mmmmmmm Sixty-Sixth Yeat 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 "They Were Going Too Fast-That's What's 'The Matter!" ben Opinions Are Free, Truth 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. )AY, FEBRUARY 21, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: DICK SNYDER Auto Power Without Brain Power - A Case For the Speed. Laws 0 SOUPED-UP Ford, two human beings, ex- cessive speed-and then there were none. Two lives were claimed in a crash on US 112 near Saline Sunday, a crash which provided vivid, if not terrible, evidence of the need for enforcement of Michign's new 65 mile per hour speed law. As several adults speculated on the possible cause of the accident while viewing the re- mains of the car that night, a six-year old boy provided the best explanation of the acci- dent. "They were going too fast-that's what's the matter!" State Police investigating the crash arrived at the same'opinion as the six-year old. And acquaintances of Vernon and Lee Irelan said the accident, though tragic, was no surprise. Following the crash, a' friend of the victims called The Daily "in the hope that this Will take the starch out of some of today's crazy drivers." HE unidentified friend went on to say that "Vern always had an angel sitting on his shoulder. I guess it just wasn't there Sunday. I had been over that same stretch with him several times and he never drove under 100. He had to have the hottest car in the state and nobody could catch him, including the cops. If he had half a chance to get away from a cop, he'd try it and go at it just like somebody plays football. He lived and breathed on cars and that's where he died. I don't know why his license wasn't taken away from him." Evidence of the friend's testimony is what remains of the car, a '56 Ford Mainliner with a factory-built, high-horsepower motor and a four-barrel carburetor. No one will know what happened. Sunday afternoon traffic was absent at the precise moment the accident oc- curred. The roads were dry. But neither of these favorable conditions stopped the car from careening off the road for 357 feet, striking a tree which ripped the Counseling WITH REGISTRATION so recently com- pleted, students still have interviews with academic counselors fresh in mind. For many Literary College students it was a disappointing experence. Those seeking educa- tional advice found something more closely resembling a rubber stamping process. In seeking to understand this lack of per- sonalized counseling in the Literary College it is possible to put the blame upon the rapidly increasing enrollment. This would be a partial explanation. Certainly the counseling depart. ment is understaffed in proportion to the num- ber of students handled this year. However ,the lack of personal counseling is in a large part intended. It can be understood when a look is taken at the ideology behind ft. In its counseling program the Literary College is adhering to its belief that as soon as possible the student's education should be his own re- sponsibility because the process of planning his program is part of the education itself. The 'freshman is given some counseling, but by the sophomore year the student is encouraged to make his own decisions. The burden of respon- sibility, it is felt, aids the student in maturing more rapidly. A system such as evidenced by some of the eastern schools where each student has a tutor top completely off and continuing on to rest 84 feet later. The best, summary of the acci- dent came from an onlooker: "Every little bit of horsepower she had went into tearing her to pieces." The Saline accident has a lesson. But there have been other accidents with other lessons in the past. They are easily forgotten, except by those who were fortunate enough to catch a glimpse of unembalmed bodies and shattered steel. They have not prevented criticism of the state's new speed law designed to curb Michigan's part in leadership of the nation's mass highway slaughter. It is argued that there is no sense in having new high-horsepower cars "when they can't go beyond 65. This limit is inconsistent with advances in car design and power.. Probably so. But the thing that is forgotten is that with the increase in automobile power, there must come increase in responsibility and brain power on the part of drivers. The fact is, however, that while our country's auto manu- facturers have gone to the ridiculous in power- ful cars, the driver has remained a mental midget capable of controlling neither himself nor his car. THUS the reason for a 65-mile an hour limit. And the factthat many car accident vic- tims are the result of other drivers provides the necessity for rigid enforcement of the new law.' Had enforcement authorities taken ac- tion on the string of violation tickets which Vern Irelan had received previous to Sunday, then he and his brother, legally deprived of the use of their car, might still be alive today. Until sufficient enforcement does become a reality, the sbest we can hope for is that care- free drivers and "non-chickens" be able to witness first-hand a similar mixture of auto- mobile parts with human flesh a~nd blood. -'DICK SNYDER atnd Maturity to direct his reading and curriculum would be strongly objected to by the Literary College as a hinderance to individual responsibility. The student,, it is claimed, becomes too de- pende ntupon an outsider in a system such as this. F WE HAVE to choose between no advice and too much advice then probably the Literary College has made the right choice. But can't we have advice which doesn't hinder maturity? If the advice remains merely advice and doesn't tend to become command it could be more beneficial than harmful. The counselor does have a better knowledge of the nature of a particular course merely from being more familiar with the University curriculum. And because he has knowledge of the aptitude and intelligence tests the student has taken, he ften has a greater knowledge of the student's capabilities than does the student himself. Yet with the assembly line system the Literary College uses now, the student seldom benefits from the counselor's knowledge or experience. A much-needed conference will be held Thursday at the Union to discuss the counseling problem. Students who are dissatisfied with the present system have an obligation to attend. -ETHEL KOVITZ AT THE MICHIGAN: I'Darling' Nois Farce LONG AGO Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz got married. It was an auspicious marriage, as later events have proved, for they have been making money out of it ever since, both in television and movies. Their most recent pot of gold will no doubt sit at the end of a rainbow called "Forever Darling," now showing at the Michigan. In "Forever Darling" Miss Ball plays the scatter-brained wife of a hard-working entomologist (Mr. Arnaz). The pair have been mar- ried for five years, and as the years have slipped by, the paths of their lives have grown farther and farther apart. Mr. Arnaz has become more and more enchanted with his bugs, and Miss Ball has become more and more enchanted with some obnoxious friends whom her husband can't stand. Miss Ball intensely resents Mr. Arnaz's snor- ing at night and his habit of leav- ing cigarette ashes everywhere but in the ash trays. These and other serious conflicts are threatening to disrupt what was once a happy marriage. *C * THINGS BEGIN to look pretty bad for the spouses when one day, in a blinding flash, Miss Ball's guardian angel appears in her bed- room. Now, at first she is terribly frightened of him, not being .very familiar with guardian angels and such,mbut gradually she gets used to him. The angel looks like whatever she wants him to look like-in this case, James Mason, without wings. Now Mr. Ma'son, looking very cool in a grey flannel suit, manages to snatch their marriage from the very jaws of disaster constitutes a dull and completely unstimulating story, * s Neither Miss Ball nor Mr. Arnaz possess any real ability as comedi- ans. They show themselves to be quite inept at handling the few funny lines in the film, and hence they must rely on the purely physi- cal tactic of making strange noises, faces, and gestures to wring laugh- ter from the audience. The only pleasing thing about the whole works is the luxurious use of color, further testimony to the technical wizardry of Holly- wood. -Phil Breen DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN -Daily-vern Soden WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: By DREW PEARSONf CHIEF problem of the Democratic party, rebellion in the South, rose to plague the Dixon-Yates is- sue, one of the best the Democrats have, during a secret session of the Senate Judiciary Committee. Democratic Senators led by Es- tes Kefauver have been pushing for the appointment of a special attorney both to defend the gov- ernment in the Dixon-Yates claims suit, and to prosecute those guilty of any Dixon-Yates conflict of in- terest. There appears to be a clear-cut case of finangling inside the Budget Bureau with Adolphe Wenzell placed inside the govern- ment to push and later finance the Dixon-Yates deal. So far, Attorney General Brown- ell has not made the slightest move toward prosecution. So Demo- cratic Senators want to appoint a special attorney. *, , , HOWEVER, one lone Southern vote, that of Senator McClel- land of Arkansas in the secrecy of the Judiciary Committee, con- sistently opposed this move. With every Republican on the commit- tee except Langer of North Dako- ta voting against the Democrats, McClelland's lone vote was all- important. He backstopped Sena- tor Butler of Maryland, who car- ried the ball for the Republicans. Here is what happened during a stormy session of the Judiciary Committee when Senator Kefauver attempted to push through his resolution for separate counsel to prosecute Dixon-Yates. "Let me get down to the meat of the coconut," said Kefauver, reading from the pro-Dixon-Yates testimony given before, the Securi- ties and Exchange Commission by the Justice Department. "Having twice gone on record in favor of Dixon-Yates," Kefauv- er argued, "the Justice Department should be disqualified from de- fending the government in the damage suit brought to recover $3,500,000 in cancellation charges." However, when Kefauver tried to enter the Justice Department testimony as evidence, Senator Butler objected. * * * "ONLY THESE specific pages?" asked Butler. "Only two pages?" "I offer a substitute motion," sug- gested McClelland, backing up Butler, "that all the records of the SEC be procured and filed for reference in this committee." This would have made the rec- ord so voluminous it would be too expensive to publish and no one would have read it anyway. "We should also have as part of this record before the commit- tee all of the hearings in the anti- monopoly subcommittee," added Butler, complicating matters even further. * * * FINALLY, Sen. Arthur V. Wat- kins (R., Utah) came to Kefauv- er's defense. Pleading for fair play, he demanded that the Ten- nessee Senator be allowed to state his case. "I think probably we ought to hear the evidonce," said the square-shooting Watkins. "I would not want to object to him bring- ing in evidence. I want at least to consider it." Butler was still adamant, how- ever, so Chairman Harley M. Kil- gore (D., W.Va.) tried to change the subject by shifting to other committee business. Butler wouldn't hear of it. "I insist that we continue with this business," he declared. "I ob- ject. Let us go on with this." S * * * SO KEFAUVER resumed the presentation of his arguments, this time questioning Assistant Attor- . ney General Warren E. Burger. "The executive departments have denied us certain records and statements," said Kefauver, "on the grounds that they are privi- leged. Are you going to insist and bring out in the defense of the (government) these matters?" "I can best answer that," re- plied Burger, "by saying. that the staff lawyers in charge of this case will do everything that they think is honorable and proper to do to win this lawsuit." * * * MEANWHILE Senators Butler and Welker of Idaho were watch- ing the clock. Noting that it was past noon, they demanded an end to the meeting. The full Senate, they said, had just convened. "For the purpose of the record," shouted Butler, "when we have a pending order of business and we had agreed among ourselves that we would not go after 12 o'clock, to ask permission on the floor (for an extension) without notifying the members of this committee is not right!" Butler's voice continued to rise. "I am fully convinced," Kilgore replied, "that the senator from Maryland is trying to put on a little personal filibuster. Eventually the committee room settled down and the hearing re- sumed. But Butler, with the sup- port of Senator McClelland, still insisted that the record be clut- tered up with hundreds of pages of extraneous testimony so as to befog the issue. (Copyright 1956, by Bell Syndicate, Inc,) 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. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1956 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 7 General Notices Student Organizations planning to be active during the second semester must register in the Office of Student Af- fairs, 1020 Administration Building, not later than Feb. 24. Forms of registra- tion have been mailed to the executive officers of the organizations which reg- istered for the first semester . Additional forms may be secured in the Office d Student Affairs. Social Events sponsored by student organizations at which both men and women are to be present must be regis- tered in the Office of Student Affairs and are subject to approval by the Dean of Mpn. Application forms and a copy of regulations governing these events may be secured in the Office of Student Affairs, 1020 Administration Building. Requests for approval must be sub- m*tted to that office no later than noon of the Tuesday before the event is scheduled. A list of approved social events will be published in the Daily Official Bulletin on Thursday of each week. A Meeting will be held Wednesday, February 22, at 4 p.m. in Business Administration Room 31 for- those inter- ested in forming a student chapter of either the Society for the Advance- ment of Management or the American Management Association. All those in. terested are invited to attend. Academic Notices Linguistics Club: Prof. I. J. Gelb, of the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, will address the Linguistics Club at 8:00 p.m., Tues., Feb. 21, East Conference Room, Rackham Building. "Problems in Dialetological Investiga- tions in Ancient Mesopotamia." Seminar in Conflict Resolution (Prob- lems in the Integration of the Social Sciences, Economics 353) Tues., Feb. 21, at 3:00 p.m. in the conference room of the Children's Neuro-psychiatric Hos- pital. Charles Stevenson will speak on "Problems in the Resolution of Ethical Conflicts." Botanical Seminar. Robert T. Wilce, of the Dept. of Botany, will speak on "Ecological Studies of Marine Algae in the Ungava BayAN. Laborador Dis- tricts." Wed., Feb. 22 ,4:5 p.m., 1139 Natural Science. Refreshments "t 4:00 p.m. Doctoral Examination for Duane Neu- man Sunderman, Chemistry; thesis: "The Development and Evaluation of Radiochemical Separation Procedures for Barium, Calcium, Strontium, Silver and Indium," Wed., Feb. 22, 3003 Chemistry Bldg., at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, W. W. Meinke, The Extension Service announces that there are still openings in the following classes to be held in Ann Arbors Semantics: The Science of Meaning :00 p.m., Tuesday, Feb. 21' Eight Weeks. $10.00 Professor Emeritus Clarence L. Meader, Instructor. Registration for This Class may be made in Room 4501 of the Administra- tion Building on South State Street during University office hours, or in Room 164 of the School of Business Administration, 6:30 to 9:30 p.m., the night of the class. Aeronautical Engineering Semnpr: Mr. Phillip E. Culbertson of CONVAIR (Aerodynamics Group), San Diego, will speak on "Application of the Area Rule to the Design of a Supersoni Airplane," Wed., Feb. 22, at 4:00 p.m., in 1504 East Eng. Bldg. Mathematics Colloquium: Tues., Feb. 21, at 4:10 p.m., in Room 3011 A.H. Prof. Annette Sinclair will speak on "A Topological Approach to a Class of Approximation Problems in Analytic Function Theory." Tea and coffee will be served in Room 3212 A.H. at 3:45 p.m. General Undergraduate Scholarship application forms may be obtained at the Scholarship Office, 113 Administra- tion Building Basement. Applicants may be enrolled in any of the under- graduate units of the University and should have an academic average of "B" or better and financial need. Ap- plications must be completed by March 1, 1956. The Make-up final examination for Botany 1 will be held in Room 2004. Natural Science Building, on Tues., Feb. 21 at 7:00-10:00 p.m. Sociology Colloquium: Dr. Leo Silber- man of Oxford University will speak on "The Theory of Games and Its Ap- plication to Human Ecology" on Wed., Feb. 22 at 7:30 p.m. in the East Conference Room, Rackham Building. Open lecture. Architecture and Design Students may not add any courses after 5:00 p.m., Fri., Feb. 24. M.A. Language Examination in History Fri., March 2, 4:00-5:00 p.m., 1408 Mason Hall. Sign list in History Office. Dic- tionaries may be used. Make-up Examinations in History - Sat., March 3, 9:00-12:00 a.m., 447 Mason Hall. See your instructor for permission and then sign list in History Office. Concerts The Toronto Symphony Orchestra, Sir Ernest MacMillan, Conductor, will be heard in the Choral Union Series wed., Feb. 22 at 8:30 o'clock, in Hill Auditorium. A limited number of tickets are available at the offices of the University Musical Society in Bur- ton Memorial Tower, and will also be available after 7:00 on the night of the performance at the Hill Auditorium box office. 4 4 Y a{ 'A To The Editor IN THIS CORNER: A Baffling Tradition By MURRY FRYMER FRATERNITY HAZING is probably the most baffling aspect of a college campus for anyone who has ever, had the perplexing ex- perience of seeing it or being a participant. It's baffling because it does take place on a college campus, and by men who, at least at times, pride themselves in intellectual attain- ment. The main object behind it is to somehow degrade the initiate, and do .so in exactingly painful process. What is perhaps even more baffling about this typically college behavior is its universality. It's as much in evidence at little Podunk college as it is at proud Harvard, or Yale, and it is very much accepted here at Michigan. Like most typically, collegiate behavior, tra- dition plays a big part in the whole process. Yet, outside of this, it is rather difficult to find a satisfactory reason for these ludicrous antics. It doesn't actually accomplish anything, and Editorial Staff Dave Baab .......................... Managing Editor Jim Dygert ............................... City Editor Murry Frymer................. Editorial Director the harm that has been done on numerable occasions is horrifying and pitiful. The recent drowning of a Massachusetts Institute of Technology student, undergoing a fraternity stunt, is one extreme example. But there are many others, cases of students on this campus who have undergone some extreme physical punishment, many who carry around its marks for life. OUTSIDE of its traditional motives, the pro- cess of hazing has one golden rule: "Do unto others as you have had others do unto you." This gives the more sadistic members of the power group their moment of glory, and a ridiculous moment it is. Abandoning individuals many miles away with little clothing and no money is a common device. Or, if you're lucky enough to make honorary status, you might be forced to slosh through mud while stale beer is tossed into your bleery eyes. The most disturbing part of the whole hazing process is its lack of meaning. If the initiates, through mutual suffering, develop closer friend- ship, it is often at the loss of friendship for the active group. For the honorary, it accom- plishes somewhat more, a certain notoriety which distinguishes campus leaders from the common mass. This recalls an incident two years ago when one ofthe many campus honoraries was wal- 7...,. . - A +1.. A;_ _ +L . TACTn Obligation Not Fulfilled To the Editor: AS SOON as I heard Mr. Thayer Soule call Egypt 'mysterious' and sunset 'the traditional hour,' I know what type of Near East- ern lecture we were in for. Fac- tual errors were abundant. There never were two million people at Baalbek, nor does anyone think that the Tower of Babel was there; Israel does not extend to the whole of Palestine as shown on his map; Kerbela, not Kad- himain, might be called the sec- ond holiest shrine of Shi'ite IEA# lam; the monastery near Aleppo was St. Simeon's, not St. Sebas- tian's; the Arabic number was 52, not 25; etc. But these errors were trivial compared with the distortion in the general picture of life in the Arab countries today. These coun- tries were presented as a museum and their people were among the exhibits. I felt that the traveler never really made contact with them as human beings. Perhaps this explains the solemn looks of the Syrian peasants at their vil- lage dance, of whom he made such a joke. Pictures of peasant life showed mainly the Nubians of Up- per Egypt and the Arabs of the desert fringes of Syria and Jordan, representing the most primitive people in those countries. All modernization was attribut- ed to British, French and Ameri- can efforts and nothing was said or shown about the efforts of the Arabs themselves: for example the textile industry in Syria has been built up by Syrians, not by the French, and the new Aswan Dam is an Egyptian government proj- ect. I am sure this distorted picture of the Near East was not due to any malice in the lecturer, but only to his desire to present the picturesque and the ancient. Still, a travel lecturer has an obligation to give his audience a reasonably accurate impression of his subject. In the first Burton Holmes lec- ture, this obligation was not ful- tilled. From the current "Political Af- fairs"-we can see that the Com- munist Party itself is not taken in by such hogwash. P 47-"The fact is that there are presently in all Party districts members in various people's or- ganizations who have direct ties with youth work and young people. The problem has been that we have not met with these comrades and guided their work." (Which in the future will be remedied - meaning) P 47-"Throughout its 6 year history, LYL has made many out- standing contributions to the right for youth's needs and in the build- ing of democratic unity of the young generation." P 48-"Many League members have developed strong ties with the established youth organiza- tions." P 48-"Without a policy of work with young people in the estab- lished youth organizations, not only would the League have been unable to exercise the deep going influence on youth developments which it did, but it is doubtful whether the League would have been able to survive the sharp at- tacks which were directed against it." P 49-"The LYL is preparing at this time to make an important change in one major aspect of its organization; its personnel and method of functioning, to more ac- curately reflect certain new trends and developments among the youth, especially teen-aged youth. "Of major consideration is the formation of a teen-aged division of the LYL that will function with a high degree of autonomy and thought a variety of more flexible forms and activities. The most rapid growth of the LYL can take place today among teen-agers." "This section of the LYL must be provided with advisors and counselors who have direct ties with the LYL and the labor and progressive movement. It will be united with the LYL primarily by the circulation of New Chal- lenge that will serve as the major . e 64 -* LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick BbWff ' , 15 1 t ' I f r A , 4 4 [ 'i l i " II 1 -.tiVs. ^ . I ....., ' 51 , ! /'' * r ,, , f ---r-- _ 1 " "' "f . Debra Durchslag .................... Magazine David apan ...............,....... Feature Jane Howard "......,.. ..,....... Associate Editor Editor Editor A ,I