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May 11, 1955 - Image 4

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Michigan Daily, 1955-05-11

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PAGE FOUR

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

WEDNESDAY. MAY 11. 1955

PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY MAY 13 1~

i T.VRdr1 LUL[1;l. XTALZAA ilk 1.7 /el

F

~r tIk igan ikih
Sixty-Fifth Year
EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
UNDER AUTHORITY Or BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS
STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone No 2-3241
Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff
and represent the views of the writers only. This must be noted in all reprints.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 1955 NIGHT EDITOR: JIM DYGERT
PRO-WEST ORIENTATION:
Near East Defense System
Gradually Taking Shape
THE NUCLEUS of a Near East defense sys- Ing Afghanistan with economic and military
tern supported and encouraged by the West aid.
is gradually taking shape.
The system, which eventually will merge WITH SUCH INROADS of Russian friend-
operations with the North Atlantic Treaty Or- ship established in the country, the hope
ganization, was- initiated when Turkey and of bringing Afghanistan into the pro-West al-
Iraq signed a mutual defense pact in March liance seems dim indeed.
of this year. The Arabian situation is more promising,
Now Fadhil al-Jamali, chief of the Iraqi however. When Egypt was asked to join a pro-
delegation to the recent Bandung conference, posed Middle East Defense Organization a few
has indicated to the press that Pakistan will years ago, she was in the midst of a tense bat-
join the pact within a month and Iran will tie to expell Britain from the Suez, and flatly
sign by mid summer. refused the offer.
The Arab League leader was still in a period
THE UNITED STATES already has a similar of anti-Western feeling when Iraq defied the
alliance with Turkey, and Britain joined the League by allying with NATO-member Turkey.
Turko-Iraqi pact last month. The entry of This action brought furious outcries of protest
Pakistan and Iran will strengthen defense ties from members of the League and some observ-
with the West and create a united defense ers believed the pact pushed the Arab states
ring from the Artic Circle through Europe to into the neutralist camp with India.
neutral India.
Two weak spots remain in the system, how- HOPE FOR a Western-oriented defense or-
ever. The defense chain of countries around ganization in the Near East seemed doomed.
the Iron Curtain is broken by the absence of However, now that Egypt has accomplished
Afghanistan in the pro-West pact and the its aim in the Suez and recovered from its
hostility of the Arab states to the organization "growing pains," she may be considering en-
threatens the effectiveness of the system. try into the Turko-Iraqi pact.
Afghanistan presents a serious obstacle to Iraq opened the way for the Arab states to
closing the military defense gap between Iran join but such action will be slow in coming.
and Pakistan. It is no secret that Pakistan and After making such recent blasts against the
Afghanistan have been on the verge of open West, Egypt cannot be expected to join a pro-
hostility for years over a tribe that lives on the Western defense system immediately. She must
border between the two countries. Russia has "save face," but hope is growing.
taken advantage of this condition by supply- -Mary Ann Thomas
Confused National Polo icture
SINCE THE NEW DAWN heralded by Dr. Education and Welfare. News commentators
Thomas Francis on April 12, the nation's claim her assistants suggested to her that prep-
polio picture has become muddled and con- arations be made many months ago. Mrs. Hob-
fusing. by, so the story goes, brushed them aside say-
Orders and counter-orders, indecision and ing there would be plenty of time later.
lack of confidence have marked government .
attempts to institute a safe, effective, rapid FEDERAL PLANS that have been formed in
inoculation, program. the past several weeks should have been
Basic cause for the confusion was the gov- thought out months ago.
ernment's unpreparedness and lack- of fore- The government must have realized the pos-
sight, which are inexcusable in light of the sibility that a black market might develop-
lives at stake. why were no steps taken to ensure equitable
distribution of vaccine?
r RUE, NO ONE KNEW for certain whether Now, when the polio season is reaching its
the vaccine would work until Dr. Francis' height and children are in desperate need of
report, but there were enough encouraging protection, the government is for the first time
signs as far back as September to prompt considering buying enough vaccine to protect
preparation. those outside the program of free Foundation
The National Foundation wasn't caught nap- inoculations. Why wasn't this plan considered
ping; they had taken a nine million-dollar months ago when it could be put to effective
gamble to insure that there would be vaccine use?
on hand. Commercial pharmaceutical com- These questions should cause Mrs. Hobby
panies were turning out the vaccine at cost and considerable embarassment - they testify to
stockpiling it against the trying days to come. the government's inability to meet the con-
The government did nothing. tingencies of a situation that demanded clear
Most of the blame must rest on Oveta Culp thinking and prompt action-and didn't get it.
Hobby, secretary of the Department of Health, --Lee Marks

Its Just As I Almost Said

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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

i
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Successful PR...
To the Editor:
THURSDAY morning I had the
privilege of witnessing one of
the University's most successful
attempts at public relations. Four
of our most talented performers
went up to Saginaw High School
and entertained 1500 students and
teachers with songs, music, and
dancing from past Union Operas.
The singing of Gordon Epding
and Earl Sayer, the dancing of
Andy White, and Paul McDon-
ough's piano accompaniment of
his own music were all superb. By
the time the quartet ended their
performance with a medley of Mi-

chigan songs the audience was
"eating out of their hands." The
way those high school kids en-
thusiastically applauded "Hail to
the Victors" made this alumnus
feel very, very proud.
-George Majoros, '54E
* * *
Another Series? .. .
RE: the picture of Mrs. Aleta
Letwin on Page 6 of Thurs-
day's Daily. Was Mrs. Letwin the
fifteenth in a series of personali-
ties in the pages of The Michigan
Daily posed against the walls of
the city room of the Publications
Building?
-Bob Maitland, '55

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EXAMINATION SCHEDULE
COLLEGE OF LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND THE ARTS
HORACE H. RACKHAM SCHOOL OF GRADUATE STUDIES
COLLEGE OF ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
SCHOOL OF NATURAL RESOURCES
SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH
COLLEGE OF ENGINEERINQ
COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
SCHOOL OF EDUCATION
SCHOOL OF NURSING
SCHOOL OF MUSIC
May 28 to June 8, 1955
For courses having both lectures and recitations, the time
of class is the time of the first lecture period of the week. For
courses having recitations only, the time of class is the time of
the first recitation period. Certain courses will be ex4Tnined at
special periods as noted below the regular schedule.
Courses not included in either the regular schedule or the
special periods may use any examination period provided there
is no conflict or provided that, in case of a conflict, the conflict
is resolved by the class which conflicts with the regular schedule.
Degree candidates with a scheduled exam falling on June
6, 7 or 8 will be given an examination at an earlier date. The
following schedule designates an evening time for each such
period. The instructor may arrange an alternate time with no-
tice to the scheduling committee.

4

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WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND:

Knight Woos, Wows Labor

WASHINGTON-Governor God-
win Knight of California, Re-
publican, once a darling of Cali-
fornia big business, did an inter-
esting thing while in the East for
the Governors' Conference last
week.
He spent his time not in kow-
towing to the White House or to
various Senators or to other Gov-
ernors. He spent a good part of
his time makingfriends where the
Republicans badly need friends--
with labor. He had a breakfast, a
dinner, and a lunch with the top
labor leaders in the Capital, then
wept to Philadelphia for a meet-
ing with the labor leaders of
Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and
Delaware.
Furthermore, he wowed 'em.
* * *
REMARKED DICK GREY, head
of the Building and Construction
Trades Union: "Here's a man
that could well run for President."
While Grey has supported Re-
publicans in the past - though'
dead against Eisenhower -other
life-long Democratic labor leaders
seemed highly impressed with the
Republican Governor of Califor-
nia. Among them was Joe Mc-
Comb of the Retail Clerks Local
1360 of Camden, N.J., also Di-
rector of the combined AFL-CIO
Political League for New Jersey.
"Why can't we have some good
Republicans like this?" he re-
marked. And he fingered his ro-
sary while having his picture
taken with the Governor, hoping,
he said, that it was not just a
dream.
- * * *
FOR KNIGHT HAD DINNER
with Bill Schnitzler, Secretary-
Treasurer of the American Feder-
ation of Labor, the No. 2 man to
President George Meany. He also
breakfasted with Jim McDevitt,
head of the AFL Labor League for
Political Rights. And he drove to
Philadelphia in the car of Jim
Suffridge, Secretary of the Retail
Clerks.
Finally he had an hour's con-

ference with Dave Beck, head of
the Teamsters' Union, in the lat-
ter's shiny new office in the
Teamsters' gleaming marble Ta
Mahal built right uhder the nose
of Congress.
ONE QUESTION labor leaders
were emphatic about was that
they would not have any part of
the Republican ticket if Nixon was
on it, either as President or Vice
President. The one heart-beat sep-
arating the Vice President from
the President, they said, was too
uncertain, especially when the
President is well over sixty.
Governor Knight was surpris-
ingly frank in his views on Nixon
during the Washington luncheon.
He made it clear that some top
California political leaders share

labor's view on Nixon and that
Nixon would not control a single
vote in the California delegation
at the Republican convention in
1956.
In Philadelphia, where about
fifty labor leaders met with
Knight at the Warwick Hotel,
Governor Knight was noncommit-
tal about Nixon. But he was em-
phatic in his opposition to the
Right-to-Work Bill in California.
* * *
"IF THEY MANAGE to get the
bill on the ballot under that de-
ceptive name," he promised, "I
,will stump the state against it."
He referred to the fact that the
so-called "right-to-work" bill is
actually aimed at preventing a un-
ion shop.
(Copyright 1955, by the Bell Syndicate)

Tues.
June 7
AM

REGULAR
Wed. Wed.
June 8 June 8
AM PM

EXAM TIME
Mon. Mon.
June 6 June 6
AM PM

I,

Tues.
June 7
PM

SPECIAL PERIOD FOR
Mon. Tues. Wed.
May 30 May 31 June 1
7-10 PM 7-10 PM 7-10 PM

DEGREE CANDIDATES

Thurs.
June 2
7- 10 PM

Fri.
June 3
7- 10 PM

Sat.
June 4
7-10 PM

Each student should receive notification from his instructor
as to the time and place of his examination.
REGULAR SCHEDULE

Monday
Tuesday

(at
(at
(at
(at
(at
(at
(at
(at
(at
(at
(at
(at
(at
(at
(at

8
9
10
11
12
1
2
3
8
9
10
11
1
2
3

Monday, May 30
Wednesday, June 1
Saturday, May 28
Tuesday, May 31
Thursday, June 2
Thursday, June 2
Friday, June 3
Saturday, June 4
Monday, May 30
Wednesday, June 1
Saturday, May 28
Tuesday, May 31
Thursday, June 2
Friday, June 3
Saturday, June 4

9-12
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AT ALUMNI HALL:
Abstraction Dominates
Student Art Exhibition

.,

SPECIAL PERIODS

INTERPRETING THE NEWS:
Little Hope in Satellites

(EDITOR'S NOTE: Delegates from Soviet Rus.
sia and its seven European satellites meet in War-
saw today to set up a unified military command.
What does this move mean; What is the military
strength of these countries? How are the satellites'
people faring today under Moscowv's overlordship?).
By WILLIAM L. RYAN
AP Foreign Correspondent
FOR ALMOST A YEAR there was a glimmer
of hope in the little Moscows of Eastern
Europe.
Stalin was dead. Beria, his secret police boss,
was dead, too.. The apparatus of cold terror
seemed to be breaking down.
A new Soviet premier, Georgi Malenkov, was
seeking to buttress himself by promising the
Soviet population shoes as well as guns, ice-
boxes and television as well as tanks and war-
planes.
Whatever happens in the Soviet Union is re-
flected at once in the captive countries, and
throughout satellite Europe the reversal was on.
Farmers, under the much-advertised "new
The .Daily Staff
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
Roz Shlimovi z, .......................Women's Editor
Janet Smith ...,... ,......... Associate Women's Editor
John Hirtzei....................Chief Photographer
Business Staff
Lois Pollak.......................Business Manager

course," were freely leaving the hatred collec-
tives, a concession the governments hoped
would spur their production.
JN THE HEAVY industrial factories, there was
an indication of lessening pressure on the
workers.
The hope is fading today, and the little Mal-
enkovs-and who remain-walk in dread. They
seem to be on the short end of a struggle for
power that is a reflection of what goes on in the
Kremlin.
At the ioment, Soviet communism seems
split into two camps. On one side is the left--
or Stalinist-wing representing a hard line. On
the other is the so-called "new course" or right
wing representing a softer line. At the mo-
ment, the hard-line revolutionary Commu-
nists of the left seem to be winning, but the
issue is not finally decided..
FOR WESTERN OBSERVERS in Europe, the
satellites represent a convenient mirror for
what goes on inside the Soviet Union. The mir-
ror seems to show:
1. The whole terror apparatus constructed
over the postwar years of Stalinism in the sat-
ellites has been disrupted.
2. Political indecision at highest levels has
been induced by uncertainty over the outcome
in Moscow.
3. Agriculture, the cancer tumor of the Com-
munist world, is in a state of near anarchy.
The chaos was aggravated by the fact that
under Malenkov, brief concessions were made to
the farmers. The concessions cannot be yanked
back too suddenly. But gradually and cautious-
ly, the hard-line leadership is beginning to pull
the reins.

T HE DOMINANT TREND in the
student art exhibit at the
Alumni Memorial Hall galleries
is toward abstraction and non-ob-
j ectivity.
Some works are excellent, but
there are some that just fall fiat
on their "formal-values."
Ann Thuma's composition of
black, red and white free forms is
most impressive. Black forms
twist and writhe as though some
pristine mammal in the throes of
death. Contrasts of black and
scumbled white project the com-
position in and out of the picture
plane giving it dynamic move-
ment.
*
A STUDY OF four nudes by
William A. McIntyre is particu-
larly appealing because of use of
the palette knife to achieve inter-
esting textures. In a somber type

Little Man On Campus

By Bibler

of expressionism, McIntyre has
created a mood of contemplation
and accentuation of the intellect.
Of Florence I. Wilkins' three
works, her small, horizontally ori-
ented work is most worthy°. Un-
mitigated conflicts and tensions
make for a dynamic composition
in which texture plays an impor-
tant role. ,
Water colors of note include
D o n a 1 d Matheson's arabesque
works with their rich texture and
oriental magnificence.
* * *
GEORGE BEAUCHAMP uses
the gauche medium well to con-
struct a vertically oriented, eco-
nomical design. To mitigate the
omnipresent verticals he works in
zig-zag lines. Color is used boldly
and the artist shows command of
his medium.
Rather appealing are the wash-
es broken by exciting lines which
delineate the planes of David
Rohn's composition. Try squinting
at this picture for fuller appreci-
ation.
Most viewers will enjoy the use
of chiaroscuro in the drawing di-
vision. Among the best is James
Tucker's "Descent from the Cross"
with its subtle gradations and in-
teresting contours, It is a highly
intellectual piece of work in the
abstract idiom. The picture plane
is well filled and the form of the
background created by the con-
tours of the figures is well thought
out.
* * *
THOMAS WELTON'S PIECE of
"sculpturesque" sculpture uses in-
tersecting, spheres and cylinders
to compose a work with tactile
feeling. The swells and ebbs seem
to come from within creating a
good deal of empathy.
The crocidile of Harry Mac Cal-
lum's is iron work which shows the
functional use of the medium con-

LITERATURE,
English 1, 2
Sociology 54, 60
Psychology 31, Group A
Economics 51, 52, 53, 54
Chemistry 4, 8, 23, 1, 3, 6
French 1, 2, 11, 12, 31, 32,
61, 62
German 1, 2, 11, 31, 32
Spanish 1, 2, 31, 32
Russian 2
Political Science 2
Psychology 31, Group B
Botany 1, 2,
COLLEGI
M.-I. 135
EE 5
Economics 51, 52, 53, 54
M.-I. 136
Chemistry 4, 8, 23, 1, 3, 6
CE 21, 22
Drawing 2 Group A, 3
PE 31, 32
EM 1,2
CE 151
Ch.-Met. 113
PE 11, 13
Drawing 1, 2x
English 11
Ch.-Met. 1
Ch.-Met. 107
Drawing 2 Group B

SCIENCE AND THE ARTS
Thursday, June 2
Thursday, June 2
Thursday, June 2
Friday, June 3
Saturday, June 4
Monday, June 6
Monday, June 6
Tuesday, June 7
Tuesday, June 7
Tuesday, June 7
Wednesday, June 8
Wednesday, June 8
E OF ENGINEERING
Monday, May 30
Thursday, June 2
Friday, June 3
Saturday, June 4
Saturday, June 4
Saturday, June 4
Monday, June 6
Monday, June 6
Tuesday, June 7
Tuesday, June 7
Tuesday, June 7
Tuesday, June 7
Tuesday, June 7
Wednesday, June 8
Wednesday, June 8
Wednesday, June 8
Wednesday, June 8

2-5
2-5
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9-12
2-5
9-12
9-12
2-5
9-12
2-5
2-5
2-5
2-5
9-12
2-5
2-5
9-12
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9-12
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2-5
2-5
9-12
9-12
2-5
2-5

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APO *WAT MOF* #MACE £At

SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS
LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND THE ARTS
No date of examination may be changed without the con-
sent of the Committee on Examination Schedules..
COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING
No date of examination may be changed without the con-
sent of the Classification Committee. All cases of conflicts be-
tween assigned examination periods must be reported for ad-
justment. Seegpulletin board outside Room 301 West Engi-
neering Building between May 2 and May 13 for instruction...
SCHOOL OF MUSIC
Individual examinations will be given for all applied music
courses (individual instruction) elected for credit in any unit
of the University. For time and place of examinations, see bulle-
tin board in the School of Music.

ma

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