4 PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY APRIL 30, 1953 PAGE FOUR THURSDAY APRIL 30, 1953 Busboys'A ction; Grad Students' Statement THE PLIGHT OF West Quad's striking busboys points up the futility of a few dozen students attempting to deal with the administration. Having hired replacements for the strikers, the quad managers con- sider their side'of the question settled. They are content to wait until the dissatisfied busboys see "reason" and return to their low wage jobs. By comparing raises in quad room ex- penses with salary increases granted stu- dent employes, it is apparent that stu- dent employes' wages are lagging behind the stiff rent hikes. At the same time resident comment indicates that quad living conditions, never of the best, are declining in the face of rising rents. Rather than sitting back and waiting for the busboys to come to heel, the quad ad- ministration might better give a slight wage increase for the balance of' this semester and guarantee a substantial hike in the fall. At the same time, officials should look toward improving general living conditions. Concern has been voiced over the future of the much publicized Michigan Hose Plan in the face of fraternity competition and higher costs. A greater threat to the system. lies in such disregard of student needs and problems as has been evidenced in the busboy case. Students who are work- ing their way through the University by waiting table can hardly be impressed with the Michigan House Plan when they see Ann Arbor high school girls hired to break up their protest measures. The House Plan will fail if these conditions continue and if living standards continue to deteriorate in the residence halls. THE ACADEMIC freedom statement re- cently adopted by the Graduate Student Council. should not go unnoticed by the campus. A well-written, timely mesage, the statement points out that worthwhile study "can exist and flourish only in an atmos- phere of free inquiry and research in an in- stitution dedicated to the preservation and protection of academic freedom." The Council also expressed an expecta- tion "that the University will be ever more prepared to maintain and defend the academic freedom of its faculty and student body" and pledged its support to the maintenance of this freedom. As less responsible elements in Congress and public life sneer at academic freedom, we can only be encouraged when a thought- ful statement of this type is adopted by re- presentatives of University graduate stu- dents. Though statements of this type may seemingly have little effect against Mc- Carthy bombast, it can be hoped that in the final analysis they will stand as the realistic approach to the problem. -Harry Lunn RAMje A Le Tartuffe, presented by Le Cercle Francais PROF. CHARLES KOELLA and the mem- bers of the cast undertook a difficult task in producing Moliere's Le Tartuffe, one of the most difficult plays of the French theater, but James Davies as Tartuffe, Mur- ray Budney as Orgon and Lillian Bickert as Dorine overcame these difficulties to give commendable performances. Additional -praise should go to Joan Alan as Elmire, Frank Richardson as Da- mie, Claude Prevots as Valere, and Carole Lofgren as Mariane. After a rather stiff and overly studied be- ginning, both the action and the actors be- gan to pick up and hold the interest of the audience. The actors overcame the diffi- culties of Moliere's subtle wit successfully. Especially clever scenes between Tartuffe and Orgon, Dorine and Elmire seemed to particularly delight the audience. Occasional poor intonation and'pronounci- ation distracted from the comprehension of the French. Many of the actors were too stiff and stood interminably in one spot, especial- ly in scenes where the entire cast was on- stage. One cannot justifiiably criticize the ef- forts of French language students and teaching fellows on an equal plane with a performance by a French professional group. Any foreign play presents the difficulty of overcoming a language barrier while develop- ing competent acting. Le Tartuffe makes it even more difficult by requiring an under- standing of the keen French subtlety of wit. A few of the actors managed to combine their skills in overcoming the difficulty com- pletely. -Ruth Gowa Brave New World---600 Years Early . oeeri to [l4' &cltor * APRIL, 1953: The brave' new world is upon us. In 1932 Aldous Huxley wrote a book about a Utopia in which he projected 600 years into the future. In 1945, in a preface to a reissue of "The Brave New World," Huxley 'suggested that the passing of 16 years had changed his foresight somewhat; many of his predictions seemed possible within but a century. Ninety-two years sooner than he dared allow for his Utopia, we turn off the alarm clock, stretch, yawn stnd awake in that brave new world. Huxley's world worshipped Ford, while we genuflect before a worthy competitor, Gen- eral Motors. Aldous oply missed the boat here by a few defense contracts. Huxley wrote of a highly centralized so- ciety where few people could recall Shakes- peare, where history is abolished and books are burned. Save for a few Alpha plus pro- fessors, who can recall the great bard? (The younger generation is more apt to attribute a Shakespearean quote to Milton Berle.) A look at a. daily newspaper will show us how history is erased or ignored or rearranged and the burning of books fills our lungs with smoke. A society of, Alphas, Betas, Gammas and Epsilons such as Huxley described -stylized, conforming to a single mold- would be only too familiar to most college students with their classic Greek white bucks, grey flannels and yellow slickers. Huxley painted a Utopia with everything and every person cellophane-wrapped and carefully labeled (super market style); the population freed from the bonds of par- ents (as, in our age, the hot rod and hard- top convertible tear youth from the fireside and the apronstrings); where the masses are taught to love the state blindly ("I love my country right or wrong," says McCar- thy; "I pledge allegiance to the flag and the Daughters of the American Revolution." comes the echo); where people would enjoy a casual sexual promiscuity (our changing moral code and flexible divorce laws allow for the taking of the fourteenth wife); where the population would be educated by sleep hynosis (a modern age scientific re- ality, five dollars down and twelve small monthly, payments) and lulled to sleep by drugs (such as television, movies and an injection of the needle); and "feelies" (only slightly more dimensionally exciting than our own Three Dimensional Frankenstein- "You are in the picture.") In this world of mass production and con- sumption, of the scientist always one-up on the masses and the masses lulled into peaceful acquiescense, we greet the brave new world. --Gayle Greene It Might Have Been .. . ALOCAL LIBRARY yesterday was the scene of an elaborate soul-searching and shelf-cleaning ceremony. Starting the rites off with a solemn pledge of allegiance to the flag, the Ii- brarians built a small bonfire to receive any material which, as Rep. Kit Clardy said, "might corrupt the innocent." The first publication to go. of course, was the obscure magazine, "New World Review," which lauded Russia and which was blat- antly immoral and indecent. It was also Un-American. Speaking in a low whisper, the head li- brarian explained to the press that no one had complained about the objectionable magazine and, that it had somehow sneaked onto the shelf. He comented that in the future he per- sonally would inspect all incoming pub-. lications and that all librarians would be held responsible for any ' dangerous literature which might possibly tend to undermine God and country. (He cited the bad tendency and clear and present danger doctrines.) One librarian said, as she dropped ten books in the blaze, "there was all sorts of subversion in these . . . one named Stalin a world leader and another called for a strong UN as the only answer to war." And so after a feverish day of book burning, the library is purified and ready for Kit Clardy and his committee next fall. The appetite of the inquisitors has been satiated here. It is hoped that other Michi- gan libraries wil.l follow suit. -Alice Bogdonoff Kavinoky's Boobk.. s To the Editor:. AS AN ALUMNAE of the Uni- f versity and a former ,reporter on The Daily, I still take an in- terest in the publication. In your April 15 issue I saw the review of "All the Young Summer Days" by ~' former Hopwood winner, Bernice U Kavinoky. , It was in such striking contrast to the favorable New York reviews of her novel that I thought those E'/ of your readers who are interested > f in serious writing might like to y see a few other opinions. On Sunday, April 5, for in- 't x stance, The New York Times saysf in part:r "The writing is sensitive and R unpretentious. There is a fine # control to the book; it is a com- posed novel, with its parts fitting "< all together to make up a living whole,.. There is a feeling for both interdependence andnclash in this quiet prose; and there are some real penetrations into / the a depths of consanguinity and af- x finity, of love and hate." '*y.: w The following is from The New "DDaily-Walt Kelly York Herald Tribune for Sunday, Pogo would like to appear in The Daily, and The Daily would like April 12: . it has beauty and 'truth. to have him - but cartoon syndicates' regulations say otherwise. Combining an unhackneyed prose -which at its best is often poetic persons have long since stilled dents in the matter of private -with an insight which manages their thoughts; more are doing so housing. to make relatively common things each day. It will be easy. While at the same time the 'U' new again and uncommon things The command will go quietly uses discriminatory practices in understandable . . . To miss this out one morning: THINKING IS the employment of student help book would be to miss reading the! FORBIDDEN. And the eyes will for the dining halls. How discrim- very interesting first work of a be on YOU! inatory? Part time help from the very promising new novelist." -Lawrence Hulack outside is paid a fifth more than -Helen Worth * * * student help. Is this in keeping *'*o* with the F.E.P.C. idea? The stu- *Accolades .*.. dent help is not only discriminat- Perry & IHC .To the Editor: ed against, but is kept from tak- To the Editor: [O PRAISE would to me seem ing leave of 'U' employment by IT WAS noted, during World War too great for the Speech De- the threat of having a black mark Two, certain prisoners on the partment's production of "Deep added to University records. Yet so - called concentration camps Art The Roots" which I had the many students must work in the went to great lengths to imitate great pleasure of witnessing. Aside dining halls due to the conveni- the actions of their guards; even from the play's centering on a to- ence afforded by this employment. setting up "courts" which punish- pic which is of utmost importance This leaves studen't help at the ed, even killed other prisoners. in the world today-that of race mercy of 'U' administrators. Un- Psychologists have advanced sev- relations, the acting from start to less they are successful in the pre- eral explanations for this pheno- finish was little short of magni- sent dispute the help will again menon, some of which seem fairly 11ficient. I had already attended be subject to these unfair prac- reasonable. one previous production of the tices. And also the 'U' will feel Here at the University, I have Speech Department this year, and that it can reach out and impose also noticed that certain of the was not much impressed by it, and its will, undisputed, on other stu- student judicial bodies tend to merely went to "Deep Are The dent affairs. adopt many of the University's Roots" because a personal friend, -David Richardson policies in dealing with "wrong- A. Vernon Lapps, who starred in Robert Kay doers." I refer particularly to the the play as Senator Langdon, had * * * recent use, by the IHC Jud Com, mentioned to me over a month of an old University weapon, the ago that when this play came Workingman's Plight . fine, in dealing with Bob Perry, along, it would be worth going to. To the Editor: It is to be hoped that Perry will My expectations were really not HE BUSBOYS' strike vividly not be forced, by the University too great after my reaction to the g TOYS' srer ivdly (who, after all, has all the au- other department production, but brings to' the foreground the thority) to pay the $40. I was in for a big surprise. The position of the working students Actually, Perry's offense ap- acting was all smooth and almost gon campus. With the cot of liv- pears to be somewhat ridiculous, flawlessly executed so far as I was ing in Ann Arbor one of the high- Door to door soliciting is one of able to judge. The display and est in the nation, it is despicable the best methods known to ac- control of emotions by the various that student wages should be at quaint students with candidates. members of the cast was marvel- the low level they are. Students Andtheproessis vidntl ile-ous and I am sure that everyone1 who are forced to earn their way Aned the process is evidently ile- sanIamsrthteryn through school deserve applause gal only on the college level. I who was able to see the play was tnu cho dsr applause am sure that Senator Ferguson well rewarded for their time spent. and consideration, not hinderance would not be arrested if he went I shall certainly welcome similar in their efforts. It is no easy load from door to door in Ann Arbor, productions by the speech depart- to go to school and earn one's liv- soliciting votes. Perry doubtless ment particularly those along a ing at the same time. r a I do that th t similar serious vein, and will make The University has felt "justi- another of the endless string of it a definite point to try to see fd" i raisig tuition, in hiking rules which serves no purpose them.domtrrae;ytitflsn other than needless regulationsef° -Victor E. Nelson obligation to make commensurate ts* adjustments in wage rates to stu- student affairs. sydents who Are trying to get an -Persse O'Reilly Busboys . .. education. * * * To the Editor: Ann Arbor has long existed on o-Think . .. HE STAND of the West Quad the exorbitant prices derived from To the Editor: busboys is to be commended, student spending. To te Edtor:for the 'U' has maintained an in- in face of these conditions a IT IS comforting to see that the ;consistent policy toward student student who is trying to "work his administration of the Massa- affairs long enough. On the one way" through college is presented chusetts Institute of Technology hand the Office of Student Af- with a wage rate which is in no has kept pace with the numerous fairs d e c r i e s discrimination way sufficient to provide his basic o t h e r educational institutions I against foreign and colored stu- needs of room, board, and tuition, which have cleansed suspect ma-j thematicians from their staffs. unless he chooses to work an inor- dinate number of hours at the risk of harming his scholastic endeav- ors. And is this not defeating the purpose of getting an education in the first place? The busboys at the WestQuad are not an isolated group. All working students on campus are faced with this same situation. It is high time the University, that employs so many of these students leads the way to estab- lishing a more equitable wage rate. Otherwise, the attempt to achieve an education on one's own, minus a "rich papa" will truly be a.farce. The picture of educational opportunity is a dis- mal one indeed! -Sylvia Diederick Diana Styler * * * I MATTER OF FACT F y JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP -6 xi 4 i Quad Menues To the Editor: DINNER MENU-Monday, April 27, East Quad. Spaghetti Tossed Salad (nine tenths lettuce) Bread & Butter Butterscotch Sundae One glass of milk & tea or coffee Thecabove menu is one of the poorest excuses for a dinner pos- sible particularly when it follow- ed one of East Quad's famous "sandwich" lunches. I find it dif- ficult to believe I'm eating over $2.00 worth of food and labor a day. Also, I would like to point out that since spring vacation the food menus have been particular: ly under par. --Mitchel Drake Blusboys and Realism. , To the Editor: I HAVE A modest proposal that I should like to offer to the Uni- versity in order that it may bring the solution of the 'busboy con- troversy' more closely within an even greater "reality," than Jane Howard suggests in her editorial "What Price Busboys." Miss How- ard hopes that the busboys' wages remain at the present level be- cause of the lack of funds. I suggest that all dormitory bus- boys work with no pay. Since the University is working with "al- ready reduced appropriations," this would seem to be the only honorable, 'realistic' step. With the added funds the University could build a bigger and better football team, thereby enhancing the University's prestige. To be - thoroughly consistent (and who doesn't want to be con- sistent today?"), I propose that the University become truly 're- alistic,' and allow all its st dent employees to work with no say. I further offer that student em- ployees be allowed to work ten hours a day so that we might re- turn to the 'realistic' days of our grandfathers. I feel confident that such a plan would be successful, for its very basis is 'reality.' The few who might still claim that-student employees should be paid for their labors could easily be shown as crackpots if not agitators merely by calling them 'un-Realists.' This plan would also prevent any further "too-ostentatious pleas" for pay increases. As the Univer- sity is always operating with "re- duced appropriations," pay raises will always be 'unrealistic' under the plan. Therefore, students seeking pay raises in the future would not be incessantly frustrat- ed by their inability to obtain the said pay raises. As a final suggestion to those busboys who find this plan 'un- realistic' because they still have that swindled feeling, I would suggest that they 'realistically' ask themselves, "Isn't this feeling unrealistic, isn't it only in my mind?" WASHINGTON-- Admiral Arthur Rad- ford looks a better and better bet to replace Gen. Omar Bradley as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The decision will presumably be made as soon as Secre- tary of Defense Charles Wilson can reach agreement with President Eisenhower. The question is whether Wilson's wishes or Eis- enhower's doubts will finally prevail. Wilson has wanted Radford for Chair- man of the Joint Chiefs ever since the President's pre-inauguration trip to Ko- rea. When the Eisenhower party was on itsaway back, Radford met them at Pearl Harbor. ie so much impressed and charmed Wilson that Wilson proposed him for the chairmanship of the Joint Chiefs then and there, without further ado. According to undoubted reports, the President answered that Admiral Radford was one of the two or three ablest senior officers in American uniform, fully quali- fied in every way to head the Joint Chiefs. But he added that Wilson had better not name Radford to the chairmanship until he had made quite sure that Radford's first loyalty would be to the Secretary of De- fense, instead of to the Navy. Admiral Radford has since made a long visit to Washington; which seems, if any- thing, to have increased Secretary Wilson's enthusiasm for him. Wilson is one'of those who "wants what they want when they want it." He wanted the famous radio entertain- er, Arthur Godfrey, for a Defense Depart- ment number of the President's special commission onpsychological warfare. When he encountered opposition, he carried his fight for Godfrey to the length of refusing to name anyone else for a considerable time. In the infinitely more important case of Radford, he is 'said to be equally deter- mined. The President, meanwhile, has always opposed the extreme naval viewpoint which Admiral Radford has always stood for hitherto. Since the Admiral is a man who fights for his view to the last ditch, it can be seen why the President has hesi- tated to approve Secretary Wilson's pro- posal. The Air Force, where Admiral Rad- ford's stand on the B-36 is only too well remembered, is also moving heaven and earth to block his nomination. If Admiral Radford is not named, other Harold Talbott has claimed the chairman- ship of the Joint Chiefs for the Air branch, and has taken the position that Gen. Spaatz should be called back from retirement if Gen. Vandenberg is not to be promoted. The argument that the chairmanship should ro- tate, which the Air Force presses, would stand in the way of the appointment of Gruenther. But he is favored by his close- ness to the President, and his personal ac- ceptability to almost everyone as a com- promise choice. Nonetheless, Admiral Radford is the best bet because of the strength and determina- tion of Secretary Wilson's support. It must be added that the appointment, if it goes through, can be counted on to influence American policy in all sorts of significant ways. In the first place, Secretary Wilson is a man of strong likes and dislikes whose personal opinions are seldom subject to change except by the very small number of persons he fully trusts and approves of. The opinions that he brought to Washington, about the right relationship between the defense effort and the bud- get, do not appear to have been shaken very much by anyone now on duty in the Pentagon. But Admiral Radford can be counted on to plead the cause of ade- quate national defense with great force, and he can also be counted on to impress Secretary Wilson. Then too, the Admiral belongs to the school of American officers who have little or no patience with mere containment in the contest of the cold war. He has strongly advocated a blockade of Communist China, as part of a larger program to make the Peking government regret its intervention in Korea. He has shown a strong prefer- ence, in many other ways, for bringing the cold war contest to a rapid and complete show-down. In this respect, Radford could hardly differ more widely from the present Joint Chiefs, whose caution is illustrated by their intensely hostile reception of the Radford blockade plan and Gen. James Van Fleet's comparable plan for a ground offensive on the Korean peninsula. In fact, this new quality and outlook Rad- ford would bring to the Joint Chiefs would probably prove far more important, in There is security in knowing that in the near future young' Americans will no longer have to be wary lest an insidious instruc- tor slip the malignant surplus- profit concept in between the lec- ture on differential calculus and the lecture on integral calculus. (Let us hope our economic in- structors are more careful than our mathematicians in what they teach). There is only one annoying thought. If many more mathe- maticians are removed for suspi- cion of infiltrating the super-pli- able minds of their students, there will be no Math educators left to teach. In that event, I suppose Fulton Lewis can be drafted to teach the Theory of Transfinite Numbers. If the burden becomes too heavy for Mr. Lewis, he can then have a loyalty clearance of a sufficient number of clean-right-thinking music teachers to take over the teaching of Mathematics. Of course, this thing could get out of hand should further inves- tigation disclose large-scale poli- tical plots within departments of learning other than Mathematics. This might necessitate swearing in the National Guard as mem- bers of the American Association of University Professors (after signing a loyalty oath) and hav- ing these newly appointed schol- .r PAm wnnnml,,o the ,'nrlc. f jfDAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) Room 3-D of the Michigan Union. Mr. Walter Doll, technical and research en- gineer at Pratt and whitney Aircraft Corp., will speak on "Gas Turbine De- velopment at Pratt and Whitney Air- craft." Refreshments will be served. La Petite Causette will meet today from 3:30 to 5 p.m. in the North Cafe- teria, Union. All interested students invited. International Committee of SL. Meet- ing at 3:10 in the Conference Room of the League. All interested persons are invited to attend. Christian Science Organization. Tes- timonial meeting at 7:30, Fireside Room, Lane Hall. University of Michigan Sailing Club will hold a meeting tonight at 7:30 in the west Engineering Building. MCSA Regional regatta will be held this week- end at Michigan State. Members are urged to attend this meeting. Kappa Phi. Supper, program, and elec- tion of officers at 5:15. All members and pledges please plan to be present. Ukrainian Students' Club. Meeting in the Madelon Pound House (1024 Hil St.) at 7 p.m. Guests are welcome. Ukrainian Students' Club. Meeting in the Madelon Pound House (1024 Hill St.) at 7 p.m. Guests are welcome. Stars." After the illustrated lecture in 2003 Angell Hall, the Students' Obser- vatbry on the fifth floor will be open for,telescopic observation of Saturn and a double star, if the sky is clear, or for inspection of the telescopes and plan- etarium, if the sky is cloudy. Children are welcomed, but must be accom- panied by adults. The Episcopal Student Foundation presents the Series of Five, a series of informal lectures by outstanding speakers. The third of the series will be the Rt. Rev. Richard S. Emrick,I Bishop of Michigan, whQ will speak on "Birth Control - sin? Christian?" Fri., May 1, at 7 p.m., 218 N.dDivision. All interested persons invited. Psychology Club. Discussion and planning for future programs, May 1,1 3 p.m. 3415 Mason Hal. All interested students are invited.- Westminster Guild Great Books Sem-' inar Friday evening at 8 p.m. at the Presbyterian Church Student Center. Discussion of "Roads to Agreement" by Stuart Chase. Sponsored by the Graduate Group. Everyone welcome. Re- freshments. The Student Center is open &Friday and Saturday evenings until 12 o'clock. Motion Pictures, auspices of Univer- sity Museums, "Earth," "Mountain Building" and "Work of Rivers." 7:30 p.m., Fri., May 1, Kellog Auditorium. No admission charge. t r k -Paul Dormont Sixty-Third Year Edited and managed by students of the Univ~ersity of Michigan under type authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Crawford Young.......Managing Editor Barnes Connable.........City Editor Cal Samra .. ......Editorial Director Zander Hollander........Feature Editor Sid Klaus. .... Associate City Editor Harland Britz........Associate Editor Donna Hendleman......Associate Editor Ed Whipple............... Sports Editor John Jenke.... Associate Sports Editor Dick Sewell......Associate Sports Editor Lorraine Butler ...... Women's Editor Mary Jane Mills, Assoc. Women's Editor DonyCampbell. Chief Photographer Business Staff Al Green..............Business Manager Milt Goetz.......Advertising Manager Diane Johnston.....Assoc. Business Mgr. JudvLrQ enhnberg..-..Finance Manager .4 I