311e ir1 k 'tBally 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 I Offer Three -Ouch!-Choicesw' SA?> 'hen 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. WSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: THOMAS HAYDEN - ----- - Same Old Story Greets Red China Bid T WAS THE same old st'ory from the United Nations Tuesday - Communist China had o chance of gaining -membership- at this ses- on, but maybe next year the General Assem- ly would consider the possibility. In the meantime, Communist China was re- rganizing top military personnel, continuing er Laotian maneuvers and bombarding the. hinese Nationalists every other day - hardly onvincing evidence that she is ready to join peace-seeking organization. Nor does there eem much hope that she will be asked to in he near future, barring a change either in the ommunist nation's aggressive tendencies or a the United States' stand on the issue. Opposition to Red China's entry into the nited Nations; spearheaded during the last ine years by the United States; is in part ased on the, fear that she would gain the TeXts and Prices dHE COST of text books is extremely high- and seems to be rising each semester.. This problem would be relatively easy to. olve if the bookstore owners were rbandit hiefs who were "robbing the students blind." owever, separate investigations made con- erning the. proposed Union bookstore made ist year by, the Upion and The Daily indi- ate that this is not true. It seems that the ookstores give efficient and reasonably priced- ervice. The evidence clearly shows that the ob- ous and most dramatic solution, a student or rniversity sponsored bookstore is not a prac- cal solution. , UT STUDENT Government Council should set up a cpmmittee to investigate the prob- m and perhaps work for some partial solu- ons. For example, they could consult with facul". Y, bookstores and textbook publishers in or- er to seek some method of reducing textb'ook osts. More paperbacks and a larger Under- raduate Library reserve-book list might help. There might be an' opportunity for a four er cent reduction, if the-Legislature could be ersuaded to exempt textbooks from the use ax. The problem of textbook prices offers an rea where SGC might well serve the student Security Council membership now held by Na- tionalist China. Her power in this position might presumably be great enough to disrupt the peaceful goals of the United Nations, per- -,haps even destroy its authority. AS AMERICA'S Walter S. Robertson, former assistant secretary of state, told the Gen- eral Assembly this week, Red China's record is hardly commendable - 'since first nominat- ed for membership she has been involved in at- tacks on other Asian nations six times, found "guilty of aggression" by the United Nations for actions during the Korean War (which she still denies) and spread "organized hatred" in propaganda against non-communist nations. The United States officials has insisted that membership be granted only if she demon- strates her desire for peace. Her rapid growth into a world power doesn't seem too significant, if she wields it aggressively. The American policy, tends to slight- p- bilities of somehow discouraging Red China's war-like mood. Nine years of snubbing by the. United Nations has had no effect, so what reason is there to believe that nine more years of the same treatment will change her? INDIA, the annual sponsor, holds the ,oppo- site idea. Membership for Red China, ac- cording to neutralist Indian policy, might very well be sufficient to tame her since she would then be responsible to a world government. Red China would be on the same plane as the rest, ofd the nations and would continually be required to justify her actions., Neither forced seclusion or reliance on social pressure seem to be the complete answer, but a "probational" membership or a combination of granting Red China membership, then sub- jecting her to the scrutiny of her peers and, if necessary, forcing -her to conform to the tenets of the United Nations might work. Other solutions undoubtedly exists:among the mem- bers of the General Assembly. Yet the United States' opposition is so absolute that even dis- cussion of the issue is postponed every year. One thing is certain - postponement cannot. 'last forever. Red China, as a rapidly growing world power, must be shaken out of what re- sembles a state of juvenile delinquency before: she reaches maturity. The United Nations has a year to think it over. Perhaps next year the General Assembly will sit down and pool ideas. - it would be the first real progress made in nine years. --KATHLEEN MOORE Whthe News by Robert iunker WORDS ARE UNUSUAL. You can read them, have them explained and be satisfied as to their meaning. Yet when they are properly used and a situation arises, they cani be twisted to say practically anything. And what they say in the end depends entirely on who has the power to change them. Thus one views with avid interest the pro- posed Student Government' Council plan, which was written, among other reasons, "to clarify" the old plan. Taken literally, this would seem to say that ambiguities which had obviously existed in the old Stu G plan were to be cleared up. Even a brief perusal of the latest edition will make it shockingly clear that ambiguity has not been removed, and that one would probably lose a debateif he claimed the new plan was any clearer than the old. A SAMPLE or two of illustration: Under the heading "functions" appears Function A: "To recognize new student organizations." Function B: "To reactivate and deactivate student organizations." Function C: "To withdraw recognition from student organizations." These three functions seem elear enough until one small point is raised: does the term "student organizations" include fraternities and sororities. As many students know, the present plan revision grew out of a dispute over a sorority, Sigma Kappa. The case brought out an ambiguity in the former plan: did SGC have the jurisdiction to de- clare a sorority guilty of discrimination and order them to sever their connections with the national? THIS POINT seems even less clear in the present plan. There are those who say Greek letter groups are not student organizations but rather student-alumni-administration groups and thus would not be included in SGC's. new areas of jurisdiction. Some high officials have assured those concerned that the term "student organizations" does include Greek letter groups. But at any angle the plan seems to be full of ambiguities. And there are distasteful aspects as well. Substantive review has been explicitly included in the powers of the Committee on Referral. Now if four members of the referral committee deem an action of SGC 'unreasonable," the referral committee takes up the question and can reverse a Stu G decision on the basis of differing, opinion. SOME STUDENTS fought this. Mort Wise, former SGC executive vice-president, walked out of the meeting at which the plan .was adopted. He felt the plan was opposed to any concept of student gov- ernment he could support. Bobbie Maier, a second student representative, voted against the plan. Ron Gregg, Stu G president, supported the plan along ,with the administration and faculty members. Mr. Gregg obviously had a differ- ent view of student government's scope and power than the other two student members of the committee which drew urp the. plan. "What can this differing concept be? On the surface it appears that Mr. Gregg does not care to head a strong student government or to fight for the ideal of a strong student government with control over student affairs. * *~ * ONE IS FORCED to wonder whether this is aywise position for a student government leader. Objectively considered, of course, Gregg ,may have seen the obvious: the administration must take the ultimate blame for student conduct and wishes to have a voice in student affairs. The administration holds the power, and no plan which excluded them from areas of Jurisdiction could pass if, they desired otherwise, Gregg may have been trying for the best possible compromise for stu- dent" government. Yet a good fight would have done much more for the SGC morale. AT THE CAMPUS: PN Herblock is away due to WhnsCopr , 1959, The Pulitzer Publishins Co. t illnesslt. Louis Post-Dispatch THE. SENIOR COLUMN: . Starting To Learn A fter Class By CHARLES KOZOLL Personnel Director IN TODAY'S frantic search for standards, the illusion of the "liberally educated man"' has. gained eminence in many, collegi- ate circles. Enlarging the mental picture of a tweedish pipe smoker who can shift intellectual tacks from dis- cussions of Plato to theories of nuclear physics, educators have set out to prove that the present overriding concern with producing technicians can be fatal to any progressing society. A cursory review of recent changes in course and department construction readily illustrates the trend-integrating relevant areas of psychology, economics and poli- itical science to provide a cross section of data, drawing men from different disciplines together to discuss one area of the world. All this toward the end of a wider academic perspective for students. -* * * WIDENING this perspective will hopefully. turn the individual who faithfully memorizes cold factual data into one capable of 'seeing relationships between facts and theories and of applying them both to general and specific prob- lems. This individual may not become a stereotype of the white collar worker who worships his hi-fi, television set, barbecue pit and the notion that the only thinking man appears in prominent cigarette ads. He may be the same individual who realizes that the entirety of university education does not oc- cur within the confines of either the library or the classroom. The academic community provides not only the means to acquire a sweeping view of academic mat- ters, but certain techniques to put these fairly abstract principles di- rectly to work. THE MOST abstract of the lot is called "human understanding" and it seeps into practically every section of college experience. It starts the day when a freshman greets his roommate for the first time and never really stops. It isn't really concerned with having dorm bull sessions on reli- gion or squatting on the floor of a .crowded apartment pretending at knowledge of existentialist phil- osophy while hopefully broadening moral outlooks. It is intimately tied up with learning first that other opinions and characters do exist and sec- ond that because they may irritate our own patterns that have been solidified for ten years, they aren't crackpot, beatnik or immoral. * * * HUMAN understanding isn't a science that is learned specifically through being steeped in a maze of extracurricular activities or be- ing classified as a Big Man on Campus (BMOC) or Growing Wheel On Campus. The sense of accomplishment which comes from having learned how to" work with people rather than use them won't be part of Buro-Cat training pro- grams, pledging periods or any form of indoctrination that vari- ous organizations use. If there could be developed a method which' would imbue alU students with this ,desirable qual- ity, it could be put. 'on booklet form for freshmen edification.e Un fortunately-or unfortunately-it can't be done, and remains a tax- ing individual process. * *~ * DESPITE the fact that gaining such insight remains, a difficult proposition, the majority of grad- uating seniors who take the time to reflect upon tlie benefits of their four year experience regard this aspect as the most beneficial part of their academic training. Seniors regard the football week- ends, the carnivals, the clubs as "enjoyment," but evaluate the ability to live with all people. as the one difference between an educated hack and the liberally educated man. The hack will be able to move along with the mass; the liberally educated man will work and live with, people. --JAMIE SEDER U' Pease Offensive N DISSIMILAR context, but with the same underlying meaning, both President Eisen- wer and the University Center for Researcir 1 Conflict Resolution have expressed hope r the abolition of conflict through education. Both believe war is "the harvest of arrogant inds." Both maintain knowledge is the mean 0 break through this curtain of insanity. But In a recent speech before the National lucation Association, Eisenhower, the soldier, ped that the education of future generations uld be a real basis for security. "Our schools e strong points in our national defense," he Id the association on its 100th birthday cele- ation. The University Center for Research on Con- et Resolutions, rather than investigating ays of defending against the possibility of ir, has taken the offensive: it will fight, rough research, to encourage peace. The Center, approved in June by the Re- gents, seems prepared to strike out along this relatively unexplored frontier. IT WILL PIONEER the area through study by the social sciences. The Center hopes to at- tain what might otherwise appear as simply an idealistic goal with an educated, varied and dedicated committee of faculty members. Then, through their efforts, subsidized by a generous anonymous pledge and other dona- tions, the Center hopes to attract other quali- fied social scientists from institutions all over the world by sponsoring conferences and semn- jinars. With further operating resources, and an expansion of scholarly cooperation, the Center could develop into an internationally promis- ing and prominent setup. Whether there will be one in the future could be the mark; of its success. -NORMA SUE WOLFE CONFUSED SITUATION: 'Civil War' Troubles Laos INTERPRETING THIE NEWS: Oiling the Waters I By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst NIITA KHRUSHCHEV is trying' to revive the suave supersalesman who appeared be- fore the National Press Club in Washington a week ago. But water, and temper, has flowed over the dam since then. The Soviet Premier is now going out of his way to reassure President Eisenhower that the flurries of conflict stirred by people critical of the Soviet regime will not affect their consulta- tions this weekend. He also is moving to repair his relations with the American business world; first damaged at his Economic Club dinner in New York. He finds a manufacturing plant and its wages something to admire, and says he gets along better with business men (who to him represent the capitalistic system) than with politicians. Business with the United States is one of the things uppermost in Soviet policy now, as wit- ness the appeals for trade by Khrushchev, Mikoyan and Kozlov. KHRUSHCHEV ALSO must have realized that his rejection by AFL-CIO leaders was internationally damaging to the Communist claim to leadership of the world's workers. So he suddenly arranged to be welcomed by Harry Bridges' left-wingers in an attempt to prove that the AFL-CIO leadership did not speak for all. The British press, which is expressing con- siderable alarm lest Khrushchev's reception on his tour interfere with Western efforts to reach an accomodation with him, reminds that there were similar flurries when he visited England. GEORGE MEANY, President of the AFL-CIO who refused to join his lieutenants in bread-breaking with Khrushchev in San Fran- cisco, has seized the occasion to remind that Khrushchev and his policies may not be dis- associated from Stalin and Lenin and their policies of world conquest. There are important questions, however, By PETER DAWSON Daily Contributing Editor MEN FROM Argentina, Italy, Japan and Tunisia are now trying to find out what's happen- ing in Laos. Unfortunately for their mission (sent by the United Nations Se- curity Council) the fighting seems to have died down. The investi- gators will have a hard time find- ing much out about the situation. They might have anyway; proving that a certain man is a Commun- ist or a North Vietnamese instead of a supporter of the Laotian gov- ernment is like proving somebody likes Faulkner and hates Shakes- peare. The conflict appears to involve Communists from Laos and its neighbor, North Vietnam, trying to take two border provinces away from Laos-those of Phong Saly and Sam Neua. They may -not try a full-scale attack after the inves- tigators leave; they may prefer to try to undermine the Laotian gov- ernment. * * * 'THE PROVINCES were attached to North Vietnam for all practical purposes until late in 1957, even. though they were supposed to be- long to Laos. They were taken over in 1953 by Communist forces in the Indo-Chinese war, and by the Geneva settlements ending the war in 1954 they were to go to Right-wing Laotian politicians reacted violently to this. Prince Souvanna Phouma was dropped, and with him went neutralism. Thin in came Phoui Sananikone's government. The new government did many sensible things. It also got hard on the Communists-too hard, per- haps. In this It was partly pushed by the army and the Committee for the Defense of National Inter- ests. * * * EVEN THOUGH two Communist battalions roamed the two prov- inces, the government accepted a Chinese Nationalist consulate, took away the legal status of the Com- munist Party, and last January suspended the legislature and postponed the next election. It also tried to disarm the two Communist battalions. This July hit-and-run attacks on! govern- ment posts began. The Laotian government charged that they in- cluded Laotian Communists and were led by North Vietnamese offi- cers. During the week of Sept. 1 the fighting got worse; the attackers brought in artillery and North Vietnamese regular troops, or at least so claimed the Laotian gov- ernment. On Sept. 4 the government ap- pealed to the UN for an emergency force. The U.S. had just send aid, mostly small guns and ammuni- in the other direction-that North Vietnam wil try to take it over, partly for its own sake, but mostly as a route to South Vietnam and perhaps to Laos' other neighbors- Cambodia, Burma and Thailand. ' How far the affair gets blown up depends on how much it is worth to North Vietnam and to Laos and its defenders, including the SEATO nations which are com- mitted to its defense. The General Assembly would probably just as soon avoid an- other Korea, especially now that Khrushchev and Eisenhower are exchanging visits. And probably so for almost everybody, including Russia and the United States. Many observers think Laos prob- ably isn't worth a war to China, since Formosa is more important to her. To the use of an emergency force India would probably pre- fer the restoration of the com- mission set up in 1954 to watchj over the peace in Laos. India was its chairman, Canada and Poland its other members; it left Laos last August. * * * INDIA suspects Laos has violated the neutrality it is supposed to maintain. (The United States, by. the way, has supplied $30 million a year in military aid to Laos since 1954, some of it apparently, wasted in corruption.) North Vietnam most likely will CHARLES CHAPLIN is' a genius who made films. These films, are at once- both the greatest re- flection and the greatest expres- sion of that genius. True, Chaplinj often constructed films that tot- tered dn their framework; true also that he indulged himself in that most knowing and sophisti- cated of concepts, "the common touch," but these are piddling con- siderations and in no way affect the overall quality of his work. "The Gold Rush" is a very great film.. Whatever qualifications I may make in no way affect that statement. Part of its greatness is that it'is primarily a visual film. This, in spite of the fact that Chaplin made a serious error, when in 1942 he reissued it with a narration that Is both stupid and' obtrusive. Fortunately, to balance this he also added a musical score, a sort of meatgrinder Dimitri Tiomkin affair, that more t]han compensates for the dialogue. IT WILL'BE a long time before anything as beautifula the dance of breadrolls hits the screen again. Close behind it is a feast of shoes and a blizzard and bear bit that couldn't be improved upon. Chap- lin learned early that the easiest way to handle a camera was to place it on a tripod and make cer- tain- that what it recorded was top quality. This is not to say that "The Gold Rush is-crude. Chaplin learned how to cut from character in "a way. that'is still being used to- day, only not as effectively. Note a cut to an aging. dance-hall floozy at the New Year's Eve party. . The cast that surrounded the master in "The Gold Rush" would be hard to improve upon. Perhaps the dance hall scenes were so good in themselves that they made the performance of Georgia Hale seem better than it was, but I doubt it, for she combined with beauty and fragility just the right touch of hardness and the result was the best portrait of this type I have ever seen. * * * THROUGHOUT, ALL this the- hand , of Chaplin, the director, never lost control. He knows when to stop in this film just as he knew how to utilize every prop Iu-~ I that could be used, something tha is a lost art today with the excep tion of Fred Astaire, "The Gold Rush" was made i 1925. I urge you to see it, not be cause it is historic, not because it' important, but, because it's enter tainment. --Al Phillips DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which -The Michigan Daily assumes no edli- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room -:3519 Administration Build- ng, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. 'Friday. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1959 VOL. LXX., NO. 3 Gener l Notices Student Organizations. Registratic of student organizations planning to b active during the present semeste should be completed on or before Oc 10. Forms are available in the Office o Student Affairs, 2011 Student Activitie Bldg. Privileges such as the use of th Organization Announcement columnii The Michigan Daily, use of meetir rooms.in University buildings, assign ment of .SAB facilities, etc., are aval able to recognized organizations 'onil Student organizations registered b this date will be considered official recognized for the current semester. Activities. All Ativities and Projects - (oth than closed social events) which are t, be presented to the campus or to large segment of it are subject to th approval of-Student Government Coun cil. Only recognized organizations a eligible to submit a petition for con sideration' Petitions must be submit ted at least two weeks before the even is to take place and publicity may n be released unt approval has been a cured. Forms may be secured from th Administrative Secretary, Student Go ernment Council, Rm. 1538 or 2011 Sti dent Activities Bldg. Activities may n be scheduled for the seven days pri to the beginning of a final examin tion period. Closed Social Events (for meimbe and invited guests only) sponsored 1 student organizations must be regi tered in the Office of Student Affat 2011 Student Activities Bldg. Form are available in the above office. Re quests for approval must be submitte to that office no later than noon of ti Editorial Staff - THOMAS TURNER, Editor' PHILIP POWER ROBERT JUNKER Editorial Director City Editor AHARLES KOZOLL............ Personnel Director 7OAN KAATZ .......... .. ... Magazine Editor