Seventieth Year EDiTED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLIC'ATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MIH. * Phone NO 2-3241 juIJw 'hen Opinions Are Free Truth Wil Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. T his must be noted in all reprints. rURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: THOMAS KABAKER CouselngShould Educate he IniGviduals C onsciousness R EEVAILUATION of the University's coun- seling program holds a major place among the working goals enumerated by the Literary College Steering Committee Thursday after- noon. Counseling as such merits attention, for it has proved to be one of the most urgent areas for consideration in the University,. Qualified counseling can and ought to be highly effective in giving the student a bal- anced perspective of the University and of himself in relation to it. FRESHAN-sOPHOMORE counseling has as its first function the mechanics of getting r'equirements fulfilled, sequences completed, and-last but not least-a major chosen. However, there is a second ands equally Important purpose for freshman-sophomore counseling. After the first two years, the stu- dent will be sharply limited by his concentra- tion program; his electives should be selected Terefore, in his freshman and sophomore years, a certain amount of exploration of University course offerings is appropriate and feasible. The student will gain from this a solid baais for choosing his area of concentration; be will at the same time develop a sense of direction to guide his choice of electives as an TT IS A responsibility of the counselor to equip himself with all available information on the nature of Introductory courses in a wide range of academic areas, as well as to know the ins and outs of distribution requirements. And to pass this information on to the student. Junior-senior counseling gives a great deal more leeway to the individual in planning his studies. It is unfortunate that many choose to get by with their minimum requirements and to elect other courses more or less at ran-- dom. However, the student who has never opened a college catalogue because he picks his courses straight from the time schedule cannot expect to lay a strong academic foundation on which to build his concentration and eventually, his career. The failure of counseling to attain its poten- tial standard of effectiveness devolves only in part on lack of interest or enlightenment on the counselor's part; it is up to the student to protect his own Interest. DISTIBUTION requirements aren't terribly difficult, to figure out; certainly it Isn't asking to much of students and their advisors that they familiarize themselves with the ma- terials available for achievement of mutual Byhis junior year, if not before, the student has usually managed to provide himself with a fund of information of dubious value: which courses not to select under any circumstances, what to take in order to pad that average, and finally, which course heasolutely must tak in order to graduate with hish frieds.nlo- ception of the college experience lacks the sense of order and purpose which distinguishes the educated man from the college man. Counseling, In Its highest form, ought to adopt the r'ole of developing in the individual a consciousness of his unique privilege and duty as a member of the University community. -JEAN SPENCER NEW HUMOR: Gargoyle Starts Of f New Year in Good Style SURPRISINGLY ENOUGH, a new Gargoyle has recently come out; ~'with format and style more closely aligned with magazines of the 1952-57 period than one might have expected Of course, a few curious details may be observed on close (micro- ,copic) examination: pages are numbered up to 40 but only 24 can be found; the inside front cover is as blank as a stare from a Health Service physician upon hearing the symptoms of pellagra; some lines of type are parallel only with the walls In a fun house. But no matter-Gargoyle for 1959 is well worth one-fourth the pie of a dollar student special,and considerably safer, too. ART WORK IS jolly good, especially a fold-out about football games. Otherwise, Garg has always used preposterous photographs from obscure magazines, reproduced with grim captions. This Is again done, to the dismay of MSU, which bears the brunt of the issue's satire. Advertisers will be sad to see, on facing pages, ads for two book- stores or restaurants, but Garg advertisers have always taken their lives in their hands when they signed those parchment contracts, so they should not be surprised. Readers who fail to read Garg ads are missing the best of the magazine, especially the ad in the lower corner of page 37. What is the story??? SOME STUDENTS, especially those who have studied the Intel- lectual History of the Philosophy of Applied Criticism, may wonder about the value or purpose of a review of this nature. MWainly, It's to help sell the magazine, but in this case, note should be taa~en that the reviewer was once editor of Garg (1956-58). Usually, when a one-time editor reads a later copy of the magapzine, his face is a mask of contempt. In this instance: a faint smile. Gar- goyle is definitely off and running (lacking only humorous copy to be completely hilarious). Summing up: Light up a Gargoyle-it satisfies. --David Kessel AT THE CAMPUS: Swedish Double Feature Satisfying Comb iatioTn Ilerbiock is away due to illness C Ler s Post-Dis ctc THE SENIOR COLUMN: Aong the Inter-A mer ican Highway Panhel Takes Mature Step PERHAPS the most obvious solution to the problems created by Panhellenic pre-rush contact rules would be to do away with spring rush and hold It in the fall. This would at least limit to two weeks that uncomfortable period when affiliated and independent women restrain their personal relationships to a "pleasant hello." But Panhel's stand on this issue was de- feated last spring by SGC's vote retaining spring rush. So Instead they have done away with contact rules and replaced them with an honor code. Past experience has shown that contact rules have created an unnatural boundary between affiliates and independents-a boundary diffi- cult to break down. A further disadvantage of these rules has been their difficult enforcement. That they complicate many personal relationships and often makes things awkward is well known to every affiliated woman and prospective rushee. BUT EVEN worse, these rules have frequently defeated their own purpose by creating un- necessary social tension during the pre -rush Te .new mode of pre-rush behavior adopted by Panhellenic is a philosophy rather than a lis ofrules. Personal relationshipsnobetween restricted-. By this code Panhel hopes to bring about a deemphasis on rush, in the two weeks before rush starts. Newly enrolled women, it feels, should get an overall view of college life, I whereas contact rules serve only to focus the perspective rushee's attention on the pending rush period. THE CODE also aims to encourage new coeds to become academically integrated members of the University. Panhel feels, then, that eliminating pre-rush rules should alleviate the tension and the distractive influence of the pending rush period that could imipair a fresh- man's grades. Should the honor code actually help to encourage newly enrolled women to acquaint themselves with many aspects of the campus and to academically establish themselves here in their first semester, then Panhel will have perhaps unwittingly justified some of the ad- vantages of spring rush. For those against fall rush have argued that It immediately diverts the freshman's attention to just one aspect of college life, and that her academic life is thus begun on the wrong foot 'by embarking immediately on a harrassed two With the honor cde Panhel has taken a positive and mature step toward reconciling themselves to and making the best of spring -STEPHANIE ROUMELL (EDITOR'S NOTE: Barton Huth- aite Journee downy te Iner this past summer. He was acconi- panled by three other University students.) By BARTON HUTHWAITE RAEFeatures Editotr-Ae T RAE onteItrAei can Highway is for the most part a dream. It can be done-if the tourist has a lot of stamina, a high resistance to dysentary and a complete set of spare automobile parts. sAltho0ugh under construction ternational Highway is still un- southern Panama as yet hav to be fully explored. Some $253 mil- lion has been spent since initial construction some 26 years ago. The United States alone has con- tributed $171 millions. When and if finished, the high- way will link two continents. But today most of the highway is a rough 3,179 mile stretch of as-, phalt, mud, dust and gravel begin- ning in the Mexican border town of Nuevo Laredo in northern Mex- icbumping acros si historial and abruptly ending in the town of Chepo in southern Panama. * * * | WHAT can the motorist expect on a trip down today's Inter- Americani highway? He can wander among ruins of the once powerful Aztec nation in Mexico, search through the remains of the Maya civilization in northern and photograph ancient Spanish churches throughout Centr al America- dating to the early days of the Spanish Conquest. He can see the poverty of the countryside sharply contrasted to the modern conveniences of the Central American city. Much of Central America is virgin territory for tourists and natives are as curious of Americans as Americans are of them. But the motorist will also have to brave the sometimes mud and dirt, sometimes paved roads of a mostly backward Central America. Road signs are almost non-ex- istant below the Mexican border and whitewashed rocks are substi- tuted for the American white line signaling a curve. * ** THE INTER-AMERIWAN High- way runs from sea level in niorth- emn Mexico to some 14,000 feet at one point in Guatemala. Some parts of the road are smoothly paved two lane highways. Other sections, especially in Guatemala and Nicaraugua, are merely one lane paths through the towering mountains. Accommodations designed for the tourist are almost nonex- istant. The best comfort for the nigt is a jungle hammock or a * * * THE FAVORITE time for Amer- ican travel, during the months from May to September, is the worst time for Central American travel. Every day at approximately three o'clock in the afternoon, towering thunderheads sweep over the mountains, turning the roads to a sea of mud. Several United States senators have labeled the highway a waste of tim and a drain on the treas- ury. But if the views of these few statesmen are overridden, the American tourist will one day be able to journey from New York to Theno a"anana republics" of Central America will almost over-- night turni into booming tourist countries. Foreign aid will prob-. ably. be sharply reduced and as a result lift the burden that has long been an irritation to the United States. Today's rough In- ter-American Highway may pro- vide an answer to part of the United States' foreign aid head- ache. A DOUBLE BILL by one direc- tor is generally something of a strain. The two Ingmar Berg- man pictures now at the Campus, however, are good enough and dissimilar enough to make up a thoroughly watchable program. "The Seventh Seal" presents a knight, returning from the Cru- sades, who is miet by Death - a tall figure in black. The knight ,delays Death with a challenge to moves continues an old earh o spiritual knowledge. At one point he tries to learn of God from the devil, but neither the devil nor God can be found - only Death, who has no secrets to tell. - This is a film that will provoke all sorts of interpretations. But the action is so striking in itself that only those who reduce it to pure allegory are likely to be dis- appointed. ALL THE ACTING is competent and the part of the knight's squire, a talkative fellow who hardly quiets down even for Death, is exceptionally well played. The same actor, looking very different, appears as central char-. acter in the second film. "Smiles of a Summer Night" is a very funny sex farce. The moral, as stated by one, who seems to know, Is simple: "When you are thrown, remoun atonce." The two most hilarious scenes are a game of Russian roulette and a despairing man's attempt at suicide, which ends with suc- CHINESE 10TH ANNIVERSARY: Vast Changes Occur Behind Bamboo Cur tain. cess in something much more lively. picture -bth he Swe d dialogue - is bad at times. This censorship has, for instance, de- prived anyone who does not know Swedish of certain precise details of Petra's earlier experiences. More often, though, whet is not clear verbally is apparent fromi the action and whatever is not stated G oee minutes late and miss the 1937 Mickey Mouse. -Bernar' Waidop AT THE MICHIGAN: C ONSIDERING te fact ta three of Hollywood's most gifted artists collaborated their considerable talents on the new- ly ar'rived "Man Who Understood Women,"' the least that one would expect is' a film of bette tan av- isg not so wi the current teniant at the Michigan. Probably the basic reason for the film's failure to generate a high level of interest was writer- directorprdue Nunnay John- son's iability to decide whether his film was to be basically a com- edy, melodrama or romantic love Women he akesa defitatir tempt to fuse all of these facets of the draa UNLIKE Hitchcock's delightful and highly successful "North by Northwest," "The Man Who Un- derstood Women" is burdened by a weighty scenario which is cli- maxed by an extraordinarIly In- effective chase sequence. Fresh from his successful trka umph in "Two for The Seesaw" Is Henry Fonda in the title role of a brilliant director who attempts to give celluloid immortality to his talented actress wife. Mr. Fon- da's acting for the most part Is wooden and asaresult he stifles hae originally possessed. Leslie Caron as the wife is ade- quate but certainly not as con- vincing as she was in her earlier films. Her portrait of an actress fighting desperately for the love ofher husband leaves a good deal Marc Alan Zagofen OFFICIAL The Daily Official Bulletin Isan sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no edI- tornal responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to ig, before 2 pm. the da receding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. sATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1959 oyn1 v wn ii TODAY AND TOMORO y By WALTER LIPPMANN By ARNOLD SAMEROFF Daily Staff Writer C HINA, ten years after her revo- lution, remains a void for most Americans. Outside of the times when she has expressed herself in the international arena in neigh-. borhod conflicts, China seems to be much further away from us than only the other side of the globe. This condition has been helped by the State Department's prohi- bition to travel to China, even by newspapermen. Today, this issue is before the Supreme Court. The fact is, however, that China does exist despite the fact that she still is not on the UN and is still unrecognized by the United States. In her land mass resides a quarter of the world's population, almost 600,000,000 people, a figure difficult to ignore. Militarily speaking she has the largest standing army in the world next to the Soviet Union's. Al- though inferiorly equipped, It was still able to match the combined Western powers during the Korean action eight years ago. This too is difficult to ignore. * * * THE COMMUNIST government which took over in 1949 has come a long way in ten years. It has been the first modern government to unite China. The aim of build- O N SEPT. 16 Mr. K. had just arrived in Wash- ington and it was impossible for most of us to pay serious attention to anything else. Yet on that date Gen. de Gaulle made public his policy and plan for dealing with the Al- gerian question. We can now pay serious atten- tion to what he said, and it is quite evident that It will be long remembered. For In his address he took the decisive step without which there could be no hope of put- ting an end to the bitter and bloody civil war. He accepted the principle of self-determination by an open and equal election to be observed by the world. In these elections the Algerians will have three choices. They can secede and set up as an Independent state. They can vote to become an Integral part of metropolitan France. Or they can choose autonomy by departments, more or less In the manner of the Swiss can- tons, within the economic, financial and poli- tical structure of the recently formed French Community. This Community now consists of France itself and twelve republics in Africa and Maagascar. . It is this third choice that Gen. de Gaulle hopes the Algerians will make. But the Al- gerians are free to choose either of the other two options. And It is freedom to choose in- Aarndpn,'i wxhiph hn trannmi i z-ieinn1 States to give public support to the Algerian policy of the preceding French governments. The best we could do in our desire not to offend the French government and French opinion was to abstain when the issue was put to a vote in the United Nations. This situation has been altered completely by Gen. de Gaulle's offer to self-determination. From now on our position is bound to be, while we avoid meddling, to encourage the effort to work out practically the program he has pro- posed, and to use what influence we may have to support the Arabs, who, like Mr. Bourguiba of Tunisia, are working for a policy of modera- tion and conciliation. It would not be proper for the United States government to give official support to any of the three options on which the Algerians will vote. But Americans can in their private capacity say what they are sure to think: that the best future lies in the third option-autonomy with- in the French Community. It is best for the European settlers in Algeria, for the Moslem masses, for the neighbors of Algeria in Tunisia and Morocco, for the stability and prosperity of North Africa and of the Western Mediter- ranean. For Algeria alone does not have the resources and the technology to provide a - decent future for its excessively large popula- Ing a powerful nation has led to side effects that have benefitted the Chinese people far more than any other Asian governments dedi- cated to serving the people. From a Western point of view the Chinese live in absymally low conditions suffering especially from their lack of freedom under the Communist regime. But the Chinese regard this matter from a different point of view. To eat and not to speak is better than to be free and to starve in the streets. And the Chinese are reaching a point where they will soon be able to eat. The vast projects in indus- try and agriculture, the hydroelec- tric dams and steel complexes, the roads and railroads are all con- tributing to the development of that country which stood a short time ago as one of the most back- ward In the world. DEARBORN CENTER: A Box Office Flop but the peasants are still in the koikhoz today. * * * THE POINT THAT must be ac- cepted is that the regime in con- trol of China can tolerate a large amount of popular discontent and remain in power. With agents everywhere indoctrinating the people and supervising their ac- tions therei little possibility that The eChinese work hard, too hard. But this has always been their condition. Before commun- ism, tradition, famine and the wrlords kept the peasant at hiswork. Today there is the prom- ise of a better life even though it will be a long time coming. The Soviet Union is in its forty- first year. It can be expected that the Chinese Communist regime will last at least that long. This means that the United States will have to deal with them sooner or later. The death of Dulles ended the power of the old China lobby, which has spent the last ten years convincing America that Chiang Kai-Shek had the potential to return China to the free world. This has proven to be untrue. * * * WHAT IS TRUE is that the facts must be faced. We ignored the Soviet Union for almost twenty years and got nowhere. The same prospect holds true for China. If the United States is to begin to solve some of our problems in Asia there will have to be an exploration of new paths in our inndpvntgnding the situation. ** * THE MUCH ACCLAIMED "great Sleap forward" with its fantastic 'production figures has proved to Sbe a fake; instead of hundreds of Apercentage gains there are only 'tens. But these gains do exist. The Scapital investment in Chinese in- dustries exceeds that of the West- ern industrial countries. The scanty agricultural harvests of the past are being Increased by the use of fertilizers and more scien- tific farming techniques. During the last decade the re- gime has made many mistakes. The announced liberalization of the "hundred flowers" period was ~. . . ,tA 'T'h nu nt' i~4 ~I If25 ~i f~'*'~