"We Should Get Together More Often" Seventieth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGANk UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG.0 ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 When Opinions Are Free Truth Wtil Prevail" BRINK OF LIFE: No Dearth of Birth In Foreign Film ONE WONDERS, after seeing "Brink of Life" at the Campus, whether perhaps Ingmar Bergman is being brainwashed. His recent pictures have shown a steady trend toward the simple.."The Seventh Eel" was dark, mystic. Nobody could miss the beautiful, if peasant, humor of "The Magician." "Brink," latest in the series, is downright accessible, so accessible that if produced locally it would be called corny. Of course, it would probably never come to pass in this country, containing as it does all the current rages of imports. If you would wallow in childbirth, abortion, and illegitimacy, do see "Brink"; it's Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. 'URDAY, APRIL 30, 1960 NIGHT EDITOR: FAITH WEINSTEIN Anti=Catholi ie as Betrays American Heritage THE American Council of Christian Churches recently unanimously went on record as being opposed to a Roman Catholic for Presi- dent of the United States. From the reasons given for this appalling action it is apparent that this group of men, which claims to represent 1.5 million "Bible- believing Protestants," has a very poor under- standing of the political structure and temp- erament of American society. One's first inclination is to incredulous amusement, but more serious reflection gives rise to real trepidation concerning the future of a government dedicated to serve and obey people like them. THE COUNCIL approaches the issue through a completely outdated and misleading con- cept: that of the "American heritage of sep- aration of church and state." The concept of church and state is a holdover from the days of divine-right kings, when an absolute ruler's religious beliefs could be national policy. The Council's reference to our "historic American "heritage" is inaccurate, because it. confuses the real nature of that heritage. To be specific, at no time in our history could a Roman Catholic President have allowed attitudes peculiar to his religion to color his political actions without committing both him- self and his party to political suicide. THIS IS PARTLY because the United States' political structure was originally strongly influenced by men imbued with the ideas of skeptical seventeenth and eighteenth century European philosophers, thus creating a polit- ical tradition distinctly divorced from religion. It is also partly because the public influence of organized religion, which had given way to the secular intellectual and economic revival called the renaissance, was no longer a real political consideration. This is not to say that religion has not in- fluenced politics in America. But religion has not been able to present a united front on any issue or candidate, simply because the number MAX LERNER: and variety of religious traditions does not lend itself to mass organization. OUR GOVERNMENT is, for the most part, run by influence groups, but only when several of them combine through compromise. It is highly unlikely that the Roman Catholic church would have any success in finding other groups with which to join forces in order to give official national or international policy a "Catholic" flavor. Whether it would want to its a matter of opinion; the fact is, it couldn't. Sen. Kennedy knows how far he would get if he tried to mix his religion with his politics, and he is hardly foolish enough to try. As it is, if he is elected there will be plenty of "Bible-believing" alarmists who will accuse him of trying it every time he takes a stand. OBVIOUSLY, the Council's action is poten- tially more dangerous to the public safety and sanity than anything Sen. Kennedy could possibly do, even in the capacity of President. Apparently, all these people actually believe that a Roman Catholic President will "ad- vance the goal" of "dedicating the United States to the Virgin Mary." This alone is enough to unnerve anyone sincerely concerned with the future of free thought and tolerance in this country. American politicians are very conservative people. The job of each party is to get as many of its own elected as possible. Conse- quently each party tries to slate candidates who will offend the least number of voters. A Roman Catholic might have trouble getting elected, but think what would be the fate of an atheist! For these reasons groups such as the Ameri- can Council of Christian Churches are at the very least doing their country a great dis- service, in tending to impose one more irrele- vant condition on the parties' choice, in con- tributing a little more confusion to public thought on the subject, and in making us look foolish in the eyes of more than one other nation. -ANDREW HAWLEY } , _Wmy"Wr% km 4~'6o I4ASW 6TQPJ _ -os . . the limit, so to speak. These drol- leries are of course accompanied by amusingly misspelled and Tin- completely translated subtitles, the latter characteristic serving primarily to draw attention to the fact that venereal disease also pops up, albeit inconsequentially. ' THE STORY and, more im- portantly, the characters on which these heavy happenings are hung are, unfortunately, so thinly drawn and portrayed that the emotions lose their meaning as expressions of human feeling and must be interpreted symbolically, if at all. The action occurs in the wards' and delivery room of a Swedish' hospital for miscellaneously preg- nant girls. Cecilia is there rather accidentally. In about her third month she has a spontaneous abortion which, being an intellec- tual type, she blames on her psy- chology and the fact that her husband doesn't love her. Things seem on the brink of clearing up for her at picture's end, though. * * * STINA IS bouncy, gay, married, in love and vice versa, and much excited about coming events. Who would guess that her overactive contractions would cause a still- birth? There is, of course, the potentially unmarried mother, or rather unmarried potential mother. She left her lovely home for the big city and wound up in trouble. She is terribly scared of her straight - laced mother: "I just wouldn't dare call her," she says in fractured Swedish. Who would guess that she eventually calls her mom who says, "Come home any- way." Her name, one of the great unconscious bilingual puns of the year, is Hiordis. * ** * THE SUBJECT matter seems, like Tennessee Williams so far. There is a significant difference. With Williams, shocking events are usually presented through the characters. They sit around and talk about them, and one observes their effects. In this rmovie one really sees things happening, but to little effect. To me the most effective scene concerned the appearance of Ce- cilia's sister-in-law with the ad- vice that the marriage should be saved. More frustrations, sublimations, hopes, and fears are portrayed in two minutes by this superbly acted dark cloaked figure than had ap- peared in the preceding ninety minutes' worth of hysteria. -J. Philip Benkard AT THE MICHIGAN: Western 'T EUNFORGIVEN"isaget i NWs a great, sweeping movie laid in the Texas panhandle, sometime after the civil war. It has some of the finest talent in Hollywood-John Huston, Burt Lancaster, Audrey Hepburn, Lilian Gish, Dimitri Tiomkin--on its credit listing. These people have put together a picture whose first half is truly memorable. The rest is less in- spired but still ranks with some of the best work that is being produced today. The film's first section deals with the question: "Is Rachel Zachery (Audrey Hepburn) really white, or is she an Indian?" In the second part, the Indians have decided that she is really oneof them and so they try to take her away from her white family (Burt Lancaster, Audie Murphy, Lilian Gish and Kip Hamiliton). PEOPLE MAY say that director John Huston is not what he used to be, but this movie proves that the old creative fire is still burn- ing. He is able to get some depth behind the usual stony Lancaster facade. His sense for pictorial composition is stunning. It is art- ful but never arty. The section in which Lancaster and Murphy go hunting in a dust storm for the man who is spead- ing the rumor that their'sister is an Indian is a tour de force of camera shots. Filters are em- ployed to heighten the visual ef- fect but their use is never so dis- tracting as they were in "South Pacific." MISS HEPBURN is her usual self, but even more so. She can be playful and serious, happy or sad with the ease of a real pro. Joseph Wiseman as the venge- ful Kelsey all but steals the movie. He is eerie and wierd as the self- appointed sword of God. As the mother, Lillian Gish is the true stoic pioneer woman. The scene in which she hangs Wise- man is unforgettable. Last mention must go to Dimitri Tiomkin's beautiful background score. It is the crowning touch for this fine picture. -Patrick Chester CHESSMAN CASE: Issues Transcend Individual Talk Veils Cold War NEW DELHI-I was one of the gallant and desperate newspaper crew that stuck with Chou En-Lai's farewell cunference until the bitter end at 1:15 a.m. As I listened to Chou talking hour after hour, the chill thought afflicted me that if the Chinese Communists do not swarm over the world with their population or devastate it with weapons they will exhaust us into submission by talk. Of Chou's entourage, Vice-Premier Marshal Chen Yi suffered and sweated silently, catch- ing little catnaps while we watched with envy, and Vice Foreign Minister Chang Han-fu fanned himself stoically. While Chou's sensi- tive, mobile features were highly expressive, his lips scarcely seemed to move, leaving you with the eerie sense of words coming from nowhere, signifying nothing substantive yet charged with meaning, when you consider that no elite since Hitler's has been so certain about the wave of the future which will inevitably give it world rule. WROTE hopefully the other day that Chou's stay in New Delhi might be educational for him, but I fear that he departed undented, unbowed, uninstructed and unconverted. Even if he were capable of learning, which would be miraculous in a Communist at 62, he would scarcely have dared show it, knowing that every word of his answers would be weighed in Peking in assessing his orthodoxy to the gospel according to Liu and Mao. On the ruins of the Five Principles, the Chinese Communists, undaunted, are now try- ing to build the Six Propositions. These are presumably the points of proximity which (Chou feels) ought to exist between the two countries. The only phrase in them that counts appears twice, in Point Two and Point Five. It refers to the geographical line of actual control. Point Two asserts the existence of this line. Point Five insists that both sides stick to it until a settlement is reached and that neither should put forward territorial claims as pre- conditions. THIS IS THE heart and body, the strategy and the tactic of the Chinese position. Sev- Editorial Staff THOMAS TURNER, Editor PHILIP POWER ROBERT JUNKER Editorial Director City Editor eral times during his press conference Chou spoke of the present actualities as the baseline from which talks must proceed. The rest of the stream of his talk was meant to engulf his listeners and the world in historical and geo- graphical detail, diverting them from the cen- tral fact that the Chinese meant to sit tight where they are sitting right now on the present actualties, holding the line of actual control. Stripping away Chou's verbiage about friend- ship and love, these six propositions came down to only one proposition: the rule of force and the law of possession. When Chou said that the boundary dispute was only one finger out of 10 he forget to add that in his mathe- matics, possession is nine-tenths of the law. The road across Aksaichin linking western Tibet With Sinkiang is what the Chinese mean to hold at any cost. While Chou insisted that the so-called McMahon Line was unacceptable to China, he hinted that China would swap the present actualities in Ladakh for the present actualities of the McMahon Line. This was the old deal with which Chou came to New Delhi. He had no new deal to offer. All the talk of the historical and geo- graphical officials of both countries who will meet fromb May to September will not change this intractable fact of the right of forceful possession as the ethic of Chinese communism. THE DANGER of this ethic is not only its cynicism, since so much of the system of world politics is built on synicism. The danger is that if China can establish this principle as a precedent in relation to India it can plead the same precedent in future relations with Nepal, Bhutan and Sikkim, Whatever happens in external aggression or internal penetration and subversion, the Chinese will insist on retaining their present position in the disputed border area as the baseline for further negotiation. I think it was this knowledge that made Nehru firm up his stand, lest any appeasement on his own part be followed by greater appeasement on the part of Prime Minister Koirala of Nepal. When Hitler invaded the Rhineland a quar- ter-century ago, when China invaded Tibet a decade ago, when Russia crushed Hungary less than five years ago, the strategy of each was to act by force and then confront the world with the politics and ethics of present actualities. You can's be surprised that China is trying it again vis-a-vis India. When Nehru says that the border will be alive for some years to come, he is admitting, whether he likes it or not, the existence of a cold war between the two nations. Chou's in- By JOHN ROBERTS Daily Staff Writer. W HATEVER repercussions it may have in the continuing controversy over capital punish- ment, the Caryl Chessman case is now nearly close - for Caryl Chessman. It appears almost certain that. after a twelve-year legal fight to save his own life, the convicted kidnapper will be executed Mon- day. In his years on Death Row of California's San Quentin State Prison, Chessman has made him- self a trained lawyer, a best- selling author, and, through the dogged persistence of his fight for life, the symbol of a growing in- ternational protest against capital punishment. * * * THE WIDE publicity given the case has probably convinced most Americans that Chessman himself is little deserving of real sym- pathy. A hardened and habitual criminal since youth, he was con- victed of kidnapping with bodily harm after a fair trial and on substantial evidence. There is no question that the man belongs in jail. But the issues involved have long since trans- cended that lone individual on Death Row, raising questions which are now gnawing at the national conscience. The moral problem is by all odds the most important and, some would imply, the only one. Instead, Chessman's long struggle through the courts revolved around what, to the layman, seems little more than a technical quibble-the dis- puted accuracy of the trial tran- script. But, according to Prof. B. J. George of the Law School very real legal issues have been raised by the Chessman case. * * * AS REPORTED in Res Gestae, the law student newsletter, Prof. George has called into question the whole rationale of the Cali- fornia statute under which Chess- man was condemned to die. This law makes it a capital offense to "carry away any individual . . with intent to hold or detain .. . for ransom . . . or to commit ex- tortion or robbery . . . in cases in which the persons . . . suffers . bodily harm." The movement of the victim, rather than the injury actually inflicted, is thus made the decisive criterion. One is left with the curious conclusion that bodily harm becomes somehow more ter- rible if the victim is first forced to walk a few paces, and in point of fact, Chessman's "kidnapping" never involved a movement of over twenty feet. "Do it on the spot," rather than "don't do it," Is the legal imperative carried by this strange law. A SECOND legal issue involveds in the Chessman case is the dif- ference of procedure in civil and criminal trials in California courts. If a dispute over the trans- cript arises in civil cases, a new trial is ordered. In criminal cases. transcript would be the basis for any appeal of the case. After a long legal fight, the Supreme Court in 1957 upheld his objection and ordered a new hear- ing to revise the record, at which Chessman was present. A large number of changes were made; Chessman, however, objected to this modified transcript also and launched a new court fight, which was not resolved until a Supreme Court denial this December. As Prof. George points out, the quickest solution to the knotty legal problem would have been to grant Chessman a new trial. This would have given the condemned man the full measure of his rights, and would have undoubtedly pro- duced the same verdict anyway. ' *, * THE DRAMA of the lone wolf teaching himself law and single- handedly challenging the courts has perhaps led to an exaggera- tion of Chessman's technical abili- ties as a lawyer, particularly in the early stages of the case. "Many of Chessman's difficulties stem from his insistence on de- fending himself, and this in turn stemmed from his overweening ego," Prof. George points out. An argument advanced recently by investigators under the spon- sorship of a national men's maga- zine illustrates the point. They claim that another ex-convict in the custody of the authorities at the time of the trial more closely matched the description given by witnesses as the "Red Light ban- dit" than did Chessman, but that the prosecution failed to follow out this lead. * * * BUT ACCORDING to Prof. George, the responsibility of the prosecution lies in accumulating evidence providing guilt, rather than checking out every conceiv- able angle which might be pro- posed, for purposes .of delay, by the accused man. If there was any substance to the claim, the defense should have raised the issue at the time and produced positive proof, but this was not done. This was just one example of the mistakes made by Chessman; Prof. George notes that a check of the trial manuscript shows numerous instances in which the prosecution took ad- vantage of the defendant's lack of legal training. Under these circumstances can Chessman be properly said to have enjoyed the maximum protection of a fair trial? While the courts have ruled that no man can be required to accept counsel against his will, Prof. George believes that a reexamination of this principle in cases involving the death pen- alty is needed. CHESSMAN'S most recent plea argued that the postponement of got his Feb. 19 execution date was ordered solely to prevent an em- barrassing incident when Prsi- dent Eisenhower toured South America; this juggling of a prison- ers' fate, he contended, constituted cruel and unusual punishment, in violation of the Eighth Amend- ment. The Supreme Court refused to hear the case last Monday-pre- dictably, according to Prof. George. He points out that the various stays of execution which have kept Chessman alive for twelve years have all been either directly engineered by him or have had his approval. Moreover, the Supreme Court has not been receptive to argu- ments based on this aspect of the Bill of Rights. Prof. George cites as the "strongest pronouncement of the Court on this matter" a 1946 de- cision involving a condemned murderer in Louisiana. In this case the man had actually been strapped in the electric chair and administered a shock, but because of a mechanical failing was not killed. When a new date of execution was set the prisoner claimed he was being subjected to cruel and unusual punishment; the high court found differently. BARRING an intercession by Governor Brown, which is unlikely in view of the State Supreme court's refusal to certify a peti- tion for clemency, Chessman will die Monday. While his lawyers make last-minute maneuvers,.such a plea based on the findings of the magazine investigators, the condemned man himself faces the execution with the same melodra- matic attitude which has always characterized him. About the magazine's claims, Chessman said with a Roman pose, "I do not want to be in- volved in this finger pointing." He has steadfastly refused to name the "real" Red Light bandit, whose identity he claims to know, and seems to look forward to becoming, a martyr. Moral issues there are, and legal ones. But in dissenting from the 1957 ruling, Supreme Court Jus- tice William 0. Douglas pointed' out, with considerable logic, that "the conclusion is inescapable that Chessman is playing a game with the courts." And now the game is up. New Books at Library Kertesz, Stephen D. and Fitz- simons, M.A. ed. - Diplomacy in a Changing World; Notre Dame, Ind., Univ. of Notre Dame Press, 1960. Koenig, Louis W. -- The Invis- ible Presidency; N.Y., Rinehart & Co., 1960. 'AT THE STATEF: 'V isit' Laughs Lean SOn Spaeman Antics THE OBJECT in projecting a character from way out somewhere into a common situation is to throw a reasonable representation of humanity into a relationship with ordinary people so that his presence will satirize them. Hal Wallis has forgotten this point in his "Visit to a Small Planet" as easily as the audience can forget Jerry Lewis is a reasonable representation of humanity. Since the object is not satire, then the only thing left is to provide as many laughs as possible. This Hal Wallis accomplishes with a degree of success. Some of the situations are indeed ludicrous, if you find traffic cops losing their pants ludicrous. The humor is not the slapstick Jerry Lewis used during his days with Dean Martin. Rather it depends on his superman type powers that flabbergast other people. As long as a surprised look on some- one's face, or the anticipation of that look remains funny, a movie o, this type will be amusing. JERRY LEWIS, a spaceboy just twenty-one million light years old, wishes to visit Earth, the planet he is studying in his history course. He sneaks off against all advice and lands during the middle of a saucer scare. Expecting to partake in the Civil War, he instead blunders-into a Civil War masquerade pre-party, cuts a few capers, then straightens everything out with the household. Swearing them $o secrecy, he enforces this secrecy by a whammy system having a voltage from eight to eighty-six. The latter burns anything on the spot while the size eight jolt merely makes them sing "Mary Had a Little Lamb" all the way through. Women quickly become an object of interest. He finds the 36-24-36 style a pleasant idea. It seems that women beyond are 36 all the way down, and this, he claims, is monotonous. HE VISITS the local expresso shop, "The Hungry Brain," in his space suit, plays the bongos by remote control, dances with a swinging chick, and zips off her skirt with a full eight-six. This is too way out for even the cats. The fun stops presently, however, as the powers beyond tire of his foibles and cut him off. Without his powers, Lewis is no longer funny. But that doesn't matter, the show is almost over anyway. -Thomas Brien . I By; Michael Kelly' i a :fi n u4 * $ YDC'0 I Q-I I