Sev~entieth 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 "When Oninions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" __ , _ o + fr' '1' a 0 1I r +r' a_.; _ , :{ ; , - ,, "To Another Year" 7 -- Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. AT THE STATE Verne's Journey Spectacle-Fraught THE "JOURNEY Into The Center of The Earth" offered by the Sta,* Theatre turned into a rather amusing one. For a change, the at- tractions promised by the advertising posters were really the highlights of the movie: gargantuan chamelions, prehistoric dimetrodons, Arlene Dahl after her clothes become tattered, a stratum of cinnabar (where Miss Dahl's clothes began to become tattered), mushroom forests, sta- alctites, underground oceans (where on the beach, Arlene Dahl's clothes reached their most tattered best), and finally the lost city of Atlantis, which was the only real disappointment. Jules Verne, of course, first wrote the story. Today,.he remains as one of the most entertaining writers ever to try science fiction. The .Y, JANUARY 5, 1960 NIGHT EDITOR: JEAN HARTWIG AS I SEE IT *.* By THOMAS TURNER THE PLAIN white envelope with a California postmark lay on the Editor's desk among the other items which had acumulated over the holiday recess. Opened, it revealed seven leaflets and two little stickers. "THIS IS INTEGRATION-EISENHOWER STYLE .. .", the first tract was headed. "The picture below, which shows Negro sol- diers embracing and kissing white women at an inter-racial dance, goes a long way toward explaining why the Armed Services are having so much trouble with re-enlistments ... "UNDER MILITARY discipline American servicemen have no alternative but to sub- mit to "integration," since they risk almost certain court martial by protesting ... If or- dered to share their bathing, eating and recre- ational facilities with Africans, they have no choice but obey. Military service, without doubt, provides the ideal setting for bringing the blessings of compulsory mongrelization to millions of boys and girls, and in this connec- tion it is interesting to observe that white WACs at Ft. McClellan, Alabama, and else- where. are already attending inter-racial dances at the post where they are encouraged to consort with Negro troops like those shown at the left ... (The picture shows two Negroes in uniform and one in sport coat and tie, with two white women in blouse-and-skirt.) "These girls, like millions of others, have been so brainwashed with 'tolerance' propa- ganda that they are incapable of knowing right from wrong, black from white.. ." Reprints of the sheet are available from the American Nationalist, Inglewood, California, the reader is informed. '"ERE IS PROOF that the N.A.A.C.P is an alien-controlled organization!" a second piece of literature from the envelope begins. "Despite the fact that it is one of the most widely publicized, and one of the most bitterly criticized, organizations in America today, rel- atively few Americans are familiar with the name or face of the sinister figure who master- minds the so-called National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). "He is Albert B. Spingarn . . . president of the NAACP since 1939 - and he is not a Negro but a New York Jew. "Yet our newspapers never print his name or picture: instead, Negro 'fronts' (such as Roy Wilkins and Thurgood Marshall) are always pictured as the leaders of the organization .. . Thus does our venal commercial press give aid and comfort to the NAACP and its alien lead- ers . .. (points theirs.)" This leaflet, too, is from American Nation- alist. "HELP!" begins a third. "Our American Birthright, Christian Heritage and our American Way of Life need your active DE- FENSE. "Use and Distribute 'FIGHT COMMUNISM' Stamps. These stamps cost $1.00 for 200, $16.00 for 5,000, $60.00 for 25,000. They are distributed by a group of Los An- geles, which advises the prospective buyer that "use of these stamps is an easy and inexpensive way to 'STAND UP AND BE COUNTED'." '"HEIR USE injures or embarrasses no one other than 'tools' of those of evil influence, communists, anti-anti-communists, traitors, dual loyalists, fellow travelers, one-worlders, political demagogues, gullible stooges (includ- ing educators and churchmen, both male and female), 'experts' (?), and professional 'do- gooders' who 'for gold,' fear, flattery, pressure, publicity, or jobs 'fall for glib talk'." The Keep America Committee contributes a little yellow sheet which quotes the American Jewish Committee's "official magazine" as say- ing, "The International government of the UNITED NATIONS, stripped of its legal trim- ming, then, is really the INTERNATIONAL GOVERNMENT of the UNITED STATES and the SOVIET UNION acting in unison." A PERSON named Roderick J. Wilson intro- duces himself as follows: "Hello! This is Roderick J. Wilson. Let's talk about -- JESUS CHRIST*.. . "On the doorstep of Christmas it would ap- pear to be time to give some Soul Searching Consideration to our STATUS as CHRIS-. TIANS ... "First, ,we must realize that although we speak of CHRIST as OUR HERO we do not have sufficient Courage of Conviction to STAND UP AND BE COUNTED; while those whose ideologies he refuted malign his char- acter, impugn His birth and deny. His mission on earth .. . "Why do we supinely agree when self pro- claimed religious leaders tell us that the Bible says, 'THOSE WHO MURDERED OUR HERO are God's Chosen People?" A SIXTH flysheet solicits financial support for "Common Sense," "the Anti-Commun- ism paper" from New Jersey. The seventh piece is a reprint of an article from "Human Events," a right-wing Wash- ington newsletter which is generally written on a higher level than the other items in the envelope. This particular article is called "The Illegiti- macy Racket: A Consequence of Do-Gooder Federal Aid." In it, writer John J. Synon alleges the gov- ernment "has made bastardy a profitable ad- venture" through federal aid to state welfare agencies. This was the offensive collection, a series of diatribes against Communists, Aliens, Do- Gooders, Integrationists and the like. That someone could consider the editor of a college publication, or indeed any educated person, fair game for these pamphlets; is incredible but apparently the case. I : .sre C- 0 I - -+-- St Lc? --te THE AMERICAN SCENE: New Year's Misgivings (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first in a two part series by The Economist, an English weekly, re- viewing the United State's past year and offering a few predictions for the next.) THIS WAS NOT, as the cigarette advertisements would put it, a thinking man's Christmas. Ding, dong, merrily the sky is riven by Mr. Khrushchev's rockets; the only song which came upon the midnight clear, that of Americans telling other Americans that they have lost their sense of purpose, was not one to make Christian men rejoice. When even carols carried a subliminal message of gloom, it was not surprising that the majority of Americans were tempted to peer no further than the bottom of their highball glasses. Immediately ahead stretch the uncharted wastes of the nineteen- sixties, as cheerless as Antarctica, with little to look forward to but more Russian footprints in the snow. Immediately behind lies a year full of events to crack the confidence of the stoutest hearts. It is not to the point that most Americans, except the farmers whose incomes have been drop- ping and the workers who have lost their jobs because of the steel strike, are spending more freely than at any previous festive season. Marooned on Christmas, with a cold expanse of unfriendly history lying all around, they might as well eat, drink and be merry. THE PAST YEAR has seen a series of events which mark it out as no ordinary year. Mr. Khrush- chev came to tell the Americans that ,he means to bury them, and to explain to those who took the he proposes to do it. Even if noth- ing happened to corroborate what he said, the shock of his visit should not be underestimated. He arrived as a figure out of the cartoonists' demonology and turned out to be an oddly'like- able human being; it was rather as if a medieval congregation had seen Mephistopheles invited to speak from the pulpit and had found that he was a peasant like themselves. But several events have made Americans suspect that Mr. Khrushchev's predictions had a sounder basis than they thought. * * * THE INTELLECTUALS are agreed to a rare and exhilarating extent about many of the things which need to be done to meet the Soviet challenge. This is true not merely among the Democrats, so often at loggerheads, who are for once saying half a dozen things in unison. The head of the Central Intelligence Agency has been reading the rest of the Ad- ministration what amounts to a Christmas sermon on the speed of Russian economic growth and some of the recommendations in the special studies organised by the Rockefeller Brothers, men not noted for their anti-Republican- ism, make Mr. Eisenhower look as out of date as President McKinley. A public opinion poll published in Look magazine this week re- veals what looks like bland in- difference to America's problems. Three-quarters of those asked ex- pressed various degrees of opti- mism about the future, and only seven per cent were warried per- sonally about the problem of keep- ing the peace. Six out of seven said comfortably that they had enough excitement. This apparent apathy is the despair of the pundits in Wash- ington. It is discouraging to shout, purple in the face, "the end of the world is coming" and to get in reply a cheery wave Christmas." and "Merry * * * BUT IT IS JUST possible that this appearance of unconcern con- ceals a deeper common sense. Some people have consistently maintained that the very last thing the United States should do is to try to match each and every Russian achievement in space, in science and in output. A better objective, they say,, is to pick out those fields in which the Soviet challenge is important; the proper function of leadership is to rally the country to meet these specific challenges by means compatible with a free society. If the public is saying, in effect, that it refuses to be stampeded into a series of uncoordinated panic measures to "catch up with the Russians," and that it is waiting for a leader who will calmly define the necessary, goals, it is being distinctly sensible. This is the Christmas message which President Eisenhower finds on his desk as he returns from his triumphant world tour this week. By opening negotiations with Mr. Khrushchev, the President may have gained the time necessary for a resolute leader to work out a national programme. It ishun- likely that Mr. Eisenhower him- self, because of his instinctive con- servatism, can provide such lead- - ership. If it is not provided by his suc- cessor, the eleventh hour may slide past without the revival of Ameri- ca's purposefulness for which men like Mr. Walter Lippmann and Mr. George Kennan have been plead- ing. But if leadership is forthcom- ing an American who raises his glass to Christmas need not feel that he has drunk a toast to his country's last decade of power. -The Economist story begins when Pat Boone, a combined budding young genius and loverboy, gives his Edinburgh professor, James Mason, a three shilling hunk of lava as a token of esteem. It unleashes the secret of a man already well traveled in the underworld. PAT AND JAMES hurry to the rocky gates, picking up the widow Arlene whose husband has been murdered by a third rival - the demented relative of the man who first discovered the route to the center of the Earth. Discovery follows discovery, though for a time the expedition is harassed by the jealous relative. He eventually proves almost harmless and conveniently falls under a rock slide. His life is not wasted, however, for the rocks that obligingly bury him open a tunnel to Atlantis. At this point, there remains only ten minutes to the movie. Jules is undaunted and pulls one out of his imagination. The final stunt is so ludicrous that it al- lows the story to come to a satis- fying conclusion. * *I * CERTAIN QUESTIONS arise, though only the most obnoxious realist would want them answered. How, for instance, do the flesh- eating dimetrodons remain so huge when the only edible food down there are mushrooms? Or why did the flesh-eating dimetro- dons turn to eat their fallen lead- er when Arlene Dahl was still helpless before them? James Mason was good as a Sherlock Holmes-type geologist. At times he seemed ready to break out in a big smile. Pat Boone, happily, was better in the movie than on any of his poor TV pro- grams. He provides some good, if strained, humor. * * * FROM HIS mistaking a duck scrounging for food to be a fel- low prisoner tapping out the Morse code in a foreign language, to his prancing past some rather excited nuns in his sheep's cloth- ing - one can only wish Arlene was given this chance - Boone's humorous role provides direction that becomes more important. than the journey itself. For those who like science fic- tion, and can do without terror or suspense, this is a good movie to see. -Thomas Brien He Believes N IKITA KHRUSHCHEV stands five-feet-five and weighs more than 200 pounds, and during his recent visit to San Francisco the hotel gotsout a special news re- lease quoting the chef as saying he was on a salt free diet. That means high blood pressure and certain temperamental character- istics of interest to diplomats, just as Mr. K's overweight is presum- ably of interest to his pysicians. He eats with gusto putting his head down close to the plate. And just when you think of him as a comical clown with this peasant origin written all over him he rises to his feet for a speech which, even through the translat- or, is moving and menacing and compelling. -The New Republic DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) part of auditorium, east section: LaW -front part of auditorium, east sec- tion (behind Architecture). Section B: Graduate - rear part of aud. with doctors at west end; Publi Health - Rm. 2004; Social Work - Rm. 2004; Flint College - Em. 2004 (behind Social Work). Section C: Engineering - Rm. 2054: Business Administration - Rm. 2071; Dental - Rm. 2033 (North end); Phar- macy - Em. 2033 (North end); Nurs- ing - Rm. 2033 (South end); Natural Resources - Rm. 2023; Music - Rm 2023 (behind Natural Resources). March into Hill Aud. - 1:45 p.a. Academic dress. Academic Costume. Can be rented at Moe Sport Shop, 711 N. University Ave. Orders should be placed immediately. Science Research Club Meeting. Rackham Amphitheater, Tues., Jan. 5, 7:30 p.m. Program: "A Rational Ap- proach to Cancer Chemotherapy" - Armand J. Guarino, Biological Chemis- try. "Applications for Nuclear Energy in Space Exploration" - Theodore P. Cotter, Physics. Introduction of new members. Dues for 1959-60 accepted after 7:15 pm. The Stearns Collection of Musica Instruments will be open on Tuesdays and Fridays from 3 to 4 p.m. Enter at East Circle Drive (across from the League). organizational M e e t I n g. Franco- American Ulversity Association. 8:00 p.m., International Center. All faculty members, students, tourists, friends, Frenchmen and countrymen Interested in promoting closer French-American inter-University contacts are cordially invited to attend. All interested persons are Invited to attend a meeting of the Near Eastern Club wed., Jan. 6 at 7:30 p.m. in the East Conference Rm., Rackham Bldg. Gilbert Bursley will speak on his col- lection of Muslim Armor. Tickets now available for second se- mester productions of the Dept. of Speech Playbill. Richard Wagner's opera, "Das Rhein- gold." to be presented with the School of Music, will play Tues., through Sat., March 1-5. Tickets at $1.75, $1.40, $1.00. william Congreve's "The Way of the World" will play Wed. through Sat., April 6-9. Tickets at $150, $1.10, 75c. "Look Homeward, Angel," the Ketti Frings adaptation of the Thomas Wolfe novel, if available, will be presented Wed. through Sat., April 27-30. Tickets $1.50, 1.10, 75c. The above productions wil play at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. At Trueblood Aud., Frieze Bldg.: The premiere performance of an original play, to be selected, Fri., and Sat., May 13 and 14. All tickets 75c, general ad- mission unreserved seating. Mail orders for tickets may be sent to Playbill, .Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- tre, with self-addressed, stamped en- velope, and check payable to Play Pro- duction. Orders may be for any or all of the four productions,. and should express first, second, and third prefer- ences of performance dates for each production. Prospective teachers who plan to take. the 'National Teacher Examina- tions on Feb. 13 should submit appli- cations immediately. Applications must reach the Educational Testing Service, 20 Nassau St., Princeton,,N.Y. by Fri., Jan. 15. An information bulletin and applica- tion forms may be obtained in Rm. 122, Rackham Bldg., or directly from Na- tional Teacher Examinations in Prince- ton. At the one-day testing session a can- didate may take the common examin- ations, which include tests in profes- sional information, general culture, English expression and nonverbal rea- soning In addition, each candidate may take one or two optional examin- ations which are designed to demon- strate mastery of subject matter in (Continued on Page 5) 4 '"i k MAX LERNER: Vision and Recoil TAIPUR, India - This isn't just year's end, but decade's end. Sure, all decades are ar- tificial, but so is the natural. You have to draw boundaries somewhere, and Nature and our calendar makers have conspired to draw them at the year, the decade, and the century. If you want more functional boundaries for the decade that has just passed into history, make it start at that moment in 1950 when Edward Teller, using a formula devised by a mathematical fellow-scientist, solved the prob- lem of making an H-bomb. And make it end with two days in 1959 - the September day when Khrushchev's big Russian jet brought him to Idlewild on his American visit, and the December day when an Air Force plane brought Eisenhower to New Delhi and the climax of his Asian tour. What I am saying, obviously, is that what- ever else the Fifties will be remembered for, they will be remembered as the decade in which humanity caught a glimpse of its own possible brutish ending -- and shrank back from what it saw in the mirror of the future. It was the decade, then, of vision and recoil. Call it, if you will, the decade of the Apoca- lypse. ONE COULD say far worse things about oth- er decades in human history. There are also worse things to say about this one, for it witnessed in its opening year the'emergence of terror in American life in the form of the Mc- Carthy shadow. It included also the Hiss and Remington and Lattimore cases, the security hunt, the "massive resistance" of the South against the school decision, the frenzy of youthful violence, the rise of the quiz shows and the fall of Charles Van Doren, the Suez But a decade is not the sum of its events, even of its big events. We have to ask what happened to the human animal and the hu- man spirit in the decade, not by asking what events happened in it nor even what sort of personalities dominated it, but by asking what was its ultimate inner vision, and what was its response. MUST ADD that the final vision of the Fif- ties was a double, not a single one. We have caught a glimpse of man destroying himself, yes. But we have also caught a glimpse of man manipulating man, reducing him to a cipher. I refer, of course, to the discipline of motiva- tional research which has come to be widely known as the art of the "hidden persuaders." The pathos of it lies not only in the fact that there are men who can live only by manipu- lating others, but also in the fact of so many other men who are capturable and manip- ulable. The scar left in our minds by the quiz rigging scandal with which the decade closed came not only from an Albert Freedman whose motto was "Anything Goes," but also from* a Charles Van Doren whose flaw was that he was too weak to resist the manipulator. LEST YOU think I give too cosmic an im- portance to these episodes, let me say that I do so largely because oj China. It is the nov- elists of a decade who pierce most surely to its vision. Early in the decade there was Nigel Dennis's "Cards of Identity," the forerunner of much of our current talk about the loss of identity. Last year there was a too neglected novel by Richard Condon, "The Manchurian Candidate," which retold a McCarthy story in terms of Chinese brainwashing. Both novels LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Bike Rack Policy Irks Student To the Editor: IT IS GRATIFYING to observe that the University is beginning the new year with a clean sweep-- but only of the bicycle racks, ap- parently. Surely it must have brought a warm New Year's glow to the hearts of Msesrs. Hatcher, Pierpont, Niehuss, Stirton and our own James A. Lewis to beaable to wander about the snow-covered streets of Ann Arbor and observe that nowhere on campus were the bicycle racks cluttered up with nasty, dirty old bicycles. I am sure that most students applauded when the administra- tion decided to enforce the bike parking bans in front of the Un- dergraduate Library and the Frieze Bldg. (Even though no one did anything about that numeri- cal lack of spaces.) "Back," our administrators seemed to' be say- ing, "into the bike racks with those bikes." there are times when it is much more convenient to leave one's bike parked overnight in the racks -for instance when one's light has burned out and one is not anxious to run afoul of the Ann Arbor city government. Are park- ing meter's next? These may seem harsh accusa- tions but they are a part of a much larger problem. The admin- istration has got to cease its policy of continually hounding students. It is time that the administrative branch of the University realize that its SOLE excuse for existence is to succor the faculty and stu- dents of the University. THE UNI- VERSITY DOES NOT EXIST SO THAT THERE MAY BE AN AD- MINISTRATION - IT IS THE OTHER WAY AROUND. If we are treated like adults by the fac- ulty, why does the administration look on us as children? -Philip Munck, '60 were in need of some of the funds. It may be that as one should go to the poor for charity, so he should go to them for humility. S * * I AM a loan recipient. I feel personally that here we have a wonderful opportunity for stu- dents in need to avail themselves of the generosity of the American people in helping them through colleges and universities. It does not offend me that in return the people ask support for their moral committment to have governmental change through le- gal procedure. Evolution, not rev- olution. I think it is wise of the people to ask this. They do not - ask that we give up all our beliefs or ideas about government. They merely ask that we show care, re- sponsibility and thought in the changes we wish to make, if any. Is this not the very definition of serious intellectual effort? trust we have of intellectualism in this country. Now let's see how paranoid we can be about that! I AM NOT proposing that we merely accept the fact of the loy- alty oath's existence with resigna- tion and defeat. That would be more than foolish, and it would mark us forever as the greatest herd of clods ever to roam the earth. It does appear. to me however, that the unfairness of the affida- vit lies not in its existence per se, but rather in the inconsistency of application. - THE RUB then seems to be that we feel somewhat limited in our freedom to think because of the loyalty oath. Signing an oath has never stopped anyone from thinking as far as I know. It would seem logical that more ideas would flow from this re- N'o Thanks .. .* To the Editor: MANY thanks to Sen. John P. Smeekens for his penetrating analyses of several of the most prominent deaths in history. It seems, though, that the senator is so engrossed in the past that he is unable to view clearly the slow, tortuous death of his own state., The senator's solution for Mich- igan's "purported" tax c r is i s might be feasible if we were living in the age of Socrates, or St. Ste- phen, or St. Joan of Orleans; un- fortunately, we are living in the twentieth century. The thought that " ..we as citizens demand and respect ... a program whose appropriation and ' expenditures are confined within the limits of revenues as received . . ." dis- misses the fact that a more com- plex society necessarily makes , t