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. * PhoneNO 2-3241 "Look-I've Rescued You Again" i Opinions Are Free, utb Will Prevail" ditorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. '"'W' ,4 F1 < j PURDAY, APRIL 21, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR, MARY ANN THOMAS 0 . 1- Miss Mead Touches Soft Spot In Advertisers Philosophy AT THE STATE: Not Much Entertainment NoLAs Susan Suffer's IDEALLY, the motion picture is a medium of educational and artistic value. To whatever degree it may or may not possess these attri- butes, it must have entertainment value primarily-if a film does not entertain, (taking all the varied connotations of that word into con- sideration) then it is not a successful film. The entertaining aspects of "I'll Cry Tomorrow" are dubious, if not negligible. Based on the autobiography of singer Lillian Roth, "I'll Cry To- morrow" is the story of an alcoholic's fall and rise. The film, which is much too long for all it has to say, smacks more of the sociological case-study than anything else. If people are indeed entertained by watching another's suffering and do thereby gain some vicarious pleasure, then perhaps this picture does all'a film should. But this is not "entertainment," I maintain, nor is it, in this case, artful study. It is mostly sensationalism, coupled with histrionics and shock effects. THE FILM errs gravely in its presentation of material. The script, as presented, shows a lack of balance and a poor handling of the important point. For one and one half hours we see Susan Hayward, as Lillian Roth, rise to stardom, arrive at liquor and then experience the t THE HOSTILE, almost violent, reaction to Margaret Mead's speech at the University's Advertising Conference Thursday suggests that several revisions are needed in the popular conception of the advertising man. He is frequently pictured as a cynical, deceitful huckster bent on new ways to sham the public. Under certain conditions he may be just that. But today, with the idea of the "upgrading of the public's taste" so common, he has been able to develop an elaborate system to justify his work. An example of this feeling was presented in the speech by Edward Stanley of NBC at the conference. Stanley began by explaining how commercial forces promote the general good. He said that the most successful television com- pany will be that which, provides the highest quality viewing, and subsequently'the level of TV shows iq constantly rising. And what is more, as program quality goes up itself, it takes the whole level of popular taste with it. This all led Stanley to remark, "Some alert and perhaps sanguine members of the academic community see the stage being set for a great that she had participatedsin interviewing Ages." Other speeches were equally optimistic, for example the speech by Garth Montgomery, Vice-president of Kenyon & Exkhardt adver- tising agency. Montgomery noted that "All really good selling is in good taste. It has to be. For most of us have.learned that TV audiences respond only when addressed as the intelligent beings that they are." Almost the entire conference continued in this tone. We need not be ashamed of imposing upon the public to make them buy such-and- such a product, the speeches said in effect. When the public becomes self-conscious, they went on, and by-products of this sensitivity elevates the level of public taste. Instead of being ashamed, ad-nmen should be proud. Thus, the new huckster tends to be remarkably sin- cere and idealistic. Indeed, Charles Brower of Batten, Barton, Durstine and Osborn agency went so far as to say: "In answer to our original question, 'Is adver- tising growing up?' I think we can give a re- sounding YES. By almost any measure it has made more strides than any other profession or trade. I think we can all be most proud to have been a part of this great business. I know.that I am-and after almost 30 years in advertising, my favorite nightmare is dreaming that some- how I missed out on advertising and wasted my life doing something routine and unrewarding." YET, in spite of this seemingly endless confi- dence on the part of the advertisers, they displayed a remarkable sensitivity to Prof. Mead's analysis of their profession. After her speech, one of the outraged adver- tising men arose and demanded to know what right she had to analyze their profession "as an anthromologist (sic) who spent all her time in Manus" in the South Pacific. Prof. Mead, however, was unruffled by the question and quietly commented that almost all of her time in recent years in the United States and had only made on relatively brief trip to Manus in that time. Moreover, she said that she had particiapted in interviewing studies on the effect of advertising in America. Comments overheard after the meeting about the anthropologist's speech were even harsher. "She seemed awfully simple," and "Horrible stuff," were altogether typical. How can one explain this intense reaction on the part of the advertisers? It seems that Prof. Mead asked certain ques- tions which she should not have asked to such a group. Although her speech may not have been presented in the form of questions, it had the inconclusive tone that is found in a question. It gave no answers. It only stated problems. She did not ask the question that the adver- tisers had been asking themselves in their speeches all that day-the question, "Where are we going?" The advertisers already knew the answer to that one: To higher and higher levels of taste resulting from the public's increasing self-consciousness. What she asked was,,"Is this good?" PROF. MEAD stressed that as advertisements continually elevate our tastes, they make us more and more self-conscious. Our ideals have grown into ourselves. People check the latest surveys to find out the way they are to behave. We are beginning to model ourselves after our own image, what the polls and surveys say we are supposed to be. And no one can know where this reflexive culture is going. "You keep altering what's happening by telling people what would have happened so that it doesn't happen." These remarks of Prof. Mead struck the most tender spots of the ad-men's philosophy: that public self-consciousness is good. The ad-men at long last have been able to settle on a premise without dispute. Advertis- ing is not really lying or "talking down" to people because it "upgrades the public taste." They need feel no shame about their profession once this can be accepted. And it is true. Tastes are being upgraded. But the advertising men never ask themselves the question that Margaret Mead asked: Is the upgrading of taste all that results from our increased self-consciousness?- Whether or not Prof. Mead's points are cor- rect, she certainly seemed to hit upon some- thing that touched home. -TED FRIEDMAN Successful Campaigni OUR VOTE for the most paradoxical Michi- gras parade entry goes to that lovely black Lincoln Continental, with the huge sign "Give to Cancer," and bearing three charming ladies, each dripping with fur pelts and costly jewels. -ERNEST THEODOSSIN r* IK 1 t R WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Dewey Chief CabinetMaker: By DREW PEARSON _,F2 ONE interesting fact about the Dewey crowd is that they never give up. If they don't succeed the first time, they try, try again. Witness the backstage maneu- vering of the ex-Governor of New York and his close friend, Elliott V. Bell, to put the latter in the next Eisenhower Cabinet-if there is one. Bell, now editor and publisher of Business Week, had one of the greatest disappointments of his life -second only to Dewey's-when Dewey found that he wasn't elect- ed President in 1948. Bell had been the chief architect of the "Don't rock the boat, play it safe, we are in, don't attack Truman" cam- paign strategy; and he has never forgiven himself for that error. ,* ,, BURNING in his breast has been the desire for vindication. He has seen other Dewey friends srunning the Ike Administration-Brownell, Dulles, Mitchell, McKay, Nixon, all owing their jobs to Dewey-and Bell has wanted to be there too. However, Eisenhower hasn't par- ticularly cottoned to the economic genius who steered New York fi- nances when Dewey was Governor. So a quiet campaign has been started to maneuver Bell into a spot in the next Eisenhower Cabi- net-as Secretairy of the Treasury. This was behind an inconspicu- ous press handout issued by the State Department announcing that "Four prominent citizens have accepted the invitation of Secre- tary Dulles to serve as adviser" at the Multilateral Tariff Confer- ence in Geneva. Heading the list, followed by quite a biographical buildup, was the name of Elliott V. Bell. * * * THIS ANNOUNCEMENT was by no means spontaneous. Quite a bit of maneuvering was behind it, in- cluding a meeting between Dewey, Bell, and Gabriel Hauge, the eco- nomic adviser to the White House. Hauge was told to line up an over- seas assignment for Bell-some- thing hard and without glamour so that a pitch could be made to Ike later that Bell had done his share and deserved a reward. Hauge to told to help. He got busy. He used to work for Bell. John Foster Dulles was also told to line up a foreign assignment for Bell. Result: Adviser on mul- tilateral tariff problems in Geneva. Meanwhile, to 'prepare for this cram course to join the next Eisen- hower Cabinet, Bell brought an "associate publisher" in to handle Business Week-Bayard E. Sawyer. A special title was even created for him. Thus, the Cabinet buildup for Elliott V. Bell was duly launched. Dewey and Bell figure various Cabinet changes will take place in Ike's second term. And Bell has told friends that the Cabinet in the second Eisenhower Adminis- tration will be even more power- ful, since Ike willdelegate more power than ever. * * * KENTUCKY friends of the late and much-loved Chief Justice Fred Vinson are among those who will not be following Happy Chandler's advice to vote for ex-Congressman Joe Bates in the approaching Ken- tucky primary race for the Senate. They have never fotgotten how Fred Vinson, when he retired from Congress to become a Court of Appeals Judge, picked Bates, then an obscure clerk of the court in Greenup County, and put him in Congress. Without Vinson's pow- erful, friendly support, Bates would still probably be back clerk- ing in Greenup County. Later when Vinson was working for Roosevelt in the White House, he asked the man he had put in Congress to help him pass some legislation. Bates turned him down. * * * TO HIS DYING DAY, the Chief Justice never forgot the manner in which Joe Bates let him down. Nor did his Kentucky friends. Ken- tuckians have long memories, and a lot of them will be voting against Happy Chandler's attempt to de- feat Assistant Senate Leader Earle Clements when the primaries are held in Kentucky. Note-Bates got sore at Senator Clements when Clements was Gov- ernor of Kentucky and it became necessary, because of shrinking population, to reapportion the state's Congressional districts. The areas with less population neces- sarily lost out, and Bates, whose district suffered, , blamed Gov. Clements. (Copyright 1956, by Bell Syndicate, inc.) New Books at Library Bode, Carl-The American Ly- ceum: Town Meeting of the Mind; NY, Oxford U Press, 1956. Carse, Robert - reat Circle; NY, Chas. Scribner's, 1956. Fox, Ruth - Alcoholism: Its Scope, Cause and Treatment; NY, Random House, 1956. Herbert, Frank - The Dragon in the Sea; NY, Doubleday, 1956. Jordan, John Alfred - Ele- phants and Ivory: True Tales of Hunting and Adventure; NY, Rinehart, 1956. Merton, Thomas - The Living Bread; NY, Farrar, Straus, Cuda- hy, 1956. O'Casy, Sean - The Green Crow; NY, G. Zraziller, 1956. Ross, Alexander - The Fur Hunters of the Far West; Nor- man, Un. Okla. Press, 1956. fits, tremblings and various mani- festations of alcoholicism. It is a trying time, and the di- rector has left no area of emo- tional, physical and mental tur- moil untouched. The audience sees it all, from the first swallow to the last. The road to recovery, though, is completely glossed over. The people from Alcoholics Anonymous enter; we see a sort of revival meeting, and then suddenly Susan Hayward is clean and fresh again. She emerges cured and happy, on the road to new fame and "This Is Your Life." Having been sub- jected to every step of the decline, why do we not see the rise? The cure, the gradual recuperation, the upward steps-these are barely touched upon. Plainly the plot is out of focus. It may be interesting to some to watch a drunkard go through hell, but understanding must be present to make the thing palatable. * * * IT IS DIFFICULT to evaluate Miss Hayward's performance since the major part of it is devoted to representation of the complete al- coholic. There isn't much to base an opinion upon unless it is to compare her with other alcoholics we have seen and decide her imi- tation is accurate. Since this may be impractical, it is enough to say that she seems believable, if uncomfortably energetic. The act- ing honors go to Jo Van Fleet as the mother of the star. Watching Miss Van Fleet, one has the impression she must have studied her' character for a few weeks, at least, before she even began learning lines. It is a bril- liantly well thought-out portrayal, with all the elements of fine act- ing. Unfortunately, "I'll Cry Tomor- row" is neither as well thought- out nor as well done as/ Miss Van Fleet's performance. -David Newman LETTERS to the EDITOR . Indebted to 'U' . . To the Editor: THIS IS TO express to you my sincere thanks for your kind- ness in mailing The Michigan Daily here to my husband all these years since we retired from the University. I want you to know how very much he did en- joy it and eager he was always for The Daily to live up to his idea of what a campus paper should be. He read it eagerly each time. (So did I. You do know, of course, of the action of the faculty in sending to each of us-myself and the six children-a copy of the Senate Resolution of Regret at their loss of him as a former useful member. We were very proud of that-all our six children hold degrees from the University and we are all in- debted to the University and also to The Michigan Daily. -Grace M. Woods Karpinski Winter Haven, Fla. 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 in 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, APRIL 21, 1956 iOL. LXVIII, NO. 51 General Notices All Seniors who will be graduating in June should be measured for caps an4 gowns at Moe's Sport Shop on North University, at their earliest possible convenience. Short Course in Computer Operation. If there issufficient interest, a series of six introductory lectures on the pro- gramming and operation of the IBM Type 650 Electronic Computer will be given by the Statistical Research Labor- atory,'from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. on Mon. Tues., Fri., starting Mon., April 23. Contact Mrs. Brando at Ext. 2942. April 23, 429 Mason Hal; April 24, 429 Mason Hall; April 27, 429 Mason Hall; April 30, 225 Angell Hall; May 1, 429 Mason Hal; May 4, 429 Mason Hal. Academic Notices Aeronautical Engineering High Alti- tude Seminar. Mr. F. L. Bartman of the Upper Atmosphere Research Group will speak on "Instrumentation and Results of Michigan Rocket Methods,I11" on Monday, April 23, at 4:00 p.m., in Room 1504 East Eng. Bldg. Psychology 55 Students: The assign- ment for Tuesday, Aril 24, is Moses and (Monotheism, Part III, Se. 2. Lectures Mr. Edgar Kaufman, authority on con- temporary design, wil speak on Mon,, April 23 at 4:15 p.m. in the Architecture Auditorium. Mr. Kaufmann will discuss some aspects of design at the turn of the century. Placement Notices The Following Schools have notified us of vacancies on their teaching staff for the 1956-57 school year. Hale, Mich. - Teacher needs: Senior High School Science; Homemaking; Shop and Math. Hanover, Mich.-Teacher needs: High School Band/vocal (high school and elementary). Homer, Mich. - Teacher needs: Ele- mentary-6th grade (man preferred). Boyne Falls, Mich. - Teacher needs: Elementary (Kindergarten); Math. Leonard, Mich. - Teacher needs: Elementary (Kindergarten, 1st grade); Elementary/Music. Peck, Mich.-Teacher needs: Band Inst. Music/Social Studies; Home Ec. Biology. Lake Forest, Illinois - Teacher needs: Elementary 01st, 2nd and 6th); Junior High Math/Science or Math/English (man). Klamath Falls, Ore. - Teacher needs: Elementary (Grades 1 to -8); Music (vocal-Elementary); Girls Physical Ed., Elementary., Bel Air, Maryland - Teacher needs: Elementary; Speech Therapists; In- strumental Music; Physical Ed.; Junior High Core; Senior High Science; Com- mercial; vocal Music; Industrial Arts; Graphic Arts; Art; Home Ec.; Librarian. Cody, Wyoming - Teacher needs: Elementary; Junior High English; Senior High English; Home Ec.; Commerce (typing/shorthand); Band; Vocal Music; (Continuea on rage 5) d 1 U DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 4 f 4, 41 ,. TODAY AND TOMORROW: I THE PRESIDENT had noc the farm bill. that Congr 'Had he signed it, he would pudiate not only his ownr but the whole record of his S culture and the actions of th leaders in Congress, Sen. Kn Martin. Does it follow that1 gram which he sent to Con was adequate and satisfying a be well if only Congress had It does not follow. The Pre tions when he vetoed the bill the basic complaint of the C position to his original pro halfway justified. Where the subsidized farm prices to tht $1,000,000,000, the President ministrative action to subsidi the tune of about $500,000,000 very high and rigid price going to put into effect high high theoretically flexible sup The farm bill is in its det plicated business. But wha since the President's special I ary comes down, I think, es In the administration's mind fundamental "problem is" a said in his veto message," surpluses," caused by "war-ti long continued." From this the basic principle of a soun to reduce production in orde surpluses. THEOPPOSITION in Congri the Democrats and most cans from the farm states, i cerned with the decline of th farming onnlation. Their to The Farm. Bill Veto By WALTER LIPPMANN choice but to veto come has increased by 36 per cent. The Con- ress sent to him. gressional opposition recognizes that there is have had to re- a problem of surpluses. public statements It does not accept the view that it is the Secretary of Agri- only or the paramount problem. The para- e two Republican mount problem is the decline of incomes which owland and Rep. may be due not only'to the war-time supports, the original pro- but to the technological revolution which has gress in January increased so enormously the productivity of nd that all would agriculture. accepted it? The administration, its eyes fixed on the esident's own ac- surpluses, hasibeen interested primarily in the 1 recognized that soil bank, which is a device for reducing pro- Congressional op- duction. The opposition, its eyes fixed on the gram was about .fall in the income of the farming population, bill would have wrote a bill which used every available gadget ie tune of about for pumping out larger subsidies to the farmers. is going by ad- The President, though he has vetoed the ze farm prices to bill, has tried to go about halfway as far as the 0. He has vetoed bill. supports. He is but not quite so IN THE LONG RUN, it may well be that the ports, character of the President's veto marks the ails a very com- acceptance of the principle that in the great t has happened transition through which agriculture is pass- message in Janu- ing, it is a national obligation to cushion the sentially to this. effects on the farmers. There is a stern theory the crucial and that prices should be set in the market and as the President that in this price structure the more efficient price depressing farmers should survive and the less efficient me incentives too farmers be forced out of farming. But no it follows that public man could or would think of acting on d farm policy is this theory, no matter how many times he has er to reduce the made speeches about free enterprise. The hazards of farming during the technological revolution now in progress have become a social ess, consisting of obligation, in principle akin to the Social Se- of the Republi- curity System which deals with unemployment s primarily con- and old age. e incomes of the The day will come, let us hope, when we shall tal incnme from have a farm policy based candidly on this -4 -. TALKING ON TELEVISION: 'Variety' Picks 'U' Television As Best ;4 By bARRY EINHORN Daily Television Writer VARIETY,' the entertainment weekly had to re-name one of the categories in its annual Show- management awards to include the top educational television produc- tion unit in the country. University of Michigan Televi- sion became the first recipient of a Showmanagement award in edu- cational television which does not operate its own station. M'=TV operates through the facilities of Ann Arbor's local UHF television station WVPAG-TV and their own kinescope network. Professor Garnet R. Garrison, head of M'-TV, received most of the credit for the Drogress made by University of Michigan Televi- sion. Because of a lack of funds for their own transmitter Pro- fessor Garrison had to resort to filming programs for later distri- bution. The present kinescope net- work presents 54 programs a week sented by 'M'-TV in the form of news and local events. An excep- tion to this type of programming was seen yesterday afternoon as 'M'-TV televised the complete Michigras parade. The category in which educa- tional television production units are classified for the annual Var- ety Showmanagement awards used to be titled "Outstanding Educa- tional TV Station." From this time hence it will be called "Outstand- ing Educational TV Service." Thus U of M TV can be considered for all future awards. And if they maintain their progressive pace they will be in front of the line for all future awards. CBS TELEVISION is presently confronted with a proolem which all of us should have. They are the biggest backers of the current hit musical "My Fair Lady." They I Special on I also have the TV rights to the show after it concludes its run on Broadway. If the show retains its present popularity it could very possibly be on Broadway for at least two more years. The longer it stays on Broadway the more money CBS makes as a backer of the show, but it also postpones CBS's sale of the musical to a TV sponsor. NBC is also involved in a similar agreement with Esther Williams "Aquacade" which is now touring Europe and which will eventually become a NBC Spectacular. * * *4 STEVE ALLEN is adding another project to his busy schedule. He will take over the Sunday night 9-10 p.m. NBC time-slot in what NBC hopes to be a serious threat to Ed Sullivan. Steve will bring Mrs. Sterling, Sidney Finster and a crile of freems to the new show but NBC has not decided whether or not to design the new program a la "Tonight" with Skitch Henderson, LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibles ',' PROFrupNPRF WilOI" OFFCE ous S t{/ 1 -f. -4