O1t7 3ir4tan &*sg Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. This must be noted in all reprints. TheBaggage Car Ahead " 1 CHORAL UNION: Milstein Plays 'UESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1955 NIGHT EDITOR: MARY ANN THOMAS .In Hill Concert I ALLING for great technical prowess in order to be musicallyrex- pressive, Nathan Milstein's performance last night was not as technical even as he might have hoped. Milstein warmed up the audience and his fingers for a program which called on the performer to play a tour de force. The Sonata in G minor by Tartini was a virtuoso piece, the piano providing har- monic accompaniment, the violin technical feats. Mr. Milstein's performance was certainly musical--having sweep, but was uneven. There were no breaks between the movements. and it attempted to be a grand gesture musically, using the ex- tremes of the instrument. IT IS always a pleasure to hear the seldom performed Bach par- titas for solo violin. The Partita in D minor must be masterfully performed or else becomes unintelligible to the listener. Mr. Mil stein played the various movements of what actually is a dance Does University Offer Intellectual Challenge? GROWING CONCERN that good students are not being intellectually challenged has been expressed by both students and faculty at the University. Assuming that a fairly large percentage of the 20,000 students here came because they wanted to be thus intellectually challenged, it is essential that we discover whether or not the University is stimulating them. First let's look at the arguments which put the blame largely on the student himself. Is it socially unacceptable on the undergraduate level these days to be an intellectual? And is the typical midwesterner's level of sophistica- tion high enough for him to have intellectual experiences? Perhaps it is true that Ivy League students want to be able to discuss the works of Eliot at a party and University students do not. If the fault rests with the individual then the cure does also. But supposing the fault rests with the Uni- versity? There are certainly conditions here which conceivably could be affecting intellec- tual stimulation adversely. INCREASED SIZE, and the fact that the University is partially a state supported school can have an obvious effect on how liberal the liberal .education is. Large, imper- sonal classrooms and state limitations tend to develop a conservative, overly moralistic uni- versity. Also, students would probably be more en- Nn Frills on Ne ORE THAN 4,000 people went through the new Ann Arbor High School Sunday, on the first and only "public inspection" tour be- fore the building is completed next spring. Some of the people were taxpayers whose money went into construction and furnishing costs. They wanted to see if their money was well spent and what they got for it. Most people were satisfied although some complained about the odd shape and manner of construction. Some were high school students who wanted to see what their new quarters would be like. Others were parents who were sending their children to school and still others were Univer- sity students, faculty and townspeople. As the crowds weaved their way through the vast and airy corridors, the smell of new plas- ter, unheated rooms and the feeling of spa- ciousness pervaded quizzical and observing visi- tors. Most people were amazed that there are no "frills" to the building. The severe modern lines eliminated wasted space and make use of all the possible building area. SPACIOUSNESS is attained by spreading the building out. It takes a person more than five minutes to walk from one end of the building to the other. There is no cramped feeling in the high ceilinged, many-windowed rooms. Stairwells are no longer dingy shafts for most are well lighted with floor to ceiling windows. The crafts shops with their skylights and many windows are so constructed as to allow maximum use of daylight. Such unique ele- ments as a miniature house as high as the room itself in the painting and decorating shop and a. small apartment in the home eco- nomics classroom enable students to put their Knowledge to practical use immediately. Classrooms have generally been constructed with broad views from the window, instead of facing the usual brick wall. High ceilings and pastel colored interiors add to spaciousness and eye-ease of the rooms. THE PRESENT high school was built for an enrollment of about 960 students. It is used ay about 1,400 students. The new high school is built for 1,800 students, a figure that is to be reached around 1960. With space left for ex- pansion (filling in partitions in the bicycle colonnade and a floor above the home eco- nomics section), the school can handle, albeit a bit snugly, about 2,200 students. If enrollment continues to increase, the school can handle up to 2,600 students which would be crowded v thusiastic about their education if they attend- ed more intellectually dynamic recitation class- es. Shouldn't the University be more selective in its choice of teaching fellows? But, then, even if the instructor is good, the University frowns on student-teacher relation- ships outside the classroom. Yet it is this close relationship which does so much to increase intellectual interest in Ivy League schools. The question has also been raised as to whether freshman courses here merely over- lap the level of achievement these freshmen attained in high school, difficult accusation to answer since students have attained such diverse levels of achievement in high school. EXACTLY WHICH of these factors, if any, is causing the intellectual boredom of the bet- ter student is not known. However, the fact that the good student is bored is evidenced by the number of people with exceptional capacity who put most of their energies into extra- curricular rather than academic activities. To discuss this problem in more detail, a conference entitled "Does the Literary College Thwart Students' Intellectual Curiosity?" will be held at 7:30 Thursday in the League. With the great emphasis on education in our contemporary society, these are vital and cer- tainly pertinent questions. As members of the Ann Arbor academic community, the respon- sibility for participation in the forthcoming conference falls on every conscientious student. -ETHEL KOVITZ w High School to say the least. With 2,600 students the situa- tion would almost parallel the present student- facilities relationship. Although extra classrooms could be built, there is no allowance for extensive expansion in such important areas as the craft shops, the library, the gymnasium and the pool. If the size of enrollment becomes a problem, shifts would probably have to be instituted in the entire school day. Or action can be taken on a sug- gestion to build another high school on the northeast side of town. But that is off in the future. Present facilities are adequate for the next five years at least. Looking out over the broad fields around the school one has a pious hope that after the school's football stadium is built and athletic fields laid out that there will be some land left over for an asphalt parking lot for both the school and football fans. On the whole Ann Arbor can be proud of its new school. There is a feeling for sincere functionalism in its construction and a feeling of comfort in its decor. Such surroundings add to the palatability of a high school education and keep more students in school. The expan- sion problems can be met when they arise, but the fact remains that planning for expansion in a decade or more is a difficult thing. This gen- eration at least will echo the comment of one coed who said "It'll probably take weeks to find our way in that maze, but it's a dream." -DAVID KAPLAN, Feature Editor , World Mourns Sherwood's Death TODAY the world mourns the passing of Rob- ert E. Sherwood, noted author, playwright and journalist, claimed yesterday by a sudden heart attack. . At 59 Sherwood hardly seemed to have cli- maxed his brilliant career. Author of "Abe Lincoln in Illinois," "There Shall Be No Night" and other distinguished dramas, he excelled in a variety of interests. Politics connected him closely with the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The Pulitzer prizes Sherwood won were well deserved, as was the national acclaim which will undoubtedly prove posthumous. Whether or not survivors agree with his 'political beliefs, Sherwood must be credited and will long be remembered for his contributions to American letters. -.H. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: A dlaiOrganizes Campaign v By DREW PEA RSON ADLAI STEVENSON'S tossing of his hat into the ring for the Democratic nomination today comes after some extremely care- ful thought and preparation. He has talked to all sorts of friends, already built up a smooth-working organization. His approach is com- pletely opposite to his semi-spon- taneous draft of 1952. Stevenson told friends privately as early as last spring that he in- tended to run for President. He made this decision when most poli- ticians were sure Eisenhower was going to run again and when many Democrats thought no one could beat him. Stevenson argued that the decision to run should not be based on whether he could win. '"Sometimes the most important fights are the ones you lose," he said. * * * IN PREPARATION for the race, he's done a lot of studying, has conducted a sort of seminar for himself with various experts. At one of his brain trust meet- ings on the question of farm prob- lems, Stevenson recalled that his father had been a professional farm manager, made his living operating several thousand acres in central Illinois. Most Washingtonians have for- gotten the days when Adlai Stev- enson was a young lawyer in Wash- ington, just as they have forgotten the days when Milton Eisenhower, brother of the President, worked with him in the same Agriculture Department under Wallace. STEVENSON'S preparations for the '56 campaign which he plans to announce tomorrow, are more practical than in 1952. In that campaign he proceeded to snub the big city bosses who nominated him. Even Jack Arvey, leader of Chi- cago, who had largely made Adlai Governor of Illinois, found his old political enemy, Steve Mitchell, running Adlai's campaign as Dem- ocratic National Chtirman. Fearful of the mink coat and deep freeze scandals of Truman's day, Adlai leaned toward the Southern wing of the Party, kept the big city bosses aloof. Even when Jim Finnegan of Philadel- phia was proposed by Harry Tru- man as Democratic Chairman in New Orleans as late as last winter, Stevenson opposed him-and won. He put his own man, Paul Butler of Indiana, in the chairmanship instead. Tomorrow all that will be offi- cially changed. Tomorrow Steven- son will announce the appointment of Jim Finnegan as his campaign manager. Wilson Wyatt, ex-Mayor of Louisville, of the semi-Southern wing of the Party and campaign manager in '52, will not serve again. He'll be strong for Steven- son and will help in many other ways. But both he and Adlai recog- nize the importance of having a big city boss in their corner. Too many of the big city bosses al- ready are .in Harriman's corner. * *B* n BARRY BINGHAM, owner of the Louisville Courier-Journal, a Southern Liberal and one of the outstanding editors of the nation, will head the Citizens for Steven- son Committee, with Harry Ash- more, Editor of the Little Rock Gazette as Adlai's chief brain- truster and speech-writer. Ash- more is a Southerner who wrote a broad-gauge book on the Negro problem and school segregation. Stevenson forces have not been saying much about it, but already they have been out corraling dele- gates, have made important in- roads on the old Kefauver strength in California once overwhelmingly for the Senator from Tennessee. Behind this advance-work is the quiet, indefatigable Jack Arvey, who, though sometimes on the sidelines in 1952; never ceased to be Stevenson's devoted friend and at times father-confessor. * * * ONE THING that has worried Arvey and all of Stevenson's friends is Adlai's divorce and the fact that his wife has taken bitter cracks at him. "What you need," Arvey advised Adlai at one family conference in the Stevenson home, "is to marry a rich widow with three small boys, each with freckles on his nose." "You see what you've got to do," Adlai turned to his beautiful daughter-in-law, a bride of only three months. "You've got to pro- duce three grandsons for me, all with freckles on their noses, and do it in less than nine months." (Copyright, 1955, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) suite, with a feel for its various moods and lines, but had real problems when confronted with three or four notes to be played simultaneously, one or two of the notesbeing melody. It seemed that the performance was most successful in the Gigue, where there was but one line; fast to be sure, but Mr. Milstein played it with apparent ease. Another problem in the work for the per- former is making the counterpoint which is in different registers of the violin sound. All in all the dance spirit and melodic lines came across. * * * IN THE Beethoven Sonata in F, Mr. Milstein was at his best. Artur Balsam, the accompanist, gained more prominence in this piece than in any other on the program. He achieved a proper balance with the violin and con- tributed to the performance. Mr. Milstein's bowing seemed so right for the work. The great dynamic contrasts of the work came partially by his rough or smooth attack. The musical ges- ture was realized beautifully. The last work on the program was a virtuoso work: Concerto No. I by Paganini. Again, this piece called for flawless'technique, but Mr. Milstein's performance was not always agile enough for the ath- letic lines. For encores, Mr. Milstein played short, lyric works which came as a relief to works of large inten- tions. -Judy Vander AT THE MICHIGAN: Good Wins liaOver Bad "THE Desperate Hours," the cur- rent feature at the Michigan, is a fast 90 minutes of Good ver- sus Evil on a wide screen. Good, as in all Hollywood ventures, even- tually wins-the bad people are destroyed, and the good people live happily ever after. It is a long hard fight but be- tween the beginning and the end of it are packed a fair amount of thrills. The film opens with the camera lazily revealing an upper middle- class American home comfortab- ly furnished in the best of sub- urban taste. In the home are five happy Americans: the Hilliards, a simple, well-adjusted family nestled com- fortably in the warm safety and security of the hearth. Into this placid scene burst three escaped convicts, and the reign of terror begins, the badmen terrorizing the innocent family, doing one black deed after another. HUMPHREY BOGART, as the savage, snarling leader of the con- victs, makes excellent use of writ- er Joseph Hayes' staccato dialogue, and it is mainly his performance which makes the picture worth seeing. He injects into the film an ele- ment of force and vigor which keeps the tension steadily mount- ing and prevents the story from degenerating into the mere de- piction of a series of brutalties. Frederic March, as the father of the family is a bit too stiff. The courage and daring he suddenly displays at the end flow into him too quickly and unexpectedly. It is hard to believe that in a few desperate hours of fear such a heroic transformation could have occurred in him. -Phil Breen 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- bitity. 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, NOVEMBER 15, 1955 VOL. LXVII, NO. 43 General Notices The University Senate will meet on Thurs., Dec. 8. at 4:15 p.m. in the Rack- ham Lecture Hall. Senate members are reminded of the new rule which requires that "All motions or resolutions, in order, to be included on the agenda, must be submitted to the Secretary of the Senate at least fourteen days before the meeting at which they are to be introduced.." Late Permission. All women students will have a 1:30 late permission on Sat., Nov. 19. Women's residences will be open until 1:25 a.m. The Map Room (General Library). which has been closed for repairs and expansion, is now open full time. The hours are 8:30 a.m.-12:00 noon and 1:00- 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. selective service Examination: Stu- dents taking the Selective Service College Qualification Test on Nov. 17 are requested to report to Room 140 Business Administration, and Room 100 Hutchins Hall, Hrurs., at 8:30 a.m. "Report to the American People", a 30-minute film in sound and color, prepared by the International Coopera- tion Administration, describing t he varied technical assistance of the U.S. in many foreign lands, will be shown promptly at 7:30 p.m. Tues., Nov. 15, Aud. C, Angell Hall. Research Club. Rackham Amphithea- tre at 8:00 p.m. on Wed., Nov. 16. Agenda: , Proposed Amendment to the Constitution regardingrmembership; Professor Jamnes M. Cork (Physics): "Nuclear Radiations and the Prolonga- tion of Life." Members only. 4 .A 4 I Lectures LETTERS TO EDITOR: Readers Compliment, Criticize INTERPRETING THE NEWS: 'Heads I Win' Policy By J. M. ROBERTS t Associated Press News Analyst YOU CAN get up a pretty good argument on both sides as to whether it is wise to end one unsuccessful international conference by announcing plans for another . The factors involved are both tangible and intangible, and not all are directly involved with the major question, which is the tug-of- war for Germany. The chief intangible factor is that scheduling another Four Power meeting now tends to continue the situation which began when the summit meeting was planned, in which un- founded hopes for East-West settlements inter- fere with prosecution of the Western defense the latest negotiation period Red China has also been marking time in her political ap- proach, if not in her military preparations, on the Formosa question. Highly significant, however, is the fact that Russia, grabbing a long-awaited opportunity to infiltrate the Middle East, was not deterred by her interest in the facade of the Geneva spirit. The allies may hope, by scheduling a new conference, to delay Russia's direct approach to West Germany on the reunification issue. RUSSIA BEGAN setting up machinery for this approach before the Summit confer- ence, intending to go ahead with it after the conferences which she knew would fail .ut the Appreciate Daily... To The Editor: W E LOOK forward to the arrival of The Daily with as much pleasure as our own Saginaw News. You are doing a fine job and we want you to know that as parents we appreciate it. -Mrs. M. Richman Saginaw, Mich. Keep Herblock, Pearson To The Editor: MR. Dave Baad: Unhappy 'as it may make Donald Reisig, please keep Herblock and Drew Pearson around. They are refreshing after years of David Lawrence and the like in my hometown newspaper. Mr. Ed Salem: Accurate report- ing is desirable even on the sports page. Jim Fox did not play at Saginaw High School. He hails from Arthur Hill High School of Saginaw. Unpardonable, Mr. Sa- lem, unpardonable. -Joe Flora, '56 The article is falsely advertised by its erroneous headline. The re- porter proceeds to quote out of context, not only losing but terribly distorting the intended meaning, e.g., "An artist has to make a des- tructive move to bring an image into being." The article is filled with many glaring misquotes which are obviously ridiculous be- cause they don't make any sense at all, e.g., "Sometimes it takes me two years to digest subject mat- ter, depending on the surface qualities of the painting." It seems that the reporter was very busy writing odd quotations without bothering to try to understand the total concept. We rather hope (but doubt) that this could be attributed to typo- graphical errors rather than the incompetence of the "executioner." -Judith Goldberg, '57 Patricia Fleming, '57 Typos Interfere... To the Editor: Parlor Game... To the Editor: ERE'S a game for students liv- ing north of campus: St. Joe's Hospital (a very fine hospital) went to a lot of trouble and spent a lot of money to put a huge dandy sign on the top of their new ad- dition. Problem: Find the place in town from which one can read the sign with the naked, normally near- sighted, eye.. -Fred Schultz University Lecture, "Biochemical Evo- lution." Dr. George Wald, professor of biology, Harvard University. 4:15 p.m. Rackham Amphitheatre, Tues., Nov. 15. Division of Bioligical Sciences. Dr. George Wald, Professor of Biology, Harvard University will give a contin- uation of last Thursday's lecture, "Origin *of Life." Tues., Nov. 15, 8:00 p.m., Aud. B. Angell Hall. Questions welcomed from the floor. Nov. 16, 8:00 p.m., Room 1300 Chem- istry Building. University of Michigan Section of the American Chemical So- ciety. Dr. Max A. Lauffer, head of the Department of Biophysics, University of Pittsburg, will speak on "Viruses." Dr. Nathan Robinson of Israel will speak on "Solar Energy," Room 1214 Chemistry Building, Wed., Nov. 16, 3:00 p.m. Auspices of the Phoenix Project. Department of Romance Languages. Lecture by Professor Jaime Ferran, of the "Seminar for the Science of Cul- ture," University of Madrid, Wed., Nov. 16, East Lecturex Room, Rackham Building, at 4:15 p.m. "Eugenio d'Or y la ciencia de la cultura." Academic Notices Seminar in Chemical Physics. Prof. Samuel Krimm will speak on "Infrared Spectra of High- Polymers". Tues., Nov, 15. College of Architecture and Design mid-semester reports due Fri., Nov. 25. It is only necessary to report "D" and "E" grades. Please send them to 207 Architecture Building. The Extension Service announces that there are still a few openings in the following class to be held in Ann Arbor: Efficient Reading II, 7:00 p.m., Mon., Nov. 21, 524 University Elementary School. Registration for this class, may be made inRoom 4501 of the Adminis- tration Building on South State Street during University office hours. Mathematics Colloquim. Tues., Nov. 15, at 4:10 p.m. in Room 3011 A.H. Dr. Herbert Knothe from Holloman Air Force Base, New Mexico, will speak on "Convex Functions on Convex Bodies." Tea and coffee at 3:45 in 3212 A.H. Physionogy 81 Exam scheduled for Wed., Nov. 16 will be held Friday, Nov. 18 instead. A A .., PRODUCER'S SHOWCASE: Hails Overseas Press AST night, in a presentation which was supposed to salute Freedom of the Press, the Over- seas Press Service saluted the Ov- erseas Press Service. Using the "Producer's Showcase' as its med- ium, the group hired various per- sonalities to tell of their accomp- lishments in the recent wars in ,w- i f-h aTTn4-t:A Qin+, yin ti. men and women of the OPS, ap- plauded vigorously. But the show was not completely void of earth-shattering announce- ments. The fact that Greer Gar- son was cutting roses in her back yard at the time Pearl Harbor was bombed was excitingly reveal- ed to the millions of Americans I