0 - .~-..;, ,.-, ~ FOUR THlE MICHIGAN DAILY _I _ _ I SL's Future-An Analysis STUDENT GOVERNMENT on the campus, always in a state of flux, now finds it- self at a critical juncture. During the past year many campus groups, particularly the Student Legislature, have undergone a per- iod of introspection and reflection about their organization, functions and capability of solving problems. This extreme soul- searching has made organizations such as SL vulnerable to criticism, as it has laid open weaknesses which other campus groups could point to with the "See, I told you so"' attitude. Fortunately, SL decided to do some- thing more than merely debate its own problems, and formed the campus organi- zation study committee. Included in the group's personnel are top leaders of the larger activities. As was to be expected, basic conflicts which have been discussed behind the scenes for years have been brought into full view in the committee's deliberations. Through the study committee, leaders of groups sucD as the Union and Interfrater- nity Council have had the chance to voice their long-held contention that student government would be more effective if or- ganizational representatives were included in its ranks. Pointing out that experience is the best criteria for leadership, they have support from both Dean Walter and Dean Rea. On the other side; arguing that students definitely rejected organizational represen- tation in 1946, SL representatives have fought suggestions for changes in the direct election method. For a while last fall, it looked as though a proposal to'bring about a "super council" government would get on the ballot, but the movement never devel-. oped. SL's low morale and crisis period pass- ed, at least temporarily, with the 47 per cent campus vote cast last fall and the Survey Research Report confirming that students wanted the Legislature to con- tinue much as it had. To switch to organizational representa- tion at this time might appear to be an ex- cellent idea. From the standpoint of ex- pediency, it is definitely a better solution, but student government need not surrender so easily to expediency when a basic prin- ciple is at stake. Considering the long-range situation, there is no proof that an organiza- tional representation method would be of any great benefit to students, and there is considerable thought that it might prove harmful. Briefly, several undesirable ef- fects can be seen arising from such a plan: 1) A substantial number of students not tied to the various organizations would not oe represented. 2) Mere possession of experience and administrative ability does not mean a leader can express what would be regard- ed as "student opinion." Lines of com- munication from the leaders to their "con. stituents" would be hard to maintain. 3) Student interests could quite often be lost in the battle for supremacy and pres- tige between organizations represented on the council. 4) There probably would be little impetus for strong anti-blas measures if IFC and Panhellenic Association are on such a coun- cil. Similarly the pressure for Lecture Com- mittee action or motions on discriminatory scholarships might be harder to achieve. Past experience seems to indicate that the various "service" organizations have avoided taking any stand that might prove at all embarassing to the adminis- tration. These groups are more disposed to public relations than support of pro- gressive measures. Thus the Legislature's independence and courage might be sacrificed for the possi- bility that service projects might be better integrated and progress made in lines which have been blocked by the autonomy com- plex of large student groups. * * * PROPONENTS OF THE organizational re- presentationplan have their best point in the experience argument. SL has been extremely worried over its personnel prob- lem, although the last election did bring in some very capable new members. The main flaw of the experience argument, however, is that continuity is sometimes lost in such an arrangement and, in addition, the ex- officio post on student government would necessarily be a side job for the head of any large organization. Through its present system, SL has achieved a certain measure of continuity, and its officers of cabinet rank are com- petent, but cabinet membership is more than a full-time activities load. If or- ganizational representation were only in- stituted in part, this trouble would still come up if the representatives wanted to exercise any great influence. Within its present framework, SL must face several serious problems. The per- sonnel situation is one of them. Keeping in touch with the student body is another. The problem of lines of communication is being partially solved by a much-improved Speakers' Bureau, but further effort should be made to attract interested students to the regular Wednesday night meeting. Meetings themselves could be nore effective if more time were spent on intelligent dis- cussion and less on parliamentary wrang- ling. More adequate prior preparation of motions would also improve meetings, al- though the committees generally do a fair job of preparation. With its constitutional structure provid- ing great theoretical power, the Legislature should be able to assume a more central position in student activities. It is not entirely the fault of SL's ner- sonnel or structure that maximum effec- tiveness has not been approached. Ra- ther, much of the fault rests with other groups and leaders who have deliberately undercut it and with an administration which has not always cared to take its viewpoint too seriously. The argument that SL is not representative can easily be used as criticism to cover a more basic disagreement with Legislature views. Although a clear-cut immediate solution for the student government dilemna seems impossible, it would seem wiser for the campus to continue with directly-elected student representatives, keeping in mind a long-range plan of having SL assume more centralized authority over other campus ac- tivities. Such a conclusion presumes that the Legislature will continually work at ful- filling student needs and voicing common opinion as accurately as possible. It means that SL will seriously consider -Dean Walter's advice to plan projects in terms of short and long range objectives. But even more important, this conclusion suggests that other campus groups co- operate more fully in realizing common student goals and be motivated more by a campus-wide orientation than by a self- centered viewpoint. Through a logical development of its wide constitutional functions, with coop- eration from other organizations and the administration, the Legislature holds great promise both for the student body and the University community as a whole. --Harry Lunnn An 'Honest' Mistake REP. HAROLD VELDE has made an hon- est mistake." The Chairman of the House Un-Ameri- can Activities Committee has finally ad- mitted under pressure that he was wrong in accusing Agnes E. Meyer of writing pro-Soviet literature. Meyer, a member of the board of direc- tors of the National Citizens Commission for Public -Schools, recently blasted the ac- tivities of Velde and his committee in a speech before the American Association of School Administrators. Velde quickly answered this by insinu- ating that Meyer was "following the Com- munist party line," and then accused her of writing a letter to a Soviet publication. This act in itself was marked with vin- dictiveness. A few hours after, the Washington Post printed an article stating that Meyer had demanded a retraction. Velde quickly back- tracked and said he had "taken appropriate disciplinary action against the employe responsible" for supplying the misinforma- tion. Aside from the immediate problem of Velde's indiscreet action, another ques- tion is raised. The public, it would seem, is entitled to know just how reliable are the employees of Velde, McCarthy and Jenner, and how reliable is the informa- tion supplied by these employees. The reputations and livelihood of hundreds are at stake. One is forced to wonder whether the "mistake" in the case of Agnes Meyers was the only one commuted by Velde's group, and if not, how many other guiltless per- sons have been smeared in a similar man- ner. -Mark Reader "We Got To Stop Reckless Spending" 1 .. IL - °' ' R cxLES curr M ette, 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 380 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 "I 1I Z r- 0 b Ll l; s c r f c c i t i t t k : ' '. .. , .. : y= Jam. C - .ra ,:r c: YO } ;} __ i 0CINEMA] A rchitectlure A4uditoriumn THE GRAPES OF WRATH, Henry Fonda and Jane Darwell. MOVIES concerned with social criticism can confine themselves to exposing one particular of human misery and dying nat- urally when a remedy arrives, or they can be something more. The Grapes of Wrath, social criticism in its broadest sense, has roots deep enough in humanity so that it will be valid and exciting until the mu- lenium. Its Imniediate situation is brilliantly delineated. The exodus, in the thirties, of small midwestern farmers from their wind-torn wheat lands is invested with the terror and hopelessness that the dis- possessed, the wanderers, have under- gone for centuries. They are hated for their misery and exploited in their help- lessness as they limp to the Promised Land in California. But for all its pan- oramic view, this picture' is much more than a documentary. Embodying the hope and bewilderment of the exiles, Henry Fonda retains neverthe- less a superb individuality. With his quiet intensity he completely realizes his complex role of seeker and fugitive. Jane Darwell is equally well cast as Ma Joad. She man- ages to be the eternal matriarch without falling into pioneer mother cliches. The script, and John Ford's direction, maintain this high level. Stark, tending usually toward a very effective under- statement, they avoid the excesses of pity and sentimentality that would be ruinous to their theme. The picture is not just a grim march of misery nor is its wit in comic hillbilly situations. The humor seems close to these people and the soil, and has a peculiar dignity indigenous to these things. Though lacking some of Steinbeck's orig- inal grimness and despair, the optimism presented by this movie is not based on phony dramatics. Instead, it seems to grow out of the spiritual strength of a different. but equally valid set of characters and values. -Bob Holloway On Judging Others NT MAN can justly censure or condemn another because, indeed, no man truly knows another. This I perceive in myself; for I am in the dark to all the world, and my nearest friends behold me but in a cloud. Those that know me but superficially think less of me than I do of myself; those of my near acquaintance think more; God, who truly knows me, knows that I am nothing; for He only beholds me and all the world, who looks not on us through a derived ray, or a trajection of a sensible species, but be- holds the substance without the helps of accidents, and the forms of things as we their operations. Further, no man can judge another, because no man knows himself: for we censure others but as they disagree from that humor which we fancy laudable in our- selves, and commend others but for that wherein they seem to quadrate and consent with us. An Answer to Demagogues By BENJAMIN FINE New York Times Education Editor A WARNING THAT the Congressional committees investigating schools and colleges threaten not only education but the demo- cratic way of life was voiced in Atlantic City Tuesday by Mrs. Agnes E. Meyer of Washington, a member of the board of directors of the National Citizens Commission for Public Schools. In a major address at the seventy-ninth annual convention of the American Association of School Administrators, attended by 17,000 teachers, superintendents and key educators, Mrs. Meyer scathingly denounced the activities of Senators Joseph R. Mc- Carthy, Republican of Wisconsin, and William E. Jenner, Repub- lican of Illinois. The address called by educators the most out- spoken of the convention, was vigorously applauded by the dele- gates, representing every state of the union. Spokesmen for nation-wide school groups, such as the National Education As- sociation and the National School Boards Association, called Mrs. Meyer's address an "historical event" and a "rallying point" for teachers to maintain independent schools. Asserting that academic freedom and American democracy itself were threatened, Mrs. Meyer lashed into Senator McCarthy, calling him "our modern grand inquisitor." She referred to him as a "dan- gerous and ruthless demagogue" a "political adventurer" and a "psy- chopathic character." Before he is allowed to investigate anyone, she said, it would be more appropriate for the Senate to investigate him. "His record as an investigator is shameful," Mrs. Meyer declared. "He has accused innocent people of Communism on mere hearsay evidence, thus traducing our American principle of law that a man is presumed innocent until proved guilty. By such methods he has weakened the morale of our Federal service and spread suspicion and fear throughout the' nation. He has stirred up hatred and used ev- ery device to destroy the confidence of Americans in each other. He has used the technique of insinuation against innocent people and debauched the Senate's power of investigation by introducing authori- tarian practices that are akin to the communism which he professes to hate." Mrs. Meyer said that Senator McCarthy would not dare to challenge education now if the American public had organized a nation-wide defense of academic freedom when-previous Congres- sional attacks began. Because of the tactics of Mr. McCarthy, Mr. Jenner and Mr. Velde, Mrs. Meyer asserted, the morale of the teachers had been seriously undermined. "The American people as a whole must now realize that they are the ones who make the climate of public opinion and that they must come to the defense of our public schools and of our institutions of higher learning, declared Mrs. Meyer. "For the independence of our whole educational system will be jeopardized if Velde, Jenner and Mc- Carthy are not stopped in their tracks before they get under full sail." These men, she charged, are corrupting the legislative process and debasing the Congressional power of investigation into an attack on the very foundation of liberty itself. She urged that the press, radio, television and church organizations take a firm stand against the school investigations. She warned that "either the clergy of all denominations must now unite in a protest against these latest Con- gressional inquisitions, or they will be the next to burn at the stake." "Wth an increased budget, McCarthy may well get out of hand," warned Mrs. Meyer. "Are the Eisenhower Republicans go- ing to allow this man to disgrace them at the very outset of their Administration? If they have any political wisdom they will not let McCarthy blacken their records by permitting him to slander so honorable a group as our educators. But the Republican leaders must act quickly if they wish to save their own reputa- tions. They must recognize their enemies before it is too late. Even now McCarthy's following is large. "It has always been a psychological phenomenon and a perpe- tual danger to our democracy that psychopathic characters succeed in getting a hearing more quickly than rational, well-balanced human beings, because it is much harder to establish truth than to sell the public a plausible untruth. This era of confusion is especially favor- able to the quacks, the extremists, the demagogues and their nos- trums. McCarthy's power over great numbers of Americans, many of whom are honest well-meaning people, illustrates the hypnotic attraction of the lowest common demnoinator of human traits. "This power of McCarthy should not be underestimated. He is a dangerous, clever and ruthless demagogue. His is another Huey Long with different tactics but with the same lust for power." Mrs. Meyer went on to say: "The college presidents, I believe, can stop Congressional investigations of our educational system in all its branches if they act in unison. They should, all of them, communicate at once with their vast alumni associations and ask them to take measures for a counter offensive. "In Oregon all the veteran's organizations got together and issued a statement defending the state's public school system and rejecting the loyalty oath for public school teachers. I don't think McCarthy will tangle with the schools of Oregon, for he would have to take on the American Legion, the Veterans of Foreign Wars and the Disabled American Veterans. You may be sure he won't do that. "The plan is to expose any teachers who look suspicious and may even be guilty of Communist affiliations. Then with the sup- port of an aroused public opinion behind them, our Congressional inquisitors will attack any or all professors whose opinions they dislike. That will be the moment when McCarthy will move into the bull-ring to do his stuff. As in the past, he will produce his I professional ex-Communists such as Budenz to say that Profes- Student Citizenship . . . To The Editor: THIS WEEK, readers of the Michigan Daily and presidents of various student organizations became vaguely aware of a new undertaking of the Student Legis- lature. This project, a type of student citizenship training pro- gram, which will begin with a talk on Feb. 26 by Regent A. B. Con- nable, promises to be one of S.L.'s finest contributions to this edu- cational community. It seems to me that by means of the increasing volume of bus- iness done by the Book Exchange and the undertaking of an ambi- tious and worthwhile project such as the citizenship program, S.L. is voicing an eloquent reply to its various critics by rendering tan- gible services to the students in the University. The prospectus for the program leads me to believe that the project will be extremely beneficial for all those students who take advantage of it. Yet this well conceived program will fail if sufficient interest is not gener- ated throughout the student body. It is for this reason that I make a plea to all those already con- tacted and to all others who are interested to investigate the pos- sible benefits of this project. If this is done, I am certain that the program can not help but to give substantial benefits to the partici- pating students and consequently be of subsequent value to the edu- cational community as a whole. -Roger Wilkins J-Hop Extra .. . To the Editor: AM SELDOM moved to write you a letter, out seeing that the only one printed on your Feb. 9 Extra panned it, I should state that some people in this place are glad if there are still persons here who do not take themselves so deadly seriously that they cannot once a year stand off a bit and look at things from a somewhat humorous angle. If the front page article of Feb. 13 is a sample, we certainly need alittle leavening of levity around here. Our friend complains of The Daily Extra which everyone could see was in- tended to be comic. Says it is in poor taste. I didn't find it so. Due to Robert Shaw's unfortunate im- mediate demise it was in poor taste by the next day, but when written and printed it was not. It was nice to see that altho ev- erything here is bogging down in- to such a morass of red tape that the poor students feel the only im- mediate comparable analogy is a jail, that at least once a year the local inmates are still allowed free speech and can have an extra- vaganza without penalty. If things have corge to such a sorry pass that we have in all in- tents become only a jail and re- strictions, rather than a place where persons can be introduced joyfully to new fields of pleasure and enlightenment, which true studies should be, then like the jail birds we have only one re- course in our darkness and that is humor. The Daily Extra was intended as a joke and served its purpose, for the Dance was meant as en- tertainment. But when profs dent the holes in the system rather than its good points and say if the total ragged fabric even exists, therefore it is perfect, that's very bad indeed and, in my opinion, "poor taste" as well. It is unfor- tunate if your Extra issue roused no thoughts here on campus and can be shoved aside unread by students and faculty alike. -Edna Mary Poe * * * Arab Protest .#.. To the Editor: R ELATIVEto the cartoon in Tuesday's issue "Moscow call All Arabs," it is hardly appropriate, and I must add it could have driv- en a point home. Now I am an LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS Arab. But I do not eat my salad- dressing with Moscow's sauce. Nor do I use Washington's rancid oili To me both substances are dis- tateful. Now really, if you had pictured three or four hundred thousands Palestinian Arab Refugees head- ing to Moscow and leaving Mec- ca behind, this would be near the truth. You can also picture Un- cle Sam (Truman would do) on the highest pinacle of the mos- que viewing the procession of these refugees driven *by hunger, pov- erty, disease,-starvation and pes- tilence! Moscow salad may appeal to this element of the Arabs, but never to the cross section of the Arab peo- ple. To think otherwise would sim- ply be "mental gymnastics" and nothing more. First, Communism as such is strictly anti-pode to Islamic prin- ciples. Those principles are so in- stilled in our tradition and cul- ture, that a change or deviation from these principles is impossible. Second, the Arab values his free- dom more than you value yours. The scope of this freedom for the Arab must be as the continuous sweeps of the skies over his home- land. And besides Islam has a' dif- ferent value judgement. And Com- munism seems to be abhorent and incompatable to the Islamic ideol- ogy. In the light of those facts, I consider your cartoon as the prod- uct of a mind unentertaining- complete - misunderstanding - ful- ly unawar.e Ben M. Awada * * * Complaint . .. To the Editor: IF YOU HAVE a letter box or a complaint department, here is one which I consider relevant. The main study hall in the library is closed from 5 to 7 p.m. We are told to come back in two hours if we wish to continue using the re- serve books available only there. From a public relations viewpoint, this is a poor way to save a few dollars. --W. Stevens I 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 Samta.........Editorial Director Zander Hollander......Feature Editor Sid Klaus.......Associate City Editor Harland Britz... ......Associate Editor Donna Rndleman.....Associate Editor Ed Whipple...........Sports Editor John Jenks......Associate Sports Editor Dick Sewell.. ...Associate Sports Editor Lorraine Butler.......Women's Editor Mary Jane Mills, Assoc. Women's Editor Business Staff Al Green........... Business Manager Milt Goetz......Advertising Manager Diane Johnston . ..Assoc. Business Mgr. Judy Loehnberg.......Finance Manager Harlean Hankin.... Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other mattersherein are also reserved. 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. 4 1. + MUSIC + At Racham Auditorium BUDAPEST STRING QUARTET N THE LITERATURE OF music, as in all the performance arts, there are certain works which, through the depths of experi- ence explored and the heights of creative ex- pression reached, defy their life's-blood, the performance re-creation. These works in be- ing so challenging, haughtily mock both in- terpreter and listener in that each succes- sive performance discloses new secrets from their never exhausted supply. Theater has always claimed "Ding" Lear" to be such a work. In music, the last quartets of Beethoven, of which the A minor, opus 132, was played last night by the Budapest Quartet, are too of the same vintage. For the reasons declaimed above, a perfect performance of such a work is an impossibility. But what the Budapest played last night was about as faithful and understanding a performance of the A minor that this critic has heard. what a rich quartet sound should be; the trio of the second movement was an immac- ulate portrayal of quartet balance. Interpretively they fared almost as well. However, in giving a little too much to the lyric side of the work, they neglected the climactic. Each climax reached seemed one of emotional intensity with not enough loud- ness. In the first movement, just before the end, occurs a very important climax. I felt it as such, but didn't quite hear it. But I can find no such complaint in the third move- ment, a movement to which emotional great- ness is testified by the fact that Beethoven had to surround it with two lighter move- ments. And the Budapest did an excellent job in bringing out its meaning. The program also inlcuded the Men- delssohn E flat quartet, and the eighth quartet of Quincy Porter, a work commis- sioned by the University. The Mendelssohn was on the dull side. A youthful work of the composer, it contains, in the second and fourth movements, passages that are reminiscent of his "Midsummer Night's Dream" music. But it lacked the unity of material and variation of tempi which could have made it successful. It could have used a fast movement that was con- r by Dick Bibler rTHER r< t' / i. -1 1' ".~7 ' By the time Beethoven wrote this work, he had changed the string quartet form com- pletely. In his earlier works his problem was i