J Se& ty-Tir-d Yar EDiTED AND MANAGED ET STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AVTHORiTTy OF BOARD IN CONTrOL OF STUDENT PUBLATIONS nons Are "ree STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MIcH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Will Prevail"ss s Is printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in al; reprints. FOLLOWS FRENCH PATTERN: 'I Grand Alliance Y, MARCH 18, 1964 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL SATTINGER \r4 7R1 ,/V 3! I Japanese Foreign Policy Turns Toward Gaullism' Dormitory Room Poliees Inconvenience Juniors WHOLE PROCESS of assigning ms in the women's dormitories is istration - not student - oriented. responsible for the operation have .strated no consideration for wom- pecially junior students-and have no provisions for special circum- s, preferring instead to treat only neral case. following situations exemplify this .nior women often find that they sufficient number of hours to make a senior by the end of the fall se- --and seniors have apartment per- a. Yet the University requires full- ontracts, so these juniors have to . the dorm an extra semester. thCrisis THE SOVIET UNION is again threaten- ed by capitalist encirclement and in- ternal subversion. Top members of the Kremlin are now terribly worried over the production of Matzoh, unleavened bread used by Jews during the Passover holiday. Accordingly, the Soviet government has cracked down and closed Moscow's only Matzoh factory. Government bakeries were ordered to stop producing Matzoh over two years ago. The closed factory had produced about 250 pounds of matzoh over a two-day period before it was shut down for supposed health reasons. THE PRESENT CRISIS followed only days after official objections to the distribution of "propaganda" among the Jewish congregation in Moscow. Official Soviet sources termed recipients of this material mental incompetents. Among the supposed propaganda was a Jewish calendar which had the audacity to omit from its list of holidays May Day, the Anniversary of the Russian Rev- olution, and days commemorating victor- ies of the Red Army in World War II. With such internal threats at hand, the Kremlin must be forever on its guard. And, indeed, the production of Matzoh is capitalist subversion of the highest order. -A. ORLIN -Transfer students receive priority over junior women who wish to get into Betsy Barbour merely because Assembly Association does not take time to keep a waiting list for those women on campus who want to get into Barbour. Thus va- cated rooms are being given by default to transfers. -Decisions on whether to petition for transfer to other dormitories must be made too quickly. A note goes up on the bulletin board one day, and 36 hours later petitions are due. No doubt this in- convenience helps the administration greatly by lowering the number of wom- en applying for transfer. LAST YEAR an extremely ingenious de- vice was used to cut the number of petitions even more: housemothers og- tained from Assembly only a few blank petition forms-hardly enough to match the demand. And even if juniors did get their petitions in, they could not apply for transfer to Oxford suites or Barbour. -Women have only a slight chance of getting the type of room they desire. A woman who wishes to live in a single, for instance, may be assigned to a dorm with very few single rooms. The possibility of her getting one rests on the small chance of her winning an early preference in a room drawing among all women in the house. -Juniors get last priority in their pref- erences anyway. Even freshmen and soph- omore women rate better consideration. The administration seems to feel that juniors have already had their chance to move, so now they may as well stay put. A junior woman who wishes to get into a house where she has not lived be- fore has little chance of getting her re- quest. THESE COMPLAINTS-although possi- bly minor to those responsible-harm greatly any feelings a woman student on this campus may have that Assembly Association and the Office of Student Affairs take into consideration the stu- dents they are supposed to serve. -HARRIET ADLER -MICHAEL SATTINGER Acting Associate Managing Editor . . t f J rt jam - .U.a , y.':'. Y- . ',r .r 1'e T , {'~ '. . '. _ . '>F' wr ::.. e .'a-' ' _. J 7Y _ . ::.. ty 3 -, ... ,, . W (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first in a series of articles analyz- ing the present situation in South- east Asia and the likely conse- quences of that situation on Japa- nese foreign policy. This article points to reasons why Japan's power and influence are on the upswing.) By WILLIAM CUMMINGS Daily Correspondent TOKYO-On Feb. 7 the Main- ichi Shimbun of Tokyo pub- lished the highly prescient and stimulating thoughts of Carnegie Tech economist Martin Bronfen- brenner, "Toward a Gaullist Ja- pan?" The concept presented in the article points out a trend that is both good and bad but is most certainly inevitable when events of the past few months are con- sidered instheir historical perspec- tive. Bronfenbrenner pointed out that the severance of colonial ties is rarely a smooth operation. The United States restored France's strength through \the Marshall Plan and in a similar way put Japan on her feet with the occu- pation and Korean War industrial orders. In the former case the United States, through what Bron- fenbrenner considers to be a series of blunders, lost control of a Gaul- list France's international policy. Bronfenbrenner predicts that Japan in like manner will assume an increasingly independent and unconciliatory policy. This conclu- sion has muchmerit, but Bron- fenbrenner's analysis of cause is somewhat shallow. He refers only to United States inspired irritants of recent years and neglects to consider the positive aspirations of Japan and France. 4 * * IN BOTH cases we can point to proud countries who suffered se- vere economic and psychological setbacks during World War II. Japan and France's stagnation after the war combined with the crippled condition of the ,other great powers, allowed two excep- tions to appear abnormally strong. These of course were the United States and Russia. The temporary prominence of the United States and Russia in- fected their national missions with an intense element of ideo- logical evangelism. Thus the stage for the Fifties was set between democracy and communism. The United States assumed these con- cepts were mutually exclusive and thus set out with lavish expense to finance an experiment for free- dom throughout the world. It cost about $80 billion of the American taxpayer's income. Russia also saw ' fit to experiment-innEast Ger- many, Hungary, Poland, Greece, Afghanistan, and so on. THE STRIKING fact about this era is that the two great powers could afford to experiment only because the strength of the rest of the world was sapped. The Six- ties bring renewed health to the world in general. If the United States ard Russia are going to continue to experi- ment in international ideological equations they must raise their research and development budgets. Practical matters prevent this: Moscow citizens apparently pre- fer wheat or a lace brassiere (from Pravda) to a MIG-21 or a piece of Albania; Americans find that charcoal steak suits their appetite better than charcoaled Korean' veterans or barbecued Buddhist monks. More concretely, Khrushchev's announcement of a reduction in arms' expenses and Congress's cut- back on foreign aid are indicative of a more restrained spirit. Furth- er more, President Lyndon B. John- son's poverty crusade is no doubt going to swing the spotlight away from external concerns in the United States. THE United States cannot af- ford to increase expenses for her international control account. Ris- ing nations such as France and Japan can-in the interest of find- ing their "proper place" on the globe. Herein lies the key to under- standing the Sixties. The United States is hampered in its international policy by tra- ditional commitments,icollected enmities, a stubborn ideology and a limited budget. If one's thoughts do not range beyond the nuclear age, France and Japan enjoy clean" diplomatic slates inAsia. Coupled with increasing prosperity they can build their prominence on this record-and it will prove to be a towering one. IN DISCUSSING future pros- pects we must keep in perspective the fact that other stars are also rising in the world. Thus France and Japan will not enjoy the same exhilarating heights that produced a militant Stalin or a zealous Mc- carthy. F u r t h e r m o r e, international thought' of the coming decade is interested in many more issues than was true in the Fifties, issues which transcend ideologies and rest on the concepts of world brotherhood andneconomic equal- ity. Thought of the post-war period and the Fifties centered around the Atlantic Ocean, as is illus- trated in the composition of the United Nations. It began in 1945 as a body of 51 nations, and only a small percentage of these lay outside the opposing East-West camps. Today the United Nations has 114 members and the continents of South America, Africa and Asia are conspicuous for their General Assembly power. In recognition of the new international structure an Asian, U Thant, was chosen as Secretary-General in 1961. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Barry Lodges a Complaint' Diag Vandals Deserve Lenient Treatment TWO INTOXICATED University students last Saturday night attempted to pry up the University "M" from the center >f the Diag. They failed to pull it up com- pletely, but their attempt damaged the 'M" enough to force the University to remove it for replacement or repair. No one can say that those responsible for the crime should go unpunished. [hey have defaced University property and should be held to account for it. And yet, to what degree should these wo men be punished? It is easy enough or students to simply let our administra- ion take care of the matter; indeed, it s easy enough for the administration to simply take the normal punitive proced- ires and let it go at that. UT WHEN WE CONSIDER the punish- ment that may be meted out to the )ffenders, i.e., suspension from the Uni- rersity or acquisition of a police record, we must remember that the "normal" )rocedures may not be the ones that will apply in this case. The administration ind student body should not allow them- elves to sit idly by while the "normal" procedures take their ill-considered ef- fect. This is because the offenders in this ase are not the "normal" type of person vho would go around vandalizing Uni- rersity property. They are University stu- lents who have made a mistake, a mistake hey appreciate and are willing to pay for. 3ut they are not common criminals and hould not be dealt with as such. Everyone at the University has, at one ime or another, done something ill-con- Idered, something foolish, something to e ashamed of. The only thing which dis- tinguishes the rest of us from the two men who tore up the "M" is that our ill-considered acts usually do not result in the probability of severe punishment. We may lose a friend or two, get a black eye, or have a very tender head the next day; but we are not suddenly subjected to the attention of our friends and the University community, or to the possibil- ity of a police record following us around for the rest of our lives. Thus having to face the likelihood of a harsh penalty is the only thing which dis- tinguishes those who disfigured the "M" from any one of us. Is it reasonable and proper to punish these men who have done no more than anyone else might have done in a similar position, no more than anyone else probably has done and gotten away with under conditions of less public interest and pressure? We must remember that the criminal act is punished most effectively by the criminal's acceptance of the seriousness of his behavior. All the public cruci- fixions in the world will not obviate the crime; what we must work for is the reform of the criminal and this will not be accomplished by an extreme punish- ment handed out in an attempt to pacify the injured party. THE MEN who have committed this crime are fully aware of its conse- quences both upon the University and upon themselves. They are willing to take the punishment due them. But there is no justice in punishing them for something that anyone in a comparable situation might have done. The duty of the administration will not be done by adding to the punishment al- To the Editor: YOU MUST not be a victim of That common falacy, Which holds New Hampshire's populace Has downed its thumb at me. Now first of all, I only lost By seven-thousand votes, Quite easily accounted for, My campaign leader notes, By all those loyal citizens Who feared, in so much snow, Their cars might swerve from right to left- Conservatives, you know. For after all, I'd not suppose Most radically to say That snow is due, so why don't you Hitch up your horse and sleigh. The People know who leads the fight, Who shows the strength, who speaks with might; Of course, they did not vote that way... But California is the one To watch with close attention: The victor in this primary has The key to the convention. I STAND upon my record past, And as I lift my feet, I see that I have said before What I will now repeat: Manned bombers are the one defense To make our homeland sound, For guided missiles miss and fail, And blow up on the ground; But bombers never fail them- selves, They just get missiled down. The UN is my second point: Completely ineffective; We pay out money by the ton; Our plans can all be wrecked if Russia wants, or Cuba wants, Or France decides to do so; If we could get our money back And I had power, I'd sue; so We should stop investing in This theatre which flops Because those bad Red actors Make all too frequent stops. The word "stop" brings me now to this: We're much too strong, it's plain, To let a bearded maniac Turn off his water main. Of course, we'd ask him nicely first, Then some Marines should rush With patriotic thirstiness To make the water gush. And finally, the budget stands, Then falters under deficits; If I had run my budget thus, I would have soon called quits. Now last year, I am proud to say, 7 tallied each expense, And with my total income, Was short just fifteen cents! Now it is no solution To din the lights way down, Until one must use candles When wandering around; I here and now do promise That if I take the oath, I'll use just single candles, Not moderately both. (For after all, I did hear shouts Of "Barry, go ahead!") We thought an "x" for me would hex The other candidates;, May I conservatively say: There's no blow worse than fate's! We thought we had it figured out: Each vote would read the same; For marking "x" is easier Than writing out a name! -Steven Walters, '66 Representation... To the Editor: WAS intrigued by your recent editorial concerning the failure of student representation to the subcommittees of the Senate Ad- visory Committee on University Affairs. In the spring of last year I, along with many other, presumably interested students, petitioned to become a student representative to a SACUA subcommittee and was interviewed for such a post. I was later informed by an officer of Student Government Council that I had been selected to sit with the SACUA Subcommittee on Edu- cational Policy. After an absence of two months, I returned to the campus in No- vember wondering why I had never received written notification of my selection, why I had never been called to a student meeting, and why I had never been contact- ed by the subcommittee chairman. I phoned Prof. William Kerr, chairman of SACUA, and was in- formed that the educational pol- icy subcommittee had probably not met yet and that, when it did, it would probably not welcome student participation. * * * SO. NO wonder the student- faculty plan isn't working. Either I was the victim of a hoax or there just has never been even a modicum of information transmit- ted to those students who showed enough interest to petition and be interviewed for these positions. Past conduct of SGC leads me to believe the latter. -Robert F. Rosin, Grad. Calling the Game.. . To the Editor: I WONDER whether Tom Wein- berg, who wrote the account of Michigan's 69-57 victory over Ohio University in Sunday's Daily, saw the same game I did. In the game he saw, "The Wolverines kept a lead of at least 10 for the last seven minutes . . ." In the game I saw, the score was 56-47 (a dif- ference of nine points) at 6:20 to go in the game. Subsequently, the score was 56-49 (seven points); 57-49 (eight points); 58-49 (nine points); 60-51 (nine points) and 64-55 (nine points). In the game Mr. Weinberg saw, his game, "Pomey . . . set up Bun- tin for a layup, putting the score at 51-43 and out of reach of the challenging Bobcats." In my game, the score was never 8-7, nor was it ever 51-43. Michigan trailed 6-8, tied the game at 8-8, and then went ahead 10-8, never to trail after that. Later, Michigan and Ohio were in a 43-43 tie, after which Michigan went ahead 45-43, 47-43, 49-43, 49-45 and 51-45. IF MR. WEINBERG and I did, in fact,usee thebsame game, then one of us is to be commended for his originality and censured for his carelessness. -Max D. Smith, Grad. (I'm quite sure that I saw the same game that Mr. Smith heard on the radio, but there are numer- ous problems involved in covering any sports event away from Ann Ar- bor as comprehensively as The Daily does. (The problem boils down to one of limited time and inabilty to cor- rect small errors, both in the ori- ginal story and in the one retyped In Ann Arbor by a staff member on the telephone. It is virtually im- possible to correct all the errors, as time is so critical. (The Daily was the only paper in the state which hadta complete cover and box score of the game in its Sunday morning edition. (The two major errors that Mr. Smith points out are attributable to the flaws in the hurried system of correcting typing and typographi- cal errors. The two two-point differ- entials in the scores are from my original story and are indeed in error. -T.W.) wilsolts .., To the Editor: THE FIGURES of Woodrow Wil- son Fellowship winners for 1964-65, cited in The Daily, which place the University second in the nation among state colleges and universities, are accurate but mis- leading. The University of California does rank first with 48 fellowships compared with 20 for the Univer- sity. But the California figure rep- resents five colleges and universi- ties in the California system: Berkeley, 23; Davis, 1; Los Angeles 17; Riverside, 5; Santa Barbara, 2. The University is thus a close second to Berkeley. * * * THE UNIVERSITY still leads state colleges and universities in the number of recipients of Wood- row Wilson Fellowships for the period 1945-64 with 159. Berkeley is second with 145. But there is little reason for complacence. The University can hope to maintain this leadership only through exerted efforts to maintain the quality of the liter- ary college and to attract the most talented students graduating from the nation's high schools. I wish to take this opportunity to express my appreciation to Prof. Otto Graf, the Honors Council staff and all concentration advis- ers whn, have. hs.lnspd mvvi ii- his, At the Campus Theatre i1HE L-SHAPED ROOM" has in this country received a great amount of very indiscriminate and unjustified praise. In some re- spects it is a beautiful film, fine- grained, superbly-lit and with an often vivid sense of pictorial com- position. There are throughout brave attempts at original images which only founder through an in- hibiting predilection for very close camera work or else trip unexpect- edly into the absurd: for instance, the doctor whose dramatic im- portance is suggested by the Klieg lamp burning over his head. It looks like an almighty halo. The acting, however, is superb. Leslie Caron, as an unmarried French girl, alone and lovelessly pregnant in West London, plays with a quite poignant sensitivity, which often gives the lie to the poverty of her dialogue. Her lover, Tom Bell, has a more densely writ- ten character to cope with, de- manding many crudely motivated changes of mood which jar with the apparent general kindliness of his nature. His fits of temper are as a result, distressingly unreal; but the rest is magnificent. Many "bit-parts" in the -film are done with startling brilliance-particu- larly Avis Bunnage as the vilest of vile landladies. 4 A.* SO WE COME to the chief fault of this movie which is apparently Bryan Forbes, the man who wrote and directed it. With monumental bad taste he has employed the grand romanticism of Brahms' first piano concerto at moments of the pettiest sentimentality. Here is one example: Leslie Caron, missing her lover (whose name is Toby Coleman), chances on a tin of mustard coincidentally brand- named "Coleman's"; the camera dashes in to a close-up (what other shot could they possibly use?); the grand piano surges to 4fs, elivvaov' Lsli. ('aron'C pett 'L-SHAPED ROOM' Banks' Novel Flawed In Pseudo 'Art Film' and moral frigidity of England? No explanation is given. Obvious- ly, the producers felt Caron, whose French nationality is the rationale for this change of heroine, had greater box-office appeal, especial- ly in America, than any British ac- tress; and with consummate scorn for the novel and for their audi- ence, they have left it at that. The half-digested quality car- ries through to the form of -the film, which seems to hanker after honors in the "art-theatre" as well as on the commercial circuit. For instance, the Brahms accompani- ment, the personnel of Leslie Caron's lodging house (two'pros- titutes. one homosexual, one les- bian, one randy writer, one preg- nant girl), the pretentious close quarter photography which only serves to accentuate a number of very sweaty pores - all this is thrust at us purely for sensation, and with no real relevance to the story line or putative themes of, the movie. None of the characters, not even the hero, is coherently developed, and they remain largely (if anything) as symbols, and voy- euristic symbols at that. "The L-Shaped Room" has been a great commercial success. I sup- pose it deserves to be, for it is a very commercial film, art preten- tions rotwithstanding. -Robin Duval Zip Coded THE COMMUNIST party's ef- forts to secure a place on the election ballot in Arizona, the home of Cadillac cowboys and oth- er variants of the Southwest's "nouveau riche," has been reject- ed, the assistant attorney general of Arizona having said that a 1961 state law "flatly prohibits official representation" for the Commun- ists.