A TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, MAY 3,.1952 {. The Politicians And The Prison THE POLITICAL locusts have descended on Jackson this week. Twenty-five members of the State Leg- islature have arrived at the prison, and their statements on the causes of the recent riot may be expected any day now. State Auditor General John Martin, Jr., campaignng for the Republican nomination for U.S. Senator, put the football in play he other day by asking for wholesale in- vestigation and discharges. State Republican, chairman, Owen J. Cleary, plunged through the line shortly afterwards with charges that 'politics" of "the present administration" had caused the riot, Meanwhile, Dr. Vernon J. Fox, the psy- hologist who secured the release of eight hostage guards and ended the riot, has con- inued to raise a lonesvoice in an explana- ion of what really happened at the prison. )r. Fox, however, was removed from his po- ition as assistant deputy warden late Sat- urday, and fromthe shape of events since, t grows clear that he is expendable in the ,urrent crisis. Unfortunately much more is at stake than Dr. Fox's job. The preset battle for power in the prison finds the whole pro- gram of progressive penology hanging in the balance. A prison administration that Lowell L. Carr, University sociologist, has called "the best in the history of the state" is teetering. Its defenders are afraid, uncertain and inarticulate. Governor Williams, in the heat of a pol- ical campaign of his own, has neatly strad- led the fences. Commissioner Brooks weighs he mail reaction daily and holds his ear to he ground. Warden Frisbie, who has backed Pox all along, is under a forced gag from ,bove. Meanwhile, educators and social reform- rs seem to be somewhere gathering wool. the work of years is in jeopardy, but they re quietly standing by while a handful of pportunists make hay,. Politicians are ever more sensitive than ducatoIs, of course, and there was never ny doubt that a loss of $2,500,000 of "tax- ayer's money" is a ready-made election is- uue. The true facts, as Dr. Fox has constantly reiterated, are that much of the loss was suffered not by the taxpayers, but by the inmates themselves, who had financed with their own funds the entire recrea- tonal program, including the gym and the library. Secondly, the riot destruction was not caused by the men in Fifteen Block whom Fox "congratulated," but by other prisoners in a "sympathy riot." The men of Fifteen Block never left that building during the entire disturbance. Thirdly, charges of recklessness in the uarding of Ward and Hyatt have also prov- I unwarranted, since it is now established iat the original attack on a guard was lade by neither of these men, but by a iung Detroit prisoner who was regarded as latively harmless. He took the keys and leased the rebel leaders. And it bears repeating: the "congratu- atory" message was issued before the nutiny ended, not after, and was part of he psychological campaign to dislodge ,he hold-outs. The Detroit Free Press, iowever, thinks differently about the whole matter, and as it happens, their journal circulates to a great many more people than have read Dr. Fox's defini. ive works on practical criminal psychol- Wg. Quantities of people are, of course, par- cularly important in election years, and e sacrifice of one man of learning and urage is a small enough price to pay for litical advantage. -Bill Wiegand ON THE Washington Merry-Go-Rond WITH DREW PEARSON "Where Are We Now?" etteA4 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. i (Copyright, 1952, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) WASHINGTON -- Ex-Defense Mobilizer Wilson, testifying before the Senate Banking and Currency Committee at the height of the steel crisis let loose a fiery tirade at CIO President Phil Murray. It was so hot that even though the senators were sitting in closed session, he asked the stenographer not to record it. Senator Fulbright of Arkansas touched off the Wilson blast by Inquiring about certain amendments to the bill extending stabilization controls. Asking that his answer be off-the-record, Wilson replied: "The chief situation you should consider is the growing control of labor over this country. "I am not talking about the rank-and- file of labor," Wilson continued, "but about their leaders. "One man," he said, referring to Murray, "has the power to shut down not only steel, but aluminum, copper-all the metals indus- tries. "Is there any use," asked Senator Ful- bright, "in having the government try to control labor, since labor is tending to control the government?" Wilson declined to answer. LAST WEEK END everything was all set inside the government to give the Steel- workers a wage increase, regardless of the courts and whether the Steel Industry liked Movie Mess age HAD A very strange experience last night. Along with several hundred other people, I went to see a movie, a film which, I was told, had a message in it, as well as being a fairly sharp piece of comedy. The report was correct. The message was, there, all right, and struck pretty close to home. As explained here yesterday, The Male Animal is about a young professor who decides that he will defy the trustees of Midwestern University by reading an an- archist's letter to his English class. The trustees are conducting a purge of Reds at the time,. and all the forces of reaction line up against the professor. But wait. This is a comedy, and the good and bad has to be pretty clearly out- lined. As it happens, the trustees are represented by an unpleasant "stadium- builder," whose prime goal is bigger and better football teams. On the other side, with our sympathies thoroughly in hand, Is the young teacher. ' And it's encouraging, somehow, to be able to be vicariously prejudiced along lines that agree so well with our own point of view. The whole matter is thin enough that no philosophical arguments are ever any deeper. than the action, and nothing is at all con- fused. The end can be seen from the be- ginning, and we know that Right will tri- umph over the blackguard trustees. Thus far, the experience is a pleasant one. But in the last scenes, after the professor has read the controversial letter, the triumph is carried to its logical extreme-logical in terms of this kind of movie. The students are overwhelmed with joy and even the "stadium builder" can be seen cheering the courageous liberal. All of a sudden, In these few moments, I realized what I had been looking at. It was film made in 1938, a film made on the same basic pattern as hundreds of' others. But fitted into the pattern were a completely reversed set of values than those we are so used to today. Our Black was their White; our idea of Right was their Wrong. Everything seemed to be backward, and the only reason it had ap- peared convincing was the unique charac- ter of the turnabout. It is a rather too obvious commentary-that this film could not be made today. The turnabout would bring its producers under unbearable fire in a moment. Actually, it is no whit less superficial than its current fellows-but in this very superficiality serves better than anything I have yet seen to crystallize the vagrant nature of national opinion. -Chuck Elliott it or not. This was before Judge Pine's de- cision that seizure was illegal. Suddenly the plan was called off. Reason for the last-minute switch was not *the argument before Judge David Pine or protests by the steel companies, but the intervention of the Railroad Brotherhoods. Here is what happened. Hearing that the Steelworkers were due to have a wage increase handed them by the Government, Roy Hughes, president of the Brotherhood of Railway Conductors, got in touch with Charles Murphy, counsel to the president, told him of a letter the broth- erhoods had received from Karl Bendetsen, Assistant Secretary of the Army, who is now operating the railroads on behalf of the government. Bendetsen had written Hughes that under the executive order by which the Army took over the railroads, he was not authorized to grant a wage increase. He expressed his sympathy for such an in- crease, but said that under the circum- stances he was powerless. The railroads have now been operated under the Government for about two years, Hughes reminded White House Counsel Murphy. If a wage increase is now granted to the Steelworkers after less than a month, with no wage increase granted to the Rail- road Brotherhoods, then there would be real trouble among railroad labor. In fact, Hughes intimated that it would be extremely difficult to prevent a strike -even against the Government of the United States. White House Counsel Murphy dashed back to the White House, stopped the proposed wage increase to the steelworkers. -NEW A-BOMB- The recent A-Bomb test in Nevada was so spectacularly successful that plans are under way for a new series of tests this sum- mer on Eniwetok Island. A fantastically powerful bomb is to be tested there-one so destructive that our scientists have been afraid to set it off with- in the U.S.A. Work on the Hydrogen Bomb has also been moving forward at such a rate that we will probably test our first experi- mental H-Bomb sometime this fall. If these tests are successful, they will revolutionize the equipment and tactics of our armed forces, probably making it neces- sary to devote one-third of the 1953 defense budget to the Atomic Bomb and defenses against it. SL's Finance THE STUDENT LEGISLATURE recently submitted a plan to the administration, designed to stabilize its income. Specifically, SL recommends that the group be financed by a fixed allocation from student fees, to be graduated on a three year basis of 33% cents per student the first year, 66 2/3 cents the second year and one'dollar the third year. If such a plan were put into effect next fall, SL would be able to maintain its pre- sent level of operations and hire a full- time secretary. If the plan is not employed, the group faces a $1,400 deficit next year. Other colleges contacted by SL receive fixed amounts from their administrations, ranging from $600 at Boston University to $95,000 at UCLA. SL, however, is dependent upon an ap- propriation from the Office of Student Affairs, which varies annually from $500 to $1200. This appropriation is not, in itself, enough to keep the group operating. Consequently, the entire success of the Legislature depends upon attendance at the Homecoming Dance and similar SL sponsored activities, which are not suit- able functions for a legislative body. By refusing the group's request at this time, the administration will seriously jeo- pardize SL's future.. -Diane Decker Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writer only. This must be noted in all reprints. NIGHT EDITOR: DONNA HENDLEMAN ___ - MATTER OrEFAC'r By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP WASHINGTON-As primary succeeds primary, the question of what Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower is going to say when he gets home looms daily larger and larger. It is like the famous cloud that was no bigger than a man's hand on the horizon but washed out the priests of Baal when it got overhead. So far, we have been given two intimations of the sort of line Gen. Eisenhower may take when he starts discussing domestic policy. On the one hand, replying to a letter from Rev. Adam Clayton Powell asking for his stand on civil rights, the General has written that his military duties have not allowed him time to reach a conclusion on this difficult issue. On the other hand, replying to a letter from his chief Texas sup- porter, Jack Porter, the General has written that "in principle" he favors a return of the federally owned tideland oil resources to the states. Coolness toward compulsory civil rights legislation and approval of state ownership of the tidelands are what may be called character- istic right-wing attitudes to current American politics. So too is the approval of a sales tax, just voiced by Gen. Eisenhower's associates although not by the General himself. And the great question about what Gen. Eisenhower is going to say when he gets home may be more realistically rephrased: "How far to the right is Gen. Eisenhower going to go?" As the tidelands case shows, Republican pre-convention politics may tend to push the General pretty far to the right. The broad mass of dominant Republicans are very conservative people. At Chicago, the General will be better able to make inroads on Sen. Robert A. Taft if he and the Ohio Senator seem to agree on do- mestic policy while differing on foreign policy. And if Eisenhower is nominated, a strongly conservative domestic policy will also increase the General's already excellent chance of carrying several Southern states. In short, the temptation to be strongly conservative will be con- siderable. But if the General yields too completely to these tempta- tions, the penalties can be even heavier. The same strong conservatism which will appeal in the Sduth will quite inevitably disenchant many Northern voters, in states like New York for example, who are now pro-Eisenhower. Clumsy handling of this delicate problem might even expose the General to defeat, although the polls now show that nearly 60 per cent of the American people want him for President. (Copyright, 1952, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN*1 Yeah, Uh huh.. . To the Editor: IN THE ARTICLE on tuition increase printed in yesterday's Daily we noticed the following statement, "With the tuition in- crease University officials expect- ed to have ... an increased schol- arship program to deal with hard- ship cases arising out of the fee hike. " As three prospective hardship cases we are anxious to know how soon we coud apply for one of these honorific refunds. Perhaps we could arrange it so that the schol- arship would be granted before we pay the tuition, thereby eliminat- ing a great deal of bookkeeping for both the University and our- selves. -Meredith McSweeny -Carol Miles -Mari Lou Anselmi * * * Religious Education... To the Editor: IN WEDNESDAY'S article con- cerning New York's released time for religious education there was expressed the idea that reli- gious taining does not belong in education for it is too personal a matter, and therefore should be left to the church and home. To me, this seems completely opposed to a mature concept of education. Religion, if anything, does have claim to a prominent place in for- mal education. . I will certainly grant that some aspects of religious training do have their place in only the church or home, but not all religious train- ing should be so considered. The aim of education should be to in- crease the ability and character of each individual. If we neglect religion in education, we leave the student only half educated. The knowledge gained in the classroom must be integrated by higher goals than just the goal of attaining academic facility. Religious train- ing fulfills this need. It gives the student purpose for the knowledge he has gained. Without this pur- pose the student is left to ride off in all directions, arriving nowhere. Religion in education helps make the individual a thinking being. I do not advocate anyone being forcibly exposed to religious train- ing, but for those who wish it, we should make all possible allow- ances to see that it can be obtain- ed. Especially today, during the war of ideologies, we of the West- ern World should not think too lightly of religious training in edu- cation. John Surbis * * * Enlightened M.I.T... To the Editor: LACK OF SOME pertinent facts, perhaps unavailable to Mr. Conrad Teitell, has led him to the wrong conclusion in regard to M. I. T.'s suspension of Prof. Struik. In the first place, it is important to note that Prof. Struik was "sus- pended" at full salary, which, in the words of a Michigan mathe- matician is, "plenty full." This act is a far cry from dismissing him altogether; in fact, it is precisely the opposite in motivation and ef- fect. Far from regarding Prof. Struik guilty, the large majority if not the entire M. I.-T. adminis- tration regards him as innocent of any crime and in particular of a violation of the Massachusetts law under which he was indicted. The suspension might more prop- erly be called a leave of absence; it has enabled Prof. Struik to de- vote full time to his defense, which was just what he was doing in Ann Arbor. But even a true suspension with no salary would be no proof that he is regarded as guilty. M. I. T. by virtue of its responsibility as a large academic institution has no choice, it is forced to assume a neutral attitude. This is an accept- ed practice, for there is always some basis, false or not, for an ar- rest warrant. The point is that Prof. Struik has been indicted for breaking a law, and though M. I. T. may not like either the law or the indiction, such dislike is no justification for disregarding the law or its effects. Surely, if a Michigan professor were indicted for embezzlement of funds, there would be no worries about violation of academic freedom because he was suspended pending trial. Another bit of relevant informa- tion concerns M. I. T.'s policies. M. I. T. is well known for its lack of restrictions on the academic and social freedom of both its students and faculty. An example is the almost complete lack of dormitory rules regarding women and alco- holic beverages. Another example is given by the non-secret dimner T. has not received some grants. Unfortunate as that may be it is part of the facts of university life. Prof. Struik, however, has not been dismissed because of this financial loss. If all universities had policies as liberal as those of M. I. T., there would be virtually no complaints about the violation of academic freedom. --Charles Sleicher And That's That.. To the Editor: MY EXAMINATION of the po- etry in the last two issues of Generation has led me to the fol- lowing conclusions: Jascha Kessler is quite distinct- ly the finest poet of the group. Saul Gottlieb, despite his con- siderable talents, tends to be prosy and discursive "including the hon- ors we strive for so diligently we know we do not deserve"); also, he could express himself with greater economy. Perhaps he writes too much too fast. Kathleen Musser, in addition to the limitations of her thermatic material, is uneven. She destroys the effectiveness of her best lines ("Peeling twigs of wonder down to wands of Truth") by placing them in the same poems with well nigh deplorable lines ("Bridged the leap between mind and matter with sex"). Anne Stevenson, as lyricist, sub- ordinates thought to musicality, and there is too little of the for- mer in proportion to her volume. Most of the third stanza of "New Year's Eve" seems little more than padding to fill out a structure. The greatest poems I have read seem chiseled down from something larger-or squeezed into their structure, struggling to get out. Frank O'Hara, though he has remarkable control over his com- ponents, seems to be driving to- ward an elimination of all bonds of common experience with the read- er ("the castle is for playing nifty dreams to yourself and thinking about asparagus soup"). Allan Hanna, in "Holy Nuns at Choir," has not achieved poetry at all. His language is largely ab- stract and denotative, while poetry requires the concrete and conno- tative (this is also true of Gottlieb at- times), and his sing-songy rimes are not worth the labor they must have cost him. This judgment, however, does not deny the possi- bility that the piece may be of value as something else than po- etry, as it undoubtedly is to Hanna. On the other hand, Jascha Kes- sler, in "Across the Pacific," achieves density, precision, phy- sical immediacy, and structural excellence. His is a finely polished craft. His exploitation of a broad central symbol in terms of its particulars leads to simultaneous evocation of profoundest thought and deepest feeling. This is Gen- erations at its best; the arrival of such a poem justifies the mediocre and even poor work which has ap- peared in previous issues. -Jack Danielson Mouths of Babe .. . To the Editor: TEVERAL HUNDRED drama lov- ers with tired legs are asking themselves tonight whether it was worth standing in line 4 hours 15 minutes for 1952 drama season tickets. Even my 4 year old daugh- ter who stuck it-out with me, tired and hungry though she was, could offer a suggestion for an improve- ment in the system of ticket-pro- cessing. Complained she: "They should of had more ticket-seller men!" -Margaret Markert i~ci~tttu I1 a; r t. 4-4 r: I ( t' I 'I' t MUSIC I ,1 j Second May Festival Concert, Friday Evening, May 2. L AST NIGHT at Hil Auditorium Thor Johnson led chorus and orchestra through the tricky score to Berlioz' Damna- tion of Faust with control and an even sense of timinfi. The old Romantic piece, sub- sisting on Berlioz' dreamed over version of Qoethe, produced at once some grim inepti- tudes in English, not a little viruosity, and much real beauty. Musically the drama provides far less sub- stance than the orchestral picture pieces like Marguerite's romance. We met real extremes in the work of the singers. It is a pity the Svanholm's tenor, always penetrating, once heroic, is now onyl tough. Worse than the wooden mouthpiece he dubbed for Faust was his seeming inability to carry through a well- started phrase wtihout a breathy warble, or even from tone to tone for that matter. On the other side, there could be little so poignant, so womanly tender as Patricia Neway's reading of Marguerite. Both George London and Philip Duey, of our own campus, gave performances distin- guished by musicianship and welcome ar- ticulation. To speak of the chorus is again to offer heartfelt praise to the conductor. Every- where he set a clear tempo geared to sweep _. v v a v _ g ~ ~ CIINEMA A*~~ a sY a - A d 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 shouldbesent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 2552 Administration Building before 3 p.m. the day preceding publication (11 a.m. on Saturday). SATURDAY, MAY 3, 1952 VOL. LXII, No. 148 Notices Student Loans for Men. Students un- able to pay, in full, loans which are now due should see Miss McKenzie, 1059 Administration Building. The Loan Committee will meet May 6 to approve new loans.ePlease havetapplications submitted before the meeting. Co-op rooming applications for men and women are now being accepted for those students desiring membership In cooperatives for the summer and fall sessions. Students should make appli- cation in person, or write to Luther! Buchele, 1017 Oakland. Office hoursj from 1 to 5 p.m. Phone 7211. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Stewart, Henry Rewoldt, Business Administra- tion; thesis: "Some Economic Effects of Marketing Research," Sat., May 3, Conference Room, 7th floor, Business Administration Bldg., 9:30 a.m. Chair- man, D. M. Phelps. Doctoral Examination for George Richard Lawrence Gaughran, Zoology; thesis: "A Comparative Study of the Osteology and Myology of the Cranial and Cervical Regions of Blarina brevi- Philadelphia Orchestra; Alexander Hils- berg and Marguerite Hood, conductor. Saturday, May 3, 8:30. Wagner pro- gram. Astrid Varnay, soprano; Set Svanholm, tenor; The Philadelphia Or- chestra; Eugene Ormandy, conduc or. Sunday, May 4, 2:30. Walton's "Bel- shazzar's Feast;" Mack Harrell, bari- tone; Jorge Bolet, pianist; Philadelphia Orchestra; University Choral Union; Thor Johnson, conductor. Sunday, May 4, 8:30. Artist night. PatriceMunsel, soprano; Philadelphia Orchestra; Eugene Ormandy, conduc- tor. Concerts will begin on time and doors will be closed during numbers. Tickets on sale at Hill Auditorium box office. Events Today Inter-Arts Union. Meeting, 2:30 p.m., League. Midwest Co-op Conference: Co-op students from Ill., Ind., Mich., O., and Canada will attend the Midwest Co-op Conference, Sat., May 3. Students interested in the organiza- tion of cooperatives are invited to come to the following sessions: 10:45 a.m.-Discussion Groups on Uni- versity relations, financing student co- ops,eand publicity and membership problems, First Methodist Church, State and Washington Sts. 1:00 p.m.-Group Dynamics in Stu- dent Co-ops. Dr. H. Gerard, Research Center for Group Dynamics. First Methodist Church. 3 p.m. Group discussions on co-op spirit and education, the role of an inter-cooperative council and co-op purchasing plans. First Methodist Church. 4:45 p.m.-The role of a national stu- dent co-op organization. First Metho- dist Church. 7:30 p.m.Movie: "Men of Rochdale." Memorial Church, Hill and Tappan Sts. fI I At The Orpheum .. . RASHOMON. TlHIS LONG-AWAITED Japanese import is actually much too powerful to be described in mere words. The full impact can only come first-hand. As a combination of beauty and bru- tality the picture is paralyzing. The vio- lent story deals with a seduction and mur- der, but neither word seems to be at all New Books adequate for the action. These events are too natural to be covered with words that contain moral values. We could no sooner call a fight between animals a war. The realization that this is all basically hu- man is as shocking as the violence itself. The realism of the fight and the emotional jolt of the characterizations make it hard to believe that "Rashomon" is only a movie, with actual people acting the parts. Machi- ko Kyo, as "the woman," is primitively beau- tiful, both physically and as the passionate wife she portrays. Her ability to be both fierce and innocent is amazing. Perhaps the only detectable complaint Sixty-Second Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. h Editorial Staff Chuck Elliott ........Managing Editor Bob Keith ..................City Editor Leonard Greenbaum~ Editorial Director Vern Emerson ...... ... .Feature Editor Ron Watts ........:....Associate Editor Bob vaughn ...........Associate Editor Ted Papes .................Sports Editor George Flint ... .Associate Sports Editor Jim Parker ..,..Associate Sports Editor Jan James .......Women's Editor Jo Ketelhut, Associate Women's Editor Busimss Staff Bob Miller..........Business anager Gene Kr..hvw Assoc. BusinessM ?a.nager~ ' (