"You Think He Might Get Interested In Us If We Moved To South Africa" Seventieth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 AT THE MICHIGAN: 'Home from the Hill' Licks Stature "When Opinions Are Free 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. FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1960 NIGHT EDITOR: JUDY DONER JETRO Goldwyn Mayer which has been indulging itself for the last couple of months in some unusually trival wide-screen color en- tries has another disappointment to account for in Sol C. Siegle's static and intermittantly interesting offering, "Home from the Hill." Only for a few minutes or so is the new film able to transcend its remarkable shallowness and crackle, splutter and smoulder all over the place. But these moments are altogether too brief and come too late in the proceedings to generate sufficient interest and concern. And even if the sequence were able to successfully jolt its audience out of their deserved lethargy, the melodramatic climax would be too diffuse to effectively illuminate the subtler shading of characters 'Equality at the Best Price' Is the Cry in South Africa A NEW HOPE for settlement of the racial conflict in South Africa has emerged this week. Some of South Africa's business and indus- trial leaders have appealed to Prime Minister Hendrik F. Verwoerd for settlement of the racial violence by a modification of the re- strictions on the Negro population, especially with regard to the identity pass rules. As in any emergency of this type, the exact losses to industry cannot be measured, but it is evident that the country has suffered great monetary losses and can look forward to con- tinued economic troubles should the present situation continue. Experts estimate the losses due to the strikes at $60 million and the Johannesburg Stock Exchange has suffered a $300 million drop in the value of stocks traded. The situation facing them has been enough to make these leaders demand radical changes in the present apartheid regulations. THUS FAR, the only method of ending the strikes and boycotts has been violence, which has in turn bred more violence. Leaders of the Pan-African Union have said that their economic and labor boycott was broken by terror and not by hunger. Clearly, racial tensions may boil over again oson and businessmen would be much happier i fsome sort of concessions were granted to the Negro population. The proposals which the business leaders sent to the Prime Minister include: 1) Immediate consultation with the African leaders by the Government. 2) Discussions with the African people to find out what they are thinking. 3) Complete mobility for African workers, except in areas which have an employment problem. 4) Modification of identity passes and easing of restrictions on Africans' freedom. ALTHOUGH the first two recommendations offer the most toward the Africans' strug- gle for first-class citizenship, the latter two are concessions of a tangible nature which all the native people can experience directly and thereby feel that they have achieved some- thing tangible for their courageous demonstra- tions of the recent weeks. This latest proposal comes from a surprising source, for the businesses have usually been strong supporters of government policy, However, it is not the plea for equality. It is merely the cry of those who have been denied their profits by government policy. In- dustry has been hurt by the racial outbreaks, and thus it is profitable and expedient to prevent their recurrence. THEIRS IS NOT an unexpected cry. When- ever business is hurt by government regula- tions, there is a strong protest by industry for a "fair-break." This particular time in South Africa it is directed toward the Pan-Africanist point of view. The next time it may equally well be in the opposite direction. The plea was not even vaguely disguised as an attempt to gain equality for the Negroes. It was simply a protest against an economic loss that was only coincidently connected with civil rights. Perhaps these recommendations can be wel- comed with the hope that time and the in- creasing world pressures for equality will make the South Africans see that this policy of discrimination cannot continue forever. Until this time, unfortunately, the Negro population of South Africa will not hear the cry "Equality at any price," but rather "Equal- ity at the best price." -MICHAEL BURNS E i i 1 i 4090-V 1 °s~ { ?a' - which are so obviously lacking in the piece. "HomneFrom The Hill" which is, adapted from a novel by William Humphrey deals with an adulter- ous husband's fervent attempt to reconcile with his'beautifully frig- id wife, as well as the unusual re- lationship which develops between the legitimate and bastard sons the husband has sried. Although there istconsiderable talk about immorality and an attempt at an inherent sensationalism, there is nothing particularly fresh or stim- ulating in the treatment. ROBERT MITCHUM is con- vincing as the adulterous gentle- man who is also the head of a Texas dynasty. Let us just say that EleanorParker as his titian haired wife is beautiful in techni- color and spare her any further embarrassment. A newcomer to the screen, George Hamilton is very effective as the sensitive legitimate son Theron, and he is certainly given considerable support by George Peppard as Theron's half brother, and Luana Patten as the girl Theron gets into trouble. But despite the competance of the younger contingent with their considerably lengthly roles, the most affecting performances are contributed by those on the peri- phery of the action. The lonely middle-aged whore which Constance Ford presents to us is a moving interpretation in- deed and Everett Sloane plays with convincingly alternating un- derscoring and gusto as a father who discovers his un ma rr ie d daughter torbe preganant. But despite the potential bounti- ful treasure of rich character and plot development, "Home From The Hill" is remarkably one di- mensional. Only the color beautifully spills over on the screen. The emotions are insufficiently developed. -Marc Alan Zagoren New Books at Library Johnson, A. H., ed. - White- head's American Essays in Social Philosophy; NY, Harper, 1959. Josephson, Matthew - Edison; NY, McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1959. Kramish, Arnold - Atomic En- ergy in the Soviet Union; Stan- ford, Calif., Stanford Univ., 1959. Menninger, Karl, ed. - Psy- chiatrist's World; NY, Viking Press, 1959. Miller, John C. - Alexander Hamilton; NY, Harper & Bros., 1959. Torres, Tereska - The Golden Cage; NY, Dial Press, 1959. NEW NOVELS 'Two' Social Satires THE MAGIC CHRISTIAN By Terry Southern, Random-House, $3.00. THE BARON IN THE TREES By Italo Calvino, Random House, x+3.50. BOTH THE "Magic Christian" by Terry Southern and' the "Baron in the Trees" by Italo Calvino are social satires. Here the resemblance ends. Southern's book is brief but not brief enough. It stars billionaire Guy Grand whose hobby is "mak- ing it hot" for mankind. This includes items like throw- ing thousand dollar bills into huge cauldrons of boiling manure in order to try the souls of money- mad Chicagoans, and inciting riots in Boston by having signs slandering the city's racial groups flown over the city. * * * AFTER SEVERAL similar epi- sodes, detailed in clear succinct prose, the reader is tempted to express his opinion clearly and succinctly by heaving the book at the nearest'trash can. The culmination is the most en- joyable luxury cruise in ages. These twenty pages make reading the rest of th ebook almost worth- while. Almost. "THE BARON in the Trees" on the other hand is worth reading more than once. This beautifully written little novel manages to be both a satire of 18th Century life ahd letters and a general com- ment on Man. The youthful Baron rebels against life by living permanently in the trees. He leads a useful life, corresponds with the greats of Europe, ,becomes famous, has fantastic adventures with armies, Spaniards, pirates, spies, rela- tives and his people. The best of life is imported into the trees including books, goats, women by the carriage load and one extraordinary woman in par- ticular. The moral seems to be that life is not only better in the trees but that the perspective is unbeatable, too. -S-. Rowley 4 I WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Kennedy Reaches Maturity By DREW PEARSON STUDENT GOVERNMENT: SGC Probes Voting Rights WHY SHOULD the student population of Ann Arbor have no voice in the city gov- ernment whose laws they obey and whose services they enjoy? Since many students live in Ann Arbor most of the year, why are they not given local voting rights? Student Government Council will seek an- swers to these and related questions from the City Council and the University Board of Re- gents in the near future. THE COUNCIL voted to request the Regents and the City Council to take action to secure local voting rights for students of voting age who are not registered elsewhere. The problem was presented to the Council as one of interpretation of the law as set forth in the state constitution. The City Clerk main- tains that in order for students to be allowed local voting rights, "you'll have to change the state constitution first." He based his remark on Article III, Sec. 2 of the Constitution, which lists residence qualifi- cations for elective franchise. The section reads "No elector shall be deemed to have gained or lost a residence . . . while a student at any institution of learning,.. In listing other qualifications, the Constitu- tion states, "no . . . student while in attend- ance at any institution of learning ... shall be deprived of a vote by reason of absence from the township, ward or state where he resides." AL HABER, maker of the motion, explained the ambiguity as he sees it. Students may technically and legally register to vote where- ever their families live. It is almost always in- convenient or impossible for students to go home to vote, however. If a student is not registered elsewhere, Haber said, and if he has lived in Ann Arbor for six months, it is up to the city to decide whether he shall be allowed to vote locally, since he has neither gained nor lost his claim to residence by virtue of being a student. It was pointed out that students are counted as residents of Ann Arbor on the state tax rolls, and indeed in almost every area except for voting. After all, a town of 12,000 should not be able to work around a student population of 24,000 whose relationship to it is vital. FROM THE Council's action in communicat- ing with the Regents as well as the City Council, it seems apparent that the diverging views of Council members the City Clerk were anticipated. While there are arguments for and against student voting rights in Ann Arbor from the city's and the students' points of view, the discrepancy pointed out at the meeting the problem deserves serious evaluation. Such con- sideration could do much to promote under- standing and good will between the groups involved. -JEAN SPENCER WASHINGTON-The most im- portant factor to watch in any young man who has traveled fast in politics is stability. Young men who travel fast toward the great goal of President are inclined to be opportunistic. They cut corners to achieve their goal. They need the stability that comes with age. Tom Dewey, for instance, would have made an excellent Presiden- tial candidate if he hadn't jumped into the race much too young. Harold Stassen was a good Gover- nor of Minnesota until he got presidential ambitions and lost his political balance. Vice Presi- dent Nixon, when under 40, en- gaged in all sorts of McCarthy tactics to get elected to the House and the Senate. Therefore, in gauging Jack Ken- nedy, 42-year-old candidate for President, you have to scrutinize not his profile or his popularity, but his growth pattern. You have to trace the line of his maturity, see which direction it's leading, and in what areas it is hardening, * * * IF YOU TRACE the Kennedy growth line you will find that in the past Jack has wanted to please both sides. He has straddled. This is not unusual in a young politi- cian. It's especially understand- able when a young Senator has been pushed forward both as a boy and as a public servant by an aggressive, wealthy father who has become an economic royalist. When young Senator Kennedy voted with the Republicans some years ago to restrict one of Roose- velt's prize projects, the Tennes- see Valley Authority, Senate Dem- ocrats asked him why. Jack was frank. "I guess I've been listening to father's friends in Palm Beach," he said. Again when the frequently criti- cized Americans for Democratic To The Edito TODAY AND TOMORROW Wisconsin rimary By WALTER LIPPMAN"N T IS ONLY the morning after the Wiscon- sin primary as this article is written, and there are not yet available detailed analyses of the vote. No doubt they will throw a little more light than we had before on how at this moment the voters are disposed to vote. But even without these details it is evident that the result in Wisconsin is indecisive, that for Kennedy, Humphrey, and for Nixon as well, it has brought forth a Scotch verdict of "Not proven." The nomination of the Democratic candidate and the outcome of the national election will not be forecast, as some have said, by the Wisconsin primary. Thus, as against Humphrey, the Kennedy vote is 56 per cent. But while this is a sub- stantial victory, it throws very little light on the national election. Kennedy's vote, for ex- ample, Is around half-a-million. This is only about one-third of the total Eisenhower-Stev- enson vote cast in Wisconsin in the national election of 1956. Moreover, though there is evidence that Kennedy's half-a-million con- tain a percentage of Catholic Republicans who would probably stay with him in November, there is no way of telling how many of Tlm _ch n-,_ vika n-fa i -ni .t urtili vn for President. The attempts to use a few hap- hazard and scattered primaries as a decisive test for the nomination is, it seems to me, an attempt to short-circuit the deliberations of the convention, and to stampede it. The theory that the nomination should go to the man who wins the most primaries rests on a number of dubious assumptions. One is that these few scattered primaries with their very different rules are a true sample of the whole national electorate. There is no reason to think that they are since we know from past experi- ence that in a state like Wisconsin, for example, the primaries do not reliably predict the out- ocme in November. Another dubious assumption is that the best candidate and the best President will neces- sarily be a man who has the time to enter the primaries, who has the money and the energy and the endurance to fight them, and who has an appetite for the trivialities and the half- truths and the special pleading and the per- sonal exhibitionism which are almost the whole of the actual campaigning. It is not so, and the Wisconsin primary campaign, like the Steven- son-Kefauver campaign of 1956, has reduced, it has not raised, the Presidential stature of the Segregation.. . To the Editor: I AM A native Alabaman, I have followed the segregation -de- segregation uproar with something more than a casual interest; and it occurred to me that my reaction to the KKK letter printed in the April 5th issue of The Daily might interest a few of your readers. My first comment on the letter is that the letter itself really de- serves no comment. I was amused by the letter when I read it. It probably would have attracted no j more than casual interest in any southern newspaper. Most mature, intelligent southerners have be- come inured to such nonsense and pay no more attention to it than they do to the rantings of a street- corner evangelist. BUT IF the letter deserves no comment, the people who write such letters surely do, for they and some of their effects on the south- ern community are but dimly un- derstood here in the north; and their influence back home in Ala- bama is to my way of thinking far out of proportion to their numbers or their importance. I may en- deavor to furnish such comment at a later date-when I am able to stop laughing. --Samr eBlack, Grad. Education , To The Editor: I would like to try to put so- called "higher education" in its proper perspective. Someone has to try it sometime. At this university, there seems to be a vast morass of stuff, stuff, and more stuff presided over by compiling and annotating pedants -that students must swallow in DID THE "A" fellow get edu- cated better than the "C" fellow? Whose mind really got the most lasting worth out of it all? There is a subtle, though most e. cient system at work in the institutions of "higher learning" that weeds out true originality, freshness and genius from the ranks of a mediocre student body playing harmless little intellectual games.'A real genius might cause some unrest. Education has nothing to do with A's. B's, C's and so forth. The word "education" comes from the Latin "eoucare," mean- ing "to lead out." That is all it means. Does an A, B, C, D or E show how well a student has been "led out," has developed mentally, morally, spiritually and all the rest? LET THE student look at him- self, educationally, as an indi- vidual-if he has the gumption- not as part of the mass, as he is encouraged to do. If. as an indi- vidual, he feels that his personal- ity, his w~lole being, like the light hidden under the bushel basket, is not being led out, then he is not being enlightened, not being edu- cated. Something else is taking place. So let's call a spade a spade. If the daily, weekly and monthly round of classes is not felt to be "higher education," in- stead higher compiling, higher annotating, higher memorizing- all in all, higher pedantry-let's call it "going through the mill" or something like that. Not edu- cation. There comes the time when a student feels that satisfying the requirements of the holy faculty and competing for grades no long- er "lead him out." (Maybe that is why Robert Frost said he left ponlle eto imnrove his mind.) But Action gave Kennedy a high liber- al rating, he squirmed over being put in the same category as Sena- tors Douglas, Morse, and Humph- rey. This was good politics in the north but not in the south. He was especially worried when the Charleston, S.C., News and Cour- ier editorialized on his liberal rec- ord. * * * HOWEVER, t hat letter was written five years ago. In the in- terim, Jack Kennedy has grown. He has grown further and fur- ther away from the political in- fluence of his father, further away from the conservative wing of the Catholic Church. There was a time when his fa- ther and some elements of his church influenced Kennedy on one of the most vital questions of the decade-McCarthyism - and his straddle on that Issue still hurts him. McCarthy got his strongest support from Boston. McCarthy also got heavyfinancial support from Jack's father, And at one conference at the Kennedy home on Cape Cod, the elder Kennedy, Cardinal Spellman ,and McCarthy mapped the latter's strategy. So young Jack, caught between his father and the Boston Irish, ducked. This evasion, which has been highlighted by Mrs. Roose- velt, one of the most powerful persons in the Democratic party, has left lasting scare. * * * HOWEVER, what you have to watch in a young politician is his growth line. And Kennedy's growth line is good. It has become firm and courageous. The vacillations have been ironed out. And it has consistently followed a left-of- center direction. This is true despite the fact that old Joe Kennedy continues to be one of the most important fac- tors in Jack's life. During the last Massachusetts election, Joe rented a suite at 82 Beacon Street for $1,000 a month, installed a dozen phones, and worked night and day rolling up a big vote for his son. Few people know that the elder Kennedy is a terrific organizer. He kept telling his associates: "Don't mention my name to your friends. If you do it'll hurt my boy." It was this careful, behindgthe- scenes organization which helped Kennedy roll up a record re-elec- tion vote. And it's the same kind of intensive buildup which has put him out front today in the Democratic bid for President. * * * IN THE AMERICAN political scheme of things buildups are are necessary. In the last analy- sis, however, there must be a real product behind the buildup. And Jack Kennedy, despite his youth, has become a product of sub- stance. You feel this coming through when you talk with him. There's a quiet determination, a depth of understanding which was not in the same Jack Kennedy a few years ago. Critical Senators who watched DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bu,1letin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes. no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before p p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1960 VOL. LXX, No. 136 General Notices Students, College of Engineering: The final day for dropping courses without record will be Fri., April 8. A course may be dropped only with the permis- sion of the classifier after conference with the instructor. The final day for removal of incom- pletes will be Fri., April 8. Petitions for extension of time must be on file in the Recorder's Office on or before Fri., April 8. Major Medical Expense Insurance: Please return Major Medical enrollment cards to your department representa- tive or to The Staff Benefits office, Room 3057 Ad Bldg. Ext. 619. June Graduates: Last two days to order commencement announcements. Thurs., April 7 and Fri., April 8 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Student Activities Bldg. School of Music Honors Program: Ap- plications now are being received for the first semester, 1960-1961. Forms are available in the School of Music office. Deadline for receipt of applications by the Honors Council, Fri., April 22. The following student-sponsored so- cial events have been approved for the comning week-end. Social chairmen are reminded that requests for approval for social events are due in the Office of Student Affairs not later than 12 o'clock noon on Tuesday prior to the events. April 8- Alpha Omicron P£, Alpha Phi, Butler House, Delta Gamma, Huber House, Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Phi Delta Phi, Sigma Kappa, Stockwell & Williams House, Tau Delta Phi & Delta Phi Epsilon, victor vaugh- an, Greene House. April 9 (one o'clock closing hour)- Alpha Tau Omega, Alpha Delta Phi, Alpha Kappa Lambda, Alpha Phi Ome- Summary of Action Taken by Student Council at its Meeting April 6. Approved minutes previous meeting. Interim action: Approved Pershing Riles, Company D participation in the 1960 Cherry Blossom Festival, repre- senting The University of Michigan. Appointed delegates to the NSA Re- gional Assembly to be held April 8-10 at Central Michigan College. Approved: Recommendation of five men and five~ women, selected from among junior honor students, from whom two will be selected to serve on the Honors Convocation Committee for 1960-61. Adopted motion requesting all Coun- cil members to submit written sugges- tions regarding a proposal relating to discriminatory membership restrictions in student organizations. Suggestions are to be submitted to the sub-com mittee by Friday, April 8. The sub-com- mittee will present to the Council (a) motion stating the regulation as it is to appear in the regulation book (b) a motion to establish a commission, giv- ing name, composition, formal charge (c) a series of procedural recommenda- tions from the Council to the Commis- sion (d) a statement giving the objec- tives of the regulation as seen by the present Council. Endorsed the Conference on Human Rights in the North, to be held on cam- pus April 28-May 1 sponsored by the Student- for Democratic Society, with the Political Issues Club as local af- filiate. Heard report on Yale Colloquium and authorized payment for advertisement in Daily to publicize meeting for con- sideration of organization of a program on this campus similar to "Challenge" instituted at Yale of which the "Col- loquium" attended by a student dele- gation last week-end was a part. Reviewed request for temporary rec- ognition from Indian Chemical and Metallurgical Engineers' Association, postponed further consideration, until next week. Approved: April 8-May 2-SGC-ISA, Essay Contest, "The International Stu- dent. A Misfit or a Blessing?" April 12- 14-Political Issues Club, Intercoopera- tive Council, Congregational Disciples E and R Guild, Fund Drive in behalf of legal defense and scholarships for participants in the "~sit-in" protests in the south. April 21-Folklore Society, Concert, Union, 8 p.m. (Subject to ap- proval of Auditor of Student Organiza- tions). May 10, 1l-World University Service Fund Drive, sponsored by SGO and CSRO. Postponed consideration of election