PAGE FOUR THE MCHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MtRUARY 20, 1955 PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, FE1t~RUARY 20, 1955 MEM PARKING PROBLEM: "When Do We Sail, Cap'n?" SGC Steering Committee Should Stick to Issues By PAT ROELOFS Associate City Editor I F THE Student Government Council is going to be sufficiently more effective than the Student Legislature to justify its existence, the time to begin achieving this effectiveness is now. The Student Government Council Steer- ing Committee has already been discussing the driving ban issue and hoping to achieve im- mediate action rather than mere talk. The suggestion that a proposal to remove the driv- ing ban be placed on the March ballot was made; all that is needed to get the proposal on the ballot is SL approval or 600 signatures of students. A majority of steering committee members oppose placing the issue on the ballot for student vote again; student opinion has already been voiced: students do want the driv- ing ban removed. It seems useless to ask them to voice this opinion again-the way to get the ban removed is to work quietly and directly with the Regents, as SL President Ned Simon suggested. SGC STEERING committee members, as well as the student- body-at-large which favors removal of the ban, should keep in mind when arguing that students be allowed to drive cars and keep cars here, that there are more and more fines being given students for parking violations, and more and more parking meters are being put up to make what little parking space there is available useless for students in classes. In other words, unless new parking pro- visions are made in this already crowded metro- polis, it seems quite useless to argue that all students who can afford cars should be allowed to have them. The SGC steering committee is already on the same road the SL was on, working with the same student problems, and spending most of their energy on a particular problem that too recently was referred to both students and Re- gents. PERHAPS TO be effective, in addition to working quietly with individual Regents on certain problems, SGC should be dealing with issues that in themselves are more worth- while and that haven't been hashed over as recently as the problem of students operating automobiles in a university town. Specifically: the bias clause issue has been lying dormant for some time; there is discrimination in dor- mitories against housing persons of different races together; rents in Ann Arbor apartments and rooming houses are higher than an aver- age student can actually afford to pay; many local landlords refuse to rent apartments to Negro or foreign students. These problems con- cern a larger segment of the student body than a driving rule, and they are problems that do not require change in the physical layout of the city (which would be required to make more parking space for students' autos.) THAT AT LEAST 33 students are running for 11 positions on the SGC is encouraging-- but let's hope, that they, with the ex-officio members, will accept the lessons SL learned about working with the Regents, and also that most important problems will be dealt with first. The driving ban is not the most import- ant ! - , r 'I w '1 Rai , _ .:} i? t 4", ' f J fir. ii u,: ,' .w, ' r.f .w ; ' ,f, .z ,,, r y c --.. . - .*..+ ' ii l ,.. . . ' CURRENT MOVIES At the State ... BAD DAY AT BLACK ROCK, with Spencer Tracy and Robert Ryan A LOT of celluloid had passed over the sprockets since the days when the maiden in gingham used to apprise the posse of the news that "They-went-thataway" with extended finger and high, flutey voice. On television, you can still see them heading the varmits off at the pass, but in the theaters, the Western has been anxiously coming of ,ge in the last few years. "High Noon" was a fine adult movie, so was DAILY OFFICIAL BULLE TIN / 4 017sr'niE nahtMatCIT+.H ?etT 4r. "Shane," and the producers of "Bad vertising that this film is their worthy successor. Well, it isn't. It is a phony, contrived piece of melodrama full of oblique and self-conscious dialogue that merely magnifies a series of ridiculous perform- ances from ordinarily respect- able actors. The worst of it is its painful effort at arty Cine- cascopic compositions and high moral tone. The best things in it are borrowed wholesale fPunm "High Noon" (the desert heat, the corrupted citizenry, the long shots down the railroad track, and so forth.) In the transfor- mations, however, all of them have lost any sense of meaning: they are simply grafted on with- out purpose. The plot of the film is dedicat- ed strictly to an endless prolonga- tion of "suspense" about why a stranger has arrived in the des- ert town of Black Rock and why the residents of the town are treat- ing him so shabbily. Aware ap- parently that there is no good reason why the stranger shouldn't announce his purpose in town at once, nor why the residents should continue to feel guilty and afraid (as they do) about something that happened four years previously, the makers of the film seek to conceal their make-believe with a lot of tense, circumventing dia- logue that is clearly designed to Day at Black Rock" have been ad- keep you on the edge of your seats. Also, they dredge up the in- evitable yuota of familiar charac- ters: the alcoholic sheriff, the ju- venile weakling, the philosophical doctor, and a couple of standard bullies. All of . these characters have the vocabulary of Harvard freshmen and psychology - course interest in subjecting each other and themselves to boring charac- ter analyses. None of them, unfor- tunately, are -half as interesting as they think they are. For good measure, there is a little sadism thrown in, most of it directed at the stranger, who is a particularly good victim since he is missing one arm. The stranger, however, gets in a few licks himself in a bloody judo fight with one of the bul- lies, and he tops that off later by flining a Nolotov cocktail at his major adversary, thus set- ting the gentleman afire. The latter action happens to be poetic, as well as prairie, jus- tice; but revealing why would also be revealing the Big Secret. It is enough to say that the pic- ture is also resolutely opposed to persecution of minority races. If it is possible to believe, the short subjects are even worse than the picture. Everybody apparently had a "bad day." --William Wiegand LETTERS TO. THE EDITOR Russian Expansion Builds -On Weak Foundation RUSSIA DOESN'T scare me so much any more. She's a big country, and a powerful one, but she has three glaring faults: she's trying to expand too fast in too many direc- tions; she has lost a great deal of prestige, mainly as a result of the recent Kremlin shakeups; and, most important, her inherent weakness lies in the system which she pro- fesses. When a man wants to build a house, he doesn't start at the attic and build down; rath- er, he digs a foundation as the solid basis for his structure. It should be much the same way with a government. Set up a solid basis for gov- erning at home, and, after you have this solid basis, then start to expand. Russia has not done this. She has grabbed countries right and left, building additions to a house that was never well constructed in the first place. She was able to do this because of the superior discipline of her military and the comparative weakness of her neighbors. It doesn't necessar- ily follow, however that she will be able to keep her satellites-sooner or later, the house will collapse. HER WEAKNESS was evident in the Krem- lin shakeups. Georgi Malenkov's whimper. ed "I request to be relieved" was indicative of the turmoil in which the Soviets operate. Two years ago he promised a "new life" to the Rus- sian people. The new life, one which had given hope to the Western world as far as peace was concerned, has failed, and it is time to get tough again. Thirty-seven years has proven that toughness doesn't work either, but Mos- cow, reluctant to admit that so far nothing has worked, blusters and bumbles, and doesn't real- ly fool anybody. The Kremlin's dirty linen has been exposed for all to see. As Time put it, "a going concern does not shake up its manage- ment at the very top." The matter then lies with the Communist system. It simply doesn't work. People, after all, are only human. Mrs. John Q. Russian wants nice clothes and electric washing ma- chines as much 'as Mrs. John Q. American, the difference being that they are more readily available to the American housewife. A Russian man wants to see the fruits of his labor on the farm materialize in the form of better equip- ment and a small profit. These things have not been available to him. Human beings are not automatons, they are individuals, and the can- not be satisfied for long with a system which by its very definition denies their individuality. THESE things do not mean, of course, that we are justified in sitting back, breathing a sigh of relief, and saying "Well, it's time to relax." Communism is more than ever a for- midable enemy, because it has lost face and wants very much to regain it. But it has dis- played its Achilles heel for all the world to see. We now know where to attack. A display of the Individual element in our system might not be out of place right now. -Tammy Morrison SL Finances . .. To the Editor: IT WOULD SEEM that it is time to answer the many unjust ac- cusations that have been leveled at the Student Legislature re- garding the disposition of their finances. First of all, I wonder at the up- roar regarding "the student's money" for two reasons: (1) The students have had no burning de- sire in the past to find out what was happening to "their" money during SL's nine years of existence on this campus. I have noticed no overwhelming vote in the all-cam- pus elections to elect people the students felt were competent to protect these funds; nor have I noticed any large numbers of spectators at SL meetings, where all appropriations of these funds take place. (2) SL's entire reve- nue is made up of a University grant and the profits from the Homecoming Dance and Cinema Guild, for which the students have already received a return in the form of attending the dance and seeing the films. Secondly, it would seem that the campus has little confidence in its own ability to judge and elect peo- ple who are competent to handle themselves in a manner that will prove to the good of their constitu- ents. Thirdly, the open cabinet meet- ing that has been referred to so many times was open to anyone who might have taken the time and effort to attend. The Daily reporter was merely asked not to publicize any discussions which might have involved personalities, for it has been proven by past ex- perience that remarks printed out of context give erroneous concep- tions of facts. Fourthly, all future meetings of the Finance Committee and the IffirtgattDa.l r To the Editor: Legislature will be open to the public, and at Wednesday's SL meeting one hour will be given to any students who wish to speak on this subject. I am curious to see how many will take advantage of this privilege. -Sandy Hoffman Secretary, Student Legislature Money Questions .. . ART REVIEW + i IN REFERENCE to Wally Eber- hard's editorial entitled, "Some C a m p u s Organizations Pursue Strange Policy," I wish to com- ment on the poor taste of the ref- erences to the Student Legisla- ture, and because of the questions that it will undoubtedly raise, I feel that some explanation is due. First was an explanation of the initial closed finance discussions. This was the first decision of the Legislature's finance committee, that The Daily be barred, and was done so that the committee could have an accurate knowledge of the assets of the Legislature, and could then come up with some con- crete and well thought-out recom- mendations on the disposition of these assets. It seemed possible that during the course of the dis- cussions, that some foolish ideas might come up or that some or- ganization or person might be re- ferred to in a bad :ight. We did not want things of this nature going on record as the decisions and opinions of the committee. Now in specific reference to the editorial. At last Monday's cabi- net meeting no plans were made as to disposition of money. It was only a discussion of ides and oth- er students were present as well as the Legislature people. Mr. Eberhard says that the stu- dents, "rightfully should be able to read some-account of how their funds were disposed of." This is a falsehood and is certainly mis- leading. The $5000 is still intact and has not been disposed of, moreover the students will be able to express their opinion on the subject as well as read about it when the disposition is made. And last, but far from least, the "if they are carried out in good faith" reference to the open fi- nancial discussions of the future. I take this as a prsonal insult to myself as chairman of the Legis- lature's finance committee and to every other member of the Legis- lature. This is an issue, when with seemingly few facts, that Mr. Eb- erhard seems determined to keep alive. I would like to again extend the invitation to the campus to at- tend the discussions of finances on Sunday at 3 p.m., Monday at 4:15 p.m., and during constitu- ents' time at the Legislature meeting Wednesday night. -William J. Adams Chairman Legislature Finance Comm. Treasurer Student Legislature * * * Both Sides . .. To the Editor: MISS ROELOFS is entitled to her opinions regarding the curriculum of the School of Edu- cation. She is also entitled to the expression of those opinions. But doesn't common courtesy suggest that one criticize graciously and point out carefully the merits as well as demerits? Surely student teaching is not the only good in the program. If the situation were as serious as Miss Roelofs con- SPRING STREET STOMPERS: Williams College Group Adds to Old Dixieland THERE'S something bright and new in Dixieland jazz and it can be found in "The Spring Street Stompers At Carnegie Hall" al- bum under a Jubilee Records la- bel. Not since the center of jazz moved from New Orleans to Chi- cago in the 1920's has there been a significant change in Dixieland music. At that time some of the New Orleans musicians went North and with the help of such men as Benny Goodman they developed what soon became big band swing. Some musicians stayed in the French Quarter where it all start- ed and kept grinding out the old traditional Dixieland. Oblivious to the various stages of progress jazz was going through, they refused to change. The Dixieland music played today by such aggregations as Red Nichols' is the same stuff King Oliver and Jelly Roll Mor- ton were playing on Bourbon Street before the Frst World War. Although this satisfies many people today it has ceased to be the real jazz it was when Oliver and Morton played it. It has be- come a stagnant form of expres- sion and in jazz this means that it has ceased to express. The only thing that can justify a standardized musical form is perfection and no jazz form has reached anything resembling per- fection. Even more to the point, however, is the fact that true jazz must not be standardized because the essential element in all great jazz is that it is emotionally spon- taneous. Most Dixieland today has ceased to have this element. NOW, out of the East has come a group of six young men from Williams College to add some- thing significant to a style of jazz that had a fine beginning 35 years ago and has lain dormant ever since. This group, the Spring Street Stompers, has retained the main features of old Dixieland such as tail-gate trombone and a driving two-beat rhythm. Addiing an ob- vious knowledge of recent devel- opments in jazz and certain new ideas of their own, this group has now proceeded to produce a kind of modern Dixieland. It is a clear improvement over old Dixieland. Instead of playing out of tune and spurting 'harsh tones out of their instruments, they have decided it was time Dixieland matured. The result is a well-tuned group making valid musical sounds. Instead of sound- ing as if they were a bunch of in- dividuals who just happen to play- ing at the same time and place, they are one cohesive group with each member knowing what the others are going to do, not be- cause of a prearranged score but because of a common spontaneous feeling. Add to this a clarinet with the technical dexterity and tone of Benny Goodman, a drummer with imagination and a bass player who can do more than just slap his instrument and the impor- tance of this Dixieland group can be appreciated. Probably what is most impor- tant to the Stompers' success, however, is their emotional fresh- ness. This is what won them "Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts" a few weeks ago. Enhanced by the spontaneous atmosphere of an actual recorded Carnegie Hall concert, it is this freshness which makes this album such a surprise. Playing such old stand-bys as "Basin Street Blues," "Royal G a r d e n Blues" andf "That's - A - Plenty" with new verve, the Spring Street Stomp- ers make a real addition to Dix- ieland music. - Bob Polley (Continued from Page 2) S. E. Asia." Tickets go on sale tomor- row 10 a.m. in Hill Auditorium box of- fice, open daily 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. chemistry Lecture. Mon., Feb. 21, 8:00 p.m. in Room 1300 Chemistry. Dr. Charles D. Dodd will speak on "Retard- ation of Liquid Flow in Micro-Pores." Academic Notices The Extension Services announces the following class to begin Mon. evening, Feb. 21: Hydraulics and Dynamics-Engineer- ing Mechanics Review II. 7:00 p.m. Room 171 School of Business Admini- stration. Intensive review designed to prepare candidates for civil service or other engineering examinations. A min. Imum of advanced mathematics is used. Lecture notes are available. Eight weeks. $9.00. Prof. Roy S. Swinton, Instructor. Registration for this class may be made at the first meeting of the class. Make-up exam in Economics 51, 52, 53, and 54 Thurs., Feb. 24 at 3:10 p~m., 207 Economics Building. Seminar in Chemical Physics. Mon., Feb. 21, 4:10 p.m. in Room 2308 Chem- istry. Dr. Guido Vidale will speak on "Flash Photolysis." Scholarships, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Applications for scholarships for the academic year 1955-56 are now available in Room 122 Angell Hall. All applications must be returned to that office by March 11. Applicants must have had at least one semester of residence in this College. Scholarships for Engineers. Applica- tions from undergraduate engineers for the 1955-56 Scholarship Awards are now being received. All applications must be in by Fri., March 11. Blanks may be obtained in the Secretary's Office, 263 West Engineering Building. Mathematics Colloquium. Tues., Feb. 22, 4:10 p.m., Room 3011 Angell Hall. R. D. James, visiting professor at Michi- gan State College, will speak on "Inte- grals of PerronType." Tea and coffee at 3:45 p.m. 2312 AH. Actuarial Review Class for Part I will meet at 4:10 p.m. Wed., Feb. V, in Room 3010 A.H. Note change of day. Doctoral Examination for Albert William Demmer, Jr., Metallurgical Engineering, thesis: "The Influence of Surface and Subsurface Variables on the Fatique Properties of Titanium and its Alloys," Tues., Feb. 22, 4219 East Engineering Bldg., at 3:30 p.m. Chairman, M. J. Sinnott. Events Today Lutheran Student Association. Meet at the Center promptly at 6:45 p.m. Sun., Feb. 20 to go to the Universal Day of Prayer Service at the St. An- drew's Episcopal Church. Those who live near there can meet us there at 7:30 p.m. Graduate Outing club meets. Sun., 2:00 p.m. at the Rackiam Building. Come in old clothes to the north west entrance. Meeting of all men and women in- terested in helping write, edit and direct the Independent Hillezapoppin Skit, the Traumatic Players, Sun., Feb. 20, 8:00 p.m. Hillel Bldg. Westminster Student Fellowship Bi- ble Seminar in Room 217 of the Pres- byterian Studert Center at 11:00 a.m, Sun., Feb. 20. I3cussion on, "When Heaven Comes to Earth." Episcopal Student Foundation. Cand- terbury House breakfasts following bot the 8:00 and 9:00 a.m. services Sue., Feb. 20. Confirmation Instruction, 430 p.m., Sun., Feb. 20, at Canterbury House. Canterbury Supper Hour at 5:45 p.m., Sun., Feb. 20, at Canterbury House, followed by the Interguild-spn- sored World Student Day of Prayer at 7:00 p.m. in Saint Andrew's Church. Dr. Joseph Sittler, preaching. Coffee Bnur will follow the service. Hillel: Chorus rehearsal Sun., 4:30 p.m. Main chapel. Hillel: Supper Club. 6:00 p.m. Sun., Feb. 20. New Testament Study Group - "Searching the Synoptics for Meaning in Today's World." Under the direc- tion of Prof. E. Wendell Hewson. Lane Hall, Sun., Feb. 20, 3:00 p.m. The Congregational-Disciples Guild: Sun., Feb. 20, 6:00 p.m., dessert meet- ing at the Congregational Church pre- ceding World Student Day of Prayer program at the Episcopal Church. Westminster Student Fellowship sup. per, Sun., Feb. 20, 5:30 p.m.,at the Stu, dent Center of the Presbyterian Church. Cost: 50c. We will leave at 6:45 to go to the Episcopal Church to participate in the World Student ay of Prayerpro- gram. Michigan Christian Fellowship: Dr. R. K. Harrison, Huron College, London, Ontario, will speak on "Problem- of Evil" at 4:00 p.m., Lane Hall. Refresh- ments. Wesleyan Guild. Sun., Feb. 20. 9:30 a.m. Discussion Group, "Paradoxes of the Christian Faith." 6:45 Meet in the lounge to go to St. Andrew's Episco- pal Church for "Universal Day of Prayer for Students.", First Baptist Church. Sun., Feb. 20: 9:45 a.m. Student class studies Revela- tions; 11:00 a.m. Sermon; 6:45 p.m. Guild meets at Guildhouse to go to Episcopal Church. Coming Events Lane Hall Folk Dance Group will meet Mon., Feb. 21, 7:30-10:00 p.m. in the recreation room. Plans for an exhibi- tion group will be discussed. Instruction for every dance, and beginners are al- ways welcome. I At Alumni Memorial Hall .. "A BEAUTIFUL country! I'd never seen chil- dren carrying banana leaves for umbrellas in the rain, or bananas sold along the road- side. I'd never seen black fuzzy tarantulas this big crossing the road. I'd never seen ferns as big as trees, or gravestones painted purple and orange; on the Day of the Dead families have picnics on their relative's graves, and eat can- dy skulls with 'Aunt Carmen' written on them in honor of some dead relative." Harry Schulke, whose collection of Mexican "things" is currently to be seen at lumni Me- morial Hall, can ramble on for hours on the vitality, the earthiness, the handsomeness, the lyricism of the Mexican people, and the beau- ty of their country. His enthusiasm for things Mexican is obvious in his refreshing exhibition of arts and crafts, collected over several "summers of happiness." He has "santos" paintings, ancient figures, pot-hooks, and door hinges sold side by side in open market places. He has fat pottery piggy banks, and festive wood and paper masks. He has shards which he dug at sites shown to him, for a price, by little boys who maintain private "diggings" in the Pre-Colombian ruins Three beautifully haunting interpretive pho- tographs by Shulke of a street waif contrast sig- nificantly with several views of the University of Mexico's handsome new campus. ALSO SHOWING with the Schulke collection are an exhibition of "Fantastic Land- scapes" and one of watercolors assembled by the Michigan Watercolor Association. The for- mer, boasting works by Man Ray, Kay Savage, Ives Tanguy, and William Congden, is hung in a highly original manner, an attempt per- by Peter Blume. The difficulty is that one arises wondering whether the squatting was worth it. Man Ray has taken a grained piece of wood, drawn a circle on it and called it "A La Lumiere Lunaire. Congden has contri- buted an insectoid "Pantheon," quite the least enjoyable of his embellished surfaces Stage designer Eugene Behrman has done one of the most satisfactory paintings; a sort of da Vinci landscape, inhabited by incon- gruous figures. The works of Kay Savage and Walter Murch are pleasant enough; Dubuffet has done con- siderably better. Enrico Donati's "Landscape: Black and Black with White Line" is good enough to be completely revolting, his work is as aesthetically communicative as the sooty furnace filter it resembles. In short, the exhibition is a sort of surrealis- tic garbage pail; 22 good artists are repre- sented by 22 less than good paintings. As a whole they seem greatly contrived. According to the blurb at the entrance of the exhibition, "each painter's vision is tem- pered by his own highly personal, individual approach." The painters seem to be wearing their "individual approach" like so many flags; THE WATERCOLORS are not awfully excit- ing. Richard Wilt and Jean Paul Slusser of the College of Architecture and Design are represented by two of the finest works in the show. Also of note is the prize winning "But- terfly Wing Fragment, Orange and Brown" of Charlese Culver. But Stephen Chizmarik's "Spring" would at best make a colorful chintz. Mary Jane Big- ler's abstract "Crustacea" is nicely handled, but Midori Hanamura works in an ancient tradi- dition that he only manages to betray. The contrat between the Shilr nllcAtion 3 r I Sixty-Fifth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editoroial Staff Eugene Hartwig ......Managing Editor DorothyeMyers ..... .City Editor Jon Sobeloff ,.....Editorial Director Pat Roelofs ......Associate City Editor Becky Conrad .........Associate Editor Nan Swinehart ........Associate Editor Dave Dvingston ......... Sports Editor Hanley Gurwin ....Assoc. Sports Editor Warren Wertheimer .Associate Sports Editor Roz Shlimovitz ........ Women's Editor Janet Smith Associate Women's Editor John Hirtzel .......Chief Photographer Business Staff Lois Pollak ..........Business Manager Phil Brunskill, Assoc. Business Manager Bill Wise .........Advertising Manager Mary Jean Monkoski .Finance Manager Telephone NO BC-BD-v Member MUSIC REVIEW 'At Rackham.. The Budapest String Quartet PROGRAM: Mozart; Quartet in D major, K. 499; William Den- ny: Quartet No. 2; Beethoven: Quartet in E minor, Opus 59, No. 2.. THE SECOND program of the fifteenth annual Chamber Mu- sic Festival opened with the Mo- zart Quartet. As usual with the Budapest Quartet it was played in fine fashion. The inner voices were well projected and balanced, though occasionally during the slow movement the long phrases movement and two to the second. The first, third and fifth sections are titled as tranquillo. They were well named. These were offset by the second and fourth sections,, brioso .and giocoso. Due to the polyphonic similarity in texture of the first, third and fifth sections the work might be considered as one continuous movement. The work was interesting primarily due to th-,-fact it was new, but it might have been more successful had the third section-the middle-been of a different nature than the outer parts. The Beethoven Quartet is the second of the three Rasomovsky quartets and is a real gem. The .