Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSrrY OF MICmGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENr PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone No 2-3241 Vhen Opinions Are Free, Truth Will Prevsl"r Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the- individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. "Were .Agreed,Then TheSupreme Court Is Unconsitutional .4-, t r- - A , ,._ yl 4 r" ? c. - 5 am. _' '2. . - r +. t ? Y -r, '"Y \:>..° '". r ..--i - 43V r at r f\' Z r y----- a HILL AUDITORIUM Gieseking Displays Mastery of Piano THE APPROACH that Walter Gieseking has to the piano is a highly distinct, personal one. It is neither monumental, nor lyrical. But no one manages a more transparent, glowing and light pianissimo tone; and few pianists today approach the piano with quite the con- centration on the miniature, evocative possibilities of the music as he does. i Y. MAY 17. 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: DONNA HANSON Academc Freedom: Michigan Far From Perfect AS THE THEME for the coming Academic Freedom Week suggests, the box score of the Michigan community on academic freedom matters is far from perfect. The Student Gov- ernment Council-sponsored Week has been tit- led "Academic Freedom: A Potential Force at Michigan." There is no pro-con discussion about academic freedom per se. The debate centers on the degree of freedom that a person in the academic, community should be allowed. The University's administration would very strongly deny that its faculty employees lack amademic freedom. Yet the furor over the handling of the Nicker- son-Davis cases two years ago indicates that the faculty, at least the more vocal segment, has a different opinion on what academic free- doi is. Even through the firing of Nickerson and Davis may have set some kind of precedent for the administration, its policies regarding a teacher's classroom freedom, his organizational affiliations and his rights in such areas as severance pay have not been definitely spelled out. The faculty on the other hand, while not entirely united, has presented a clearer picture of how it regards academic freedom. AND UNLESS the administration has changed its mind about the Nickerson-Davis incident, Disregard for S IN A RECENT Faculty, Student, Administra- tion Conference students and faculty alike ex- pressed almost 100% dissatisfaction with the new. University calendar adopted for the next two years.. The calendar was the product of several fac- tors; the faculty's inability to cover the subject matter of courses in less than 16 weeks, the ath- letic schedule, and the problem of summer and holiday student employment, resulted in a shortened Christmas vacation, almost no dead period before exams, early returning for the fall semester, and late recess in the spring. Why was this calendar which pleases neither the faculty nor the students adopted? Dean Walter B. Rea seemed to believe that the fault lay in the lack of student interest in the calen- dar. He said that sev al student-administration conferences had been fheld in which only one or two of the five student members of the commit- tee were interested enough to attend the meet- ings. SUPERFICIALLY, the fault may be laid at the feet of the student. Yet is it completely the students fault? Student opinion has been sought in the past, as when a referendum on this calendar was held unless it is still part of a professor's obligation to testify before an investigating committee, the faculty has taken a more intelligent stand, Academic freedom is necessary o the growth of thinking individuals. By limiting it, the individual grows in some areas but not in others. By prohibiting it, he becomes completely stunted. Since Michigan is a state-university, it is often pointed out that the administration cannot antagonize its source of support. The State will not finance advocates of a doctrine contrary to the democratic ideal. HOWEVER, it is a denial of that same demo- cratic ideal to limit an individual's freedom to express his views and to take advantage of his Constitutional privileges. The administration is not blameless in the matter of going to bat for the rights of its faculty. It has done little to educate the State Legislature on what academic freedom means to an institution. As a representative of a lead- ing university, it is its duty to exercise edupg- tional leadership. The emphasis on academic freedom during the coming week makes it an appropriate time for the administration to clarify, if not formu- late, its policy. --DICK SNYDER tudent Opinion two years ago. Is this student opinion taken into consideration when actual policy decisions are made? In the case of the calendar, it was not. Another example of almost'total disregard for student opinion is found in the Literary College Steering Committee. This committee meets and discusses problems of faculty and student interest. For years, the student mem- bers of the committee have advocated a modifi- cation of the science requirement in the literary college into a more generalized basic science course whch they feel would be of much more value to the non-science major. For years this opinion has been disregarded. THESE ARE two examples of total lack of interest in student opinion shown by faculty and administration . Student action is often turned 'into a debate in which no positive action is taken. Perbaps the students are at fault for this lack of interest in the matter of the University calendar but perhaps the larger responsibility for student apathy must be taken ,by the faculty and administration of the Uni- versity. -CAROL PRINS fl. . d a °',r " qy " ar tf CARr4y /- i 11' 11 1 1, 1' x2 F .1 6 I k! ' * f ., . 3- -2-1.1= .. o cam. l9(tSIr-T v,4s {tni z~ord 1 pSrw. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Senators protected Chotiner By DREW PEARSON T HE SENATE Investigating Com- mittee was amazingly gentle when it delved into the law prac- tice of Nixon's right-hand man, Murray Chotnier. Here is the mild-mannered cross-examination by Senators when the name of Marco leginelli, notorious czar of the South Jersey numbers racket and a Chotiner client, came before the committee. "If he (Chatiner) was Reginelli's attorney at any time, I do not think we should force him to an- swer," said Sen. Joe McCarthy, who has hounded, scolded, bawled out scores of other witnesses when they shied away from answering. "Am I right, Mr. Chairman?" he asked Sen. McClellan of Ar- kansas. "Only to the extent that he was employed by him and the scope of his employment. No details," ruled the Chairman, who in other cases has been fierce and unre-' lenting in his cross-examination. * * * BO B KENNEDY, committee counsel, was not so mild. He tried to pin yChotiner down regarding any connection between Reginelli and the government uniform con- tracts which involved Chotiner's other clients, Kravitz and Abrams. But once again, Chairman McClel- lan came to Chotiner's defense. "The chair will not require you to go further if you say that the Government was involved and had an interest in the litigation or the subject matter of your being re- tained," he reassured Chotiner. In other words, McClellan and his committee, for some strange reason, were interested only in the uniform contracts and not in oth- er government matters handled by Chotiner. Yet Chotiner admitted that he had handled a deportation case for racketeer Reginelli, which cer- tainly involved the Government, and may well have involved in- fluence-peddling. When commit- tee counsel tried to develop how Chotiner had visited Government off icials to persuade or pressure them into not deporting Reginelli, Sen. McCarthy objected. "YOU'RE EMBARKING on a fishing expedition," he told Ken- nedy. However, this column can re- port the facts which Kennedy was not permitted to bring out. Racketeer Reginelli had been listed for deportation by Truman's Attorney General James Mc- Granery, when Attorney General Brownell took over the Justice Department in 1953, Reginelli was still on the deportation list, and his attorneys were getting wor- ried. When the Democrats were in power, Reginelli had retained as his attorney a Democrat, the late Lemuel Schoefleld, former com- missioner of Immigration under Roosevelt. However, when the Justice Department, which has charge of immigration, shifted to the Republicans, Schofield went out to Los Angeles on behalf of Regenilli and had a visit with Chotiner. Obviously h+ felt that he needed a Republican with in- fluence to handle the case of the New Jersey mobster. So he re- tained the close friend of Vice President Nixon. THE IMMIGRATION service under both the Democrats and Republicans had wanted to deport Reginelli. To them it was a rou- tine matter and politics should not be involved. As a matter of routine, the case went before the Board of Immigration Appeals and was heard Feb. 11, 1954. It was shortly after this that Chotiner got in his licks at the Justice Department. Just what he did remains a mystery because Senators McClellan and McCar- thy would not permit cross-exami- nation. However, Counsel Ken- nedy drew out one fact-before he was stopped-that Chotiner had called at the Justice Department. on behalf of Reginelli. Whatever he said and whoever he saw, Chotiner was successful. For, after an amazingly long de- lay, from Feb. 11 to Dec. 14, 1954, the Board of Immigration appeals handed down a decision,'in favor of the South Jersey racketeer. IT RULED that a conviction for violation of the Mann Act in 1952 was not moral turpitude. In so finding, the Board went into a tortuous examination of the facts by which Reginelli had transport- ed Mrs. Louise Abate from New Jersey to Florida. Although he had previously received a six- month sentence and $1,500 fine, the board ruled that this was not moral turpitude. (Copyright 1956, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) The core of Gieseking's atenti: of the music, where the extende uttered, melt into each other. It is only against this still center of these cantabile. sections that the louder portions seem like fortis- simos and can sometimes become frighteningly tense. Coupled with this care on the melodic line is Gieseking's de- tached, self-effacing under-play- ing, and his predisposition for dry but clean tones on the piano. * * * G I E S E K I N G'S attention is placed so completely on the music that a listener forgets the huge, burly man on the stage, He be- comes aware only of the carefully articulated, finely chiselled sounds in the spaces of his mind. This ap- proach is thus diametrically op- posed to that of a man like Rub- instein at whose concerts, what- ever is attempted merely glorifies the performer. The progran last night began with a tentative reading of a Mo- zart sonata (K. 576) and a solid peritormance of Beethoven's So- nata Op. 110. In neither cases were the readings smooth, but there was much to admire in the intent, far from glib readings that Giese- king delivered. Both compositions are reflective and contain lovely slow movements. In the Beethoven sonata, I don't ever remember hearing such a fine articulation of the quasi-recitative passages, or such tensely mount- ing forte to fortissimo chords -in the middle of the fuge. Sa * THE BRAHMS Intermezzi were performed with proper adjust- ments of sentiment and rhetoric: and Mendelssohn's "Rondo Capric- cioso" was given one of the most de-trivializing performances ever heard. Gieseking's special gift for ex- posing the emotional correlate of the music, especially where the emotions evoked are subtle, im- pressionistic ones, insured that the Debussey and Ravel numbers wouldcrown the concert with pianistic miniatures seldom sur- passed. The mood of the late afternoon and twilight world of Fragon- ard was quietly evoked to perfec- tion in the Suite Bergamasque, in- cluding the slowest performance of the "Clair de lune" and the sublimest. Gieseking is still a master at the piano. -A. Tsugawa ARCHITECTURE AUD-: 'Island' Still Tight r4IGHT Little Island" has been with us for seven years now, and has even shown up lately on television. The curret showing of, it at Cinema Guild is likely to be cherished most, therefore, by those who haven't seen it yet, preposter- ous as that may be, or for those who caught it on its first 'or sec- ond time around back in the early fifties. It is the kind of comedy that can stand a couple of viewings, both because of its humor, and because there are aspects= of the film which might be missed the first few uproarious times. When it has become familiar enough to elicit only a protracted chuckle it is possible to appreciate the more subtle shadings and char- acterizations. FEW FILMS have had so many1 supporting actors and so few leads. The plethora of islanders, each with his characteristicrtwitch, stare, or grin, is what makes the comedy effective on the first view- ing, and what in the end gives the picture its truth and importance. Only one actor, Basil Radford, has any extended time on the screen, but as a character he is developed through the same cun- ning quirks which illuminate his fellows; consequently he is the only onewho fails to wear well as time passes. In a film whose tech- nique is mainly composed of quick glances, his is the single perform- ance which grows shallow through familiarity. * * * "TIGHT LITTLE ISLAND" is a situation comedy, or rather an extended gimmick. A thirsty is- landful of elemental Scots is awarded a wrecked freighterful of whiskey, and the attendant problems fill out the plot. Rad- ford, as a self-important petty government official, plays antag- (Continued from Page ) will discuss his previously presented paper on "A Formalization of the Con- cept of Balance," Thurs., May 17, 1:30- 3:30 p.m., Conference Room, Children's Psychiatric Hospital. Lecture, auspices of the Dept. ot Anthropology. "Human Evolution and the Piltdown Hoax." Dr. Kenneth Oak- ley, British Museum. 4:15 p.m., Thur., May 17, Aud. C, Angell Hall. University Lecture: Prof. Burton Dr- ben of the Department of Philosophy, University of Chicago, will lecture on "Another Look at the Frege-Russell Re. duction of Mathematics" on Friday. May 18 at 4:15 p.m. in Angell Hall. Aud. C. Open to the public. Auspices of the Department of Phllosophy. James Johnson Sweeney, art eritie, will speak at the Architecture Audi- torium on Fri., May 18 at 413 pm. Sponsored by the Department of Art. Open to students, faculty, and the gen- eral public. Topic: "Today is Yesterday Already." Astronomy Department VIsItors'Night. Fri., May 18, 8 p.m., Room 2003 Angell Hall. Fred T. Haddock will talk o "Radio waves from the Sun and Space." After the talk the Student Observatory on the fifth floor of Angell' Hall will be open for inspection and for telescopic observation of the Moon, Jupiter and Saturn. Children welcomef, but must be accompanied by adults. Concerts Student Recital: Joyce Elaine Wright, saxophonist, recital in lieu of a thesis for the Master of Music degree, at 8:30 p.m. Thurs., May 17, Rackham Assembly Hall. A pupil of Laurence Teal, Miss Wright will perform works by Hfandel, Heiden, Ravel, Moussorgsky, Ibert, Glas- ounov, and Pierne. Open to the general public. Carillon Recital: 1:15 tonight, by Percival Price, University Carillonneur, and Beverly Brehm, graduate student In the, School of Music. The first group of compositions including works by Bach, Mozart, Price, and a folk song, will be performed by Miss Brehm. Prof. Price will play the second half of the program. Scenes from Opera, presented by School of Music opera class 8:30 p.m. Fri., May 18, in Aud. A, Angell Hal. Scenes from wagner's Die Meistersinger von Nuernberg, Smetana's .Bartered Bride, Gounod's Faust, Richard Strauss' Der Rosenkavalier, withstudent soloists. Open to the general public, without charge. Academic Notices Freshmen and Sophomores, College ot LS&A. Those students who will have fewer than S5 hours at the end of this semester and who have not yet had their elections approved for the Fal Semestet should make an appointment at the Faculty Counselors Office for Freshmen and Sophomores, 1210 Angell Hall. If you do not have your fall elections approved before the final examination period, it will be necessary for you to do this the half day before you are scheduled to register next fall. Be- cause registration will begin. on. Mon- day, September 17, the "alf day be- fore" Monday morning win be Saturday afternoon, September 15. Interdepartmental Seminar on Applied Meteorology, Thurs., May 17, 4 p.., Room 4041 Natural Science Bldg. Prof. Edward R. Baylor will speak on "The Response of Microcrustacea to Radia- tion". Department Colloquium, 70 p.m., Thurs., May 17, Room 1300 Chemistry Building. K. Wyckoff will speak on "Studies on the Yohimbyl Alcohol. Physical. Analytical- Inorganic Chem- istry Seminar, Thurs., May 17,;8:15 p.m., Room 1300 Chemistry Building. R. Z. Machol will speak on "Order-Disorder Transitions." 402 Interdisciplinary Seminar on the Application of Mathematics to Social Science will meet on Thurs., May 17. Room 3401 Mason Hall from 4:00-5:30 p.m. F. Goode will speak on "'A Re- view of 'Tendencies Toward Group Comparability in Competitive Bargain- dng' by Hoffman, et al.", Seminar in Applied Mathematies Thurs., May 17, at 4:00 p.m. In Room "247West Engineering Bldg. Alfredo Pinero-Perez, Teaching Fellow In the Department of Mathematics, will speak on "Legendre Integral Transforms." Refreshments will be served promptly at 3:30 p.m. In Room 274 W. Eng. Bldg. Astronomical Colloquium. Thurs., May 17, 1:30 p.m., the Observatory, J. P. Wild of Sydney, Australia, will speak on "The Scintillation of Radio Stars." Psychology Colloquium: Dr. Carl Rogers,. of the University of Chicago, will discuss "The Necessary and Suffi- cient Conditions for Therapeutic Per- sonality Change," on Fri., May 18, at 4:15 p.m. Aud. B, Angeli Hall. Astronomical Colloquium. Fri. May 18, 4:15 p.m., The Observatory. Dr. G. Righini of the Arcetri Observatory, Italy, will speak on "Solar Research at the Arcetri Observatory." Doctoral Examination for Peter Engel I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN H S. ,;yr Ni ,X lies in the slow, quiet portions notes, aloofly and deliberately "l1 1 "I : TODAY AND TOMORROW: No Solution in Algeria By WALTER LIPPMANN , IT IS a bold man who coming from the outside presumes to talk about the French problem in North Africa. For myself I cannot see far into the problem for which there is not, so far as I know, any example anywhere else of a success- ful solution. Yet it is plain enough that a crucial test is. about to begin. In about four weeks the French government in Paris will have deployed in Al- geria the military forces-about 400,000 men- that it judges to be necessary to -pacify the country and to contain the active rebels in their mountain fastnesses. When that has been done as now planned, Paris plans to hold elections. From them there are to emerge Arab leaders willing and able to negotiate a peace. The terms of that peace are not published but they are based on the concept of autonomy for the Algerian Arabs within the, framework of the French state, THERE ARE SOME, as good judges as any, who believe that this official policy will have been tested by the autumn. y A visitor soon learns to realize that he must not think of Algeria as another in that series of countries to be evacuated-in the series which Editorial Staff DAVE BAAD. Managing Editor MURRY FRYMER JIM DYGERT Editorial Director City Editor DEBRA DURCHSLAG ............... Magazine Editor DAVID KAPLAN ...... .....,.. Feature Editor JANE HOWARD ............F... Associate Editor LOUISE TYOR ...............Associate Editor PHIL DOUGLIS ...................... Sports Editor ALAN EISENBERG ....... . ... Associate Sports Vditor JACK HOIWITZ .., ....... Associate Sports Editor DIARY HELLTHALER............. .. Women's Editor ELAINE EDMONDS ......... Associate Women's Editor JOHN HIRTZEL................ Chief Photographer Business Staff DICK ALSTROM................. Business Manager BOB ILGENFRITZ ...... Associate Business Manager began with Lebanon and Syria, went on to In- dochina and has recently come to include Tu- nis and Morocco. In a sense that these other countries never were, the French think of Algeria as a national interest. That is because at least one-seventh of the people of Algeria are Frenchmen. Algeria is not an economic asset. Indeed it is a liability. It is to the large community of Frenchmen that the French at home feel themselves bound. There are signs of a mounting popular will to stand by them and not to let them become a helpless minority in a sovereign Arab state. IN THE MONTHS to come there will be put to the test two questions, Can the rebellion be subdued by a dense concentration of troops in the main populated areas? If they are subdued, can the Arabs be induced to participate in elec- tions and, shutting their ears to Cairo, to ne- gotiate for something less than sovereign in- dependence? The prospects of a negotiated settlement on the French terms are, it may be said, not very bright. At the least, assuming there is no over- whelming and crushing defeat of the rebellion, the Paris government would have to offer ex- traordinary concessions at the expense of the vested privileges of the French community in Algeria. One can doubt whether the Pais government is strong enough to impose a military victory on the Arabs and at the same time a political set- tlement on the French community. It is this weakness of the government, by the way, which accounts for the growing amount of talk about drastic constitutional reforms. BUT, though the prospects are not bright, it would be a mistake to suppose that the unsuccess of the present policy would lead to abandonment and evacuation. So at least it seems to me here in Paris. The French interest is real. The French army might fail to pacify all of Algeria but it cannot be defeated. There is now an organized army opposing It, as there was in Indochina. If the official policy does not succeed, the is- A, LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Critic, Writer Draw Criticism Pervading Genius .. . To the Editor: THE DAILY Critic, disregarding almost completely all other as- pects of the initial production of the 1956 Drama Season, used a great deal of space in this morn- ing's Daily to present a synopsis of the current play, Black Chiffon. Mr. Marlin turned thumbs down on the play, shed a few tears for the struggling cast, and called it a day. Said Mr. Marlin, "It's pain- ful to see sue ha competent cast struggle with such writing." I would suggest that it is more likely that Mr. Marlin's struggle wa sa bit more painful. Whereas I respect the opinion of Mr. Marlin, I suggest that his critique could have been written in the library as well as at the Lydia Mendels- sohn. Surely there was something else at the Mendelssohn other than a somewhat weak play. The fact is, it appears to this spectator, that Miss Anderson, who reached the apex of her brilliant career in her magnificent portrayal of Medea a few years ago, has retained her position as one of the very few fhafrinnl .ar nof mnripar~n 4-lynn tion. He did not mention the superb acting of Murray Matheson who proved himself a worthy partner to Miss Anderson, nor did he mention Bradford Dillman who appears to be one of the more promising young actors in the field. Nor did The Daily Critic mention Mr. Mel- lencamp's set, certainly deserving of some praise. I encourage The Daily Critic to go bac kto the Lydia Mendelssohn this week and take another look at the production-in its totality- without having to worry about a Daily deadline, without having to sit through the performance think- ing constantly of the criticism that will have to be concocted. Go back an denjoy yourself--don't fibht the pervading genius of Miss An- derson. I promise you, sir, you will not see a struggling cast-you are, rather, in for a profound experi- ence. This is the power of Judith Anderson. -Harold Scheub, '58 Philosophy of Life To the Editor: CANNOT help but disagree strongly with Ted Friedman's editorial, "Pedagogue to the Propa- phy of life by the way schools do things. Educators might very well prefer that this were not so but they find out (sometimes sadly) that it is. The child who is so pressured to pass a course he cannot grasp that he resorts .to cheating has solved one of life's problems. If this is successful for him, he may well be imagined to adopt this way of solving prob- lems at any time that the pres- sure is on him. The child who is called stupid, or lazy, or any number of insult- ing dames by a teacher or by fel- low students will develop an atti- tude toward people that will be an important part of what I consider his philosophy of life. The countless ways in which schools affect children's attitudes are too numerous to mention. If a person is sincerely interested in this problem he will do well to read the type of evidence present- ed and the logic used in the de- cision rendered by the Supreme Court on desegregation in the schools. It was, not ,found that bigotry and prejudice were taught in a specific class at a certain hour of the day, it was found that bigo- try and prejudice were taught every hour-,'of euvry school day be I