Seventy-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBORMICH.* Phone NO 2-3241 "Saddle Up. We Can Still Head 'Em Off at the Gulch"- is Are Free Prevail" _Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. Y, MARCH 29, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: PAT GOLDEN Economy Plan for MSU Smacks of Public Relations [J President John Hannah took time out Uionday to call 1,100 of his faculty into a meeting. e purpose of the meeting? To outline to professors a radical new plan to take care- SO's needs over the coming fecade. his' school. But there is no way of knowing' whether President Hannah thought of this' Hannah himself explains that he called his' special meetiing "so that the faculty would know about it before the newspapers did." For- sure, the faculty appreciated the courtesy. It. , was so unexpected. y 7 /r wp' (44)ft) k L16 S41S7A r~ he 90-minute speech created quite a stir;. sident Hannah seemed to promise a great , of economizing. Not only would he man- to cope with a 50 per cent eprollment hike 1970, but he would also succeed in raising alty salaries, "possibly twice as high" as- y are at present. 'HAT makes his proposals more interesting still is that President Hannah has appar- ly given up any claim his school maintained adequate support from the Legislature., We'll be lucky if the state gives us as much pupil (in ten years) as it does ,now," he [ a reporter after his speech. he main means of the economizing; Han- i suggested, would be through a highly ef- et use of the faculty, including intensive of teaching machines, television teaching 1 films. recisely how this will free enough money permit doubling of faculty salaries was not ed. Indeed, Hannah showed. a reluctance. ae. specific on any of his innovations,. tretching the point, one might suppose that "economy-minded" legislators would react orably-and perhaps even materially-to nah's 'realistic' view of future state aid to MSU, AS WELL AS other schools in the na- tion, will face severe problems in the -next ten years, and certainly Hannah's program in- dicates a willingness to cope with them. But Hannah says "It should be a point of pride to all of us (at MSU), asi it is a source of satisfaction to me, that few other univer- sity administrations would dare to place such sweeping proposals before their trustees with confidence in the willingness of their faculties to rise to such a challenge, and in their ca- pacities to meet It." This is nonsense. Other schools are certainly as interested in the future as is MSU. They have not, however, found any reason as of yet to indulge in the flamboyant reforms pro- posed'vaguely by the MSU head. It is 'gratifying to know'that MSU has enough waste now to permit so much cutting- down in the future. Perhaps, if Hannah looks a trifle more carefully at his school, he will, find a way to help the state in its own budget difficulties. Perhaps,. too, it is a good thing to know that if .Hannah does manage to save money, he will'devote it to salary increases. He certainly doesn't need it for his public relations office. -PETER STEINBERGER AT LYDIA MENDELSSOHN: 'Our Town' Works Cotton Candy Wonders THORNTON WILDER'S "Our Town" must always remain a wonder. It has dramatic effects, but try to trace their origin or line of buildup. It is an emotional tour de force, but analyze it and you have dust in your hands. It is only -vaguely apparent afterwards that Wilder has turned some inspired verbal slapstick into one of the most moving plays of the modern stage, and has done it somewhere between the second and third acts. You might also see in the organdy. haze which is its inevitable effect, that Wilder has managed to weave into an organic whole many of the most daring experiments of today's theatre including a surrealis- tic irony, which-like opposite mirrors placed against the poetry of the individual lines may suggest more' levels to the play than are there.' But it is your fault if you look for them, because Wilder makes clear from the start that it is to be pure theatrical effect; that it is indeed all done with mirrors. THIS PRODUCTION, as intelli- gent and as sensitive as it is, seems to have lost itself somewhere be- tween the mirrors, with some ac- tors heading straight for the poetry, some for the irony and some wisely ignoring the reflec- tions of either. The Stage Man- ager, Singer Buchanan, who of all people should have maintained the strictest balance, is merely a senti- mental guide and it is clear why, he is unable to create any real identity of place from' the start; he is a stranger in Wilder's town. THE COMEDY which takes up the larger part Hof the first two acts comes .off well except for the first scenes in which pace was lagging. But the,pace was too fast in the vital scenes between George and Emily even to the point of running over laughs. The delicacy of these sceneswere to prepare us' for the, final act and its delicate, climax which is Wilder's emotional, formulation of his town's address. "Grover's Corners, New Hamp- shire, The Vniverse, Thy: Mind. of' God." Royce Rosenberg, who is a very fine actress, probably could not feel herself in the pace of the early scenes and so her emotional growth into the last act appeared heavy-handed and, sentimental. The overall reason, then, why all that was good in the first two acts perishes in the third seems to have been a failure to distinguish be- tween Wilder's irony and comedy, his poetry and, anybody's senti- mentality. -Robert Kraus to the EDITOR To the Editor: AR RELIGION and s c i e nce compatible? A letter from Mr. D. F. Owen (Daily, March 18) an- swering this question in the nega- tive indicates a gross and unfor- tunately all too common misun- derstanding of the issues. While I am not qualified to present a care- ful Christian exegesis, I suggest Mr. Owen becomes so before he attempts to criticize. For clearly Mr., Owen has no conception of the Christian doc- trine of Original Sin, which he claims is "certainly not compat- ible with scientific thought." Rather, it has absolutely nothing to do with science. * * 0 SIMILARLY, to say that biology and religion, or Darwin and Chris- tianity are incompatible is to out- rage the grave (in Westminster Abbey) of Charles Darwin, as good a Christian as he was a biologist. May I refer Mr. Owen to a book by a*-man with whom he has only a name in common? In Scientism, Man and Religion, Dr. R. G. Owen points out that "incompatibility" only occurs when science becomes a religion, as, it does in Marxism; when left to follow their own sep- arate ways, as Mr. Owen should leave them, there is no discord- ance. --Michael C. dePencier, Grad., Dept. of Philosophy HOUSE PLAN DEAD: Residence Halls, Lack Strength implication by Innuendo M4PLICATION BY INNUENDO seems to be an increasingly popular sport in Michigan dur- g the last few days. The State Police and le Floyd McGriff of Detroit have taken it ;on themselves to be arbiters of political iought and gain notoriety for themselves arough the implication of Communist in- iltration. Sgt. Stanley Olezak, head of the "subver- "ve"' squad, charged that there are 300 Com- unists in Michigan. McGriff has charged iat the University and Wayne State Univer- ty have been "infiltrated" by Communists. Yet both these people have resorted to vague eneralities, a veil of secrecy and utter idiocies hen asked to make any substantiation of heir charges. Witness McGriff's statement: "You have ome of these professors who have done no- iing but read books and read more books and on't know anything trying to teach our :ung people." N THIS IMPLICATION of complete unreal- ism on the part of college teachers, McGriff as completely neglected his own unrealism. Is better to flinch at the very mention of ommunism without understanding, the ideas nderlying it? What are his qualifications for riting any sort of statement on Communism? :e claims that he wrote a thesis on Karl [arx in 1911 and was with the U.S. troops in .ussia in 1919. But these are still not authori- Itive measures of his knowledge of Com- iunist societies and present-day Communist bought. He also states that in lifting the ban on ommunist speakers, "WSU has opened the oors to a million-dollar soapbox from which ftists can spew and spawn parts of a Com- aunist creed without opposition." Notice the use of the word leftist instead of Communist. Is McGriff in favor of not only banning Communists from campuses but Socialists? He says he feels that debate on the. relative merits of the two societies would be good. But his tacit implication (since his proposed debate between Mr. Khrushchev, who is a Communist anyway, and Henry Cabot Lodge-is highly unlikely) is that it must be a contest in which there is no contest; a contest from which those who sincerely believe in the opposition viewpoint would be banned. AS FOR THE State Police, Sgt. Olczak and. his associates are an anachronism in their methods and objectives; they represent Mc- Carthyism pure and simple except that they have no Congressional immunity and are hence forced not to be quite so bold about their pperation. Though they have made no specific charges other than that there are 300 Communists in. Michigan, their total effort has been an at- tempt to excite people and to raise a stir over nothing. They have not named the supposed subversives. In fact, since he disclosed one of his sources of information as being the notor- ious' Circuit Riders group, it is very possible that many' of these people are not subversives at all. The Circuit Riders are, after all, famous for their implication of people in high places (such as former president'Dwight David Eisen- hower) as Communists or Communist dupes. The dangerous part of such investigations is that while so many people remain frightened of the Communists, they will unknowingly fall the victim of fascists. Freedom is not a "some- time thing". To lose our freedoms for the illogical, emotional publicity seeking of a hysterical few who cry that we are being sub- verted by them is sheer stupidity. -DAVID MARCUS (EDITOR'S NOTE: James Seder, '61, former chairman 'of the Stu- dent Government Council Human Relations Board, 'is a member of the SGC Committee on Membership in Student Organizations and has been active this year in various other, groups at the University.) By JAMES' SEDER Daily Guest Writer FOR THE past several years a' small but informed group of students, residence hall personnel and younger faculty members have devoted a great deal of critical at- tention to the University's resi- dence hall system. The impetus for this study has not been the feeling that residence hall system is "totally bad." 'On the contrary, it ranks relatively high in comparison with residence hall systems at many large public universities. The group's position was best defined by former Daily Editor Richard Taub who stressed that the residence halls were not living up to their potential for pro- viding the student with stimulat- ing intellectual and social experi- ences. The group is not primarily con- cerned with the food problem, the drinking problem, the .dress regu- lation problem, the social life problem, or the occasional trav- esties of justice in dealing with disciplinary action. All of these problems are, to be sure, unde- sirable in their own right and 'bad because they lead to disen- chantment with the residence hall system. * * * HOWEVER, attempts to deal with these problems tend to be- cloud the need for fundamental reorganization of the system. The past two presidents of the_ men's residence hall system, Tex Chert- kov and Dan Rosemergy, have de- voted their attention almost en- tirely to begging minor food re- forms from the business office and have, as a result, failed to push for any of the necessary ma- jor reforms: structural reforms. There are probably three areas where reforms of the system are desperately needed: 1. EITHER the business office of the residence halls have entire- ly too much power or they are be- ing used, rather despicably, as scapegoats. No one questions that Leonard Schaadt and Franklin Shield are competent business agents, but there is nothing in their 'training, professional orien- tation or experience to indicate that they are in any way compe- tent to make value adjudgments concerning the operations of the residence halls.. It is unquestionably true, as they continually remind students, each dollar can be stretched just so far and it is probably true that they do a reasonably good job of stretching dollars. But value judgments as to how the money is spent, what will re- receive priorities, and similar de- cisions should be made by indi- viduals who are primarily inter- ested in. and oriented toward, the the Administration B u i 1 d i n g. Schaadt does not understand the students and cannot reasonably be expected to do so. He and stu- dents should become involved in collective bargaining. F u r t h e r- more, the dichotomized responsi-' bility between the Deans' offices and the business office offers a fine excuse for the present lack of unified, coherent, and articu- lated residence hall policy. * s * 2. THE self-liquidating financ-' ing of the residence hall system has severe limitations. There is a sharp limit to the amount of resi- dence hall fees which can be as- 'signed to debt-retirement and still leave enough money in the sys- tem to adequately finance food, staff and service needs. A slower rate of expansion of the residence hall system (and thus a slower rate of amortiza- tion) would have made it possible to allocate a larger portion of stu- dent funds to student needs. Fur- ther, it would not have forced the residence hall system to build its present monster structures such as South Quad, and Alice Lloyd and Mary Markley Halls. Perhaps South Quad and possibly Alice Lloyd were necessarily built and financed as they were. The Uni- versity had to meet a demand. But Markley was, and this is probably a gross understatement, a compounded agglomeration of every mistake in residence hall building in the University's ex- perience. It was too large, to aus- tere, too expensive, too far fromr campus, too inaccesible by car at. closing hours, and had a built-in over-capacity 'which forced a sharp reduction in apartment per- missions for women. This latter aspect of Markley is doubly un- fortunate: in addition to making the girls. who are refused apart- ment permission unhappy, it closed the safety-valve by which the system would free those girls unable' toadjust to it. The university's policies on 'ex- pansion must be coordinated. If the residence hall system cannot afford to keep pace with, Univer- sity expansion either older stu- dents must be, encouraged to live outside the system, other financ- ing for residence halls must be se- cured, or expansion must wait. On the other hand, it is an unfair burden to put on students' should- ers to make them pay for antici- pated expansion. * * s 3. THE THIRD problem is the most serious and the most 'inex- cusable. There is a tremendous lack of communication between the various levels of organization. of the residence halls. The Board of Governors of Residence Halls either does not have the vaguest idea what is happening, in the residence halls or it chooses to ig- nore what is happening. It is incredible that members of the Board can maintain that they are not aware of student dissatis- faction with food, dress regula- tions and the like, and more im- portant by far, that the residence in addition, the policies of the Board seem to have trouble filter- ing down to the staff. Several staff members in both the men's and women's residence halls still feel, for example, that it is part of their responsibility to protect White Christian Americans from contact with 'the rest of the stu- dent body. This is against the Board's policy, but communica-' tion downward has apparently not been very effective. As a first step toward 'becoming an effective policy-making body, the Board must' clarify its posi- tion in relation to the two Dean's offices. They must also be recept- ive to student and staff views. Finally, they must give the staffs effective direction. * * * THIS ARTICLE has been fo- cused rather strongly on the weak points of the system. It should be repeated that the residence hall system is not all bad, and it should be admitted that there are real problems involved in improv- ing the situation. But any improvement must be premised on the realization that the Michigan House Plan is dead and has been dead for twenty years: we could not afford it. The residence hall system must be re- organized to meet the realities of the system as it now exists. Struc- tures like South Quad, Alice Lloyd and Mary Markley cannot be run as they would have operated un- der the House Plan: The responsibility for running the residence hall systemlies with the 'Board of Governors, and_ if there is to be any improvement in the system-not merely in the minor areas of dissatisfaction, but also in the atmosphere 'of the residence halls-the structure of the system must first be strength- ened. TODAY AND TOMORROW The Facts of Life -Daily-Larry Vanics D~iL OFICIL BULLETiN r'+'= r lwt .."rr Yr"'7W~i". rr{:a h' {:: i .a f Y~~ti,, ut , yae, hrsdv . r . 30, 162 .as By WALTER LIPPMANN VREN THE President and the Prime Minister said at Key West that "the situation in os cannot be allowed to 6ontinue to deter- rate," they were thinking, we may suppose, at the Boun Own government might, without itting up much of a fight for it, lose the capi- I city. After that, this government which we pport would have little - standing and little ,rgaining power in a negotiation about the ture of Laos. Among the rebel forces, which ruld then be dominant, there would be a dan-. rous tension between the genuine neutralists ider Prince Souvanna Phouma and the active )mmunists of the Pathet Lao. Some kind of cease-fire and standstill is, erefore, necessary if there is to be a success- 1 negotiation, establishing, as we now hope, passive and neutralized Laos. There was a testion whether this radically changed Ameri- n policy in Laos, which has been adopted only the new Administration, could still be carried t. But the acceptance by Moscow of the itish proposals shows that the Soviet Union usts the President's purposes in Laos. Soviet Union, a military victory would be im- possible. A French army of some 400,000 men has been unable to defeat the Algerian rebels. The strategical situation in Laos is very much more difficult for SEATO than was the situa- tion in Algeria for France. On the other hand, the Soviet Union and the Chinese cannot expect to win a stable victory by military force. The SEATO nations. have behind them the sea and air power of the United States, and this power can be 'used to deny to the Pathet Lao an assured victory. There is, therefore, in Laos not a true balance of power, for the balance is decidedly against us. But there'is a rough balance of the capacity to harass and frustrate. This balance is leading to a negotiation, such as Great Britain, France, and the United States have proposed. The facts of life have prevailed upon us to recognize that Laos cannot be brought, as the preceding Administration tried to do, within the American sphere of military influence. The President was leaning over backward at his nress conference when he credited the Eisen- The Daily Official Bulletin as an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial ' responsibility.. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Building, before 2 p.m., two days preceding publication. THURSDAY, MARCH 30 General notices Library Hours during Spring Recess: The General Library, the Undergraduate Library, and divisional libraries will be open on regular schedules until noon on Sat., April 1. The University, Libraries will be open on short sched- ules from Mon., April 3,thru Fri., April 7.: Libraries will be closed Sun., April 2 and April 9,. also Sat, April r8. The General Library and the Under-, graduate Library will be open from ,8 a.m. to ,5 p.m., Mon. thru Fri., April ,3 thru April 7. The Audio Room in the Undergraduate Library will be closed during the spring recess. Vacation hours for divisional libraries will be lposted, on the doors of each library. All'libraries will resume regular sched- ules, Mon., April 10.' fitdns who exnci t, re eiveEdu the Spring semester,21960-61, will be given on Fri., May 12 and Sat., May 13. Students planning on taking the examinations this Spring must notify the Secretary of the Committee in Linguistics, Prof. Chavarria-Aguilar, 1625 Haven Hall, in writing, not later than Fri., April 14, of their intention to do so. Effective Monday, April 10, first day of classes, after spring vacation,, the temporary student triangle parking lot at Thompson, Division and Packard Streets will revert to Recreation Area until. the Monday following Thanks-' giving recess, fall 1961. All automobiles must be removed from that area before April 10. Office of the:Dean of Men. Bicycle Regulations for Spring Vacation 1: Bicycles stored (left over 48 hours) in racks in classroomareas will be im- pounded. During vacation bicycles should be left 'in the racks at your Ann Arbor residence. 2. Bicycles on 'University property (classroom areas, residence halls, Uni- versity apartments, Medical Center, etc.) which do not bear a current (ex- piring 9-30-61) license will be im- pounded: 3. Bicycles parked illegally (out of racks, on sidewalks, under canopies, blocking building exits, or on grass butyrate," Turs., Mar.30 1582 Eas Medical Bldg., at 10:00 a.m. Chairman, Phillip Gerhardt. Good Friday Concert. The University of Michigan Symphony Orchestra, con- ducted by Josef Blatt, will be heard at 3:30 p.m., Fri., March 31, in Hill Aud. They will perform Johannes Brahms' Serenade No. 2.in A, Op. 16, Joseph Haydn's Concerto per l'Organo, and Igor Stravinsky's Symphony de 'saumes. Robert Noehren, University organist, will.aassist with the Haydn composition, and the University Choir, conducted by Maynard Klein, will as- sist with the Stravinsky number. Open to the public. Lecture: Dr. Melvin Calvin, Depart- ment ofaChemistry, University of Calif- ornia, at Berkeley, will discuss "The Evolution of Photosynthetic Mechan- isms" on Fri., March 31 at 4 p.m. in the Natural Science Aud. Placem~ent SUMMER PLACEMENT INTERVIEW-MAR. 30 Camp Maplehurst-Mich. coed camp. Dr. Thomas Cohn interviewing for male counselors this afternoon from 3:30 to 4:55 p.m. Attn: Students registered with Summer placement Service: If you have ob- tainti anmpr nh, nlpnafo ,nntcnt