I NRMM9 Ar*AE FOfl THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MAY 10, 1953 'U U, I, s 5. "it ;q a ." fa' 'ii , +p (Prize Winning Review At the Michigan ... MOULIN ROUGE, with Jose Ferrer (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following was picked from 14 reviews of Moulin Rouge as the most outstanding. See page 1 for the complete list of winners. in The Daily's contest.) . "MOULIN ROUGE" is announced on the screen as a tribute to Toulouse-Lautrec "that he and his time shall live again." Dir- ector John Huston and photography super- visor .Eliot Elisofon have paid their tribute admirably well in one of the more enter- taining pictures of the year. The phrase "that he and his time shall live again," however is misleading. "Moulin Rouge" is pure fantasy. As a glimpse of life at the turn of the century, it is pre- sented to us through the eyes of a stunted French painter. Toulouse-Lautrec is a poetic figure. His world is a poetic world. The picture stands or falls on this point. The plot is simple. It evolves around the series of. images that are used to mirror Toulouse-Lautrec's world. Played with feel- ing and reserve by Jose Ferrer, the crippled painter's life reflects these images in a pan- orama of pastel fade-outs and hazy back- drops. Thus a rowdy opening scene in the Moulin Rouge slips unobtrusively into dis- mal, early morning Paris and the deformed artist recalling his childhood in a series of flashbacks. It turns out that the young Lautrec, having tumbled down a flight of stairs in boyhood, early learns that his pas- sion for women is not to be returieed. From this moment on, he becomes the Cyronoish figure of a beautiful soul enclosed within an ugly body. "Moulin Rouge" has some delightful scenes. Zsa Zsa Gabor completely steals her brief appearances as a flighty chorine. Suzanne Flon and Colette Marchand are both good as the two loves in Lautrec's life with Miss Marchand especially adept in her portrayal of a prostitute trading love for Lautrec's money. Most amusing however, are Ferrer's own' comments like "marriage is like a dull meal. with the dessert first," and his antics-with a cog- nac-filled cane. The Challenges, Attitudes Facing Student Legislature etterJ to (fet 6d'itor EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is an excerpt from a speech made by outgoing Student Legis- lature president Howard Willens at the SL ban- quet Wednesday night. The remainder of Wil- lens' speech dealt with specific SL accomplish- ments such as discussions in the Lecture Com- mittee and the Committee to Study Campus Or- ganizations.) By HOWARD WILLENS A RECENT editorial in The Daily stated that the Student Legislature "is suffer- ing from an acute attack of disillusionment and sophistry" and that this is due princi- pally to the fact that Student Legislature (and other "political" groups on the cam- pus) finally sees itself for what it really is- "an important, yet powerless part of the campus community." The important question concerning this is not whether I, as an outgoing President (suffering from the usual "senioritis"), am equipped or willing to accept this chal- lenge ... but whether the young members of the Student Legislature are prepared and have the courage to accept this chal- lenge (in any of its many forms) which you will encounter in the next year. In clarifying the nature of the challenge I should like to outline two types of at- titudes, prevalent among many members of the administration, faculty, and stu- dent body, which confront the Legisla- ture. The first belief extends peyond the Leg- islature and affects all the student govern- mental groups on the Michigan campus-- IFC, Panhel, IHC, Assembly, and the Board of Representatives. It is simply the belief that student opinion at the University will never, nor perhaps should, be a significant factor in the deliberations of University of- ficials concerning University policy. Although there are instances to the contrary, all of these groups have found on more than one occasion a reluctance on the part of the ad- ministration to consult with, or listen to, the official agencies of student opinion on the campus. The second attitude focuses directly on the Student Legislature (and is frequently utilized as a rationalization for the first attitude). Here it is thought that student opinion at the University of Michigan will never be important until the Student Leg- islature has been replaced by another type of student government. Frequently you will hear the Legislature blasted as "irrespon- sible" or "unrepresentative," and the motives of the members of the Legislature are dep- recated. The past of the Legislature, partic- ularly its work regarding discriminatory clauses in campus organizations and the problem of the library hours, is taken as proof of the above opinions. WHY SHOULD student opinion be consid- ered important? I should like to present an over-simplified answer to this question I believe that the University of Michigan will be a better University in two ways if stu- dent opinion becomes an important element in the making of University policy. First, I believe that many of the decisions themselves will be better, and I think it is a fact that all the decisions will be accepted more readily when it is known that students participated in the decision-making process. Students have varying degrees of interest and competence in the different spheres of University operations. In the matter of Uni- versity finances, for example, few students would challenge the decisions of University officials regarding such matters as dealing with the State Legislature, etc. In questions of an academic nature-curriculum and hir- ing of faculty-again it would seem that this field is fundamentally the concern and decision-maljng area of the University fac- ulty. But I do not believe that even these areas should be "hallowed" in the sense that stu- dents should fear to express themselves re- garding these questions. It would seem that University officials and faculty would welcome student opinion in these areas-- on rent increase, curriculum changes; knowing what students think should be like knowing all the facts of a question be- fore an intelligent decision is made. It is in the area of student affairs-in the broadest sense of student organizations, student regulations, and student disci- pline- where the students have not only perhaps the greatest immediate interest but also the technical competence which they lack in the other fields. It is here where the students should speak out con- tinually, and where students should have their decision-making area. It is here def- initely where the decisions will be infer- ior unless student opinion plays a major role.. Secondly, I believe that the University will produce better students, graduates, and citi- zens, if student opinion assumes a more im- portant place in the University. This is prob- ably the most hackneyed statement in stu- dent government circles, but it seems to necessitate frequent reiteration here at the University. The University should aim not only to increase the classroom knowledge and intellectual capacity of the student, but also should endeavor to train the student to utilize his mental faculties to benefit the society of which he is a part . . . whether it be a city, state, national, international or University community. I believe this is consistent with existing University policy. We frequently hear of the University's very real obligations to serve the State of Mich- igan . . . by means of TV programs, Out- Patient Clinics, Extension Service, Survey Research, etc. I would say that training the student in the sense I have mentioned is an- other of the University's important non-aca- demic functions. I think this attitude on the part of the University will benefit not only the people in student government (ad- mittedly a small percentage), -but will cre- ate a greater awareness among all the stu- dents of the problems of the University-an awareness which will extend to their friends and families now, and will remain with them as alumni. This is the basic motivation of people in student government-to help ad- ministrative officials and faculty in meet- ing the many serious problems which con- tinually confront the University of Mich- igan. EVER SINCE the last war, our foreign pol- icy has had to take one longshot gamble after another. First we had, to mention on- ly the major ones, a Vichy gamble and a Chungking gamble. Later we gambled in Athens and in Ankara, and then we risked our physical and moral resources in Bel- grade and Madrid. In all these ventures, the odds have been against us from the start. Not our deliber- ate choice, but the inscrutable madness of a Hiler or the maniacal reasoning of the Politburo has determined where and with whom we take the hazard of alliance or of co-belligerency. We are still paying off on the Moscow gamble that Hitler forced on us. If the Wehrmacht had driven Stalin out of his country, we probably would have been obliged to set him up in London or in Washington as the leader of a "free" Rus- sian government-in-exile. The main hazard in the co-belligerency gamble is that our military and economic assistance will be recklessly dissipated. If the soldiers who are supposed to use the weapons made in the U.S.A. haven't the heart to fight or if they are led by crooked, incompetent officers, then we become the Quartermaster, . and laughingstock, of the enemy. Actually there is no sure way to know how the people and soldiers under a tyrannical government feel about their mas- ters. -from the "Reporter" '4, U,;, .1 Eliot Elisofon's camera work finally pro- vides the key to -the picture's impact. Shots filmed through Miss Gabor's red veil and ' with multicolored lights playing on Ferrer's face in the climactic suicide scene, empha- size the factual unreality "Moulin Rouge" ii. strives for. Sacrificing exactness of detail for a greater-than-real emotional appeal, its producershave thus left themselves open to a criticism of being overly sentimental. Their concern with such heroics drags down the. movie's plot and ultimately raises the :whole. question of what "Moulin Rouge" is trying to accomplish. -Don Potter s, Naidoo's informer PERIODICALLY cases come up on this campus which aptly illustrate the pre- carious, position of the foreign student in the United States. Last year the case was an Indian student who was being deported for apparently no substantial reason. This Week the student under attack is a South Africali Indian, L. V. Naidoo. Strangely enough it is not the immigra- tion office which is hounding Naidoo at the moment, but a "fellow South African," namely Miss Rhoda Barry, University of Illinois student and presumably a white Couth African. 'Miss Barry began to interfere with Naidoo p in January when she wrote a letter to The Daily attacking Naidoo and "his eloquent plea for the Africans (black races)" in con- nection with Kenya and the Mau Mau. But this blast at Naidoo was confined to the editorial page of The Daily. Now, Miss a Barry has written a letter to the Minister of Internal Affairs in Pretoria, South Africa, in which she accuses Naidoo of conducting a "smear campaign against the Union of ,'South Africa." This self-styled informer goes on to y recommend to the Minister that Naidoo's passport be revoked. In Naidoo's case this recommendation could easily result in his being pulled out gof this country before he finshes his journ- alism degree this spring. It is certainly true that Naidoo has been outspoken about his country and it is quite 'obvious that Naidoo has pulled no punches ,in his attack on the racist practises of tMalan and his government. But is this grounds for deportation? Naidoo has attacked the policies of his x government but has remained loyal to his country and, as he writes Miss Barry, "I t hope that net too far in the future Afri- cans, Europeans, Coloreds, including In- dians, will enjoy the fruits of our beloved . country ... equally." There is little wonder in Naidoo's bitter- ness. His people are among the eight mil- lion non-European South Africans who are Idisenfranchised, segregated dhd impover- ished. " But in snite of his hatred for Malan Another Paradox? ... SINCE the beginnings of recorded history, simultaneous with the growth and development of "civil- ization" there have also peen para- doxes of civilization, the greatest of them being wars. Is the current of history so strong that we must necessarily follow it? Or can we learn from history? That man cannot cooperate with man, that nations cannot be at peace with other nations, that no profound international under- standing can be brought about, that love cannot dominate the minds and actions of men and na- tions, are alldelusions. In the Third World Conference of Christian Youth that I attend- ed in South India last December, three hundred delegates came from fifty-two nations-and we all felt that we were a team of really united nations. If we did learn anything from that conference that we can relay to others, it is certain things are so common in man that all men are equal, and that the greatest peace and co- operation can be attained when love and sacrifice are the motives. If, instead of thinking in terms of how much it can make and gain, each nation in the United Nations thinks rather in terms of how much it can do and give for the promotion of world peace and prosperity, then we would have a sounder criterion upon which to base and judge the UN's successes and achievements. Are the UN delegates aware that their organization is at present the only hope of mankind for a peace- ful world? Or is it inevitable that we should be led to believe that the UN is another paradox of civilization? -Raja Nasr, Lebanon * * * , Defense of Israel .. . REGRET that Mr. Ben M. Awada, whose letter on "Pales- tinitis" you published on May 6, is voicing his objections to facts stated by Professors Haber and Slosson with more heat than ac- curacy and coherence. The State of Israel was established on the basis of "the historical connec- tion of the Jewish people with Palestine", internationally recogn- ized since the Palestine Mandate of the League of Nations. The United Nations has confirmed the right of the Jewish people to es- tablish an independent Jewish State amongst the eight Arab States which already existed in that area. The Arab States op- posed that decision, which may have been their right; but they opposed it, as was not their right, by armed force. They fought a war to prevent the State of Israel from existing. As a result of this war of aggression, against Israel, the problem of the Arab refugees wascreated; not by Israel putting them "out of the back door", but by a mass exodus of Palestinian Arabs directed by their own lead- ers. The time has come to treat these unfortunate victims of Abar ag- gression against Israel as human beings, and not as pawns in political maneuverings directed against the State of Israel. Israel has accepted with open arms three quarters of a million Jewish refugees. The Arab na- tions are keeping their own bre- thren in refugee camps maintain- ed by the United Nations. As for Arab fears of "spreading conquest" on the part of Israel, I find nothing in the existing sit- uation to indicate a justified fear of Israeli expansion. It is Israel who offers non-aggression pacts. It is the Arab States who refuse them. There is a clear contradic- tion as to facts and Arab asser- tions: The Arab States made war against Israel, but it is Israel who is accused of having aggressive intentions. Israel is offering peace negotiations and non-agres- sion pacts, to be supported if ne- cessary, by the United Nations. The Arab States refuse to nego- tiate and yet they say they need assurance against Israel aggres- sion. You cannot, on the one hand, pretend to fear the aggres- sion of your neighbors and on the other hand reject possibilities of receiving non-aggression guaran- tees with international support. I strongly feel that the real ills of the Middle East-economic backwardness, illiteracy and dis- ease-can be cured, not by re- crimination and polemics, but only by peace and cooperation among all peoples of that area based on mutual recognition of each other's right of existence and with enlightened support of the Western World. -Edward Superstine I Believe .. . To the Editor: II Qw p,, /. I,' ' ' IlKS r ;r" broken wing; Who torment their face a page And vomit up a rage. The campus rages! a doubt All Eloise or Angell Blood in each eye, each hand, brains to de- thimbleful of nay, 'tis past Hall's let out! and letters in Hail Frankie Laine! and Froman! (Jane), And modern vics'. I believe that every new-born Johnny Ray Will serve our need, And boost our creed, 'Cause I beeelieve. III I agree what churches need are flashing signs, And "moon-June" rhymes; Forty-fives and thirty-threes and sapphire tips, And change-booth lines. I agree the "masses" could be sip- ping cokes, And telling jokes, And singing "I Beeeelieve". -Dick Grossman * * * Tragedy & Joy. , To the Editor: MR. AWADA'S letter throws light on a problem that has many Jews thinking seriously. Israeli independence caused heart- breaking joy to us, but heartbreak- ing tragedy to you. Part of the price for the Israeli state was the displacement and suffering for your people. For your misery the are deeply sorry, and we want sincerely to help. We need your help if we are to remove the barb wire from our borders; you need ours if you are to remove the barb wire of the D. P. camps. Accusation, count- er accusations, andubitterness only will widen the gulf between us. For the well being of both our people, we must replace our anger with understanding. -Joe Weiss Brazil.. . To the Editor: PROF. CATHERINE HELLER of the College of Architecture and Design made some interesting re- marks concerning her trip to South America; however, we think that in a short time it is impossible for anyone to judge the architecture of a country and much less of a continent. Prof. Heller said that South America is awakening to 20th century architecture and also that the use of reinforced con- crete on buildings throws the graceful lines off. We don't believe that Prof. Hel- ler had enough time to see any- thing, or if she had, she didn't see what she should have seen. At this point we would like to say that Brazil is not awakening to any kind of architecture; on the contrary, if we have anything for a long time it is modern and grace- ful architecture. People from all over the world come to Brazil to study architecture. France, Italy, Germany, England, Spain and other countries have already pub- lished books on the impressive Brazilian Architecture. We use our own modern systems of pre- stressing concrete that allow us to make things that would be im- possible to do with any other sys- tem. Did Prof. Heller see the Municipal. Stadium in Rio de Janeiro which has a capacity for 200,000 people and is entirely cov- ered without a single sustaining column? Or, did she see the Quitandimha Hotel in Petropolis, Estado do Rio, which is more luxurious and graceful than any lavishly expensive Hollywood set- ting? Prof. Heller also points out that custom built furniture is the pre- dominate type and are compara- tively expensive. Evidently she didn't see the P. Kastrup factory that handles all government con- Panacea . .0. To the Editor: I WOULD like to see Mr. Ben Awada recover from his recent illness "Palestinitis," so am sub- mitting some suggestions which might ease the pain. A. Concerning the "demand made upon a weak and defenseless people to drive them away to pov- erty and humiliation." 1. The Arabs have never had it so good regarding health, educa- tion and equal rights as they have in the new state of Israel. Here he does not have to suffer indigna- tion at the hands of those eco- nomically superior to him for he is an equal. 2. If homes for those who vol- untarily fled is in question, what about the Arab section from the division of Palestine when Israel was created. The Arabs were not driven out and the only cause of reduction to poverty and humili- ation stems from the non-accep- tance by those countries in the Arab League (numbering eight with a recent addition.) B. Democracy or Agency of Per- secution? 1. The system of government is similar to the British. One exam- ple of the democratic principle is illustrated by the many political parties. 2.'The church and state are not one, as religious practices have been imposed on neither Arab nor Jew. 3. If economic aid from America (government and private agencies) is what is meant by imperialism, then we may regard the world as being a subject of American impea perialism. 4. Another element which may be considered in constituting Is- rael as a democratic state is its tendencies toward the western na- tions as opposed to the past ten- dencies of pro-Nazism of the na- tions surrounding it in the Near East. Our sick friend is caught in a common dilemma of whether or not the Jews are a race or reli- gion which is not pertinent to any of his "reasoning." Here's to a quick recovery with facts as medicine. -Harriet Bergstein, '55 Book List ... To the Editor: THE STATEMENT from the pro- secutors office that the Wayne County listing of "obscene" books will not be the criterion employed by local officials to have book dealer's clear their shelves is sheer nonsense. That criterion already has been used and the books have been removed. The Wayne County list now con- tains about 152 titles and new titles are added at the rate of about ten per month. The list was sent by the Ann Arbor Police Dept. (evidently on orders from the prosecutor's office) to a local distributor with instructions to have the books removed from cir- culation. The dealer then abstracted only books in current distribution in Ann Arbor from the list. Thus Hemingway's book does not appear on the condensed list, but works by James T. Farrell, John Faulk- ner, Jules Romains, and John O'- Hara among others do. The con- densed list of 47 titles was sent to all local book stores except one with the following instructions: "The following list of books has been banned by the Ann Arbor Police Department, remove these books from your 'stand immedia- They damn, decry, deplore,' de- spair, demand ! All letters write, for speech and thought are free, And three cents gets 'em immor- tality. The educationists point out the way: All education is creative play. No need to learn to write or spell; Phys. ed. and self-expression do as well. Each would be critic writes: for our great state Maintains that art is settled by debate. Each champion of th' oppressed writes in high dudgeon, With logic dark and satire like a bludgeon. Each music lover howls in out- raged pain, Each shaking freshman sings the simple strain. Methinks I hear a mighty organ roar: Echoes from Burton Tower shake the floor! The tenors squeak in rage, the basses call: "Let's stand that Harvey Gross against a wall!" Their wit is weighted with a mean- ing dense, Their prose a tangled travesty of sense; With angry words they plead their righteous cause, And violate good taste, and gram- mer's laws. Or soberly in dullness undefiled, Calm in style, with reason sweet and mild, Bent o'er his desk, half-hid in fog from sight, Wrapoed in Chaos and shades of Oldest Night, Sits the complacent, condescend- ing fool Who'd send all honest critics back to schc'l! Others I could sing, members of that band, Head in the ground and vorpal pen in hand, Whose maritial or alimen'try stress, Whose itching need to protest or confess, Sets 'em to scribbling and t'enjoy the fame Of printed nonsense and their published name. --Dean Drapier, Grad. L. 4 and qualified staff to draw up its own list. In conclusion, it is a fact that the Wayne, County list'has been and is the basis of book censorship in Ann Arbor. Few people will deny the right and value of cen- sorship of pornographic literature, but censorship of the type current in Ann Arbor is quite'a different matter. -Charles Sleicher * * * Epistle to the Letter-Writers .*.. To the Editor: Apologies to J. D. & A. P. HE SCRIBBLERS and the campus wits I sing, Whose feeble writings flap on I v .1 _I 3 1' .1 .8 ON THE Washington Merry-Go-Round !i with DREW PEARSON ' _ _ _ rMl 4 BEHIND THE TRUCE TALKS T HERE ARE still a few stumbling blocks in the way, but the State Department believes a Korean truce is now just a mat- ter of time. The latest Communist proposal is so close to the Indian compromise; which the United States has already accepted, that the State Department is ready to close the deal. It has been the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who have been holding back. South Korean President Syngman Rhee has also been threatening U.S. officials that he would launch an offensive with his own South Korean troops and risk upsetting the "truce negotiations. He is flatly against any truce that falls short of unifying all Korea. In fact, Rhee has been so belligerent of late that General Mark Clark dropped around to see him privately to soothe him. Rhee finally promised not to take any rash action without first consulting Clark. In the backstage argument over Com- munist truce terms, the State Department has been willing to accept Red Poland and Czechoslovakia on the armistice commission to police the truce and screen 48,000 prison- ers who don't want to return home. The State Department feels that Sweden and Switzerland would balance these two Com- The Joint Chiefs told the State Depart- ment, however, that the Communist pro- posal did not set a time limit on how long the unwilling repatriates could be held in Korea, and left the disposition of these prisoners up to the judgment of a political conference. The Joint Chiefs feared that this political conference might stall along for years, keep- ing the 48,000 prisoners incarcerated while the politicians haggled. After a conference of the top civilian and military brass at the White House, the Pen- tagon finally sent instructions to General William K. Harrison, Jr., the chief UN ne- gotiator, to try to settle these objections. Harrison was instructed to substitute Pak- istan in place of India and to clarify the fate of the prisoners who still refused to go home after four months of thinking it over. One drawback is that the Communist pro- posal would give their officials an opportun- ity to proselyte these prisoners for four months after the armistice. The Joint Chiefs were also apprehensive that the Reds might use this opportunity to intimidate the prisoners. However, Washington officials believe there is ennurh hsis fo rareement to settle . Sixty-Third Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the 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 HarlandBritz.......Associate Editor Donna Hendleman......Associate Editor Ed Whipple..............Sports Editor John Jenke. Associate Sports Editor Dick Sewelli...Associate Sports Editor Lorraine Butler,.......Women's Editor Mary Jane Mills. Assoc. Women's Editor Don Campbell..C..Chief Photographer Business Staff Al Green...........Business Manager Milt Goetz.......Advertising Manager Diane Johnston . Assoc. Business Mgr. Judy Loehnberg...Finance Manager ,; yI 4 .. 1