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. r1*,gnAV N~f~vG*T2L ss ,re -------- Oh, Stop Looking So Darn Smug" C.' ___ ___X11^_____ - 6 ~ HILL AUDITORIUM: Robert Shaw Chorale Outstandmg Group THE Robert Shaw Chorale left no doubt as to its standing as a choral group in its concert in Hill Auditorium last night. It is probably the outstanding organization of its kind today. The spirit of the entire group is exemplified in its young and energetic director. Robert Shaw insists on and receives perfection from his singers. The Chorale achieves a smooth clear tone quality that is -seldom found in choral groups. Flawless intonation was another trait of the performance. Careful ennunciation is another trademark of the Sliaw Chorale. One of the most thrilling aspects of the chorus is its ability to sound as if it was an ensemble of hundreds instead of its actual thirty voices. THE PROGRAM consisted of selections from two extreme musical periods. It opened with a selection from the Baroque era, Bach's ., 1'.VAVLDJMi±$ 23,155 NIGHT EDITOR: MARY ANN THOAS Have Fun But Remember 'Thanks' in Thanksgiving p ODAY ALMOST 20,000 families will wait at bus and train depots, airline terminals and living rooms for the return of their Ann bor representatives. T'omorrow as many tables will be piled with ditional Thanksgiving fare. . For the next four days there'll be a distinct ange in the usually rushed tempo of the iversity student's life. He can rest. He can rsleep. He can pick up loose academic eads (in every suitcase there's bound to be least one textbook) at his leisure. She can enjoy a social life without fear of 'ning into a pumpkin or sitting in next week- 1 if she happens to arrive home at 12:31. LL THESE prospects are inviting. And they should direct attention to their basis: an nual chance to stop and think over the ngs taken for granted. rhanks, after all, are due for plenty of things. For the diversity of 20,000 stimulating people with 20,000 unique sets of backgrounds and ideas, all on tap for anybody interested. For a University whose quality isn't marred by the transitory gloom of a black Saturday. For classrooms which offer a consistent fare of material well worth the round trips to Ann Arbor. For the people who cook or buy the Thanks- giving dinners and who make sacrifices, material or otherwise, so that the advantages here won't go unappreciated. For a world whose very complexity fills it with challenge, and for the prospect of a few more decades living on it and contributing what we can to it. These, and the myriad things on every indiv idual list of "blessings", give the long-awaited holiday a significance beyond the trivial com- forts we're anxious to enjoy. --JANE HOWARD, Associate Editor Open Letter to the French / 1 O THE FRENCH ELECTORATE: Soon, whether at the scheduled dissolution of the National Assembly in June or perhaps earlier, as proposed by the present Faure Gov- ernment, the 625 deputies of your National Assembly will face you for a day of reckoning. Making an inference from your post-war electoral history, you soon will return six ma- jor intransigent parties to office, from LEFT to RIGHT: the Communists, Socialists, Popu- lar Republicans, the Radical Alliance, the Con- servative Alliance, and the Gaullists. As if, you soukht to achieve a sort of distributive justice, you will deliver approximately one sixth of the Assembly seats to each party. What will the next half decade bring? Again, taking a lesson from your post-war history, about ten Premiers and their cabinets will fall or quit in frustration during the five year reign of the Assembly you are soon to elect. The stagnation and frustration of positive po- litical action in the Assembly for the next half decade will only rub salt into your present political wounds. The current brushfires of nationalism in your North African 'colonies will be handled in an inconsistant way by half a score of gov- ernments. The already emaciated Treasury will continue to be underweight as the farmdrs and the industrialists ingeniously dodge the tax collector. The disgruntled, fixed-income laborers will continue to shoulder 70% of the tax load and will carry their troubles to the sympathetic ear of the Communist Party. Your country will remain only as a hitclhhiker of the Big Three, going along with the decisions of the United States and Britain or being disregarded. And your military strength will be anything but formidable-possibly even inferior to Ger- many, your recent conqueror. Nazism isn't dead in Germany and your weakness and dis- unity could encourage it. THIS is what you may correctly anticipate for five or more years to come unless you experience an enlightenment, perhaps revolu- tion, in political thought-unless you learn to translate the divergent ideologies of your political spectrum into a considerable degree of political positivism. The love of liberty and the idealism that pervades the French character are admirable traits. But, still, you lack the one ideal that makes all others politically effective-compro- mise. The political parties, in which you express your idealism, hold tenuously to the whole of the ideal, feeling that a compromise between parties means the shattering of the ideal. You equate compromise with surrender to authori- ty, the "authority" being the aspiring idealism' of another political party. In the United States, individuals, groups, geographical regions, and political parties also have ideals-ideals in which they believe deep- ly. But, we have seen the efficacy of compro- mising our ideals to achieve a considerable degree of political positivism. You would be hard put to prove that consequently we enjoy Mess liberty. Admittedly the analogy is defective to some extent. There is more than a nominal dif- ference between our countries. Our history isn't dotted with instances of "authority" en- croachments upon "liberty;" your scarred mind can't forget Napoleon Bonaparte, the coup d'etat of Louis Napoleon Bonaparte, the near coup of General Bolanger, the Dreyfus inci- dent, and recently, the collaborationist Vichy regime. OF COURSE you can't forget your turbulent history and you shouldn't. But, your his- tory should reveal to you your pitiful failure to gel the liberty-authority relationship. Hereisyour weakness and your paradox, Frenchman. You claim and cherish independ- ence and liberty; each of you supposes himself to be the architect of his own destiny. But, for good or for evil, the state in the Twentieth Century determines almost entirely the inde- pendence, liberty, and welfare of the populous. Your political parties, .however, have not given your democratic state an essential in doing its job. That essential is-compromise. So, in reality, the destiny of each pf you is not in- dividually charted; the chaos and inaction of the state charts it. Mendes-France, in a recent attack on your electoral system, quipped, "You can't cauterize a wooden leg." This could equally apply to the French mind as it manifests itself in poli- tics. If your minds can see the efficacy--the Twentieth Century necessity--of political com- promise, Frence need no longer be plagued with the political negativism and economic sickness she is experiencing currently. If the four major democratic parties of your country (Socialists, M.R.P., Radical Socialists, and the Conservative Alliance) can see the "necessity" of facing the electorate with com- promising spirit among themselves this June, you, as voters, can give them collectively af mandate to "govern," something which you haven't experienced from the Fourth Republic. -JIM ELSMAN 4d~R-m lL.AOs W.. t r sr Ift WA,04 e"4 c1woi PoJ.'w-40 WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND- Foreign A ffairs Optimism By DREW PEARSON THIS IS the season when the American people give thanks for their blessings. It is also a time when there seems little to be thankful for regarding the dream held out at Geneva last July for peace with a powerful poten- tial enemy. John Foster Dulles has just given a report to President Eisen- hower which was more blunt and more pessimistic than that which he gave to the American people that the Geneva Conference was a flat failure. He told the President in unvarnished language that there seemed no hope of getting along with Russia and that the cold war was on again full force. Simultaneously, Premier Bul- ganin and Party Boss Khrushchev are being received with wild ac- claim in the Middle East; are making extravagant offers of eco- nomic aid to India, Burma and Afghanistan. * * * SIMULTANEOUSLY, U.S. Am- bassador James Conant in Ger- many has cabled that a group of German businessmen known as the Konigstein Circle already has started confidential talks with East German Communists for a deal between Russia and Germany. Dulles also must report to the President, if he has not already done so, that another meeting in Geneva is badly bogged down - that between the United States and Red China. U.S. representa- tives discussing prisoners and oth- er problems with the Chinese Com- munists in Geneva have refused a Chinese request for a meeting next spring between Secretary Dulles and Premier Chou En-lai. As a result, the Chinese are about to pull out of the Geneva talks, and can be expected to begin bombarding Quemoy and Matsu shortly thereafter. This will re- vive the Formosa crisis, quiescent since last May. The reason Dulles refuses to talk to Chou En-lai is quite simple. An election is upcoming in the United States. So Dulles doesn't want to lay a Republican Administration open to criticism for going farther that the Democrats did in talking to Red China. * 4 - THE INJECTION of politics into foreign affairs incidentally, is one thing we should be most unthank- ful for today. For when you consider the Gen- eya Conference carefully, you will find its failure resulted partly from politics. It resulted from the fact that the Geneva summit meeting was built up into a great triumph when actually it was no triumph- merely a hazardous but very worth while start on a most difficult path to peace. Reason it was built into such a triumph was pure politics. The Madison Avenue boys around Ei- senhower saw Geneva as a great propaganda weapon to make him run again. He was, of course, re- luctant even then. But they saw Geneva as a chance to sell the public on demanding the re-elect- ing of the indispensable man. The Eisenhower popularity pofl, it will be recalled, shot way up after Geneva. He had been having "trouble over Dixon-Yates, the be- ginning of the Harold Talbott scandal, failure to pass a school bill, a highway bill, over the bung- ling of Salk Vaccine, and the in-, eptitude of Mrs. Hobby. But suddenly these domestic problems and bunglings faded to insignificance as the Geneva sum- mit meeting gave the Madison Avenue boys the chance to usher in a new era of Republican peace. * * * ACTUALLY, Ike did a good job at Geneva. That was my opinion, and I was there. But what he did. was make a start toward the solu- tion of an extremely difficult problem which could not be solved in a week, a month, or a year and which should not have been fan- ned up as a great victory by the political propagandists. (Copyright, 1955, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) "Magnificat." This work takes as Gospel according to St. Luke. Th cellently although the soloists se LETTERS to the EDITOR Just Ignore Them.*. To the Editor: N ANSWER to the letters from Michigan State: It is my op- inion that the best policy is to ignore these inanities. -Dale W. Priester, '58 Wrong Term... To the Editor: IN HER editorial of last Friday, Mary Ann Thomas expressed a concern that the "Democrat" Par- ty is in danger of becoming a one- class party. This letter is written to allay her fears. The Democratic Party draws its support from all walks of life. Each citizen tends to vote for the candidates whom he believes will best promote his own interests and those of the community. The man who cannot find such sup- port in the Republican Party will seek it in the Democratic Party. This is as true of the small busi- nessman or professional man as it is of the working man. Trends of this type need not pol- arize the political community. The political market, like the econom- ic, is competitive, and each party is free to woo the voters. This is illustrated by the 1952 trend in the Republican direction. T h a t party, too, has its labor support. Miss Thomas' use of the term "class" is unfortunate. Rigid soc- ial stratification is not the Amer- ican way. For that very reason, campaign emphasis on this theme tends to alienate the typical voter, even though it may appeal to the already convinced, e.g., those who say "Roosevelt was a traitor to his class." If Republicans are concerned about the electoral drift to their opponents, they are free to offer a program which will appeal to a majority of voters. That is, if the hard core of their party will let them. Incidentally, it is clear from your masthead that the respon- sibility for each editorial rests with its writer, and not with the Daily. It would seem, however, that the Daily still bears a respon- sibility in matters of grammer and fact. The name of the organiza- tion is the Democratic Party. -Charles H. Hubbell Distorted Reporting... To the Editor: F OLOWING THE hysterical de- nunciation of the University of Michigan football team that has appeared in the metropolitan press, I would like to say a few words in defense of our fellows. As a life-long fan, I am proud of the team's performance in the Ohio State game and feel sure -that the players were justified, if not tactful, in any exchanges they may have had with the field of- ficials. Unfortunately, many millions of football followers who rely on the press for their only coverage of the game are forced to accept- a distorted version of the proceed- ings. The sports "scribes," as they call themselves, made capital of the bitterness and misunderstand- ings of the final few minutes to shame the oldest and finest foot- ballaggegaionin the Mdwest for alleged poor sportsmanship. I also submit that it was not the Michigan team that went "wild" and caused penalty mark- ers to fall like rain and turn the contest into a farce. One Detroit newspaper, which itself went wild with hearts-and-flowers recrim- inations, reported in consicuously that "the officials . . . permitted the game to get completely out of hand." What can be said about Ohio State's sportsmanship in using what appeared to be a variation of the outlawed flying wedge to pro- vide interference for Buckeye ball carriers? What can be said for the rabid O'hiofnsf w~ zho e aPvd.aaA nzM.a r, d! its text the canticle of Mary in the e Chorale performed this work ex- emed to have trouble overcoming the sound of the orchestra. The program continued with Ar- thur Honegger's "King David." This work written in the early 1920's has many characteristics of today's musical drama. Although most of the vocal lines are lyrical, beginnings of the current declama- Cory style sometimes break through. At times the music also ap- proaches the atonal writing found in recent operas. A narrator re- lates the action of the Old Testa- ment stories of David while the chorus reflects and comments, as in a Greek drama. C * C AFTER GIVING wonderful per- formances of these two works the Chorale completely captivated its audience with gay light encores such as "The Yellow Rose of Texas." A woodwind section that played out of tune most of the evening distracted greatly from what was otherwise a fine orchestral accom- paniment. The brass and string sections produced a remarkably full tone in spite of their small size. -Bruce Jacobson DAIL* 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 form to Room 3553 Administration Building before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for the Sunday edition must be i f WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1955 VOL. LXVII, NO. 50 General Notices DEMOCRATS IN CHICAGO: Politics Is Fun', Reporter Finds INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Force Still Rules Humanity By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst THE GENERAL Assembly of the United Nations has been in session now for nine weeks. On few days has its activity attracted much attention. The pattern of world affairs today is not the pattern of peace, but the pattern of violence and threat of violence. In a world where men have reasoned their way to at least a partial understanding of the universe, they still seem far away from the wisdom needed to arrange their political affairs. The French are pouring troops into an effort to halt terrorism in Morocco. There's fighting in the streets of Bombay. Indonesian govern- ment troops fight sporadically with rebel forces throughout the islands. The British are having to renew their mili- tary campaigns against Communist guerrilla forces in Malaya, and meet rioting on Cyprus with force. $ift . * Men are dying almost daily along the Egyp- tian-Israeli border and there is definite threat of war. REMNANTS of Vietminh Communist forces are still fighting in Laos in violation of the Geneva truce. Remnants of Chiang Kai-shek's nationalist forces which fled to Burma under Communist pressure are still fighting the Bur. mese much after the fashion of bandits. In Latin America the two most powerful countries, Brazil and Argentina, are governed only with the help of troops. In South Africa natives are forcibly removed from their homes as a nationalist government seeks to establish what the United States is tryng so hard to disestablish - racial segrega- tion. The Russian government still considers that its only good opponents are dead opponents, although there will be little world sympathy for the late Lavrenty Beria's secret police aides. THIS LIST of physical violences, which could be expanc1dd with only a, ile1cr .r~.r.-i (EDITOR'S NOTE: Miss Wiley, along with Daily reporters Lewis Ham- burger and Peter Eckstein, recently attended the Democratic National Committee meeting in Chicago. News stories and editorials by the three writers have appeared in The Daily. This is an account of some of the comment and color heard and seen during the three-day attendance at the meeting.) By DEL WILEY Daily Staff Writer IN SUITE 1400 of the Conrad Hilton Hotel, political writers like James Reston, Bob Considine, W. H. Lawrence, Hub George, Frank Morris, George Tagge, Rob- ert Howard and Charles Cleveland sat at the long wooden typewriter tables. The Democratic National Com- mittee was meeting, and Suite 1400 had the only bipartisan air in the whole building. When we frst entered that suite last Thursday morning, we felt slightly intimidated. But we were proud to be representing the only collegiate newspaper there. The Committee was holding its intial meeting, which was closed to the press, so at 11:00 we went to see Estes Kefauver's publicity manager. He had a glass of scotch and soda and tired eyes that smilingly lit up at routine questions about Kefauver announcing his candi- dacy in December. AFTERWARD, snatching one of the twenty-odd elevators Hilton The State Chairman from Ore- gon asked us if we were Young Democrat members. When we told him who were were, he said, "Are you going to the Rose Bowl?" Up on the Tower's second floor, every reporter began taking notes while Mitchell spoke. WE FELT like we were back in a college lecture, except that no one was asleep, and Mitchell knew most of the reporters' names and whether thay had had donkeys or elephants on the '52 campaign buttons. Laughingly beginning with a comment about not saying a prayer to begin the conference, Mitchell said that no meeting re- sults would be kept from news- men as those of the Republicans allegedly were. When he said there would be loyalty oaths for the '56 National Convention, he added that several Democrats who were Republicans nationally and Democrats locally were going to be kept out of the Convention. * * * - A REPORTER asked who these people were. Mitchell looked at him and said, "Oh, they're not in "Chicago Tribune" territory." Then he mentioned Governor Shivers from Texas as one of the people. That afternoon, Suite 1400 was filled with grumblings about the closed meetings scheduled for Thursday and Friday. anecdote about Staebler, ending happily with, "Politics is fun!" * * * BEFORE the luncheon speaker began, we went upstairs to wait for Kefauver's press conference at 4:00. Kefauver's publicity manager stood in back of him and Martha Ragland sat on his right. Ques- tions were quckly snapped out when Kefauver mentioned that the National Committee had shown favoritism for Stevenson, a breach of the Committee's non- favoritism standing. We went to ask Adlai Steven- son about this in the Madrid Suite, second largest in the hotel. Pic- tures of bullfighters were on the walls and we stood next to one called "Death Thrust." Stevenson was talking to twQ of his women supporters. Fragments of sentences like, "He's not in the White House very much, you know," and "He's not playing golf, just putting around," came to our ears along with laughter. * * . SUDDENLY Stevenson was shaking our hands. He said he knew nothing of Committee favor- itism. Then he left, commenting, "Working for college newspapers is good, isn't it? I used to work for the 'Daily Princetonian,' you know." That night we went to Mayor Richard J. Daley's cocktail party where we shook hands with newly- arrived Averell Harriman. Regents' Meeting: Tues.; Dec. 13. Communications for consideration at this meeting must be in the President's hands not later than Dec. 5. TIAA -- College Retirement Equities Fund. Participants in the Teachers In- surance and Annuity Association retire- ment program who wish to change their contributions to the College Retirement Equities Fund or to apply for or discon- tinue participation in the Equities Fund, will be able to make such changes before Dec. 15, 1955. Staff members who have one-fourth or one-third of the contributions to TIAA allocated to CREF may wish to change to a one-half basis, or go from the latter to a one-fourth or one-third basis. The Air Force Officer Qualification Test (Stanine) required for admission to the advanced corps of AFROTO Cadets, will be given Thurs. and Fri., Dec. 1 and 2 in Kellogg Auditorium. Testing periods extend from 7:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. Attendance at both ses- sions is mandatory. Lectures Astronomy Department Visitors' Night. (For ochildren and adults; individual hildren must be accompanied by adults, and in the case of groups of school children, there must be at least one adult for every five children.) Fri., Nov. 25, 8:00 p.m., Room 2003 Angell Hall. Dr. Lawrence H. Aler will talk on "Star Systems," after which the Student Ob- servatory on the fifth floor of Angell Hal will be open for inspection and for telescopic observations of the Moon. Concerts Carillon Recital by Sidney Giles, As- sistant University Carillonneur, pre- viously announced for Thanksgiving Day, will be Fri., Nov. 25, at 7:15 p.m. Compositions by Franssen, Nees, verdi, Donizetti, saint-Saens, and Pleyel. Academic Notices Sociology Coffee Hour. Graduate stu- dents and faculty in Sociology and Social Psychology, today at 4:00 p.m. in the Sociology Lounge. Events Today Free Film. Museums Bldg., 4th floor Exhibit Hall. "Let's Look at Elephants" and "Four Minute Mile," Nov. 22-28. Daily at 3:00 and 4:00 p.m., including Sat. and Sun., extra showing Wed. at 12:30. Placement Notices PERSONNEL REQUEST: WTVB, Coldwater, Michigan-wants a -4 f g ,_