PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY. APRIL 29. 1959 PAGE F0U1~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY .LJLAJANk7".CXJL# tXX AVJLAJ f O, it NATIONAL PRESS WEEK: Newspapers Have Responsibility For Accuracy, Truth Latest Report From Behind The Iron Collar By PAT ROELOFS Associate City Editor DURING THIS National Newspaper Week, members of the fourth estate are reminded of the two main problems of the press: free- dom from coercion of the truth, and respon-' sibility to print the truth accurately. The two areas are inseparable. A newspaper has a responsibility to readers to print every item that is of interest to any segment of its reading audience. Included in this responsibil- ity is the need for a newspaper not to protect any powerful interest because it says or does something that may be detrimental to another group in society. This responsibility becomes especially impor- tant in' a campus community because every group on campus has the right to know what every other group on campus is doing - the campus community has a right to ask why cer- tain pursuits by campus groups are being fol- lowed. ORGANIZATIONS have a duty to the rest of the campus to cooperate with its university newspaper in divulging facts about its acti- vities-the truth may not be coerced whether honest or dishonest. Equally important in the "print the truth" category is the newspaper's choice of what non-local stories should be included in the newspaper. Obviously no newspaper can carry every news story written. A choice must be made. The popular choice has been to give generous coverage to murders, thefts, and sometimes absurd statements made by a person with an established reputation in, the world of diplomacy. All of this has fre- quently been at the expense of needed detailed coverage of important diplomatic meetings, Senate committee meetings, national church group meetings or academic meetings!. The publisher's choice in this matter should be directed by a need to print important truth and not by the readers' questionable need to learn the ugly details of the most recent mur- der. IN EFFECT, the newspaper must direct the reading tastes of its public-this seems ulti- mately to fit into the categorf of "responsibil- ity." A newspaper should not be afraid to print editorially unpopular ideas if they are well thought out. The press is a vulnerable creature when conformity campaigns gain support. If a reporter or editorial writer knows that prices in a certain area are higher than they need to be, he should be free to print what he knows (stressing accuracy of facts) and to make sup- portable conclusions. The fact that advertisers may cease support- ing financially the newspaper should, ideally, not cause a publisher to hesitate from publish- ing truth-even though critical of someo The press needs to remain free from coerc of truth by advertisers as well as organizati al interest groups, or we will have to f about the "freedom of the press" slo proudly announce to the world. THE PRESS, in return for its fre duty to its reading public. T. accuracy, accuracy in facts, accur ures, accuracy in typography, accura judgment, accuracy and logic in Readers can help newspapers to serv portant function of printing news by cooperating in giving all facts, holding some, by contacting their lo to inform them of facts, and by pi through letters columns their different i tations of facts. Responsibilities of truth and accurac difficult ones for any newspaper to mee an age of conformity. Freedom of the press c not survive unless newspapers fight to perfo both despite pressures from all directions. E . /,ld. a (pABiltft ; , t"' ° " x HOOVERCo , JOO AT THE ORPHEUM: Superior Camera Art Beauty of 'Ugetsu' TUGETSU" is a very unusual motion picture mixing fantasy and reality, based on a Japanese legend of the late 16th Century. The plot is secondary to the theme and the camera is superior to both. Seldom are scenes as well presented. Only a few moments are in bright daylight; for the most part, different shades of grey enhance the feeling of non-existence. But it is sheer beauty. A boat scene has the vessel gliding over peaceful water and through thin haze; pastoral scenes centering on house or tree seem as part of tapestry. The picture, as such, seems almost supplementary. Taking place when Japan was being torn asunder by warring lords, it follows two DAILY OFFICIAL P l' country brothers who leave their wives to go to the city. One wants respect, the other wealth. The former tries by fighting as a sa- murai, the latter by profiteering with his pottery. THE soldier's wife is raped by some soldiers of the invading army and becomes a geisha girl where she. is found by her soon wartime successful husband. Still in love, they are reconciled and return to their home. The "warrior" is reality. The portrayed by the pot- married to a rich o discover she is a unishment for such comes via the death ough she appears to when he returns TODAY AND TOMORROW *y, false love, are all eing opposed by by spiritual law as perstition. The two o peace until they homes where peace rned since the in- ne also. e is found in many d it does not make tand out scriptwise. e of dramatics with and general ravag- picture remains, scenes tied together n individual. is skillful in that end into the scene, e actor stands out. ;eautiful background musical instrument adding even more r to the movie. as a whole is not is the photography. -Harry Strauss ons open interested in re- cartooning for The contact the Editor- r in his Student s Bldg. office today and 5 p.m. CINEMA GUILD: French Film 'Stimulates' (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is a reprint of a review that appeared in The Daily Last September when "Crime and Punishment" previously was shown by the Cinema Guild.) By WALTER RANSOM THIS FRENCH FILM version of Fyodor Dostoyevsky's famous novel, 'Crime and Punishment,' is one of the best foreign films avail- able to American audiences. It features Pierre Blancher as the pathetic student-murderer and Harry Bauer as the magistrate of police. Both these men give out- standing performances. In fact, the entire cast is unusually com- petent. On the whole the picture is very well worked out dramatically. There are a few places, however, where the scene changes so rapid- ly that the viewer may be slightly confused, but these lapses are not serious. The setting of Dostoyevsky's no- vel is czarist Russia. The use of scenery and the excellent photo- graphy conveys nicely the atmos- phere of cold poverty in which the people eke out a useless existence. .This production is an excellent example of what can be done with simple, almost crude scenery and a direct approach to a really fine plot. There are no blaring trum- pets and no magnificent spectacles here, but rather an honest, straightforward, and good motion picture. This is not the kind of movie at which one is likely to relax very much. The necessity of keeping up with the English subtitles as well as the profoundness of Dostoyev- sky's philosophy makes it more a picture for stimulation than for relaxation. By WALTER LIPPMANN ON SUNDAY at Bandung Premier Chou En- lai proposed that "China and the United States should sit down and enter into negotia- tions to settle the question of rela'xing and eli- minating the tension in the Taiwan (Formosa) area. However, this should nokin the slightest degree affect the just demand of the Chinese \ people to exercise their sovereign rights in liberating Taiwan." This statement may be read in the light of what Secretary Dulles said in his press confer- ence on March 15: "If there were a renuncia- tion of the use of force, that would meet the immediate requirements of the situation, and there would be no necessity that I can see for anybody, either on the Republic of China's side, or the Communist side, to renounce what they might call their legal pretentions, their legal claims." These two statements of positions are so close together that there may be no difference between them. FIVE WEEKS have elapsed between the Dulles statement and Chou's statement. It is rea- sonable to suppose that in that interval there was very considerable diplomatic activity in which, presumably, London and Moscow, New Delhi and Karachi, had a hand. The renunciation of force without renouncing claims was first proposed publicly by Sir An- thony Eden on March 8 in a statement to the House of Commons. As a matter of fact, Secre- tary Dulles's statement was in reply to a ques- tion as to whether he agreed with Sir Anthony Eden. Presumably, Secretary Dulles made his state- nent in order to give Great Britain and the other governments, which have been playing a role of intermediary, a proposal to work with in Peiping. And presumably also, the mediators had achieved their first success in Peiping some, time before the Bandung conference met. For the Chinese Ambassador in Washington, Dr. Koo, spoke out the night before the Bandung conference met and made an elaborate re- jection of any kind of modus vivendi. Sixty-Fifth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Eugene Hartwig..................... Managing Editoy Dorothy Myers....... ..............city Editor Jon Sobeloff.......................Editorial Director Pat Roelofs......................Associate City Editor Becky Conrad.................. Associate Editor Nan Swinehart...................Associate Editor Dave Livingston....-.....................Sports Editor Hlanley Gurwin ..,......Associate Sports Editor. Warren Wertheimer.... .... Associate Sports Editor Roz Shlimovitz......... ............ Women's Editor Janet Smith..............Associate Women's Editor John irtzel. .........Chief Photographer Business Staff Lois Pollak .... .. . ........ ...Business Manager Phil Brunskill .....Associate Business Manager Bill Wise.. .................. ..Advertising Manager Mary Jean Monkoski........ ......Finance Manager re ephone NO 23241 The government of Formosa must have known what was in the wind. And if we guess a little more, we may guess that Chou's ac- ceptance of the formula, rather than the build- up of Red Chinese air power on the coast, was what took Secretary Dulles - down to see the President in Augusta just as Admiral Radford was cancelling his trip to Europe in order to rush off to Formosa . . . Or is it sheer coin- cidence that these pieces in the jigsaw puzzle fit together? AS A MATTER of fact, the main novelty of Chou's statement at Bandung was that he made it publicly. For in spite of the Communist propaganda, diplomatic contact with Chou has not been broken since the Hammarskjold mis- sion. The choice of the Bandung conference as the place to make public Chou's acceptance of the formula is a most favorable development. For it means that under Eden's leadership there has been found a formula which is acceptable to Peiping and to Washington, and has the ap- proval of the uncommitted nations of Asia and of Africa. The Bandung conference was, of course, over- whelmingly opposed to a war by Chiang, backed by the United States, to overthrow the Red re- gime. But it was no less opposed to Red China's "liberation" of Formosa by force. What it wanted was what first Eden, then Dulles, and finally Chou were able to propose: an arrange- ment which would avoid a war that might en- gulf the greater part of Asia. IF THE State Department knows what it is doing, and if the makers of our policy can manage to collect themselves in one place long enough to act with deliberation, Chou's ac- ceptance of the Eden formula in the presence of the Bandung conference is, at a minimum, a public commitment not to use force in the Formosa Straits until the diplomatic exchanges which have already begun have been carried further. Let us hope that the State Department will not go on fumbling as it did on Saturday morn- ing after Chou's first statement. Let us hope that the department will not turn what can be a diplomatic success into a diplomatic de- feat. Chou took five weeks to make his reply to the Dulles statement of March 15. There is no reason why with the President in Gettysburg and the Secretary of State on an island in up- per New York, the State Department needed to form an opinion and to express it publicly a few hours after Chou's statement was received. What do these people think they are doing? Trying to make a deadline for the next edition of the newspapers or conducting the foreign policy of the United States? NOR IS IT necessary, or desirable and wise to hump to the conclusion that the next steps should be concessions by Peiping in order that we make then agree to participate in a formal conference. The last thing we ought to want now is a formal conference. There is no hope in a formal conference. For at a formal conference there would arise, like a swarm of angry hornets, issues that are really seripus only if the negotiations have to be done in public. Who, for example, shall attend the confer- ence? Chiang says he will not attend it, and we (continued from Page 2) Department of Astronomy. Visitors' Night. Fri., April 29, 8:00 p.m., Room 2003 Angell Hall. Dr. Freeman D. Mil- ler will speak on "Meteor Craters." Fol- lowing the iliustrated talk the observa- tory on the fifth floor of Angell Hall will be open until 10:00 p.m. for ob- servations of the Moon and Jupiter. Children welcomed, but must be ac- companied by adults. Academic Notices Doctoral Preliminary Examinations for Students in Education will be held May 26, 27, and 28. Students who anticipate taking these examinations must file their names with the Chairman of Ad- visers to Graduate Students, 4019 Uni- versity High School, not later than May 1. Seminar in Mathematical Statistics, Thurs., April 28, in Room 3010 A.H. Miss Irene Hess will conclude her dis- cussion of Chapter Eleven, Cochran's Sampling Techniques. Seminar in Applied Mathematics will meet Thurs., April 28 at 4:00 p.m. In Room 247 west Engineering. John Cris- pin of WRRC will speak on "The Radar Cross-Section of an Infinite Cone." Doctoral Examination for Thair Lee Higgins, Chemistry; thesis: "A Ther- mochiemical Study of the NH3.nHF-HF and NaF-nHF-HF Systems," Thurs., April 28, 3003 Chemistry Bldg., at 3:00 p.m. Chairman, E. F. Westrum, Jr. 402 Interdisciplinary Seminar on the Application of Mathematics to social Science will meet Thurs., April 28, Room 3401 Mason Hall from 4:00-5:30 p.m. R. Hefner will speak on "A Multi- dimensional Model for Matching Be- havior." Department Colloquium in Chemistry. Thurs., April 28 at 7:30 p.m. in Room 1300 Chemistry. Orville L. McCurdy will speak on "Synthesis of Alstoniline Hy- drochloride and Related Compounds." Sheldon Shore will speak on "Some Chemical Aspects of the Diammoniate of Diborane." Geometry Seminar will meet Thurs., April 28, at 7:00 p.m. In 3001 AH. Note change of day. Prof. G. Y. Rainich will speak on "Logic and Geometry." Special Botany-Zoology Seminar. Dr. G. Ledyard Stebbins, University of Cali- fornia, will speak on "New Methods in the Study of Evolution" in Room 1139 Natural Science, Thurs., April 28, 7:30 p.m. Refreshments. Department of Electrical Engineering Colloquium. Fri., April 29. Dr. Louis J. Cutrona, Willow Run Research Center, will speak on, "A Wide-Band Integra- tor and Cross Correlator." Coffee-4:00 p.m., Room 2500 E.E. Talk-4:30 p.m., Room 2084 E.E. Open to public. Logic seminar will meet Fri., April 29 at 4:00 p.m. in 3010 Angell Hall. Mr. Addison will speak on "Definability and Quantifier Hierarchies." Astronomical Colloquium. Fri., April 29, 4:15 p.m., the Observatory. Edward A. Spiegel will speak on "Vitenses The- ory of the Hydrogen Convection Zone of the Sun." Doctoral Examination for Fred Wil- bur Lott, Jr., Mathematics; thesis: "The Use of a Certain Linear Order Statistic, Related to the Mean Difference, as an Unbiased Estimte of the Standard De- viation in Finite and Infinite Popula- tions," Fri., April 29, East Council Room, Rackham Bldg., at 3:15 P.M Chairman, P. S. Dwyer. Doctoral Examination for Richard Henry Boll, Chemical Engineering; the- sis: "A Rapid Technique for Determin- ing Specific Surface in Liquid-Liquid Sprays," Fri., April 29, 3201 East Engi- neering Vdg., at 1:00 p.m. Chairman, C. M. Sliepcevich. Biological Chemistry Seminar. "Some Problems on Vitamin D and the Mech- anism of Calcification," under the di- rection of Dr. A. A. Christman, ,Room 319, West Medical Building, Sat., Apr. 30, 10:00 a.m. Concerts Student Recital. Frances Horne, pian- ist, works by Bach, Debussy, and Brahms, at 8:30 p.m. Thurs., April 28, in Rackham Assembly Hall, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Music degree. Miss Horne is a pupil of Joseph Brinkman. Open to the public. Carillon Recital 7:15 p.m. Thurs., April 28, by Percival Price, University Caril- lonneur. Compositions by Scarlatti, Price, Mozart; German folk songs, and Old German pilgrims, song. Lincoln University Concert Choir, 0. Anderson Fuller, Conductor, will per- form at 11:00 a.m., Fri,, April 29, in Lydia Mendeissohn Theater, for a School of Music student assembly. Works by Williams, Paladilhe, Gretch- aninoff, Kalinnikoff, Tchaikovsky, Har- ris, Brahms, Boito, and a group of spir- ituals and folk songs. Students from other units of the University #re in- vited. Student Recital. Priscilla Bickford, so. prano;~ 8:30 p.m. Fri., April 29, Auditor- ium A, Angell Hall; in partial fulfill. ment of the requirements for the Bach- elor of Music degree. Works by Mozart, Vivaldi, Rosa, Veracin i, Reger, Mahler, Marx, Strauss, Massenet, Graham Peel, and Richard' Hageman. Open to the public. Miss Bickfordl studies voice with Chase Baromeo. Events Today Christian Science Organization Testi- nonial Meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thurs., Up- per Room, Lane Hall. International Center Tea. Thurs., 4:30- 6:00 p.m. Rackham Building. Congregational-Disciples Guild. Thurs. April 28, 5:00-5:30 p.m., Mid-week Medi. tation in Douglas Chapel.- VEA RSON:- Duck Frustration 4eads to Amendment TON-Just how Sen- hn Bricker of Ohio hap- troduce his famous con- amendment limiting i-making powers of the has now become clear. ginal cause of it all was Editorials printed in The Mich- igan Daily are written by mem- bers of The Daily staff and rep. resent the views of the writer only. This must be noted in all reprints. JANE HOWARD NIGHT EDITOR Its . able e in flamboya prominent figures in the Pentagon are saying ir iousness. If retreat from Quemo, Matsu is appeasement and 'un- righteous," what is the alterna- tive? To defend, against the opin- ion of Asia and the advice of our allies, a decrepit regime in two ob- scure and ' worthless islands to which we have no claim; to em- bark, if the Reds attack us there, on what is sure to be a major war and may well become the catas- trophe of a world war. Is this righteousness? Is this the cause for which we are to assume that God will be on our side? "For frantic boast and foolish word Thy mercy on thy people, Lord!" -William B. Willcox icker Amendment, which the Senate for several debate last year and will gain this year, was born "enator's avid passion, for ooting and his vehement for federal game wardens slice the plush duck marshes shed by his friends along ores of Lake Erie. .iese have been developed at a of around $100,000 per marsh, a id Sen. Bricker just sees red when, after all this investment, his friends from Cleveland and Toledo can't enjoy their shooting without interference from federal game wardens. HOWEVER, game wardens oper- ate under a treaty-in this case, the Migratory Bird Treaty between the United States and Canada. And this, it develops, is what got the Senator fighting mad against the treaty-making powers of the President and tied up the Senate in so many weeks of de- bate. For, under the Constitution as written by the founding fathers, a treaty supersedes any state law; thus the treaty on migratory birds supersedes any law of duck-shoot- ing passed by the state of Ohio. Sen. Bricker used to be Governor of Ohio, and feels that his state has some rights regarding ducks; also that his business friends have a right to shoot ducks-even if a little bait is found in the vicinity -after they spent over $100,000 to fix duck marshes. Therefore, he wants to set aside the treaty-making powers of the President. His amendment would permit each of the 48 different states to have 48 different laws on duck-shooting. Thus, near Toledo where Sen. Bricker, likes to sit be- hind a duck blind in knee boots and leather jacket, state law might permit him to entice ducks within gunshot with bait, while in Michi- gan a few miles away, bait might be vetoed-all according to how the duck-shooting lobbies persu- aded state legislatures to vote. OF LATE, Sen. Bricker has been having a hard time. The law, and the judges, and the game war- dens have been going against him. One of his friends, Maurice Koch- er of Toledo, was just given one of the stiffest penalties in duck- shooting history by U.S. Judge Ralph W. Freeman-a $500 fine and six months suspended sen- tence, plus probation for two years. Sen. Bricker doesn't like this. That's one reason why he sum- moned John L. Farley, head of the Fish and Wildlife Division of the Interior Department, to his office and bawled him out the oth- er day. Previously Sen. Bricker had suc- ceeded in getting the civil servant who headed the Wildlife Division, Albert Day, fired. But now he feels that the new Republican appoin- tee, Farley, isn't doing any better. Or rather, that he's just as strict as the Democratic holdover. Meanwhile, Fred Jacobson, the young game warden who is so re- lentless in arresting. Sen. Bricker's AT U. OF MINNESOTA: Why Not Gamble for Football Seats? (EDITOR'S NOTE: The problem of seating for students in college foot- ball stadiums comes up for annual de- bate on most college campuses, in- cluding the University of Michigan. At the University of Minnesota, a new scheme is here discussed in the Minnesota daily newspaper.) SEATING at athletic events is a topic that always produces a tnrrn$-of ori.4nn ctri.e. A .ni, eliminate many of the causes for present ticket irregularities, for example, the plan: (1) Allows no chance for cleri- cal errors in classification. (2) Provides no temptation for students to falsify fee statements. (3) Stops inequities sometimes present in classification. (Now Memorial stadium, they find they are assigned to poorer seats as up- perclassmen than they had before. The reason for this, according to the dean of admissions and rec- ords, is that more than half of all University students are in the ad- vanced levels, and the number is getting greater each year.