PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1951 - i OSU & the Speaker's Ban THE FIGHT against college speaker bans is gaining impetus at Ohio State Uni- versity. And the spark behind the move to end a trustee's screening rule has come from the most logical of all campus groups, the faculty. The Ohio controversy began in early September when Columbus newspapers objected to a campus appearance by Dr. Harold a. Rugg, professor emeritus of Columbia University. The school trustees immediately re- sponded with a rule compelling all guest lecturers to be screened by the university president. With the speaker's ban came a statement of principle by the trustees: "We encourage the fullest academic freedom consistent with national security. The facilities of the Uni- versity will not be made available to known Communists or members of other groups who seek to undermine the basic liberties of America." Like all speaker's bans and cultural vigi- lantism this sounds patriotic enough. But to date, it has succeeded in barring only one speaker from campus-a Quaker. BOTHjEDUCATIONAL and religious lead- ers in Columbusand at the University decried the ruling. The two newspapers however, supported it, and the trustees stood firm on their principle. Extensive faculty criticism, however, prompted the trustees to make two con- cessions; to appoint a committee to discuss the problems of administering the gag law and to hear the faculty complaint. A committee of seven, representing the Homecoming Dance THERE SEEMS to be a decline in ro- mance on campus these days, despite a more favorable dating ratio. Advance ticket sales for "Football Fantasy," the annual Homecoming dance sponsored by Student Legislature, have fallen alarmingly below the aver- age of previous years, and the dance committee is having visions of an empty Intra-Mural building tonight. Of the 17,000 students currently regis- tered' in the University, approximately 4000 will be attending 47 registered house social functions tonight. This figure is based on a liberal average of more than 80 per party. Where will the remaining 13,000 be? Homecoming is the highlight of the fall social season in Ann Arbor, and cer- tainly the main Homecoming Dance should be able to attract a good represen- tation from this number. Proceeds from "Football Fantasy" will support Student Legislature activities for the coming year, eliminating the student government tax found on many campuses. Highlights of the Homecoming Dancej will be one of the best orchestras in the country and decorations twice as elabor- ate as those for last year's Homecoming dance. Why not try it? -Mike Scherer nearly 2000 teachers at OSU, was scheduled to meet with the trustees last night. But besides just complaining against the screening the OSU faculty has taken several positive steps. The University Religious Council an- nounced that as long as the ban is in ef- fect Religion in Life Week would not be held. A conference of the American Physical Society scheduled for next semester will meet in a Columbus hotel without university sponsorship. Several other faculty societies are also considering moving their conventions off campus rather than submit their lecturers and participants to the president's screening. The Ohio State faculty uprising, how- ever, is the only promising factor in a general restriction of speakers throughout the Big Ten. Except for the University of Iowa and Michigan State, every Big Ten school, in- cluding our own, requires prior administra- tive or faculty permission for speakers. And both the University of Iowa and Michigan State reserve the right to ban any extreme lecturers. AN ANSWER for the Ohio State contro- versy, and for all schools with speaker bans might be found in the recent solution reached at Columbia University. There, student groups are free to invite whomever they please to lecture. But to protect its interests Columbia will estab- lish a student-faculty group to review the responsibility of all organizations. A definition of irresponsibility by Colum- bia is: "illegal or immoral actions, actions contrary to the organizations stated ob- jectives, and action taken without fair re- gard for the interests and good name of the university." If this definition is followed with con- servative strictness, groups will be able to invite one controversial or unpopular speak- er but never another. It will be the same situation that existed before the speaker's ban was lifted. A loose interpretation, however, carried over a period of time would mean a sensible speaker's rule. It would allow free choice of speakers, it would give the university a right of review, and it would place the decisions of what was irresponsible in a representative student- faculty group where any controversial issue could be assured a fair hearing. Such a compromise would be ideal at Ohio State University where some changej will have to be instituted. For if the concerted denouncement by an entire faculty cannot bring about the end of a speaker's ban, then the faculty has lost its importance in the university system. And Ohio State will be a smooth-running flaw- less enterprise but not an educational in- stitution. -Leonard Greenbaum MATTER OF FACT By JOSEPH ALSOP WASHINGTON-Sen. Robert A. Taft's wonderfully unsurprising announcement of his candidacy for the Republican nomin - tion has had at least one good effect that Sen. Taft did not look for. It has spurred the Republican supporters of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower to tackle the all-important problem of organizing their forces. Hitherto, the real inner weakness of the Eisenhower movement in the Republi- can party has not been the uncertainty as to Gen. Eisenhower's future intentions. The real weakness has been the character of the movement itself-a loose coalition of local political potentates, each with his own claims and touchinesses, each eyeing all the others with visible suspicion. Now, however, the main groupings in the movement have come together at a series of meetings held here in Washington by Sens. James Duff of Pennsylvania, Irving Ives of New York, Frank Carlson of Kansas and Henry Cabot Lodge of' Massachusetts. These Senators, acting either as plenipoten- tiaries or as principals, have reached agree- ment on certain major points. Dangerous Detour ,~%" " /ettep4 TO THE EDITOR The Daily welcomes communications from its readers on matters of general interest, and will publish all letters which are signed by the writer and in good taste. Letters exceeding 300 words in length. defamatory or libelous letters, and letters which for any reason are not in good taste will be condensed, edited or withheld from publication at the discretion of the editors. 1 1 Iz C n a s t in The St. Fitzpatrick Louis Post-Dispatch College Humor. . . 'o the Editor: IN REFERENCE to your "Bloody Mess' of the 24th: On the night of the 23rd several wisted minds from the 55 side of Stockwell Hall wound their way around to the 50 side in search of some more minds to twist. Their method was subtle; they claimed a. simple case of suicide in the shower. Incand around the shower were placed many of the univer- sity's up and coming actresses who ointed tothe dblood on the cur- tain and pleaded "respect for the dead."nWhile thererwere no house directors present to give the scene some validity, there have been enough suicides in the universities of this country to give us reason to believe that the suicide was authentic. After all, who has time in a university to concoct jokes, es- pecially those requiring calculated perverted planning? We looked in- to thetshower, and without taking the time. to examine the corpse, blood, and knife, were terrified- and we are in good physical shape. If this be a method of the 55 cor- ridor to rid themselves of their weaker members, it is a good one, in accordance with survival of the fittest, but if it was simply an at- tempt to be funny, no malice meant, it was not very successful. -Ellie Suslow Ester Mark * * * music . . To the Editor: AT FIRST glance one would nev- er think the Student Publica- tions Building was a mortuary. But judging from the sounds which es- cape its windows about 11.30 p.m. each evening, one would not hesi- tate to believe that it was the nightly meeting of the Ann Arbor Morticians' Society. Very sombre and slightly diluted organ music floats on the breeze. (The same breeze, I might add, which floats into my window.) And since my window faces the SP Building not a single chord escapes without my hearing it. When I am studying this proves to be very annoying. When I am trying to sleep it seems to be very eerie and reminds me of a holiday at a funeral home. The distance between Helen Newberry and SP is just enough to cause dilution of tones and hence greatly changes the sound and pitch of each chord. If a slight breeze is blowing, the music floats in with each phrase a different key. This adds variety to the se- lection and tends to hold my at- tention since I am in music school 1and Music Lit, is one of my requir- ed courses. The lab period in Mus. Lit. is not required of freshmen, however, but it seems that I have a lab every evening whether I want it or not. I appreciate the fact that you, at SP, are music lovers but can't you do your loving just a little earlier? -Betty Sittman Helen Newberry Residence Editor's Note: Our linotype opera- tors,'a peculiar breed, find that organ music makes them more accurate. Since this faculty is most important between midnight and 2 a.m., per- haps a rearrangement of program- ming might be effected. Taft Support, ... To the Editor: THIS is to announce the forma- tion of a new organization; Democrats for Taft as the Repub- lican Nominee for President. This is not to suggest tha we will sup- port Alphonso for the Presdency once he is nominated. For with Taft s a candidate, we Democrats can feel secure that a Democrat, ANY Democrat, will be the next President of the United States. -Lyn H. Marcus t ON THE Washington Merry-Go-Round with DREW PEARSON Editorials Published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: CRAWFORD YOUNG FIRST, THE HEADQUARTERS of the Eis- enhower movement will be in the Gen- eral's home state, at Topeka, Kan. The head- quarters are expected to be opened there rather shortly under the joint auspices of Sen. Carlson and his partner, Kansas Na- tional Committeeman Harry Darby, and they will most probably be placed under Darby's direction. Second, what may be called an organizing office will also be opened almost immediately in Washington. This office will be a coopera- tive venture, where the interested Senators can keep tabs on progress throughout the country. Third, Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York has been fully informed of these prospective steps. An understanding has been reached that the New York Gover- nor will let his allies publicly lead the Eisenhower parade, confining his own overt effort to New York and the Eastern states, but quietly lending a hand else- where when this will be useful. The pur- pose is to lull the suspicion that the Eisen- hower movement may be a concealed Dewey movement, which is already enter- tained by some people who underrate both Dewey's political hard-headedness, and the fervent sincerity he brings to this fight. If this pattern of organization can be made to work, it should be highly effective. It re- presents a logical division of responsibility. It knits together all the various main groups of Eisenhower backers in a coherent man- ner. It assures the maximum of coalition ef- fort. Indeed, it has every virtue except the virtue that cannot be achieved until Gen. Eisenhower himself is prepared to say to his supporters, "Here is the man I want to head things up." * s . W1ITH A SERIOUS organization in the field against them, Sen. Taft and his backers will do well not to be deceived by their own propaganda, aimed of course at doubting delegates, that the Eisenhower movement is a mirage, and that the Taft bandwagon is a sort of political juggernaut. There is no argument about Gen. Eisen- hower's superior popularity. And with such men as Gov. Dewey and Sens. Carlson, Duff and Lodge actively organizing for Eisenhow- er, and firmly declaring their own certainty that Eisenhower will be available, the effect on doubting delegates should be immediate and important. The great question will still remain, of course, as to whether these leaders read Gen. Eisenhower's intention correctly, and as to when the General may be able to declare his candidacy. But even on this head, there is cold comfort for Sen. Taft in certain facts which can now be stated on the highest au- thority. In brief, several of the Eisenhower lead- ers were in intimate touch with the Gen- eral prior to his appointment as N.A.T.O. commander, when he was actually just about to take the major step of enrolling himself as a Republican. Since the Gen- eral's departure for Europe, these same men have maintained a quiet but to them entirely satisfactory and encouraging liai- son with him. And it is because of these unseen contacts, that the pro-Eisenhower chieftains declare with such cert'ainty that they have no fear their candidate will not be available at the last moment. In addition, there is the further fact that can now be revealed, that certain of these Eisenhower leaders have also had represen- tatives working out in the states for a good many months, with most hopeful responses. In short, there may still be a lot of "ifs" in the Eisenhower movement, but it is infinite- ly less iffy than the Taft propagandists so hopefully suggest. (Copyright, 1951, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) New Books at the Library Cary, Joyce-Mister Johnson. New York, --THE DIPLOMATIC POUCH- U.S. AMBASSADOR Robert Murphy in Brussels has handed the Bel- gians a tough note virtually demanding that Belgium send some of its army to help the United Nations in Korea. So far, Belgium has sent only a few hundred volunteers . . . The United States is also pressuring the Netherlands to do its part to reinforce General Ridg- way's army. The Dutch contribution has been no greater than thet Belgian.J American reports on Russian A-bomb tests have been so ac-c curate that the Russians are reported preparing a new and distantt proving ground for future tests. It's reported to be in the Taklan Makan Desert across the southeast Russian border in China. This1 desert is shut off from the outside world by some of the world's highest mountains.o U.S. experts believe England's rearmament program will danger- ously lower the British standard of living and make another U.S. loan necessary by the middle of next year. It'll be around $2,000,000,000, and will occur whether Churchill's elected or not. (Actually a change in Britain's ruling political parties is not expected to make the slight- est difference in Britain's economy.) . . . All of our new F-84 jet fighter-bombers are now equipped to be refueled in flight. This gives them a range thousands of miles greater than the fighters in the last war. -WETBACK LOBBY-- THE BIG RANCHERS of the Rio Grande Valley met secretly at Bayview, Texas, recently to map plans for blocking the Immigra- tion Border Patrol from enforcing the wetback laws. These same ranch- ers have been hiring cheap labor, smuggled across the Mexican border, and in order not to lose this cheap labor supply, they agreed to raise a war chest of $50,000 to lobby against strict border enforcement, both in Washington and Mexico City. It was tentatively decided to assess each rancher ten cents per acre. The first step, they agreed, was to block a $6,000,000 appro- priation to strengthen the border patrol. The secret meeting was called by Lon C. Hill of Corpus Christi, who reported to fellow ranchers on his trip to Washington and claimed' he had been told confidentially by high congressional leaders not to return "so ill-equipped." What the word "ill-equipped" meant was not explained, but this was the reason for raising the war chest. -TENNESSEE FEUDIST- THE INCIDENT was hushed up, but shortly before congress adjourn- ed, 82-year-old Senator McKellar of Tennessee added round six to his record as the Senate's most bellicose member. In past encounters, McKellar has tried to bean one victim with a gavel, boot another in the pants, flail another with a roll of newspapers-and once he landed a surprise left hook. This time, however, McKellar attacked with his walking stick. The incident took place behind closed doors of the Senate Appropriations Committee. The victim was Displaced Persons Commissioner Harry Rosenfield, who made the mistake of interrupting a McKellar haran- gue. The old man had been hounding Displaced Persons Chairman John Gibson, who had difficulty understanding. "I beg your pardon, sir?" he kept repeating. Finally McKellar snapped: "Isn't there anyone around here who understands anything about this?" - Rosenfield jumped up to his colleague's defense. "If the chairman of the Displaced Persons Commission doesn't know anything about displaced persons . . . "Rosenfield began. But McKellar cut him off. "You can't talk to me like that!" he shrieked. "You sit down! I don't want to hear another word from you at this meeting!" Shaking with anger and shouting incoherently, McKellar picked up his cane and lunged at Rosenfield. The commissioner ducked and the blow narrowly missed his head. . This was round six for McKellar, whose other publicly disclosed brawls include: Round 1-McKellar started to pull a clasp-knife from his pocket and advanced toward the late Senator Copeland of New York on the Senate floor. Colleagues restrained him. Round 2-McKellar took offense at United Press Reporter Dayton Moore's questioning, whopped him over the head with a roll of news- papers. Round 3-Nashville publisher Silliman Evans greeted McKellar courteously in a Washington hotel, but the old man landed a poke that caught Evans off balance. Round 4-A representative of this column asked McKellar his age. The aged Tennessean replied by raining blows on the reporter's head. Round 5-McKellar got into an appropriations argument with Con- gressman Cannon of Missouri, tried to settle it by crowning Cannon with a gavel. It's getting so that both congressmen and newsmen find it safer to steer clear of the Senator from Tennessee. (Copyright, 1951, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN r' JRiteNT i M/i Es I 11 At The Orpheum . 0 . At The Michigan . .0. The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Publication in it is construc- tive notice to all members of the University. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 2552 Administration Building before 3 p.m. the day preceding publication (11 a.m. on Saturday). SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1951 VOL. LXII, NO, 29 Notices. Social chairmen of student organiza- tions are reminded that requests for approval for social events are due in the Office of Student Affairs not later than 12 o'clock noon on the Monday prior to the event. Academic Notices Game Theory Seminar Mon., Oct. 29, 7:30 p.m., 3001 Angell Hall. Dr. Wilfred Kincaid will speak on "Convex Bodies." Events Today Newman Club: Annual "Homecoming Dinner," 6:30 p.m., in the clubroom of Saint Mary's Chapel. Entertainment and a record dance will follow the din- ner. Admission charge. All Catholic students and their friends are invited. Tickets are on sale all this week in the Chapel's office. Roger Williams Guild: Open House after the game. Episcopal Student Group: Open House after the game at Canterbury House. Bring your folk and friends. Wesleyan Guild: Alumni Homecom- ing Bar-b-que, 4:30 p.m., at the Guild. All Guilders, Alumni and guests are in- vited. Alumni committee meeting, at 7 p.m. in the lounge. School of Music Student Council: Important meeting, 11 a.m., 404 Burton Tower. Wesleyan Guild: Cell Fellowship group 9 a.m., at the Guild. All persons interested are invited. Saturday Luncheon Discussion Group, Lane Hall, 12:15 p.m. Discussion on "The Principles of B'Haism." Phone reservations to Lane Hall. Congregational-Disciples Guild: Foot- ball Open House after the game at Guild House, 438 Maynard. Bring friends! Coming Events Michigan Chapter of the American Society for Public Administration. So- cial Seminar, Thurs., Nov. 1, 8:15 p.m., East Conference Room, Rackham Build- ing. Guest speaker: John M. Gaus, National President of ASPA and Pro- fessor of Government at Harvard Uni- versity. Topic: "Reflections on Public Administration." Members, wives, and friends are invited. League Co-Ed Record Concert. Sun., Oct. 28, 8:30-10 p.m., League Library (3rd floor). Program: ;.> Villa-Lobos....... ....Nonetto Bruch........ Concerto In g minor Beethoven....... Symphony no. 7 Young Republicans will meet at 7:30 p.m., Tues., Oct. 30, League. Speaker: Mr. Owen J. Cleary, Republican State Central Committee Chairman a n d Chaiman of the Mid-Western Federa- tion of State G.O.P. Chairmen. Open meeting. U. of M. Hot Record Society. A Bop record program, League, Sun., Oct. 28, 8 p.m. Everyone invited. The J. Raleigh Nelson House for In- ternational Living, 915 Oakland Ave., will hold an Open House, Sun., Oct. 28, from 3-5:30. Graduate Outing Club. Meet at the rear of the Rackham Building, 2 p.m., Sun., Oct. 28. Hiking and games at Huron-Dexter Park. i STANLEY AND LIVINGSTON DESPITE a 12 year lapse since its original production, this film manages to sur- vive as one of the greater classics of the movie industry. Combining an absorbing blend of dra- matic biography and awe-inspiring pho- tography, this picture tells a story of daring and adventure so well, and with such restraint and fine acting, that one cannot help but forgive the studio for its nonchalant disregard of historic fact. In assembling an authentic visual record of the landscape, the camera leads us through much the same country Stanley must have travelled in his search through a land of unearthly birds, sounds and people,. Portraying Stanley as a warm and vital personality, Spencer Tracy gives a flawless performance in this re-creation of the re- porter's exhausting trek over a dangerous and fever-ridden terrain. Tracy receives extraordinary support from Charles Coburn, Walter Brennan and Henry Travers, but special mention must be made of Sir Cedric Hardwicke as the missing mis- sionary Stanley goes into darkest Africa to find. In his role as Dr. Livingston, Hard- wicke joins Tracy in a scene of muted emo- tional power so vibrant that it casts a bind- ing spell over every member of the audi- ence. "Doctor Livingstone ... I presume," as pronounced by Tracy, was a dramatic summation which offered a brilliant con- trast to the hardships of the grueling search. i A PLACE IN THE SUN, with Mont- gomery Clift, Elizabeth Taylor, and Shel- ley Winters. It is a pleasure to report that the new adaptation 'of Theodore Dreiser's "Ameri- can Tragedy" is an exceptional motion pic- ture. It has perhaps fallen short of the ranks of film classics due to a mechanical perfection that has precluded moments of spontaneous brilliance which often make memorable those productions that should weigh less in the overall consideration. In the space of a short review, it is diffi- cult to list all its assets. Most of the things it deals with are old-old emotions, old sit- uations, even the familiar "love that can never be." As a text, Director George Stev- ens has used a novel of 850 tortuous pages, also of no modern vintage. Yet all these things he invests with a freshness that makes the story seem strange and rare. His techniques are for the most part conservative. The symbols he employs are never conscious or obtrusive. The transi- tions are masterfully easy, often employ- ing a strain of music or a bit of dialogue to merge the various pieces. From the start, he builds quietly and slowly to the lake tragedy, then gradually tapers off through the somewhat anticlimatic trial sequence to the clear finality of the death cell scene. Even the "social comment," implicit in the novel, is subdued but not overlooked by Mr.. Stevens. Indeed with his handling of the half-real character of Angela, Stevens repre- Sixty-Second Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board of Control of Student Publications. 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Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscription during regular school year: by carrier, $6.00; by mail, $7.00. I BARNABY Your Fairy Godfather hasn't given on ,he ia of ,,oss;na ;nto outer Probably he sees some innstellation rouhly ________________________I r ~P Ii i I f