ul r Ak tgan atlt 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. 0 Phone NO 2-3241 4 ea, T 7 Vhen Opinions Are Free, Truth Wit] Preval"' t t , ,r ' ; ;, . : _ ;' ;_ - ; . - .. .. J Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. R'" " . , j jet . ' -4 '$ HILL AUDITORIUM: Loud CorTal Concer t Mozartean Fiasco OF THE more than 626 extant works of Mozart, a good many must be trash: and the Missa Brevis (K. 192) is one of them. Last night it was given a very successful performance since one of the major characteristics of the work was eloquently communicated. The Michigan Singers not only sounded uninspired, but looked with boredom on this music of mostly school boyish polyphony. The AY, MAY 25 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: PETER ECKSTEIN The Farm Vote: Republicans Take The Lead THE FARM PROBLEM, having long served as a "political football" in domestic pastures, appears to be partially solved, with the passage of the new farm bill. It appears also that the Republicans under the guidance of Dwight D. Eisenhower and. Ezra Benson have out-maneuvered the Demo- erats in the race for the farm vote. Exclamations of Democratic rejoicing were hieard after the passage of the first omnibus farm bill. This bill ignored all the Administra- tion requests for farm aid expect for the soil bank plan, which would allow farmers 1.2 bil- lion dollars in payment for the withdrawal of land from crop production. PASSING)a bill which included such Ben- son-disapproved provisions'as the rigid price supports on basic crops, the Democrats hope to put Eisenhower on the spot by means of political strategy. Ike had two choices, he could either O.K. the bill which was directly opposed to the Re- publican policy of a sliding scale of parity sup- ports and thereby hope to increase Republican chances of gaining farm votes; or he could veto the bill sticking to sound economic policy and standing a chance of losing the farm vote. Eisenhower vetoed the bill, thereby uphold- ing his party's principles and not descending to.a level of making the farmers plight a "poli- tical football." FURTHERMORE, Eisenhower seems not to have lost farm support but gained rural votes as seen in the recent Indiana primary which show that the farmers still like Ike. To add to this victory, Ike and the Adminis- tration have sponsored a new farm bill which has passed both houses of Congress., This new farm bill includes the soil bank provision which was the major Republican pro- posal in the omnibus bill. It also includes the sliding scale parity price supports on basic crops instead of the high rigid supports favored by the Democrats., IT IS INTERESTING to note that the soil bank proposal included a Republican spon- sored provision whereby farmers would get advance payments up to 50 per cent as soon as contracts for withdrawing surplus-producing acres for next year are signed. This provision, which would have bene- fited the farmers immediately, was vetoed by the Democrats. It is surprising that the Demo- crats, who in the omnibus bill came out for im- mediate' rural aid through high rigid supports would veto a provision which proposes to do this very thing. ON THE OTHER HAND perhaps; it is not surprising. The Democrats are 'losing out politically on one count, the Eisenhower veto, want to make sure the Republicans do not make any more advances on the rural vote. It is interesting also to note that the Demo- crats who insist on playing politics with the farmer's plight and using poliical strategy to gain rural votes' are, losing and the Republicans, led by Eisenhower, have remained constant on party policy and seem to be taking the lead in the battle for the farmer's vote. -CAROL PRINS a 1 4W~sse'~SSE Y Y. r e ' " L .. > ¢o , _r ' - :. ,;. L :::, .. , d. 9tgt'1niE W$alt tKG"AS pc>Sr '. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Mrs. Luce, Nixon-Diplomats By DREW PEARSONa Education, Not Rules 1OLICE RECOMMENDATIONS embodied in their final report on last Friday's traffic tragedy are disappointing. So is speculation on what effect it will have on the driving ban. The emphasis is on tighter restrictions, greater supervision of parties and continued failure to recognize that restriction and regulation are invitations to abuses. Rules and regulations are not the answer to preventing tragedy. The approach is nega- tive. Students will continue to drink despite the rules and, unless properly educated, drive while drunk.' Overly-restrictive regulations are themselves an incentive to commit excesses. In addition, they force enforcement agencies to ignore constructive measures aimed at safe drinking and driving. Closer supervision of pre-parties, as police suggest, would be a good idea if the party-goers didn't hold their parties in secret. But as long as students want to drink and legally can not, the pre-parties will be held illegaly, they will not be supervised, and drunks will drive. Un- fortunately, the situation is as ridiculous as it sounds. NOR DOES the answer lie in greater enforce- ment of regulations. First, is is impossible. Second, we have faith in the student's ingen- uity an discretion. The answer may lie in education--a positive approach. Creating a community awareness of the effects of combining drinking and driving would prevent more accidents than prohibiting the two. Teaching students to drink safely would entail overlooking the regulations pro- hibiting drinking but it drinking which is more can claim. might yresult in safe than the regulations -LEE MARKS 'Spring Recitals' Plague Coeds IT HAPPENS every spring. Women's housing units are plagued by fraternity members exhibiting their opera talents in the wee hours of the morning.- This practice invariably reaches its peak during the few weeks before final examinations, and particularly delightful for those who are trying to obtain a few hours of sleep between study sessions. The activity is extra-curricular to the pin serenades which are an integral part of the Michigan tradition, but seem to be far more entertaining (at least for the fraternity mem- bers). Perhaps these "men" are those with an unlimited amount of intellectual curiosity about whom the University is so concerned. Appar- ently the academic challenges are not suffi- cient for the affiliated men on campus.. The coeds must be understanding, however. These sensible, sober young men are probably merely trying to find an outlet for their un- tapped intellectual curiosity. . Nevertheless, Michigan coeds are in the market for old shoe collections. -JANET REARICK IF I WERE Ike and truly wanted to rescue the disastrous skid of American foreign policy, I would bring Clare Boothe Luce lack to Washington and appoint her to a top place in the State Department, perhaps even as Secretary of State. And if her health would not per- mit Mrs. Luce to work full time, I would appoint Richard Nixon Un- ,dersecretary. Some readers will probably fig- ure that I have been smitten with the lady's charm and beauty; and that I want to get Nixon out of the Vice-Presidential race. But the fact is that Mrs. Luce has shown more imagination and statesman- ship tha nany other U. S. diplo- mat, while Nixon hasp developed a shrewd showmanship and knack of winning friends abroad. IT WAS Mrs. Luce who, after some initial mistakes, helped to guide Italy's galloping Commun- ism into pre-Western, pro-demo- cratic channels. She steered American arms orders to Italian factories in such a way that the giant Fiat company's labor unions voted to throw out Communist leadership; and she deftly, unob- trusively helped the Italian gov- ernment put acrossyland reform and revamp its tax system so as to put a proportionately greater bur- den on the rich than on the poor. It was Mrs. Luce, also, who saw The winning essay of the Academic Freedom Week Essay contest will be published in Sunday's Daily, in President Gronchi a new, mo- derate leader of Europe; and she persuaded Eisenhower to invite him to Washington. Here Gronchi was the first to warn our head-in- the-sand John Foster Dulles that NATO was falling apart and must be broadened with economic and political functions. Mrs. Luce's husband's Time magazine has castigated me al- most every week with weird dis- tortions of the truth. I have no reason to be prejudiced in her favor. But I have watched her work for years-in Congress and in Rome-and she is a person of judgement, brilliance, and imag- ination. She would be a great asset to the nation if used to guide our entire foreign police in Washington. THIS GOES back to the manner in which Premier U Nu was re- ceived in the U.S.A. Dulles receiv- ed him politely, but perfunctorily. The State Department denied one of his statements. But, worst of all, Secretary of Agriculture Ben- son kept him cooling his heels in an ante-room, didn't even seem to know he was coming. So the Prime Minister of Burma walked out. Neither John Foster Dulles nor Ezra Taft Benson nor a good many other U. S. functionaries seem to iealize that "face" is everything in the Orient. Pride, prestige means more to these new brown- black-yellow nations than millions of dollars of relief or thousands of words of propaganda. Premier U Nu was humiliated. He lost face in America. Invited here as the head of an extremely important new nation, he was kept waiting and joked about. So, while Bulganin and Khrushchev had flowers tossed in their path and wreaths placed around their necks, John Foster Dulles had to be content with look- ing down on Burma from an air- plane as he flew by. .' * * HE WAS not invited to land. Those are some of the things Vice President Nixon understands and did not permit to happen to President Sukarno of Indonesia. Tomorrow I'll write further on our skidding foreign relations and why they need someone like Mrs. Luce and Mr. Nixon to get them back into gear. New Books at Library Pasternak, Joe-easy the Hard Way; NY, Putnam's, 1956. Pate, Lloyd-Reactionary!; NY, Harper, 1956. Rajendra, Prasad-At the Feet of Mahatma Gandhi; NY, Philos, Lib., 1955. Saroyan, William - Love; NY, Lion Lib. Ed., 1956 Sanderson, Ivan - Follow the Whale; Boston, Little, Brown, 1956. Sansom, William-A Contest of Ladies; NY, Reynal, 1956. Seymour, John-One Man's Af- rica; NY, John Day, 1956. Shaplen, Robert-A Forest of Tigers; NY, Knopf, 1956. Shaw, I'win-Lucy Crown; NY, Random House, 1956. Shotwell, James -The United States in History; NY, Simon, Schuster, 1956. unimaginative dynamics of the performance was stilted and sud- den;a steady forte with occasion- al strained fortissimos. The one refreshing musical moment came near the end when a soprano voice incanted her first agnus del with more subtlety than the rest of the reading which in general was like the progress of a bull- dozer through ravines and laby- rinths of blurred counterpoint. * * .* THE MAIN WORK presented was the Requiem Mass (K. 626), performed with piano accompani- ment by William Doppman. The piano turned out to be a fortunate substitution, for at many moments it pointed out the lyrical, lineal aspects of the orchesttral music: and it was frequently a pleasure to hear the unornamented piano line sweetly singing away under the heavy choral onslaught, es- pecially in the "Hostias." The choir's conception of the Requiem, sung with heavy blunt- ness, seems to be that "we are brutish being filled with frenzied terror at the unknown. All eter- nity is an infinite and disembodied shriek." In some passages like the "Rex tremendae," this unsubtle bellow ing made for properly ani- mal 'sounds shouted in forceful unison at some unreasonable land-I lord. But one hankered for a transparent pianissimo after a while. In all this there were some won- derfulimusical interludes, especial- ly from the excellent quartet of soloists, and the pianist. At every juncture, they managed to /phrase intelligently, and to articulate vo- cal lines boldly and surely. But I think Mozart's ghost would have wept. -A. Tsugawa AT THE MICHIGAN: Monster. Rally YESTERDAY afternoon, I was banished to the Michigan to muse upon the so-called Top Shock Show of All Time. "Phantom from 10,000 Leagues" is traditional, traductionist tripe. A plump, well meaning scientist finds a atomic-type death ray in the ocean guarded by a man in a rubber suit playing monster and all kinds of fun follows. Funniest line is when the scientist, upon observing charred bottom of a boat, exclaims; "radiation burns!" o, well. "Day the World Ended" has more meat on its bones, mostly contam- inated. Big atomic war percolates everyone except for a handful of typical Americans: a sea captain who foresaw the catastrophe years ago, his pretty daughter, a smirk- ing gangster, a stripper, a geolo- gist, and a half-radiated village idiot type. It's dog eat dog as these rugged men, their emotions stripped raw by gamma rays, fight for the love of these gay wenches, while hor- rible monsters peer from the wings The poor sea captain's daughter is strangely attracted to one of these monsters; presumably a for- mer lover, now turned professional. Explanation for the monsters is that they are the result of radia- tion changing men into monsters. Bdth these pictures suffer from incredible misconceptions of radi- ation. If producers someday real- ize that radiation burns don't char wood or turn men and animals into monsters, we may yet get some decent films out of the atomic age. -David Kessel DAILY OFFICIAL 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 in TYPEWRITTEN from 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. FRIDAY, MAY 25, 1956 VOL. LXVIII, NO. SO General Notices All Departmental Offices, plant facili- ties and service units will be closed on Memorial Day, May 30 1958. Residence halls and the University Hospital will operate on a holiday schedule. Commencement Instructions to Facul- ty Members: Convene at 4:15 p m. , the first floor lobby in the Adminstr.- tion Building, buses will be provided In front of the Administration Building on State Street to take you to the Stadium or Yost Field House to join procession and to take the place assigned toyou' on stage, as directed by Marshals; at the end of the exercises buses will be ready in driveway east of the Stadium or at west side of Field House to bring you back to the campus. Herbert G. Watkins, Secretary Oreon E. Scott Freshman Prize book winners who have not as yet received their books may obtain their copy by calling at the Scholarship office, 113 Administration Building, Mon. through Fri., 8:00-12:00 and 1:00-5:00. Distribution of Diplomas. If the ee- ercises are held in the Stadium, diplo- mas for all graduates, excepting the School of Dentistr6i, will be distributed from designated stations under the east stands of the Stadium, immediately af- ter the exercises. The diploma distri- bution stations are on the level above the tunnel entrance. If, however, the exercises are held In the Yost Field House, all diplomas e- cepting those of the School of Dentistry will be distributed from the windows. of the Cashier's Office and the Regis- trar's Office in the lobby of the Ad- ministration Building. Following the- ceremony diplomas may be called for until 9:00 p.m. Herbert G. Watkins, Secretary. Student Accounts: Your attention Is called to the following rules-passed-by the Regents at their meeting on Feb. 28, 1936: "Students shall pay all ac- counts due the University not later than the last day of classes of each semester or summer session. Student loans which are not paid or renewed are subject to this regulation; however, student loans not yet due are exempt. Any un- paid accounts at the close of business on the last day of classes will be reported to the Cashier of the Univer- ity and- "(a) All academic credits will be with- held, the grades for the semester or summer session just completed will not be released, and no transcript of credits will be issued. (b) All students owing such as- counts will not be allowed to register in any subsequent semester or sum- mer session until payment has been made."- Herbert G. Watkins Secy. Commencement Exercises, June 16, '3 To be held at 5:30 p.m. either in the Stadium or Yost Field House, depend- ing on the weather. Exercises will con- cude about 7:30 p.m. Those eligible to participate: Grad- uates of Summer Session of 1955 and of February and June, 1956. Graduates of the Summer Session of 1956 and of Februray 1947 are not supposed 'to pa- ticipate; however, no check is made of those taking part in the ceremony, but no tickets are available for those in these classifications. Tickets: For Yost Field House: Two to each prospective graduate, to be distributed from Tuesday, June 5, to 12:00 noon on Saturday, June 16, at Cashier's Office, first floor of Adminis- tration Building; For Stadium: No tick- ets necessary. Children are not admitted unless accompanied by adults. Academic Costume: Can be rented at Moe Sport Shop, North University Avenue, Ann Arbor. Assembly for Graduates: At 4:30 p.m. In area east of Stadium. Marshals will direct graduates to proper stations. If siren indicates (at intervals from 4:00 to 4:15 p.m.) that exercises are to be held in Yost Field House, graduates should go directly there and be seated by Marshals. Spectators: Stadium: Enter by Main Street gates only. All should be seated by 5.00 p.m., when procession 'enters field. Yost Field House: Only those holding tickets can be admitted owing to lack of space. Enter on State Street, opposite McKinley Avenue. Alumni Reunions: Headquarters at Alumni Memorial Hal. Registration on June 14, 15 and 16. Alumni Luncheon: Saturday, June 16 12:00 noon, in Waterman Gymnas- ium. Admission of Alumni by badge. Relatives and friends by tickets pro- vided at Alumni headquarters. Graduation Announcements, Invita- tions, etc.: Inquire at Office of Student Affairs. Commencement Programs: To be dis- tributed at Stadium or Yost Field House. Housing: Alumni should apply at Registration Desk, Alumni Memorial Hall; all others at Residence' Halls Office in the Administration Building. Doctoral and Professional Degree Can- didates who attend the commencement exercises are entitled to receive a Ph.D. I y 1 INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Leadership and Friendship PAINTINGS, DRAWINGS: Union Art Exhibit Outstanding By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst W EN PRESIDENT Eisenhower says the United States is trying to be friends with everybody he touches one of the most difficult and one of the weakest facets of American foreign policy. Qualified leadership hardly ever succeeds in beling friends with everybody. In attempting to, it may fail in friendship with anybody. There is a difference between friendship and an even-handed leadership in international affairs. HAT THE President was saying was that the United States sought to avoid involve- ment in controversies between those with whom she sought. friendship. This 'is more difficult in international than in personal relationships. One of the chief embarrassments of the United States over a period of years has been to maintain her position with Europe's colony- holding powers without abandoning her tradi- Editorial Staff tional sympathy for the underdog and her belief in self-determination of peoples. SHE HAS stepped in twice in disputes involv- ing colonialism or hegemony. She helped the Indonesians obtain independence, and her advice went far toward the British-Egyptian settlement of their military treaty dispute. She earned no profits in either case from either side. By not stepping into other disputes, the United States, since she is publicly allied with and aiding the economies of the colonial pow- ers, has acquired the taint of colonialism her- self in the eyes of many Asiatics and Africans. There is a serious school of thought which contends that, instead of trying to be neutral 'on problems which arise -between component parts of the free world, the United States should actively follow her conscience. This is the role of leadership, rather than the role of mediation. THEY POINT OUT that Americans are in- clined to take the attitude that those who are not with them in the cold war are against them. That means submerged peoples must be granted the right to feel the same way about those who are 'not with them in their' revolu- tion against European hegemony. The overwhelming difficulty, of course, is that much of Europeis strength depends upon its economic relationships with these sub- merged and now emerging areas. xa'E' STUDENT paintings and draw- ings will be on display at the Union Art Exhibit through Friday. The talent exemplified in these art works is worthwhile seeing. Judging the Art snow this were were three men closely associated with art: Marvin Eisenberg of the Department of Fine Arts, Donald Gooch of the Art Department, and Richard Wilt also from the Art' Department 'and the Ann Arbor Art Association. The judges have awarded first and second prizes, and an honorable mention in each of three categories: oils, drawing and water colors. In the oil painting category, the first prize went to Florence Wili- kins Rohe's Still Life. A chiaro- scuro study in tone. As a subtle blending of pastel shades aside darker grey and brown tones, her picture possesses an interesting quality of surface tension. Her flat burnished use of pigment al- lowing the texture of the canvas to I show through creates interest in the medium as well as in the sur- I face pattern. mention for her Swing! in enamel on metal. Amazing though it may seem, ten dripped enamel lines can convey a felling of mobility. Carol DeBolt won a first prize for her Fish, a naive water color drawing. * * * THE SECOND prize in this field was given to S. E. Morello for a nameless painting, which has more character than the first prize painting in this category. The greens, blues, and yellows are fresher and clearer, while in the first painting, the colors atop each other appear rather muddy. Honorable mention was awarded in this category to Diana Marcus' modified cubist painting. The' freshness of water colors is inevit- ably lost in such complexity; this complicated type of design seems better left to oils. Yet with the juxtaposition of shapes, the pic- ture is well-composed. BESIDES THE water color prize, S. E. Morello wan o first p la c e award in the drawing category for a still life. The composition of this ink drawing, while assymetri- cal, creates a pleasantly balanced picture. Yet the artist worked with enough freedom that the awarded to Roger Core for a re- clining nude. His shading care- fully interprets the contours, yet the drawing retains a nice fresh- ness and unbelabored quality. Many more prizes could have been awarded, for much of the work presented in the Union Art Exhibit is outstanding. -Linda Goodman LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler N!{ ECON v/J.".. TillS WeEKS ASS t / / ,NT:1.To fM f'' C "IS A L FAt'A FA j SA PoN-MSC C I4 A- DAVE BAAD, MLURRY PRYMER Managing Editor JIM DYGERT C.ity Edtor THE JUDGES awarded Mar- garet J. Williamson a second place for her Winter Mountains, which in its simplicity, sharpness of form, s t }'