Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 wWho's in Qiarge ilerer hen Opinions Are Free, Truth Will Prevail* Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. 'URDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: GAIL GOLDSTEIN AliceB Silver 1934-1956 AT THE ORPHEUMs Welles Camera Shatters 'Othello' So SELDOM does the screen produce a Shakespearean work, that indeed most filmings of the master's plays are worth seeing, if only because they are rare occurences. Orson Welles' production of "Othello," the most recent Shake-. spearean cinematic effort, might perhaps be taken as a notable ex- ception to the foregoing rule. It is an example of what can happen when a director forgets Shakespeare's genius and relies too heavily upon his own. It is not chiefly the actors who impair the film in question. Mr. Welles' Othello may not suggest a "constant, loving, noble nature," but it is powerful. Suzanne Cloutier's Desdemona is lucid and beauti- ful. And Michael MacLiamoire's Iago is often very exciting, though somewhat too diabolical to suggest how Othello could term him "full of love and honesty." FURTHERMORE, though the cuts-the screen, even the stage, demands cuts in Shakespeare-sometimes get out of hang (e.g., Oth- ello's trust of Iago is never adequately developed), these alone could not destroy "Othello." % What does destroy it is Mr. Welles' infernal camera, that annoying and persistent camera that simply will not stop acting as if it were in AN OPERATION following long illness brought the life of Alice Bogdonoff Silver, '54, to an untimely end last Sunday in New York City. She was 22. Associate Editorial Director of The Daily two years ago, Alice Silver contributed to this paper's columns a clearly-conceived liberalism. As both an individual and a journalist she won respect for her direct and, honest opinions. She is remembered as an idealist, believing impassionately in freedoms of 'speech, press and intellect. For her these were not "causes," but principles on which she wrote prolifically and with outspoken courage. Her final editorial, following the Clardy com- mittee's investigations of the University fac- ulty, reflects this courage: ' WE WOULD have spent our time elsewhere," she wrote, "if we did not believe that this gap (between ideals of *'educational freedom and the policies of the University) can be sig- iiificantly narrowed by students, faculty and administrators, and that the University of Michigan will in the future realize its potential in all areas as one of the finest universities in the nation." To the community she will be remembered for examples such as this of outspoken liber- alism. But to those of us who knew her, she will be remembered for much more-an ap- pealing warmth, a willingness to work, and a remarkable faculty for understanding. -THE SENIOR EDITORS Weather Freeze Brings Campus Thaw T'S ESTIMATED by reliable sources that there were in the neighborhood of 16,000 falls yesterday as students sItruggled to reach morn- ing classes. And it's also a reliable estimate that with most of them came smiles and condolences from surrounding sympathizers. Despite the blanket of ice, the Michigan campus was a warmer place yesterday than it has been in a long time. Unfortunately with the thaw in the weather returned the traditional freeze on the campus. We'll have to wait until the next ice flow before strangers start talking to each other again. --M. F. IP AN * Dt - ',' ~,16 TODAY AND TOMORROW: 1 THE AFFAIR of the S a ludicrous but dama can happen in a big an inent when it is not c administered from the government has been fac problem oi arms shipme On this subject there conference at the high President and the Britis There have been many arms for the Middle Ea happen that the State D ten about its own appr Saudi Arabian tanks, th 'went was operating wit mess the shipment of t cause, once the facts bec The reason for this there is no high policy which comes from the t all the way down the making officials to the o President has not, ofi command, certainly no fact not really 'since h August. Yet it is only effectively coordinate t like State and Defense. E only if at Cabinet meet makes the heads of the stand clearly what the obvious that nothing of during the past six m happened. TH LACK of high co vated by the way M office of Secretary of St self as a roving negotia President's Constitution foreign affairs. He wor personal negotiation, an cies to be administered absence by officials wh hand what they are. Mr ington long enough or command the operatio The effect, as the Sau trate, is to leave the imn government to be operat on their own notions w Lions from the top. The administrative co or indeed the most seri way our affairs have 1 the past six months. Thl the top whose business i Editori Dave Baad............. Jim Dygert ................ Murry Frymer ............ Debra Durchslag .......... David Kaplan ............. Jane Howard ............. Louise Tyor ....a.......... Phl Doglis ............... Alan Eisenberg ............ Jack Horwitz.............. Mary Hellthaler ".......... Elaine Edmonds".......... John Hirtel ............... Busines Dick Astrom ............ Bob Ilgnnrit ........ . The President's Ordeal Dy WALTER LIPPMANN audi Arabian tanks is able, to face up to the new Soviet challenge ging example of what which has confronted us since the first Geneva d complicated govern- meeting. The President has been too ill to deal learly led and firmly with it, and Mr. Dulles has been too preoccupied top. For months, this with his travels, his negotiations, and his ed with the dangerous speeches. In these past six months we have nts to the Middle East. suffered the biggest and most serious setback has recently been a since the Communist victory in China. est level between the The fundamental cause of the setback is that h Prime Minister, the Soviet Union has been developing a new pronouncements about foreign policy since Geneva whereas we have st.. How then could it remained frozen and inflexible in the policy of epartment had forgot- the pre-Geneva period. That is why there is oval of the sale of the scarcely a country from France and Italy and at the Defense Depart- Germany and Greece to India and beyond hout realizing what a where the pro-Western and pro-American par- hese arms would now ties and politicians are not in trouble. With ame known? nobody at the top in Washington who can and incident must be that will take new decisions; our diplomacy is almost for the Middle East everywhere fighting unattractive rear guard op and is administered actions. line from the policy- perating officials. The IT WOULD be interesting to know who in the course, been truly in high places where decisions can be taken has t since his illness, in been putting his mind on the speeches delivered e went to Denver last last week at the Community Party Congress in the President who can Moscow. They are very long speeches. But they wo great departments are exceedingly important. Their common He can coordinate them theme is that within the Communist world ings and elsewhere he they have an industrial system which is, in se departments under- terms of national power, not only in arms but policy is. It is only too also in the means of capital development, al- the sort has happened ready reaching equality with the West. onths., or could have The Soviet leaders have been declaring that the rate of economic growth in the Soviet Union surpasses that of all countries, and that, nmand has been aggra- therefore, they will become a more and more r. Dulles conceives the formidable competitor in the economic and ate. He thinks of him- political markets of the world. tor, who represents the I do not know whether all the statistics that al authority to conduct were put out last week are correct. But the k out high problems by world will not doubt the great fact that the d then leaves the poli- Soviet Union is now the strongest power in I and operated in his Eurasia. It is this economic fact which accounts o do not know at first for the extraordinary tone of confidence that Dulles is not in Wash- pervaded all the speeches made in Moscow last continuously enough to week. It also explains the ideological and politi- ns of his department. cal declarations about how Khrushchev and his di Arabian tanks illus- people expect to win the cold war without mediate business of the revolutionary violence. They believe that in the ed by bureau chieftains competition with us for influence in the un- ithout overhead direc- committed countries, they can make more at- tractive offers than we are likely to make. nfusion is not the only, Even if they cannot offer as much economic ous, consequence of the aid as we could, they will be able to offer been conducted during more than Congress will allow us to offer. ere has been nobody at Moreover, whatever they offer, they can offer t has been, or who was on terms which are politically more attractive than the terms which Congress insists that we should impose. HEY ARE in a stronger bargaining position in the uncommitteed nations. For they do not ask, they do not need to ask, for military at Staff pacts or their equivalent. They are able to Managing Editor identify themselves with the popular longing to .y............C iyEditor remain unentangled. What is more, in the ........ Editorial Director underdeveloped countries, which are by defi- Magazine Editor nition without capital resources, the govern- *........Feature Editor Associate Editor ments must necessarily play the principal role .......... Associate Editor in capital formation. This suits the socialist ............ Sports Editor ideology of te Russians. It runs at cross pur- Associate Sports Editor .. Associate Sports Editor poses with out own anti-socialist ideology. Women's Editor The new challenge of the Soviet Union is very . Associate Women's Editor formidable indeed. If we are to meet it, we ,. Chie Photographer shall have to reverse ourselves on a number of s Staff things which are strongly believed in here. We .Business Manager shall have to be willing to export capital on a Associate Business Manager cnsideoahscal. We shall have to be willing I WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Stoy of Tank-CarryingShipEA By DREW PEARSON::} L ATEST WRINKLE in the con- troversy over 18 tanks to Saudi Arabia is a question as to whether they will be received by the Arabs since they are being shipped on a Jewish-owned vessel. Hitherto no vessels owned by Jews have been permitted in Egyptian or Arab harbors or any- where near Egyptian or Arab wat- erways. The SS James Monroe on which the 18 tanks are proceeding toa Jedda is chartered briefly by a Greek firm, Hellenic Lines, but is owned by the family of Jacob Mi- chael, 120 Wall Street, New York, under a complicated arrangement. Mr. Michael, a strong Zionist, would not make himself available to answer inquiries. Calls to the Liberian Embassy'and the Liber- ian Deputy Maritime Commission- er, Albert J. Rudick, at 261 Madi- son Ave., also failed to shed much light on the ownership of the ves- sel. Officially the ownership was registered under Seacarriers, Sa., a Panamanian firm. But Mr. Rud- ick said he could not go beyond that, and besides, he was distrust- ful of telephone calls. * * * THE PANAMANIAN Embassy in Washington said it was equally in the dark. The James Monroe sails under a Liberian flag but is reg- istered in Panama, thus does not have to comply with American wage and safety standards. After several hours of telephon- ing, the press relations spokesman for Jacob Michael called to say that Mr. Michael did not now own the vessel, that he had sold it, and that his attorney, Abraham I'omerantz, would speak for him. Mr. Pomerantz stated that Mr. Michael had once owned the ves- sel through Seacarriers, Sa., but had sold it on March 11, 1955. "IN THAT CASE, he would have to record the sale with the Mari- time Administration in Washing- ton," Mr. Pomerantz was remind- ed. "That is not necessary." "Who did he sell the ship to?" "Mr. Michael cannot reveal this. He does not wish toembarrass the other party. He has absolutely no control over the ship. He cannot say more." -However, the records of the Maritime Administration were con- clusive. They showed that he had sold or transferred the ship only to his wife. ON NOV. 15, 1954, the vessel was transferred to Panamanian Registry and Seacarriers, Sa., with the approval of the Maritime Ad- ministration. Records of the Maritime Ad-- ministration showed that Seacar- riers was and still is owned by Mrs. Erna S. Michael and by the Astra Management Corporation, which in turn is owned by Mrs. Michael, and in small part also by the Polaris Corporation, a Swiss corporation, which Mrs. Mi- chael dominates. There was no record of any other sale or transfer. In brief, Mr. Michael, if he transferred the SS James Monroe at all, transferred it to his wife. She has now chartered the ship for a brief period to Hellenic Lines, which is carrying the. tanks to Saudi Arabia. But according to official government records, the ship is still owned by the Michael family, and it's barely possible that the Saudi Arabian govern- ment, in view of Israeli-Arab bit- terness, might reject the tanks and demand that they be delivered in another vessel. (Copyright 1956, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) LETTERS to the EDITOR Genuine Pleasure ... To the Editor:-' SWE HAV k just received the en- rollment records for the HEART of THE HOME Classes which were held in your area re- cently. We are indeed gratified with the results obtained and with the number of persons who at- tended the classes. On behalf of the Board of Trus- tees of the Michigan Heart Asso- ciation may I take this opportun- ity to extend our very sincere ap- preciation for the splendid coop- eration which you extended to us in publicizing these classes to your readers. It was a genuine pleasure for us to have worked in your county snd we are looking forward to the opportunity of working with you again in the not to distant future -Ernest T. Guy, Executive Director Michigan Heart Association Two Birds .. . To the Editor: I AM A VETERAN of four years Navy service. I thought Dick Halloran's Sundayeditorial was pertinent, consistent, and demo- cratic-a' well written and provo- cative statement and I am in com- plete agreement with, it. I also believe Ann Arbor book store prices are unreasonable and that the University should open its own book store. The Univer- sity has an obligation to its stu- dents as well as to Ann Arbor merchants. -Dick orbat, '59A JGP Thanks.. . To the Editor: I WOULD like to thank all the junior women who showed their interest in the junior class by trying out for JGP. It was won- derful to see that you were all behind this class project. My only regret is th'at we could not use all of you in the show itself, but our script called for a certain number of girls who were suited to speci- fic parts. It is unfortunate that we had to be limited in this way, but we were. -Sue Arnold, '57 Not True Picture... To the Editor: THE UNIVERSITY is sponsoring a program of travelogues, as part of their educational program as well as an entertaining one. The travelogue series started last night at the Hill auditorium with "A Trip from Cairo to Baghdad." We the undersigned, as Arabs from the State of Egypt, feel obliged to cm- ment upon the show in an effort to enlighten the sponsor and the enthusiastic audience. The movie is misinforming and very abusing to the efforts of the Arab people towards progress, be- sides being discouraging to bring about a better understanding of our problems. It also is very de- grading to the American minds if it is assumed that seeing is be- lieving. Such a fruitless effort on behalf of the film, shows the Arabs living in primitiveness, which represents nothing but a selective memory, painting our people as shown, in a savage but polite manner. The movie is simply an expose of an abusive intention. The slums seen in a few parts of the U.S.A., we know, do not represent the American way of living. Some of its staged acts, we who live in Egypt, never saw in our communi- ties. Educationally, the show adds to the basic reasons for not object- ively approaching our mode of' life; and thus, how can we expect Americans to sympathize with -our --Ernest Theodossinr. an epileptic fit. The reason for its frenzy is undoubtedly that Mr. Welles wanted to present his "Oth- ello" with pictorial movement, a rather necessary and noble object for a film director. But once that camera starts moving, it goes up, down, around, through, in circles-never concen- trating on a single image for more than a few seconds. Much of the time it photographs the actors from behind, their faces complete- ly out of view. A GOOD illustration of Mr. Welles' shenanigans is the scene where Othello comes to strangle Desdemona. First the screen goes completely black for a few sec- onds. Then Mr. Welles is seen from various angles, emersed in near shadow. He walks about the bed, snuffing out candles with his bare hisnds. Finally he places a veil of white gauze over Desde- mona's head; as he chokes her, she writhes like a distorted marble statue. After he stabs himself, he begins to spin in wild circles, the camera following up and down, in and out. p ; t .,'... .,, ri DAILY OFFICIAL' ); PIONEERS: U' Leads Way in Educational. T. V (continued from page 1) In its annual appropriations re- quest to the State Legislature in 1954, the University included a re- quest for the necessary $500,000 from state funds, but Governor G. Mennen Williams snipped it out. That brought things down to earth. Future Plans Made A review of the past became the order of the day, and flexible-long- range plans for the future were necessary. "U-TV" has been a pioneer in educational television since 1950. As a result, on Sunday, Novem- ber 5, 1950, the University of Mi- chigan Television Hour was born. Its first productions came in the form of the now-famous "Tele- courses." The hour was divided into 3 twenty-minute segments, the first two bringing college calibre courses into the homes of people wanting to continue their educa- tion, but unable to attend college. The third took the form of a "Teletour," giving the people of the state a behind-the-scenes re- view of the operations of their educational institutions. Format Changed Within a short time, the format was changed and the Telecourses were extended to two half-hour segments. The Teletour reap- peared as "Michigan eport," which is still being produced weekly. Several of the courses are now even in the absence of a trans- mitter, there was no reason why similar audiences could not be found all over the state, even over the country. With this belief, the Kinescope network of the Univet- sity of Michigan Television Office was founded. In addition, "Michigan Report" circulates throughout the state weekly, accompanied by a half- hour information program cover- ing varied areas of University study, "Understanding Our World." Five Shows Produced In Ann Arbor, the Television Office and the Department of Speech have united with local sta- tion WPAG-TV to produce five shows: Dateline Ann Arbor (Mon- day, Wednesday, and Friday), a special- news and sports program with interviews and features; Story Time (Monday and Wed- nesday), children's dramas pre* sented for the 5 to 12 year age groups; Close up (Monday), va- riety show; Studio Sampler (Fri- day), drama, panel discussions, opera, music; and Sports Parade (Friday) featuring local, high school, and University sports. Today, the weekly audience of University Television is conser- vatively estimated at 1,500,000 persons each week. 'TOMORROW: What about the future? BULLETIN THE Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi-, bility. Notices should be sent I TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3553 Administration Building before 2- p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for the Sunday edition must be in by 2 p.m. Friday. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1956 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 1 General Notices President and Mrs. Hatcher will hold an open house for University faculty, staff, and townspeople on Sun., Feb. 26, from 4:00 to 6:00 p.m., at the Presi- dent's house. . Several Laurel Harper Seeley Scholar. ships are being announced by the Alum- ni Council of the Alumnae Association of the University for the academic year of 1956-57. These awards are in the amount of $200 each and are open to both graduate and undergraduate wom- en. Made on the basis of scholarship, contribution to University life and fi-" nancial need. Application blanks may be secured at the Alumnae Council Office in the Michigan League Building, between 9 a.m.-12 noon and 1-5 p.m. daily. Appli- cation with references must be filed by March 30. Lucy Elliott Fellowship for 1956-57 offered by the Alumnae Council of the Alumnae Association of the University to women graduate students from any college or university who wish to study here or to graduates of this university who wish to pursue their studies, at,, another university. The fellowship, amounting to $750, is awards. on the basis of personality, achievement, and scholarship ability. Preference shown to women doing creative work. Applica- tion blanks may be secured In the Alumnae Council Office, Michigan League, and should be returned by March 30, 1956. Academic Notices Aeronautical Engineering.,Juniors, Seniors, and Graduate Students:.A number of special scholarships and fellowships will be available for the academic year 1956-57. Consult the announcement on the Aeronautical Engineering bulletin board regarding application. Two classes of beginning fencing will start in the Boxing Room if the Intra- mural Bldg. at 4:30 p.m. Tues., and wed., Feb. 28 and 29. All interested men invited. Weapons and major protective equipment will be provided. Experienced fencers invited to com- pete in the Student-Faculty Intramural fencing competition Wed., Feb. 29 and 5:15 p.m. in the Boxing Room of the Intramural Bldg. Doctoral Examination for James Michael Joyce, Education; thesis: "The Development of wayne County General Hospital from a Custodial to a Rehabili- tation Institution," Mon., Feb. 27, 4024 University High School, at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, C. A. Eggertsen. Placement Notices The following schools have positions to be filled now or in the very near fuu-.. ;;.t 4 o 4; LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Oick liblor ,~0% I~DOWN A MTE LInTTE ? * ., .. HAIR-I