PAGE FOUR. THE MICHIGAN DALLY FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1955 PAGE FOUR THE MICHiGAN DAILY FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1955 SURPRISE TURNOUTS: Is 'Apathy' Still Word For 'U' Students? "What Do You Hear?" T oHEAR self-styled campus sages talk these days apathy has swept the University un- dergraduate populace. Ideas are supposedly at a minimum and conformity is the by-word of student thinking. Local coffee shops in the win- ter and the Diagonal and arboretum in the summer are loaded with students while a hand- ful struggle to perpetuate the University's var- ious student organizations. The lack of stu- dent ambition and interest inherent in such a situation has been criticized at length by vari- ous campus leaders during the past few years. Past criticism has been valid. For several consecutive elections Student Legislature had less than 50 per cent more people running for office than there were positions available. Dur- ing the past two years some leading campus groups have been forced to appoint juniors to senior positions - because not enough seniors still remained in the activity. One top campus organization held an open house last fall for prospective members and only one person at- tended. Another group fared little better with four. This shows apathy, with little room for dis- sent. HOWEVER, BEGINNING last December a slight, shift of canpus interest was evident and after viewing two' occurances during the past week one might think students have sud- denly forgotten they are supposed to be apa- thetic. In December inspired by publicity from the four housing groups, students took an interest for the first time in several years in student government. Almost 7,000 turned out to back the new Student Government Council by a hefty 3%12 to one margin. The SGC vote temporarily turned some of the critics optimistic for the future. The op- timism didn't last long when there was only mediocre student support at the SGC election in March. AFTER THIS week's happenings optimism reigns again and this time its foundation has increased solidity. Expecting a turnout of- around 40 people last Wednesday for its first Administrative Wing tryout meeting, Student Government Council was overwhelmed by over 100 interested students. In fact Wing Coordi- nator Sandy Hoffman, hopefully brought 100 petitions to the Wing meeting and was stun- ned when she ran out of petitions long before the meeting ended. Tuesday the Daily ran a request for cartoon- ists and movies, art, and drama reviewers. Ac- tually expecting a few scattered people, the Daily Editorial Director was flooded with over 40 applications. There is at least a spark of student enthu- siasm left at the University. Last week's events may be isolated cases but the existing spark is well worth fanning next fall. With a little push on the part of people already enthusi- astic and ambitious apathy might become a thing of, the past. --Dave Baad - -. -.. _ N-_ .-C LETTERS TO THE EDITOR AT THE MICHIGAN: 'Jungle' Part Fact, Part Faked "THIS SCHOOL is the garbage can of the educational sys- tem," says Louis Calhern, an old, apathetic schoolteacher. "Did you ever try to fight thir- ty-five guys at one time?" asks a oung hoodlum named West. And Glenn Ford, the new teach- er, gets the picture: he has the job of trying to teach English to a room full of juvenile delinquents. Well, he gives it a try and no end of Bad Things happen to him in the process: he and another teacher get rather badly mauled in an alley, poison pen letters get sent to his pregnant wife, Anne Fran- cis, which almost causes her to have a miscarriage, and finally he has to disarm the knife-wielding West in a classroom duel. BUT HE DOES manage to win the respect of his students, by gaining the friendship of their leader, Sidney Poitier, and show- ing a cartoon about Jack and the Beanstalk to illustrate the mean- ing of racial equality. "Blackboard Jungle" is an odd hotch-potch of starkly real fact and hashed-up Hollywoodism. It alternates between the true sav- agery ofhthe class ganging up on a disliked teacher (the silent treatment, furtive and outright re- bellion, etc.) and slick too-pat answers and solutions. The apa- thetic teacher gets interested, the class is all but rejuvenated, and suddenly a mob of rioting young delinquents is turned into a group of which Dale Carnegie would have been proud. Although many voices have been raised to state that the situation presented is not true, the fact is that schools such as this do exist, and a non-solutional presentation such as that of "The Wild One" would have been much better and more forceful than the weakly un- convincing ending of "Blackboard Jungle.". NONETHELESS, director Rich- ard Brooks has managed to make most of the picture hit hard enough and sincerely enough to make those of us who have known, if not identical, at least similar situations sit up with a start of recognition. In this he is aided by the realis- tic acting of the students, notably Vic Morrow and Sidney Poitier, that of Richard Kiley as the weak teacher and, oddly enough, Glenn Ford as the crusader. -Norm Hartweg Freedom of Press Not Freedom of Information F REEDOM OF THE PRESS has been dogma for so long that even newspapers are embar- rassed to explain it. Freedom of information has likewise been taken for granted as synonomous to freedom of the press. They are not synonomous. Freedom of the press is but an implementing of the real free- dom which a truly democratic society owes it- self, that of information. What should be wor- rying all of us today is not that the press' free- dom is being lost, but that the press is helping us lose our freedom of information. The press is too free. It is free to agree with its sources not to print certain information. Presidents of the United States have been known to give to reporters, along with so-called "big" stories, conditions that the stories not be printed until the president gives the word. To this the reporters agree, else they would get no information at all. The government's ex- cuse calls it advisable to release the informa- tion beforehand so that the papers will have background data when the story is broken. W HATEVER the rationale, the press becomes a party to suppressing information in this process. It has gained this excessive freedom through its great power. We don't have to wor- ry about Big Business suppressing the press. The press is Big Business. Ninety-four per cent of the nation's news- paper circulation is printed- by newspaper chains. The result is too much freedom for the press; and too much freedom for a minority is loss of freedom for the majority. In this case, it is loss of freedom of information for the public. We can see on this campus that the press does not necessarily prefer the dubious distinc- tion of "being in on things" days or weeks be- fore its readers, or keeping some information forever from its pages, but finds such a situa- tion forced upon it. T HERE ARE MANY on the campus who, in attempting to keep news out of The Daily, offer off-the-record data in return for its not printing any, or at least not complete infor- mation., The newspaper is left with the choice of ei- ther refusing the information it is most unlike- ly to obtain elsewhere, or becoming a party to suppressing freedom of information. The press can not really do much about this. Violation of an agreement means no more "off- the-record" information, which always come ,ith admittedly excellent reasons for its being "off-the-record. Only the sources themselves can correct the situation. They should adopt the rule, "Let others know about yourself what you would know of them." Impractical? Sometimes, but only that. --Jim Dygert Common Sense . .. To the Editor: DO THE two editorials on For- mosa in Tuesday's Daily con- tribute to common sense? Surely this not asking too much. Jim Dygert asks an important question-does the United States want to sit down and talk. He sees us missing a fine propaganda point, for he is pretty sure that China doesn't. Why? Did China refuse to talk about Korea at Py- ongyang? Was it China who abstained from!the Geneva talks last year? And have we forgotten that the only time China was permitted to appear before the UN Security Council was on her own request, in 1950, to discuss Formosa? How do we know that China "wants no part of a peaceful, solution" when we do not bother to find out? Should we propose to talk peace only when "there need not be too much worry" that anyone will ac- cept our invitation? Jim Dygert, to his credit, sees that Chiang "wants no part of a peaceful solution." If the United States even considers the possibil- ity of peace, how can it be ad- vised (much less militarily allied) with one who denies it from the start? Isn't this a basic policy mat- ter? These delicate questions do not trouble William Brumm. It is dif- ficult to discuss his editorial point by point; one reads that he is "proud to be an American" with "courage and honor" left in his "American blood." He comes com- plete with battlecries ("Not one cent for tribute . . ." etc.), which if heeded will "break the back" of "vicious cutthroats, and "pirates of atheistic, communistic totali- tarianism." Is this sense about Formosa? For a clarif4cation of his facts, (including his geography concern- ing Quemoy, Detroit and other places), I suggest he read the "Hearings before the Committee on Armed Services and Foreign Re- lations, U.S. Senate 1951 on "Mili- tary Situation in the Far East," page 1671 and the following pages. It is made clear that a) "For- mosa, politically, economically,, and geographically is part of Chi- na. Politically and militarily it is a strict Chinese responsibility," b) "Formosa has no special mili- tary significance" and c) "Seek- ing United States bases in For- mosa, sending in troops, supplying Original Student Drama Sparked by Fine Actors A TOP-NOTCH student production was given last night as the speech department presented "The Clugstone Inheritance," an original student play. Author James Harvey has, on the whole, written a good play, though marred in spots by long, undramatic monologues. In the main, it is a study of characters; while not long on plot, there are many ingenious twists and much humor so a continual in- terest in the drama remains. The story concerns the five Clugstone children, gathered together to hear the will of their father. Just who is to get the old house and arms . . . would involve the Uni- ted States in a long-term venture producing at best a new era of bristling stalemate, and at worst involvement in open warfare." This was the position taken in U.S. State Department papers, declass- ified and published at the Mac- Arthur hearings in 1951. I think it is wise counsel. --Bill Livant * * * Tiring Cry . .. To the Editor: R E: William Brumm's editorial advocating war with China for the greater glory of the U.S., I think the battle cry is too long. By the time our boys get done yell- ing "not one cent for tribute, nor one square inch for appeasement," they'll be so tired out they won't be able to fight. -Judy Gregory * * * Three Cheers . . To the Editor: HIP, hip, hooray! for William Brumm's editorial on Ameri- can courage and the glory of get- ting into a war in the Pacific. However, I feel he left out a few pertinent phrases and would like to contribute the following: "Fifty-four forty or fight." "Don't shoot until you see the whites of their eyes." "Praise the Lord and pass the ammunition." "Remember the Maine." "Give me. liberty or give me death." "No taxation without represen- tation." Keep up the good- work, Mr. Brumm. -Joan Bryan * * * Different Shades .. . To the Editor: ,FUNNY Mr. Brumm but my "American" blood does not show the same shades of red, white and blue that yours does. I guess that mine must be infested with the "selfish cancer" of the mind. Words such as honor, glory, and courage are fine for your slogans and battle cries but not for a solution to the Formosan crisis. No Mr. Brumm you're not an or- dinary warmonger, you just be- lieve that the cheapest way to peace is via physical conflict- sticking to the 'good ole American way,' of course. -Joyce Greenbaum the newspaper chain settles on two: Josie and Pete. The will states that the inheritor shall be chosen by the lawyer. The rest of the play draws out the characters, mainly the two protagonists as they fight each other and for the inheritance. The lawyer's choice comes in the sec- ond act but the will is voided and the inheritance changes hands for a time. WHAT FURNISHESthe body of the play is the relationship among the heirs. When the play- wright has Josie and Pete argu- ing, the dialogue is very good but when a character talks to another, somewhat pointlessly, about life as he sees it, the scene begins to slip. This is especially notable by the third act. But Harvey has some of the best actors of the speech depart- ment in his play. Gwen Arner is excellent as the bewildered Josie, searching for something to grab onto in her middle-age. Valerie Schor stands out as the boisterous eldest sister, and Marian Mercer provides some hilarious moments when she returns a little high from a party in the second act. Donald Streat has just the right histrionics for the theatrics of the lawyer and Dale Stevenson handles the difficult role of the pompous, selfish Pete well. Also effective in their roles are Susan Goldberg, John Olson, Michael Gregoric and Rol Jones. Prof. Hugh Norton's direction was well-paced in a very hand- some, old-fashioned living room set. Superior make-up really gave the actors a middle-aged look. While the play has its structur- al faults, especially in the charac- terizations of the men, "The Clug- stone Inheritance" is certainly one of the best of the student plays of recent years. --Harry Strauss SINCE I WROTE (of certain atrocious Japanese methods of making war) we have cooked a million or so Japs in napalm, which is a form of gasoline, and left some other thousands mere man-shaped carbon stains on ra- dioactive sidewalks." --Philip Wylie in new footnotes to "Generation of Vipers" DAILY OFFICIAL 1BULLE TIN DREW PEARSON: Burma's U Nu Quizzes Chou on Prisoners (Continued from Page 2) Special Education-Home bound chil- dren. Kinde, Michigan (North Huron Rural Agricultural Schools) - Teacher Needs: Industrial Arts; English; Social Science. For additional information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Ad- ministration Building, NO 3-1511, Ext. 489. PERSONNEL INTERVIEWS: The representatives from the follow- ing will be at the Engrg. School: Mon., May 2 Wabash Railroad, Montpelier Div., Montpelier, Ohio-B.S. in Civil Engrg. for Railroad Maintenance Engrg. Mon. & Tues., May 2 & 3 Sunbeam Corp., Chicago, 111.-BS. In Aero., Civil, Elect., Ind., Mech, and Chem. E. and Engrg. Mech. for Summer work for Jrs., and Regular work in Pro- duction Control, Production Supervi sion. Tues, May 3 Chicago Screw Co., Bellwood,Ill.-B.S. & M.S. in Mech. E. for Management Triining Program, For appointments contact the Engrg. Placement Office, ext. 2182, 347 W, Engrg. Representatives from the following will be at the Bureau of Appointments: Shell Oil Co., Detroit Div., Detroit, Mich.-men with a minimum of 12 hrs. in Econ. or Acctg. for Accounting, men with any degree technical (engra., chem., etc.) or non-technical (bus.ad. or LS&A), for Sales, Advertising and Promotion. Tues., May 3 Massachusetts Mutual Life lusurang Co., Detroit, Mich.-men for Sales. For appointments contact the Bu- reau of Appointments, 3528 Admin Bldg., Ext. 371 PERSONNEL REQUESTS: Navy Dept., Ind. Mgr., Ninth Naval Dist., Chicago, 111.-offers positions in the field of Electronics for Electronic Engrs. Federal Mogul, Inc., Ann Arbor. Mich., is looking for a girl to work part time in the library. Would be helpful if she could type and had a car. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hdq. New York, N.Y., needs two men to work as Publishers Representatives at colleges, universities and High Schools in as- signed areas. A representative from the company will be in Detroit to interview during the 1st and 2nd weeks in May. City of Detroit, Mich., Dept. of Polie, is conducting an examination for P- licewomen Saturday, May 8, 1955. Re- quirements: 22 to 30 yrs., completion of at least three years of college with majors in the field of social science and some work done in a field in which public contacts are made, Ordnance Corps., Ballistic Research Lab., Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md., of fers employment to graduating stu- dents with degrees in Physics, Chem- istry, Math., Engrg. Opportunities exst for scientists possessing a doctorate as well as those having master's and bach- elor's degrees. For further information contact the Bureau of Appointments, Ext. 371, 3528 Admin. Bldg. Lectures The Henry Russel Lecture will be de- livered by Dean George Granger Brown, Wed., May 4, at 4:15 p.m., in the Am- phitheater of the Rackham Building. 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 illustrated 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 Department of Electrical Engineering Colloquium. Fri., April 29. Dr. Louis J. Cutrona, Willow Run Research Center. will speakon, "AWde-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 "Vitense's 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 a# Unbiased Estimate 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 Bldg., at 1:00 p.m. Chairman, I I INTERPRETING THE NEWS By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst O NE OF THE great troubles of communica- tions between governments these days, one that President Eisenhower has been trying to get around in his correspondence with Marshal Zhukov of Russia, is that so much of it is at- tempted through public, non-official channels. The other day when Chou En-lai wanted to get across an idea to the United States he used a public forum in Bandung and depended upon newspaper dispatches to carry the message. It was typical of the way in which diplomats now use the oblique method of approach. The problem -of non-recognition, of course, compli- cated the Chou case. But the business of issuing public policy statements and replying to them the same way 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 Editor 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 Hanley Gurwin................Associate Sports Editor Warren Wertheimer............Associate Sports Editor Ros Shlimovitz...................Women's Editor Janet Smith................Associate Women's Editor John Hirtzel.......................Chief Photographer Business Staff Lois Pollak..........................Business Managg Phil Brunakill..........Associate Business Manager Bill Wise. ..... ...............Advertising Manager Mary Jean Monkoski................Finance Manager Telephone NO 23241 produces friction which sometimes even seems to transcend the important issues themselves. W HEN CHOU spoke out in public he put the State Department on the spot to get in its licks while his statement was still fresh. The department replied too hurriedly with a list of prerequisites for negotiations which virtually amounted to refusal. Then Chou felt his own words needed some interpretation, and came up with his removal of Formosa's future from the field of things that could be negotiated. It meant that if he talked about Formosa at all it would only be on the terms of its surrender. But it also meant there were things to talk about without involv- ing Chiang Kai-shek. Secretary Dulles put the business back on the track with a statement that bilateral negotia- tions with the Reds might be possible on issues not directly connected with the future of the Chinese Nationalists. NOW IT IS revealed that the President and Zhukov have exchanged views, and Eisen- hower thinks it may have done some good. But he's not going to publish the letters unless Zhu- kov wants to, That leaves the field open for further com- munications in a delicate situation where noth- ing more than exploration can take place and neither man is in a position to make commit- ments. Addressing each other as friends can be accomplished without weighing every word for its effect on others than the addresses. If Chou really has any desire to lessen ten- sions in Asia-which is certainly open to doubt --and if he had possessed normal means of communication, he could have followed a much more sensible course. He could have advised the United States in advance of what he intended to say, giving time for a considered reply and enhancing the possibilities that something would come of it. The Russians may have had something re- WASHINGTON-American pri- soners-Premier U Nu of Bur- ma had some private talks with Chinese Premier Chou En-lai at Bandung about release of the 15 American fliers held in Red China. Nu brought up the subject at the secret request of Secretary Dulles. Chou made no promises, in fact denounced the State Department for refusing to permit American relatives to visit the prisoners as he has invited them to do. This columnist still believes Red China will turn the American fliers loose but not until it sees a good chance to make propaganda. WAR CLOUDS - Secretary of Defense Wilson has secretly increased the ammunition stock- pile goal. He's taking no chances on another ammunition shortage in case of war . . . The Kremlin DISPLACED PERSON: Activities Man Makes Way-for Youth bosses have built themselves half a dozen secrets underground air- raid shelters several miles outside Moscow. No plans have been made, however, to exacuate the popu- lace . . . Civil Defense Adminis- trator Val Peterson is looking for a cheap, two-dollar gas mask that every American can afford to keep on hand at all times in his own home. Red China is rushing work on a secret atomic-bomb installation in remote Sinkiang province. Nearly 100 Russian advisers are directing the project in order to develop cheap power to industrialize China . . . It was carefully hushed up, but an experimental atomic rock- et from the Los Alamos proving grounds misfired and almost caus- ed an incident with Mexico. Though it landed on a Juarez graveyard, it exploded in the air and no damage was done .. . Tests with mice have shown that it's 10 times more likely than prev- iously indicated that A-bomb radi- ation will produce abnormal chil- dren, TIMES HAVE changed regard- ing Joe McCarthy. It was only a short three years ago that he made the major spiel before the American Society of Newspaper Editors. Most editors then clam- ored for more news about Joe's witch-hunting. In contrast, Sigma Delta Chi was holding a business meeting to prepare its annual breakfast meet- ing for visiting April editors. Washington- big-shots were to be invited, and the list of VIP's from the Supreme Court down was call- ed off to see which member would put up the $4 necessary to invite a very important person. Finally Chairman Jim Warner called the name of Sen. Joe Mc- Carthy. There was a dead silence -followed by laughter. No one wanted to buy bacon and eggs for the once headlined Senator from (EDITOR'S NOTE: Joel Berger, a senior in the College of Literature, Science and the Arts, was a night edi- tor for The Daily this year. Since appointments last week, he is . . as he says.) By JOEL BERGER Spring's here. You relax. You lean back in your chair and take another drag on the cigaret, then mash it out in the steadily-filling- up ashtray, "Well, I've had it," you think. Three years in an activity and now you're through, just marking time until finals and graduation. At first, a week ago when you finished up your service to the or- ganization, you were quite happy to be through. But by now you're chafing at the bit. It'd be kind of nice to get back to work in your old activity, which you cussed out when you were with it. Now it boat-they never went out for any activity. Their college life has con- sisted of studying, an occasional Saturday night date, card games and bull sessions. Working on an activity, you have managed to squeeze all these into your daily life, but at the same time accomplished something you could later look back on with pride. * * * SOMETHING HAS come from your college life besides the regu- lar, routine grind of classes. Even if it's only an occasional 8 o'clock bolt allowing you to sleep in after staying up until 2:30 or 3 in the morning after sweating out publi- cation of a Daily, you remember it later. And you remember those occasional bull sessions with other fellow workers in your organiza- Regardless of what it was, you spent time with the organization, helped nourish it and with luck, watched it grow. And it's some- thing you're proud of. So now all you've got left are the memories. Sure, at times you were pressured , over a project which was giving you a tough time. And there were the times when you mentally (and verbally) cussed out your superior in the organization. It always seemed you were being picked on. It was enough to make you feel like a paranoid. But now you are a free man-no more or- ganization to worry about. * * * SO LET THE guys and girls who came on after you take over the organization. You've had your fling, and now it's their turn. Now all you can do is return to the