- tion to Kennedy during the cam- paign and his vociferous support of his some state's unpledged elec- tors. The Committee on committees picks the Democratic Party's slate of committee positions, and is very capable of slapping the seniority tradition in the face and following the prestigious Ray- burn's suggestion. Most observers 'new feel that 11 of the Com- mittee on committee's fifteen members are in favor of the pro- posed purge. Miraculously, the group's chairman, Wilbur D. Mills of Arkansas is included in the Rayburn camp. * * * BUT EVEN THOUGH the de- mise of Colmer seems to be as- sured, Rayburn will still have to gain House support for the purge, since the House must ultimately approve all committee slates. When the issue reaches the House floor, probably early next week, an all-out fight is assured. The biggest danger to the li- berals on the House floor will be the so-called "moderates" who have often criticized the obstruc- tionist tactics of the Rules Com- mittee, but who actually need the committee to prevent embarrass- ing measures from coming - to a vote. These men harbor conser- vative feelings alien to their home constitutencies and use the Rules Committee as a handy scape- goat. 'Thne Tal' king Ass' Spefaks Loudly WfLLIAMP. KENNEY and X. J. Kennedy as the second and first half asses, walked away in tandem with Prof. John Heath-Stubbs biblical farce, "The Talking Ass," last night in Rackham's Assembly Hall. This talking ass is the only one who sees the angel of the Lord; the only one who sees that "brother Ass must take care of brother ass"; the only one of the personages that will witness -the manger scene and see the sword turned into a cross twenty-two years later, so saith theangel of the Lord. Balaam, the proud, but weak prophet with a gift for words wrestles with his pride and attempts to listen to the words of the Lord and bless, not curse the Israelites who invade Canaan from Egypt. But the "burden of the vision was too bright for him," he could not tolerate the thought of giving his "talent" and himself to the Lord, and runs off. Offhandedly reverent and beautiful, the main fare of the "Talking Ass", is tongue-in-cheek satire of age-old political 'situations. Explanations of the obvious,'particularly the commentary of the Angel of God, make the play a bit slow, but the delightful subtleness of the satire draws chuckles throughout these parts. The death cries of the Geni (summoned by Balaam's pride) were overplayed but the rest of the characterizations were delightfully hammy. Prof. Marvin Feldheim was a great old soldier, the twinkle in his eye never died even in the most serious moment, while Frank Brownlow's ROTC uniform with rhinestones epaulets only equaled the terrycloth snout of the first ass. The best characterizations, however, were of Balaam's wife Kezia. and the hard bitten Balak, King of Moab, played by Betty Chmaj and Prof, O. L. Chavarria-Aguilar. All in all, the John Barton Wolgamoth Society did amateur jus- tice to the first American production of ".7he Talking Ass" which Heath-Stubbs wrote "just about ten years ago." --CAROLINE DOW AT THE MICHIGAN: 'F acts ofLie Aren't, Interesting, CONSIDERING that Bob Hope and Lucille Ball are two altogether splendid comic performers, the new vehicle in which they are co-starring "The Facts of Life" emerges as a considerable disappoint- ment. * * * * THE PANAMA-FRANK production which is the current tenant at the Michigan Theatre suffers from an overabundance of slickly polished sentimentality, and a deficiency of an, adequately comic "Move One To The Back Burner -One Up To The Front Burner -" 11. warmth. "The Facts of Life" too to the EDITOR Cheating... To the Editor: ANDREW Hawley's editorial on the Literary College Steering Committee's report on cheating was based on two key premises: one qf which is simply inaccurate and the other represents a basic disagreement between Mr. Hawley and the Committee. His editorial stressed, at two points, that cheating was a func- tion of size. The Steering Com- mittee found no evidence for this assumption-and Mr. Hawley'pro- vides none. There are large courses' with virtually no cheating and there are small courses with a great deal of cheating. The Steer- ing Committee's report tried to spell out what we believe to be more significantly related factors. Mr. Hawley "thinks that many teachers do not consider it their responsibility to 'play nursemaid' to students" and asks "can we ask. ' our college professors to destroy an attitude that is, often 'built in- to' the student and still pervades his social environment?" We feel that this entirely misses the point. The report pointed out explicitly that certain types of procedures by instructors quite un- necessarily create situations which put into motion enormous pres- sures on students to cheat. Al- though the report explicitly recog- nized that an individual student does bear ultimate responsibility for this conduct, we do not con- sider the University primarily as a, testing-ground. of moral fortitude. frequently gets bogged down in its perfectly unnecessary, per- fectly symmetrical structiring. Not that "The Facts of Life" isn't endowed with Some very fine and funny moments. With Mr. Hope and Miss Ball at the helm a good deal of charm cannot help but permeate. Watch Mr. Hope as he goes out from a Sunset Strip motel room to fetch a cup of coffee to revive the delightfully inebriated Miss Ball only to later discover that there are so many motel spots along the strip he has forgotten .at which motel exactly he has stranded Miss Ball for their clandestine meeting. Watch Miss Ball when she discovers that while she is carrying on an affair with Mr. Hope in an out' of the way drive inn the mutual laundry- man to their respective abodes is sitting in the next truck taking in the whole splendid business. Despite the fact that the "The Facts of Life" is never really dull, it must also be said there are too few moments when the film is truly interesting. Too frequently one feels that there are lead weights attached to the production- which hamper the fine styles of Mr. Hope and Miss Ball. Certainly "The Facts of Life" is modestly entertaining throughout, but merely modest entertainment from a pair as grand as these experts is highly disappointing, -Marc Alan Zagoren DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) MALE 1-Radio-Electronics Technician (h time