........... - I 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 '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. )AY, FEBRUARY 14, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: MARY ANN THOMAS In Memoriam: H.L.M. DYING, as H. L. Mencken once put it, is "the last, worst of all practical jokes played pon poor mortals by the gods." For seven eais following a stroke Mencken's mind func- toned with its customary alertness in a brok- n body which could neither read, speak nor rite-the things it had done with so much kdll and zest in better days. Last month that "practical joke" ended with is death at 75. In a sense his life was a practical joke layed upon poor Americans by Henry Louis fencken. Seldom, if ever, has "the American ray of life" been subjected to as intense a. low of ridicule as during his heyday. Mencken was primarily a critic, one who rould be laughed with and cursed at, but one rho would be heard. These aims, he believed, re not best achieved by the making of fine istinctions or balanced judgments. His meth- d was, as one observer described it, "gross ex- ggeration and gross metaphor," and he proved iimself a master of both. Thus young Abe Lincoln he compares to a 'Tammany Nietzsche," religion he calls a "con- itioned reflex" made up of "astounding im- ecilities;" and to "Lord Hoover" he ascribes he "texture of a chocolate eclair." The na- tion's near-deified "man-on-the-street" was in Menckenese merely a member of the species "boobus Americanus." A FEW targets Mencken also attacked with particular gusto were the South, Teddy Roosevelt, the North, Franklin Roosevelt, chiro- practors, professors, theologians, Communists, democrats, anarchists, marriage, dishonor, mor- ality, reformers, Rotarians, and, we might add, editorial writers. If often he swung too wide and hit too hard, Mencken must be accredited with a penetrat- ing eye for hypocrisy, pretension and plain stupidity among the revered. If he toppled too many icons, he did it during an age which toppled too few and erected too many. Of the two tendencies, his was the healthier. Both Mencken's twenties and our fifties are eras of a good deal of accumulated intellectual fat. One of the unfortunate differences is that while we also have our Coolidges, our Lindbergs, our Saccos and Vanzettis, we have somehow been unable to produce a Mencken. What we have gained in composure we have more than lost in stimulation. -PETE ECKSTEIN .RC ! f : . Y z °- x si fr t t Tt' OF At AR ENTIZAACE 1 '1FCa MOSS lwl 40 lf, tl 1 x;;Ss r ? -r yr a ''f 1 1 WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND.- Pressure on Ike Continues By DREW PEARSON ' INTERPRETING THE NEWS ; i Decision Now Up to Ike' SEX : Deer Park a Not Best of Mailer "The Deer Park" by Norman Mailer (C. P. Putnam). W HAT experiences await the reader who takes up the third novel by one of the most promis- ing young writers to emerge from the trial of World War II? What promise had been fulfilled in this new work by Norman Mailer, au- thor of the stark, eloquent, effec- tive novel titled The Naked and the Dead? The publishers have the first go at trying to answer to these ques- tions: "We believe that many readers will consider The Deer Park to be (Mailer's) best novel, his most mature, his most disturbing, and his most entertaining; we are equally convinced that some read- ers will find the book too strong for their tastes, if not downright shocking." Out of this plethora of adjec- tives one suits this reviewer's feel- ing exactly. It is a disturbing book. Disturbing, however, for reasons other than those proposed in the packet blurb. What we look for is missing. Mailer's voice in The Deer Park is no longer the noble, defiant cry of real men in real crises. The tone of the novel is a single, grotesque, racking, sometimes falsetto squeak of inconsequentiality when com- pared with the profound chorus of his earlier and rightfully famed The Naked and the Dead. M K M THE , AUTHOR'S attack~ it seems, has shifted from analysis of, the socio-critical functioning of ma nto be an elaborate treatment of his biological functions. The three-letter word s-e-x is the key here. The California movie colony, Desert D'Or, which is the scene of the st®ry, comes to suggest to the reader, to the way Milwaukee does beer, Battle Creek, cereal, or Richmond hospitality. The characters, from director Ettel, through rising' starlet Lulu Meyers, to executive Herman Tep- pis, seem to lack the true dimen- sions of human beings; they ap- pear rather as figures which per- form the acts and represent the viewpoints of their individual phil- osophies of sex. rt " s THE ALLEGORICAL exercise is,, in itself, an interesting, compet- ently handled one. And the deftly worked-in "substatement of the creative artist's right to unchecked expression gives some stature to the work.. But, essentially what is disturb- ing is the author's direction. A consideration has evidently as- sumed the proportions of a preoc- cupation, and a brilliant career appears to be suspended. So, without the answer being given, there still remains the major unsolved question - which time will ultimately answer-of a great creative promise as yet unfulfilled. -Donald A. Yates Reviewers A meeting for students in- terested in reviewing or car- tooning for The Daily will be held at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Conference Room of the Student Publications building. Positions are open for re- viewers in: movies and drama, music, art, books and maga- zines, at well as editorial car- tooning. By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst PRESIDENT EISENHOWER will get the evi- dence today and "retire to chambers," as the judges say, to ponder it. Within two or three weeks the country should know his decision. The President's keen sense of responsibility is well known. Today it makes him an object of sympathy. People*generally know little about what he is thinking. One thing he has said fairly clearly; he does not want to accept an obliga- tion which he might not be able to carry out. Another thing he has said is that, regard- less of how well he has recovered from his heart attack, he isn't the same man physically he was six months ago.' The best the doctors can tell him today, to bring it down to generalities, is that he has recovered as well as a man his age can be expected to recover from his type of attack. That would mean the heart has suffered no invaliding damage.: It would not mean the conditions which produced the attack have been overcome. A coronary attack can come to almost anyone at almost any time. Doctors dispute whether one attack makes the victim prone to another. The causes are not clear. T HERE IS NO DISPUTE, however, that the weight of the Presidency is man-killing, 11 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN and only a few have long-survived it. Under the circumstances, it would seem logi- cal for the President to say that he, like any man,. wishes to assume no further responsi- bilities which might interfere with living out his years. From personal experience I have learned, however, that' one can develop a certain confi- dence about being able to live even with a damaged heart and may, unless a tight leash is held on the spirit, undertake things danger- ous to health. It would be normal for the President to wish to complete the job he undertook so reluctantly in the beginning. That generally is considered to require two terms. His interest in the case of peace alone night persuade him not to quit. He is bound to feel a certain responsibility to the Republican Party, which insisted on . putting him into the biggest job in the world. He knows there is a good chance that the work he has done for and through the Party could be undone if he stops next year. It would be strange if such considerations did not weigh heavily with the President, whose way of life has been the pursuit of duty. Yet it would seem almost incredible that he should gamble his life against them. All the people can do is stand back, allow him a peaceful time in which to think, and wish for him a wisdom that men seldom have. HE pressure on President Eis- enhower, as he takes his final medical, is still continuing. The pressure to run comes from three general groups 1. The Palace Guard--The boys in the White House who want to keep their jobs. They are just as ardent as the Democrats who worked under Roosevelt and Tru- man and who were determined that their boss must run again. 2. The big politicoes-GOP lead- ers on Capitol Hill like Joe Mar- tin plus GOP Chairman Len Hall don't see any way the party can do without Ike, and they demand that he run. 3. The business brain-trusters -up in New York men like Gen. Lucius Clay, former Commander of American Troops in Germany; Sidney Weinberg, head of the gi- ant Wall Street firm Goldman- Sachs; and ex-Governor Tom Dewey, believe Ike is essential to save the peace and our economic way of life-plus their point of view regarding American business. THERE HAVE been sobering thoughts, however, since ex-Gov- ernor Oswald West of Oregon ac- cused other Republicans of mur- dering Governor Paul Patterson of Oregon. "The death of Paul Patterson was not only a tragedy," said ex- Governor West, hhnself a Repub- lican. ."It was murder. He was forced into a Senate race by self- ish members of the Republican Party imbued with an obsession to beat Wayne Morese." Note-Governor Patterson had a heart condition. After deciding to take on the campaign against Wayne Morse he had a heart at- tack. Ike, thanks to outside pres- sure, had urged him to run. THERE WAS a good reason whys Eisenhower held up his second re- ply to Premier Bulganin on a U. S. - Soviet friendship pact after firing the first reply back in Bul- ganin's teeth. He found he had fallen into a Soviet trap. John Foster Dulles, as usual, had acted without consulting his ad- visers, especially astute U.S. Am- bassador Chip Bohlen in Moscow. Instead, Foster acted as if Joe McCarthy was glowering over his shoulder. The trap Eisenhower fell into was that the Kremlin wants more than anything else to show us up as not wanting peace. Most important popular devel- opment in Russia today, Ambas- sador Bohlen has advised, is that the Russian people have come to b(lieve the Kremlin's peace prooa- gaocea. As a result, today they c ui not eas:!y be stampeded into w2 r. IN THE PAST, the 'Kremlin has had the whip-hand in starting war. It has no Congress to con- sult, no critical newspapers to worry about, or commentators to goad it. War could have been declared in the past at the drop of a hat. But since the Kremlin's peace propaganda has taken hold, sud- den action would be difficult. This was the reason for Bul- ganin's two friendship notes, namely, to trap the United States into rebuffing Russian friendship so the Kremlin can reverse itself and point out that the U.S. has spurned Russian friendship, that the U.S. wants war. This is why our allies, plus skilled U.S. diplomats, wish Eis- enhower had not been so hasty in slapping down the first Bul- ganin note. If he had waited a day or two to consult with Prime Minister Eden, "he could have let Eden share responsibility for his slap-down. Or he could have waited longer to appear to give the matter more careful study. That was why he waited longer to answer the second Bulganin note which the Kremlin, having scored in the first round for peace propaganda., fired back at Ike so quickly. ONE OF THE, most effective things Eisenhower did at Geneva, in the opinion of this observer, who was there, was, to convince the people of France, Italy, Ger- many, Greece, et al, that the United States genuinely wants peace. Eisenhower played his cards perfectly, cut the ground out from under Moscow's continual claim that the U.S. wants war. But today as a result of Bul- ganin's fast foot-work and the Dudes - Eisenhower eager - beaver rush into his trap, part of Ike's fine work at Geneva has been neutralized. What Ike and Dulles did on the first note was to operate U.S. for- eign policy as if Joe McCarthy was still glowering over their shoul- ders. When the second note ar- rived, they finally realized that Joe's glowers are now feeble and faded, and that they had fallen into a neat Russian trap. (Copyright, 1958, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) (Continued from Page 3) American Studies 101. Introduction to U.S. Civilization, will meet Wed, and Fri. mornings at 8:00 am. in.. 626 Haven Hall. For foreign-students. Events Today General meeting of the Michigan Dames Tues., Feb. 14 at 8:00 p.m. in the Assembly Room of the Rackharn Build- ing. Placement Notices Interviews for Air Force teaching positions overseas are being held at the Union Building Feb. 14 and 15 from, 12:00 noon until 8:00 p.m. Two years of recent public school expersence is re- quired. Women who apply must be be- between the ages of 23 and 40; men, 23 to 50. When making application, fill out a Standard Form 57 (which can be obtained at the Post Office) and also take with you a photostatic copy of your teaching certificate and an official transcript of credits. The following schools will have a representative at the Bureau of Ap- pointments to interview teachers for positions starting Sept., 1956. Wed., Feb. 15. Whittier, California-Teacher Needs: Elementary. Thurs.,., Feb. 16: Battle Creek, Mich-Teacher Needs: Elementary; H.S. Chemistry/physics; H.S. English; Counselor; Girls' Physi- cal Ed., H.S,; Home Economics, Jr, and S.H.S.; Vocal Music, Jr, H. Decoto, California-Teacher Needs. Elementary; Jr. H. Social Studies, Jr, H. Math. Fri., Feb. 17: Pamona, California-Teacher Needs: Elementary; Jr. H. Math.; Jr. H Mug. fish/Social Studies;. Jr. H. Homemak- ing; Jr. H. Science; Jr. H. Art/Science and Girls Physical Ed.; Jr. H. Metal Shop; H.S. Girls Physical Education; American Government; Industrial Arts; English; Social Studies; Math; Commercial; Physical Science; Driver Training. Roseville, Michigan-Teacher Needs: Elementary; Speech Correction. Covina, California-Teacher Needs: Elementary; 7th and 8th Grades. For additional information and ap. pointments contaef the Bureau of Ap pointments, 3528 Administration Build. ing, NO 3-1511, Ext. 489. SUMMER PLACEMENT: Meeting of the Summer Placement Service in Room 30, Michigan Union, on Feb. 15, from 1 to 4:45 p.m. Any one Interested in summer employment is welcome. Jobs range from' all types of Business to Camps and Resorts. The Belfry Players of Williams Bay, Wisconsin, are now accepting applica" tions of resident actors. There are some scholarships. Applications should be is by April 5. Contact the Bureau of Appointments for rurther information, 3528 Administration Bldg., Ext. 2814. Representatives from the following will be here to interview for summer" Jobs in Room 3G, Michigan Union, from 1 to 4:45 p.m. Wed., Feb. 15: Mr. Henry B. Ollendorff, fteoutlvs Director of The Neighborhood Settle. ment Association of Cleveland, Inc., will interview for counselors, male and female. Also for full time positions. Sat., Feb. 18: Mrs. HJordis Ohberg, Camp Director of the Teaneck Golden Knot Girl Scout Council, Inc., Teaneck, New Jersey, will interview for counselors. Call the Bu,. reau of Appointments for appointments, 3528 Administration Bldg., Ext. 2614. PERSONNEL INTERVIEWS: Representatives from the following will be at the Engrg. School: Thurs., Feb. 16: SUMNER CHEM. CO., INC., Zeeland, Mich.-B.S. In Chem. E. for Develop.. ment, U.S. GOVT., ORDNANCE CORPS., Philadelphia, Pa,-ali levels in Elect.. Electronic, Mech., Ind, and Chem. E.,, Chemistry, Physics, and Metallurgy. CONTINENTAL OIL CO., Houston, Texas-B.S., M.S. or PhD in Mech. and.. Chem. E. and In Chem. for Summer and Regular Manufacturing and Petro. chemical Depts. Fri., Feb. 17: AMERICAN MOTORS CORP., PLAS. TICS DIVISION., Milwaukee, Wis.-B.S, in Chem. E., Elect., Ind., ' Mech., and Eng. Mech. for Development and Pro- duction. OTIS ELEVATOR CO., Detroit, Mich.. all levels In all programs for Construo" tior4_and Sales. U.S. citizen. M13CHANICAL HANDLING SYSTEMS, INC., Detroit, Mich.-B.S, and M.S. in Ind. and Mech. for Design and Sales. INGERSOLL-RAND CO., New York, N. Y.-ail levels in Ind.; B.S. and MS, In Mech.; and B.S. In Civil, Elect., Eng. Mech, Metal., and Naval and Marine for Research, Devel~ Design, Production, Sales, and Business . Eng. U.S. citizens. COLLATE-PALMOLIVE CO., Jersey City, New Jersey--B.S. in all programs Engrg., Chem. and Bus. Ad. for Re" search, Devei., and Production. U.S. citizens. UNION CARBIDE AND, CARBON CORP., ELECTRO-MET. Co., Niagara Fail, N. Y.-B.S. and M.S. In all Engrg. ' 'for Research, Devei., Design, Production, Construction, and Sales GULF OIL CORP.-all levels in Chem. E., Elect., Instru., Mech., Metal., Nu- clear E., Math., Physics, Eng. Mech., and Science for Research, Devel., and - Production. For appointments contact the Engrg. Placement Office, 347 W. E., Ext. 2182. PERSONNEL REQUESTS: AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OIL AD. VERTISING AGENCIES is sponsoring an aptitude test for men and women interested in the advertising business. There is a fee for the examination which will take place in Ann Arbor on March 3, 1956, as well as in Detroit and East Lansing. People in any field who are interested . in Advertising --- Radio and T.V. Production, Art and Layout, Copy Writing, Adv. Research, Media Solection, Mech. Production, Adv. Planning and Merchandising are eligible to take the test. The deadline for filing applications is Feb. 24. Time is limited because it is necessary to write to the " Detroit office for applications before filing. MICH. CIVIL SERVICE announces an exam for filling vacancies in the State Tax Commission, the Liquor Control -{: IN THIS CORNER: kl Adlai's Battle For Reason By MURRY FRYMER DESPITE all the experience he has had, Adlai Stevenson still shows signs of being a novice politician. For example, Mr. Stevenson told a California audience recently that he did not believe in making promises he did not plan to keep. And so when speaking to a Negro audience in Los Angeles, the Democratic hopeful spoke of cau- 'ton 'and moderation in enacting integration in the South. This was not what the audience that night wanted to hear. Later last week Stevenson was confronted with the proposed Powell a amendment to the Federal School-aid bill which would cut off financial support to segregated schools. Said Stevenson, he didn't feel the amendment was needed, but rather it might disrupt the con- struction of vitally needed schools. Also, he said, his answer depended on whether the amendment could be framed consistently with the Supreme Court's desire for orderly transi- tion, and whether it allowed for "complex lo- cal problems." All this left Stevenson in a weak, noncom- mital position. The NAACP was unhappy, and there was fear in the Stevenson camp that the large northern Negro vote might follow its lead. Now this is exactly the sort of trouble the Stevenson-for-President campaign had in 1952, and Adlai realizes this. Speaking in Portland on Sunday, Stevenson, faced with the conflict between his own moral convictions and the political powderkeg the segregation issue can ignite, asked that the issue be removed from the Presidential campaign. "I can trunk of no greater disservice to our country than to exploit for political ends the tensions that have followed in the wake of the Supreme Court decision," he said. HOWEVER, it is very unlikely that 'this plea will be heeded. And there is little reason that it should be. The Negro problem in the South has now flared to heights which begin to resemble.the fervor of pre-Civil War days. More than ninety years of moderation have done little for the rights of Negroes in such states as Mississippi and Alabama. The Supreme Court ruling on segregation was an active and forceful move, but the result can be seen in the riotous South- ern mobocracy which has replaced all rules of decency and justice. CANDIDATE STEVENSON has unwillingly become involved in the chief present-day American domestic concern, and he won't get an agreement to forget about it. The issue is not', as Stevenson called it, "race against race" or "section against section." It is the very ideological foundation of the nation that is shaking. When an American senator (East- land of Mississippi) questions the honor of the Supreme Court and implies corruptness as he did last week because the "nine-man oligar- chy" ruled that democracy requires equality, it is no "forget about'it" issue. It is true, as Stevenson claims, that tension in mixed schools will be exploited if the segre- gation issue remains on the political battle- field, and again, "reason" is a greater weapon in the struggle than "force" as the Democratic candidate claims. But how successful has the quiet-please' campaign been? Cannot reason * be a part of a political campaign, or has American politics fallen to a bosition where "reason" cannot . ti LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Charges Daily Distorts, Principle of Letter To the Editor: WITHOUT consulting me, you lifted an article of mine that appeared in The Wall Street Jour- nal on December 29, 1955. As far as that is concerned, your maneu- ver is not objectionable, as I take sole responsibility for anything I may write or say publicly. However, since you presumed to write a headline of your own on, the piece, together with some addi- tional interpretative comment, you took on a professional journalistic obligation of integrity and fair practice toward the readers in the community you serve, as well as to me. You did not fulfill this most serious obligation. In this connection, a consulta- tion with me prior to publication of my article might have circum- vented: the unfortunate terminol- ogy you chose in the headline, as well as your distorted interpreta- tive comments that followed. I think you had better bring your heads out of the dark place and get straightened out on a few facts. I know of no "Reds" on the clearly indicated therein, is that conservative opinion is not get- ting an adequate representation in the college curricula today. That is my observation, based on at- tendance at two other colleges besides the University, on studies of pertinent factual material, and gleaned from many and varied personal contacts among college students and faculty members across the country, dating back to 1949. I believe that the matter is open to welcome, healthy, and intelli- gent discussion without descend- ing to personal charges and accu- sations against particular individ- uals or particular colleges. It was in this spirit and to this purpose that my letter to The Wail Street Journal was written. Your headline and comment falsified this spirit and purpose. My letter is a rebuttal to debate by another reader of the same paper concern- ing academic freedom for conserv- atives.' It made no reference to the University of Michigan, was not an indictment of the University to the extent that this interpreta- tion invades the curriculum to the total exclusion of opposite view- points and the neglect of historical fact, it is mis-education in its most bigoted form." As a corollary to this statement, I might add that any viewpoint that exclusively invades the class- room, the book lists, or the speak- ers' lists is a perversion of the meaning of, education. In this sense, the swing to. the Left in American colleges today is "dan- gerous." To the extent that de- magoguery of any kind is prac- ticed at this University, steps must be taken to search it out and eliminate it. For me, it is not a matter of "Reds" versus "Fascists" or "lib- erals" versus "conservatives"-it is a matter of the preservation of American individualism-of pre- senting to the student a balanced emphasis on opposite viewpoints, and allowing him to make his own private choice, free from any sort of pressure or indoctrination. This principle applies to courses in retract those statements and make a public apology. . -Robert A. Moeller i (EDITOR'S NOTE: Mr. Moeller's letter was printed in The Daily in its entirety, with the exception of introductory and concluding paragraphs in which he refers specifically to another Wall Street Journal letter. It was changed in no manner, nor did The Daily make any interpretation -of it. As for the head- line: 11U' Student Sees Red Danger here," it was based on such quotes as L the following: "Textbooks in many sensitive background courses on world and domestic political affairs are stack- ed decks for the fellow-traveler out- look." "Far too many speakers and professors endlessly lean ever backward to apologize for Soviet dictatorship ... while applying with equal fervor the label of "unconscious Fascitsts" to those individuals who oppose Commun- ism . . . " and "Many of his (the student's) regular assignments call for an exclusive diet of Leftists' books or publications, his class noted consist entirely of the economic or political pronouncements of a collectivist or Soviet apologist, and the only speakers he can listen to are of the same ilk." "Within the limits of my college, ex- perience I can testify to the fact that speakers' lists are loaded to the Left in almost unvarying consistency," Mr. J