Consumer Research 0 4e mtrdigan Bally Seventieth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN When Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. " ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. DNESDAY, MAY 8, 1060 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL BURNS U DRAMA SEASON: 'Golden Fleecing' Clicks Like IBM Computer TO MISS DRAMA SEASON'S second production, "The Golden Fleec- ing" by Lorenzo Semple, Jr. is to deprive yourself of two and one- half hours of fast and furious fun. This show -clicks with precision worthy of one of its principle characters, a super efficiency IBM computer. David Wayne, Robert Carraway, and Larry Hagnian are three adventurous souls who are going to conquer the Grand Casino in Venice with the help of the aforesaid electronic brain. The only real hitch to their scheme is that the computer is in a guided missile launching ship anchored in the bay. So they "borrow" a signal light from the ship. and put it in the window of their hotel suite. However, Point System Reflects U.S ImmirtIn Laws FGDERAL POWER COMMISSION - 4s [' IS QUESTIONABLE if all those people who have been criticizing the Grosse Point "point stem" and crusading against it realize how nilar it At. to the current immigration quota stem used by the United States The "point system" is used by Grosse Pointe altors to determine who should and should t live in Grosse Pointe.t It discriminates ainst Italians, other Southren Europeans and ientals. Last Friday State Attorney Gen- al Paul Adams branded this system as "wholly moral" and ordered Grosse Pointe to stop ing it. It is ironic to note that this same system hich has been so greatly criticized is much e the system used by the United States to termine who can immigrate to this country, "HE CURRENT immigration quotas used by the United States are based on the racial d ethnic composition of this country in 1920. his plan also discriminates against Italians, her Southern Europeans and Orientals. It allows for a relatively small percentage of ese people to enter the country . as con- ,red to the more acceptable British and rthern Europeans. For example, of the 154,000 immigrants ad- itted to this country each year, only 2,000 r 1.2 per cent) are allowed from within hat' is 'called the Asiatic Pacific triangle. his area includes such countries as Japan d is predominately Oriental. 'ARLIER this year President 'Eisenhower asked for a revision of the current quotas, his request was branded as a "vote-attracting maneuver" by Francis E. Walter (D-Pa), chairman of the House Immigration Subcom- mittee, who also said there was no chance of the President's request passing. So far the Democratic Congress has done nothing in this area and insiders say it is unlikely that any- thing will be done. If Mr. Adams and Co. are so sure the point system is "wholly immoral" why. don't they carry their crusade further and try to correct the discrimination in our immigration laws. Of 'course this assumes they are genuinely interested in fighting discrimination and right- ing wrongs and are not just playing politics. IT SEEMS to me that by making an issue of the "point system" Mr. Adams is mainly try- ing to perpetuate, the image of himself and the Democratic Party of Michigan as the fight- ers against discrimination and the champion of minority groups. They also seem to be play-. ing heavily the antagonism many people have against "ultra-swank" Grosse Pointe. It is not necessary to dwell upon how help- ful this could be to the Democrats in the forthcoming elections, where they face a hard fight to retain their twelve-year hold on the Governor's mansion. If they are genuinely concerned over dis- crimination and arbitrary point systems, the immigration quotas is an area where they can really accomplish something. Of course, it is not as politically expedient, since it is their national party which is preventing any' revi- sion of the quotas. -STUART DOW ., z x::. { x. ''=-= i . .. . Ik I; - - one just can't have a Navy signal disguise it witha clothand a bust of Eleanora Duse. THEN THE PLOT begins to thicken. Because of the signaling the Navy thinks that there. is a band of Russian spies in Venice trying to find out about the new guided. missile ship. Everything becomes extremely involved and needless to say extremely funny. The cast is fabulous. Seldom has such a group of muggers and scene stealers been let loose on a stage to cavort with such aban-, don. David Wayne is truly wonderful as the ringleader. He brings a great deal of credibility and warmth to the rather stock char- acter of the eternal schemer. AS THE TWEEDY mad scien- tist, Larry Hagman has a seem- ingly endless repertoire of zany ex~its and odd ways to perch in chairs. -His lady love is Ann Khut- sen (Donna Pearson), the daugh- ter of a sausage casing millionaire. Michael Lewis plays Benjamin Dane who must be the first cousin of Gloria Upson of "Auntie Mame" fame. It would be hard .to say which would have the more clenched jaw or bone-crushing handshake., AS THE CHIEF roadblock in the adventurers' way, Stephen Elliott (Admiral Fitch otherwise known as "Old Barracuda") is a rough and ready delight. His daughter, Monica Lovett, was' fresh and sparkling. Her scenes with ,Wayne were charm- ing. The setting by Robert Mellen- camp was extremely opulent and very playable. -Patrick Chester WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Summit Flop Pleases Mao By DREW PEARSON Disarming Confidence? ICKNOWLEDGING risks in either course of action, some 1350 Harvard faculty mem- rs have wired a plea to Eisenhower for a mmitment to work toward total disarma- ent and, more immediately, a moratorium nuclear testing as opposed to continuation the status quo. Their primary assumption is that "the oply al security possible today is existence in a sarmed world." They stress that the implied risks in pres- re for disarmament should not be allowed o obscure the far greater risks of, the arms ce," and their telegram lists the latter risks -length. It is unclear what risks the petitioners see the continued attempt to arrive at a test ,n agreement, which they advocate-the tele- am never enumerates them., 'ERTAINLY world tension has just been brought to a new high by the collapse of the summit, conference, inflated in advance by widespread optimism; it could only be in- creased by a test ban now. The spy plane incident underlined before the world that ,both Russia and the United States consider maintenance of a balance of nuclear weapon strength important enough to justify cheating on an absolute standard of' integrity. The Harvard petitioners seem to want to emphasize that they !are not so naive as to believe a) that a test ban is an indubitably sound objective, or b) that if it were, risks in- curred in working toward it would indubitably be justified. Can they have overlooked the question, whether it is possible at all, in terms of inter- national pressures? -JEAN SPENCER, PARIS - When Nikita Khrush- chev pulled the stopper out of 'the summit conference, there was rejoicing in Peiping as the world's peace hopes went gurgling down the drain. For some time, United States diplomnatic reports from Moscow have indicated an increasing tend- ency by Mao Tse-Tung to joggle Khrushchev's elbow. It began when Nikita flew from Washing- ton last September almost direct to Peiping to report on the Camp David talks with President Eis- enhower. He got a cool welcome. Not only did he fail to persuade his oriental partner to relax Red China's tension with the United States around Formosa, seat of the' Chinese Nationalist govern- ment, but they didn't approve of relaxing tensions anywhere. Indian diplomats in' Peiping re- ported to American diplomats via New Delhi at the time that Khru- shchev sincerely tried to carry out a commitment to Eisenhower to pacify the Red Chinese. He failed. ** * LATER AT THE "SUMMIT" conference of Communist nations in Moscow last February, China again kicked over the traces. The Chinese not only voted against Khrushchev's proposal to relax the cold war but expressed vig- orous disapproval of it. All other members of the Soviet bloc lined up with Mr. K. Since then the Chinese have be- come increasingly .active. China is not only operating its own for- eign aid program' in competition with both the USA and the USSR, but has sent technicians all over the world. From secret intelligence reports and otherwise, here is the scorecard on Chinese penetration: North Africa-de Gaulle report- ed to Eisenhower in Washington that Chinese technicians already had arrived in Algeria to aid Al- gerianrebels. They are being fol- lowed by arms and so-called vol- unteers. Cuba - Testimony before the Senate Internal Security Commit- tee reports that the Chinese are building air strips in the heart of Cuba, presumably for air bases. Latin America - Diplomats re- port a heavy influx of Chinese workers along the west coast of South America and a tremendous increase in Chinese in f lu e n c e there. India - Negotiations between Premier Nehru and Chou En Lai over Chinese encroachment on the Indian boundary got nowhere last month and the Red Chinese are r e p o r t e d concentrating more troops and building more roads in that area. Far East - Traveling through Thailand, the Philippines, Hong Kang and Japan last winter I noted unmistakable evidence that the Chinese Communists with two-thirds of a billion people are on the march. President Garcia of the Philippines, an astute ob- server of the orient, predicted this bulging population is bound to move into less crowded areas. East Germany - Here has oc- curred the most important pene- tration of all. When in East Ber- lin last week I learned of the closest ties between the two com- munist countries, with many East German engineers going to China to replace Russian experts and many Chinese working with East Berliners in their industrial de- velopment. * * * such an extent that 5,000 refugees fled to West Berlin every week. A HEADS-OF-STATE confer- ence hasn't been held with the Crillon Hotel' background since Woodrow Wilson and an American' delegation tried to write a treaty establishing permanent peace after World War I. They failed. Newsmen, recalling the quiet' efficiency of the Swiss, wish they were back in Geneva. At the last summit conference (1955), the Swiss had every newsman booked at hotels. Here it has been a mad CAGE AND TUDOR: scramble. One highhanded hotel even charged for a cable confirm- ing a reservation which. it later re- fused to honor.. . . Diplomats, who know Ayub Khan, mustachioed President of Pakistan, raised eye- brows over his'protest that he didn't know American planes were flying over Russia from Peshawar. Ayub Khan lives in a village near Peshawar and could hardly escape, knowing of the intense air obser- vation the United States has op- erated from there for several years. (Copyright 1960, by the Bell Syndicate) light in one's hotel room so they. DAILY. OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official BuIletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which Te Michigan Daily ,assumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to 'Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1960 VOL. LXX, No. 170 General Notices June Graduates who have ordered commencement announcements can call ffr them at S.A.B., May 18, 19 & 20, sto 5. Commencement Exercises - June 11, 199 To be 'held at 5:30 p.m. eith r in the Stadium or Yost Field House, depending on the weather. Exercise will conclude about 7:30 p.m. Those eligible to participate:.'If weather isfair.Graduates of Summer Session. of 1959' and of February and June, 1960.,Those eligible to paitl- pate: If'exedise must be held ndoors, Graduates of Summer Session of 1959 and of June 1960. Tickets: For Yost Field House: Two to each prospective graduate, to be distributed from Tues., May 31, -to 1200 noon.on Sat., ;June It, at Cashier's Office, first floor, Ad. Building. For" Stadium: No tickets .necessary. Children not admitted unless acconi- 'panied by adults. Academic Costume: Can be rented at Moe 'sport ShopN.- University Ave., Ann Arbor. Assembly for Graduates: at 430 p . in area east' of Stadium~. Marshals will direct graduates to proper stations. If siren indicates (at intervals from 4:00 to 4:15 p.m.) that exercises are to be held in Yost- Field House, -graduates should go directly there and be seated by Marshals. Spectators: Stadium: Enter by ,Main St. gates only. All should be seated by 5:00 p.m., when procession enters flied. ; Yost Field House: Only hose' aholding tickets can be ,admited owing to lack , of space. Enter on State St., opposite Graduation Announcements, Invita- tions, etc.: Inquire at Office of Student Affairs, Commencement Programs: To be dis- tributed at Stadium or Yost Fieldr"' House. Distribution of Diplomas: If the-ex- ercises are held in the Stadium, dplo- mas for all graduates except the Schol, of Dentistry, the Medical School, and Flint College, will be distributed from designated stations under the east stand of the Stadium, immediately after the exercises. The diploma distri- bution stations are on the level above the tunnel entrance.' If the exercises are held in the Yost Field House, all diplomas except those, of the School of Dentistry, he Med ial School, and glint College, will b dis- tributed from the windows of the Cashier's Office and the Registrar's Of- fice,'lobby, Ad.-Building. Following tie ceremony, diplomas. may be called for until 9:00 p.m. Doctoral degree candidates who' qual- ify for the Ph.D. degree or- a similar degree from the Graduate School and who attend the commencement exer- cises will be 'given a hood by theUul- versity. Hoods given during the cere- mony sire all Doctor; of - Philosophy'. hoods, Those eceiving a doctor's de- gree other than the Ph.D. .may cex- change the Ph.D. hood given them dur- ing the ceremony for the appropriate one immediately after the .ceremony, at the Graduate School booth under the East Stand, or at the office of the Diploma Clerk. Ad. Building, on Mon., June 13, a~nd thereafter, International Student and Family Exciange: have moved to new. quarters at the. Madelon Pound House (base- (Continued, on Page 5) t New Music 'Year's Most Interesting' A Start on Human Rights ONE OF THE year's most inter- esting concerts took place be- fore a surprisingly small audience, Monday night under the auspices of the Ann Arbor Dramatic Arts Center. The Little Theatre of the Ann Arbor High School was about- half full' for a performance by John Cage and David Tudor of assorted contemporary works for diverse instruments, or perhaps one should say devices. One understands why the piano is so popular with the brand of 'composers represented: it can take a beating. After you hit a violin with a hammer, there is not too much left. The piano was assisted in this concert by four tape recorders, at least three phonographs and a large, suitably amplified slinky spring. I FOUND IT most interesting to wander about during intermis- sions sampling audience reaction. A music professor thought that one of the composers should try electronic music as he seemed limited by restriction to a single performer. A theatrical director was enormously excited by the dramatic possibilities of what he called unexplored dimensions. A fellow music critic was unable to suppress laughter. A friend was impressed and moved by some pieces, disgusted with others. * * * 1 THE FIRST WORK, Klavier- stuck VI by Karlheinz Stockhaus- en, was to me the most musical part of the program. This may be just because it was the closest in sonority to ordinary piano music. The performer is restricted to rather elementary activities. He depressed various keys with his fingers in such a way as to pro- duce tones, and he manipulates the pedals with his feet to pro- long or diminish sonorities. Despite this conventional ap- proach, Stockhausen effects a quite varied and deep study of some unusual tonal resources of the piano. The work is frequently con- cerned with percussive effects and extremely tapid rippling passages, usually covering a wide expanse of the keyboard. These sharp at- tacks are often dissonant. BUT STOCKHAUSEN is a mu- sician. The piece is extraordinar- ily evocative. If one were to give it a descriptive title, I should sug- gest revery. The distinct sections of the work drift by in a semb- lance of dreamy randomness, as though one scanned a distant foggy shore through a telescope, hit araonn e no fstto distinguish case with a hammer, or plucking the strings with his fingers. For one piece the pianist dons. gloves, to alter the character of sound produced by his hands striking the keys or other parts of the instrument. * * * ALL THIS IS interesting; cur- ious and often possibly new sounds are produced. But of what value innovation per se- Did the first artist to discover egg tempera simply pour some on the floor and exclaim: look a new medium! Perhaps he did, but the incident has been forgotten. So, I suspect, will be this work of Mr. Bussotti. In the first pieces so much time is needed to pre- pare for each sound (pick' up a hammer, locate a specific damper, cock the key cover for slamming) that the work proceeds too delib- erately. The sense of motion is' lost, and this sense is crucial to the, time- ordered arts. Towards the end the work gathered momentum and actually built to a fine climax of banging. AFTER INTERMISSION things degenerated. We entered here into, LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Fraternities Not Innately Private a realm of sound production in which, as was explained to me by an aficionado, relationships be- tween sounds are ignored; sounds are produced and are to be lis- tened to individually., At this point I think one loses the right to pose as art. There are many striking colors in a paint sample book and many fine-sounding words in a diction- ary, but these are not works of art. For a painting, one must have spatial ordering to provide struc- ture; for music the vital element of structure is provided by tem- poral relationships e x p r e s s e d through the sense of motion. This was more and more missing as Monday night's program pro- ceeded. The sounds utilized by Cage in his compositions were perhaps interesting and may per- haps be the basis of a new form' of art in the future. But at pres- ent they are not art. The pianism of David Tudor is extraordinary for its control and self-control. The world or ordin- ary music may have lost a fine performer. The world of comedy lost a fine dead-pan actor. -J. Philip Benkard [OST OF THE WORK in the huhan rela- tions field is based on a simple premise: y person who gives serious thought to the oblem of discrimination will conclude that crimination is a reprehensible social evil rich must be eliminated. [f this premise is true, demonstrations such yesterday's march commemorating the sixth niversary of the Supreme Court's school dt- hregation decision represent a practical ap- oach to the problemn of ending "discrimination. [t would be foolish to say that one of these rnonstrations or even a series of them will ate a wave of mass protest which will im- diately end discrimination. But these demon- ations can accomplish more limited objec- es. The recent Conference for Human Rights the North demonstrated one of the effects of ling public attention to the problem. Many lividuals came to the Conference "just out Editorial Staff THOMAS TURNER, Editor ILIP POWER ROBERT JUNKER torial Director City Editor I BENAGH................... sports Editor of curiosity" and in the process became com- mitted to work for human rights. Likewise, events like yesterday's march provide a stimulus for persons who were "thinking about" doing something. Equally important, such demonstrations create an atmosphere. The ,public is made at least vaguely aware that there is a problem and that discrimination is an evil. This will make them more receptive to the arguments of the human rights advocates. IT WOULD BE very fortunate if the premise were entirely true. Running a few demon- strations is a relatively simple and efficient use of one's manpower. But the premise is only partially true: people need to be convinced. Much of the progress in the human relations area must come from hard work with small groups or on a face-to-face basis. This is long, hard work, but it must be done. Another great need is planning. Ascertaining the needs of minority groups and the facilities of the community is unexciting, undramatic and tedious. Furthermore, it is not "progress," but these things must be done before any real pro- gress is possible. Another great need of the movement is in- tellectual focus-the moral issues must be made abundantly clear. The movement must look for articulate leaders and it must develop these leaders. To the Editor:' R S. RIVKIN'S argument for complete autonomy of frater- nities would be valid'providing his basic point was relevant to exist- ing conditions., He argues that n fraternities and other clubs of this nature are not public. As such organizations, it is their in- nate right to discriminate in any. way in regard to the type of per- son! whom they will admit to membership." The fact that fraternities may have had the innate quality of complete autonomy when they were organized is no longer rele- vant, therefore not a valid argu- ment. FRATERNITIES today are not private organizations in the same manner country clubs are, even, though attempts have been made to show similarities in their func- tions. The present structure of a fraternity, recognized and regis- tered with the University and composed entirely of students and alumni membership, is far' from having the innate. quality of com- because they are members of a particular race or religion. This will not insure the end of dis- crimination, but merely allows consideration of these individuals possible. If Mr. Rivkin's private ,frater- nity were to exist it would have to, revert to the fraternity of the 1920's and completely alienate it- self from the University. In many instances this would decrease their effectiveness as an active segment of the University. -Ross H. Rosenberg, '63A&D Historic Precedent . . To the Editor: SEVERAL very old Italian news- papers, circa 1632 (the exact dates are uncertain) have recently been discovered. Being of great historical interest, these antique newspapersnare being translated; in the oldest of these the follow- ing story appears under the ban- ner headline "Galileo To Be Tried In Rome." Naples: Galileo, the famous as- tronomer who has publicly de- an authority outside the area of his competence. THIS REPORTER has heard from usually reliable sources that the Grand Inquisitor had to be prodded into conducting this trial by the Pope who had received 250 mate letters from laymen demand, ing that Galileo be burned at the- stake for his views. It was also learned that these 250 inate letters had been written on the request of a certain Ignoramus, Latimori of Rome who had urged the lay- men not to pay the- new Church tax on the grounds that these tax monies would also benefit Galileo. This reporter talked informally with the Pope and the four judges after yesterday's pre-trial confer- ence. The Pope said informally that "all those who support Gali- leo are merely rejecting the im- plied paternalism of the Church in its telling them, in effect, how to think." One of the four Judges told this reporter informally that "There is no doubt that Galileo will be found guilty at his trial three weeks hence. The Church