~1 x Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATION. "Where Opinions Are FeSTUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Truth Will Prevail"> Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1963 NIGHT EDITOR: ANDREW ORLIN FEIFFER MMMH. I LOK A THAT 5 5I I-I ! . KAU1V- I IVVC Via- 0000,11 (4" ME1AINLY LIMA~J IF qo') Y CALU CALL THAT THAf FAU1~1fL) 5roto TTH6 $EAUN OF A 50oJSf' 1 Mq CO EIht F!, ANAT l5 8AU N1 l it THE LIAISON: T he Wheat Deal Barbara Lazarus, Personnel Director :{r _ J Tl7 44 0 ^ 1 A; lk i k f1 VfATh mse9f! 7HTi WKA qLOU W1 60T. I1UTIPUF Sq WH~A LeU qJCVD THOV& PRESIDENT KENNEDY made a forward step last week to clear out crammed wheat storage bins. He announced that the United States will sell about $300 million worth of surplus wheat to Com- munist bloc countries. This does not solve the basic farm prob- lem of super-abundance nor does it alter the concept of parity-high subsidized market prices shelled out by the govern- nent to farmers. It doesn't claim to do this. Hospitality HE ARREST of two Chicago co-eds on the steps of a Jackson, Miss., church, and their subsequent sentence to a year in jail for committing the crime of trying to go to church is the most heinous ex- ample thus far of the new brand of South- ern hospitality. Julie Zaugg, who is white, and Betty Ann Poole, who is Negro, may well become the latest martyrs in the fight against bigotry in the South. According to Judge James Stencer, who gave them the maximum possible sen- tence for "trespassing and disturbing public worship," they must have had a complaint signed by an official of the church Involved.But the pastor has de- nied that he or any other spokesman for that church has signed any such state- ment. PPARENTLY, the high official alluded to was an-usher who stopped them at the door before they were able to carry out their evil plan, that of worshipping their Lord. But this is neither here nor there. There is no excuse for any body that calls itself a religious institution to turn any- one away. Nor Is there any excuse for their being thrown in jail on such flimsy charges as "trespassing in church." If this sort of tomfoolery is an example of the way jus- tice is carried out in Jackson, Judge Sten- cer should be disbarred forthwith. IT IS UNNERVING to read of these girls' grim future, which may involve a long session on a penal work farm if their de- fense progresses no further than releas- ing them on bond. What is even more unnerving is the ap- parent lack of interest in the matter on the part of the Justice Department, which plans to sit around for a few weeks in the guise of "determining the facts" when it could order an immediate investigation. IT IS NO SECRET that the state of reli- gion in this country has degraded to an abominable extent. This is especially true whenever religion is connected with bias against one group of people or another. The Biblical, admonition to "love thy' neighbor" is disregarded all the time, pretty much as a matter-of course. When this happens, the dignity of man is drag- ged in the dust as well. There is no point in setting up a reli- gious front if prejudice and bias are as deeply inherent as they obviously are in many Southern churches. This latest act on the part- of the good Southern Chris- tians only serves to demonstrate what a farce religion has become in that part of the country. It should not go unpunished any longer. -STEVEN HALLER Liquor ALCOHOL is a wonderful solvent, both fiscally and chemically speaking. Ear- marking liquor taxes for higher education would improve the financial state of the University no end. It puts the burden of financing higher education back where it belongs-the stu- dent-and it is a far less obvious and painful way of increasing University in- come: instead of a tuition increase, the student pays more for his liquor. -M. SATTINGER ~kr Aticiigau kaily Editorial Staff RONALD WILTON, Editor DAVID MARCUS GERALD STORCH Editorial Director City Editor BARBARA LAZARUS.,.............Personnel Director PHILIP SUTIN .............National Concerns Editor GAIL EVANS............. .....Associate City Editor MARJORIE BRAHMS ..... Associate Editorial Director GLORIA BOWLES..........Magazine Editor MALINDA BERRY...............Contributing Editor DAVE GOOD........................... Sports Editor MIKE BLOCK .................Associate Sports Editor JIM BERGER ................Associate Sports Editor BOB ZWINCK............Contributing Sports Editor p-.t.. e. It was done in the only manner possible -by executive order-which will and has brought criticism on Kennedy's head from disgruntled farmers, Republicans, mem- bers of Congress and West European al- lies. Each of these groups, however, is merely selfishly guarding its own inter- est and not looking at the long run prob- lem. THROUGHOUT the last four administra- tions, Congress has done nothing con- structive to take the farm burden off the federal government and has only begrudg- ingly given surplus food away to needy countries as part of the foreign aid pro- gram. .Congress, especially the House of Rep- resentatives, has a rural bias and mem- bers tend to guard their constituencies' interests. Representatives usually com- plain about the high costs of government, but can't or won't think of new ways to cut federal spending on agriculture. CERTAIN FARM LEADERS have already condemned Kennedy's action and de- manded that a more representative body decide the issue. Charles B. Schuman, president of the American Farm Bureau Federation, has glibly suggested that this is a solution for Congress to decide, since it "represents all the American people." He represents a more conservative farm opinion that, on the one hand, rails against giant government and, on the oth- er, accepts the money it offers. Congress has failed for the past 20 years to accom- plish anything concrete or original in solving the farm problem although the time was ripe for the President to cut through this inaction and self-interest and make a definite policy decision. The Republicans are also going to use this issue for political fodder in the 1964 presidential campaign. Their arguments, however, will seem hollow and invalid since secretaries of agriculture of both parties have consistently failed to come up with worthwhile solutions for the sur- plus problem,. Each secretary is plagued with large stockpiles of wheat, butter, chickens and cotton which keep accumu- lating and are dished up for school lunch- es. BASICALLY, the present subsidy situa- tion, which adjusts for an imbalance in supply and demand, raises the price level for agricultural goods far above what they would normally command at the market- place. The federal government and the urban taxpayer pay the price difference to the farmer, keeping his earnings high, allowing him to stay in agriculture and keeping the ideal of the yeoman farmer alive. The subsidy program also forces Ameri- can agricultural prices above the world price, preventing easy sale of surpluses in the world market. The wheat for Russia, for example, will be sold at this world price, some $.60 below the United States subsidy price. The farmer is still not bearing any bur- den in the price difference since the gov- ernment has an export subsidy which will make up the difference. The sale will only empty the bins, and the government will wind up paying twice. THE EISENHOWER-BENSON years only worsened the farm problem. Secretary of Agriculture Ezra T. Benson's soil bank plan was a failure and only helped to build up the amount of wheat in storage. The approach attempted to be original, but fell on its face. Republicans and Demo- crats have failed alike in this problem. Nor can Republicans pull the "trading with the enemy" talk that has so often hampered past deals. Whether or not the cold war thaw is temporary or permanent, real or imagined, wheat is being given to hungry people and not just ideological enemies. The Soviet Union has a shortage of food, and this wheat which is just rot- ting in the United States will give bread to these people. FORMER WEST GERMAN Chancellor Konrad Adenauer (who is still the pow- er in West German politics) was quick to condemn the wheat sale. Adenauer, like the Republicans, draws political lines and sees this wheat as going to the hated East Germans. He would rather have people starve for political reasons, before he would help them as human beings. It also wasn't very long ago that the Common Market jacked up tariffs on American poultry, cutting off much trade between Western Europe and the United States. The result is a glutted American market with prices spiralling downward. THE WHEAT BARGAIN will be handled by individual, private grain dealers. It does not represent a mass federal, sale or killing of free enterprise. It will stop ex- cess wheat from lying useless and give it A 1 ., IM A FEAM qAI3T A WI &1~ A KR5143. f LI ou'L.U MhT FLUE 1 I poff VIA VTfE FROgi ROW~. 8EAUrM MRt- i6 A WN Th 9T5 5TAPV. A AL1 5 660 O f OOU r TACH-VIJTIUAUI PM- £0 'Hi 50 goUg Mq WIFE, 14q FRED~t W~IF6'5 WORE RA65 FOR qFAR5. AW5! WO~ STOUE VAT THAT MCANA~fO) MORE I COXVAT CAST. CONE FEAU 'Ft , fA "C WItHAM E90~6 $ AJO A focWEL, i O RU.fl PAR- VT ' A RA M051' L{OU of 5H0Lp somr 5 ERRt1a HER~ si~ow. SABLE I v /1- sEA~fq- I t- 5wJ- 1e.. ( TODAY AND TOMORROW: Congress Endangers Nation AT RACKHAM: Japanese Music Done. with Artistry By WALTER LIPPMANN THIS IS ONE of those moments when there is reason to wonder whether the congressional sys- tem as it now operates is not a grave danger to the Republic. There are two great measures before Congress, and in all proba- bility Senator Goldwater was right when he said the other day that "the President has to make up his mind whether he wants the civil rights bill or a tax cut, because he cannot get them both." THIS SITUATION is a reflec- tion on the Congress. For the truth is that the two measures are not competitive, but comple- mentary. If the tax bill can do what its advocates believe it can do, that is to say stimulate busi- ness and reduce unemployment, it will reduce some of the pres- sures which are making it so dif- ficult for the leaders of the Negro people to continue to be moderate, non-violent, patient and reason- able. The civil rights bill promises the Negroes the chance to vote, better schooling and an end to humiliation in public accommoda- tions. But the tax bill promises the Negroes jobs. They need them. The rate of unemployment among Negroes is a little more than twice as great as among the whites. The Negroes, therefore, have an acute interest in a measure that promises to overcome the slug- gishness of the economy. Today, for example, the Negro rate of un- employment is over 11 per cent; during 1951-53, when the economy was booming, Negro unemploy- ment was less than 5 per cent. Anyone who is serious about dealing with the Negroes' griev- ances must, therefore, be dis- SERMON IN REVIEW: Protestant Preacher Shirts the Bible SUNDAY I HEARD a sermon typical of half the preaching of Protestantism. It was at the Packard Road Baptist Church, which meets in the basement of the YM-YWCA. The center of attention was equally divided between two loci: a wall-clock unblinking except for the slight pantomime of its inexorable sleight-of-hand ballet and the two-piece pulpit, box lectern squat on round-table. The pastor, Mr. Jesse Northweather, stood between them to deliver his sermon. The one offered him the freedom to expound the Word of God; the other left him the slave of time. * * THE SUBJECT was "Christ and His Answers to Hard Questions." Mr. Northweather began with the visit that the Queen of Sheba made to Solomon. We don't know what questions she asked the King; but he answered all of them. Each of us has hard questions. Jesus is, or has, their answer. The sermon considered four of these: What kind of a being is God? What shall I do about my sins? What is the supreme purpose for life? What is the future life? By looking at Jesus. we see God. Jesus was loving but not "a namby-pambly do-gooder." Jesus was "a bigot" because he required of people a single "narrow-minded dogmatic way." Jesus was also the person in the Bible who spoke most often about hellfire, wailing and gnashing of teeth. Mr. Northweather said, "I like to read of his love, but I cannot shun the other scriptures." "Both justice and mercy met and kissed at the cross." God is many-sided; He is both mercy and judgment. * * * WHAT SHALL we do about our sins? One group says,.deny them; another, hide them; a third, blame them on others (as Eve did "that poor old crawling snake," and as the Church, caught in stagnation, does the World, and as America, perplexed by international crises, does "the lousy Communists"); the fourth, confess them and accept Jesus as our Savior from sin. The future life is a going-home. Mr. Northweather celebrated the pastoral winter twilight homecoming of a farmboy eager to stable the team and enter the warmth and light of the house. "Does he dread going into the house?" asked Mr. Northweather. Jesus told us not to worry about life-after-death. Mr. Northweather concluded with "Crossing the Bar" by Tennyson. * * * * THE SERMON was typical of half the preaching of Protestantism because it was not biblical interpretation. Traditionally, Protestantism has claimed the Bible as the source of authority for the Christian life. But we departed no wiser about the Bible in general, about a specific passage, or about the way to interpret scripture. The preacher used the Bible merely as a gimmick-to start the sermon, and as a source of "proof-texts"-scriptural sentences isolated from their contexts and quoted to establish the arguments as true. A LARGE, WELLBUILT MAN, Mr. Northweather stood, and spoke, solidly. His voice had a far-corner and last-row reaching, all-purpose loudness. Everybody heard him. Except by adjusting its volume to quietness for two personal anecdotes and the reading of a poem, he did not regulate his voice to express modulation and movement of meaning. Exposition and pathos and sarcasm all had the same set amplified quality. He did not resort to gesture. The clock behind him semaphoring time was more arm-waving than Mr. Northweather. Nevertheless his sermon had energy, chiefly drawn from unflinch- ing doctrine and variety of language. Bold discussion of judgment and sin gave air-clearing vigor to his preaching. And he employed a large vocabulary, combining archaic words, colloquial phrases, sub- standard constructions, technical jargon, fragments of 19th century oratory, and segments of contemporary straightforwardness, into muscular talk, rich in range and delightful in leaps from level to level of discourse. tressed to find that he has to choose between the tax bill and the civil rights bill. A competent Congress, which was equai to the realities of our time, would see that the two measures are closely related and would act on them ac- cordingly. BUT THERE is something more in all this than the lack of serious and realistic understanding of what is at stake. This Congress has gone further than any other within memory to replace debate and decision by delay and stultifi- cation. The reason for this delay is that there is a considerable body of strong opinion in Congress and in the country which is opposed to any tax cut until spending is cut down. Though I happen to think that it is impossible to balance the budget when the econ- omy is running so much below capacity, and that an attempt to deflate now would produce a reces- sion, the views of the opposition to a tax cut are honorable and de- serving of respect. The issue, which is real, should be debated for as long as it takes to debate it thoroughly. But there should be a roll call and a deci- sion at the end of the debate. This is a furtive and degenerate form of the filibuster. In my view, the open filibuster-that is to say, protracted debate-can normally be justfied and accepted as a way of mitigating the absolutism of numerical majorities. If I were a senator, I would be very loathe to vote for cloture. But I would vote for it now, because the times are not normal and a critical emergency exists. The national security requires, I believe, the passage in the near future of a civil rights bill which constitutes a declaration by the federal government that all the remaining badges of slavery and servitude are outlawed. (c) 1963, The Washington Post Co CAMPUS: 'Carry on' Col1lapses COMPLACENT Americans be- ware, the British have issued a sturdy challenge to our position as the ruler of overdone situation comedies. With the advent of the two latest in the Carry On series, "Get On With It" and "Carry On Regardless," now showing at the Campus Theatre, we can no longer feel as secure as before. Others are capable of repetitive, aimless, slapsticl comedies quite as silly and senseless, and possibly even worse, than ours. Able to stretch small segments into long scenes with a single joke, able to run old jokes into an already trod ground, the Carry On series is the English counter- part to our Three Stooges films. It is different only in being a slight bit more tasteful, a wee bit more bearable, and even occasion- ally funny. It also has Kenneth Conner. * * * AND THAT'S a world of dif- ference in itself. The British seem to have a stable full of stock characters that they pick from whenever they produce a comedy. Over and over the same faces appear. "Carry On Regardless" runs like a Who's Who. But no matter how eccentric, how clever, they all stand lost in the shadow of Kenneth Conner. Conner is easily the funniest character in British cinema. With equal ease he is tragic and wildly humorous, unquestionably deserv- ing his title of the Cockney Chap- lin. T HE . RACKHAM .AUDIENCE Sunday night had the privi- lege of hearing and seeing the great Japanese kotoist, Kimio Eto, who also doubled on the samisen, Tadao Nomura, playing the shaku- hachi, and Suzushi Hanayagi, a classical dancer. The harp-like tone of the koto, a long cithern related to the Chinese ch'in, and the obvious mastery of Mr. Eto overcame any difficulties in appreciation the audience might have felt when faced with admusicconstructed and oriented differently from our own. Japanese music is linear without the harmonic structure of West- ern music. Heterophony, or simul- taneous variation of the same melody, was the compositional technique used when the ensemble played together. All the numbers were programmatic and many were centered around a song, tech- niques characteristic of Far East- ern art music. THREE distinct styles from the the solo koto repertoire were rep- resented: "Midare," dating from the 17th century, the more highly ornamented "Shiki No Nagame," written in the 19th century, and the brilliant "Mizu No Hentai," by the great innovator, Michio Miyagi. The Miyagi composition and the encore, an ancient folk song ar- ranged by Mr. Eto, introduced new techniques such as harmonics and the use of a chordal background for Japanese melodies. The clas- sical musicians of Japan are. part of an ancient yet still vital and expanding tradition. THE SHAKUHACHI, a vertical bamboo flute, has an intentional breathy quality achieved by fin- gering with the underside of the knuckles rather than the finger- tips. The shakuhachi has a color- ful history. The large instrument common today was developed by ex-samurai who became wander- ing priests in the Edo period (1600-1850). Without their swords, they substituted an out-sized flute of a defensive, or perhaps offen- sive, weapon. IN THE classical pieces, "Ku- x'okami" and "Kanegame-Saki," the dancer Suzushi Hanayagi ex- hibited the restraint, control and understatement we associate with the Japanese esthetic. By contrast, the street dance, "Echigo Jishi," in which she so skillfully manipu- lated her scarves, had the vigor and enthusiasm of folk dances throughout the world. The audience showed itself very receptive to this unusual and ex- cellent concert, an evening of Japanese chamber music. --Judith Becker i AT THE STATE: DeSica's Altona Not Sartre's 'Altona' THE VITTORIO DeSica - Abby Mann treatment of "The Con- demned of Altona" is incredibly incompetent. No one would call Sartre's "Altona" a well-made play. It is almost unplayably long; structurally, it is diffuse. But it is successful in creating the sense of oppression that permeates the mansion at Altona. The situation is not unlike that of "No Exit"-and DeSica has made the same mistake as the adaptors of that play for the screen. The use of exteriors al- most totally dissipates the domi- nant mood of both plays. It is clear enough that DeSica was concerned with making "Con- demned" cinematic. But it is his mistake in assuming that the medium demands that this vio- lence be done to the important dimension of mood in Sartre's play. * * * ALSO DE SICA's camera is clumsy. Someone should tell him the close-up loses its meaning and expressive force if it underlines every bit of "significant" dialogue. The most serious flaws, how- ever, are in Mann's screen-play. It amounts to an almost syste- matic misinterpretation of Sartre. In the play, the young Gerlach, Franz, proclaims that everyone is guilty. His father proclaims that no one, except a group of leaders, is guilty. Sartre is saying that these two amount to much the same thing. Franz preaches his delusion of a destroyed Germany. This vision of national punishment is the only justification he can find for his butchery of two Russian prisoners on the Russian front. His father, however, is one of those most re- sponsible for the resurrection of the Federal Republic after the war. This is as much of an eva- sion as Franz's. Again Sartre is saying that both collective guilt, and what we might call collective innocence, are much the same myth. 1Mann has managed to undercut Sartre's exposure of collective guilt as a myth, and to obscure his insistence that ethical terms lose their force when applied on more than the scale of individual action. In the film, Franz's delu- sion of a destroyed Germany is shattered when he wanders out of his room and walks the streets of a prosperous Hamburg. He wanders into a theatre and be- gins to rant at the members of the audience, "You are Hitler." In the play he calls himself Hitler. Abby Mann has him call the Germans Hitler. * * * WHEN FRANZ does confront his own responsibility in the film, he is becoming more and more mad. This is due at least in part to a wretched performance by Maximillan Schell. Throughout the play, especially in the last act, it is necessary to communi- cate a furious lucidity. Schell is only hysterical. The recognition that was vital for the end of the play is lost in the film. The elder Gerlach has taken Franz up on a lift to see the Gerlach ship-building empire. Franz pulls them both to their death. For neither Gerlach is there full recognition of individual guilt and responsibility. A subtle ethical dialectic is lost. Sartre's adaptors have made a rather weak indict- ment of Germany, and little else. -David Zimmerman LETTERS to the EDITOR To the Editor: SE A G R E E wholeheartedly with Edward Herstein's edi- torial, "SGC: A Useless Facade That Should Be Abolished." Our S t u de nt Government Council