0.1.r Sixty-Seventh 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, MICR. * Phone NO 2-3241 "Freezing To Death Isn't So Good Either" AT THE DAC: A "When Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the .individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. - SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: JAMES ELSMAN Validity of Student Opinion In Sigma Kappa Consideration Student Government Council spent two hours Student opinion may not only be irrelevant Wednesday wrangling over possible limi- but harmful because, in many cases, it will be tation of constituent debate when Sigma Kappa based on emotion rather than information. comes up for consideration next Wednesday. Sigma Kappa members, legal advisers and dele- It was a case of war between practicality and gated representatives are likely to be most principle. If constituent debate is condicted 'informed and should, of course, present their along the lines of that during the deferred case. But debate similar to that on deferred rushing hassle last year, it will indeed be what rushing would be chaotic and contribute noth- President Bill Adams termed a circus. On the ing td a wise decision. other hand SGC, cannot in conscience deny its Up pops principle-all students have a stake constituents the right to speak on any issue, iUpthisi. ilargethaejustSim much less on one of such major importance. inpti i ndisar ha n ra. If student opinion is what the Council wants, Kappa, involving discrimination in general. And the forum Tuesday should be able to fill the students should have the right to speak, bill admirably. However, if all the facts that will be presented Wednesday are not also pre- f SGC does allow constituent debate, the sented Tuesday, the Council cannot regard the debate should certainly be limited in time, opinions expressed Tuesday as completely or nothing will be accomplished. SGC must valid, also decide when it will allow debate-before its deliberations, or during the regularly sched- T here is also the question of whether student uled constituents' time near the meeting's end. opinion is really relevant to the case at The former would very likely confuse the all. The regulations exist-no organization may real issue-whether or not' regulations have maintain recognition if it restricts member- been violated. The latter would be worthless ship on the basis of race, religion or color. If if the Council wants student opinion. the regulations have been violated, SGC has no T alternative but to withdraw recognition. The question for SGC members to decide A decision must be made on the basis of when they meet tomorrow is whether or not fact, not opinion, and no amount of student student opinion is really relevant to the issue. opinion, pro or con, will alter the facts. -TAMMY MORRISON Christmas Out of Hand? B AH! HUMBUG! This "Christmas" thing is getting material returns for his hard-earned approaching ridiculous heights. cash, he has the deep glow inside from giving Window dressing, light-pole decorations, 70 to one of the zillion charitable organizations. foot trees with 150 ornaments in department Trouble is . . . there are so many of them. It store dining rooms . . . the list is endless . . . has reached the point where it impossible to beset all but the most isolated hermit. Santa walk across the Diag without having a squirrel Cflaus, in one of Chicago's major emporiums amble over to you, sit up on his haunches and is enthroned at the opposite end of a maze chatter for a hand-out. of green bannisters. The old gentleman (one Perhaps the best thing to do is turn into of the more reputable fellows - considering one of those blissfully unaware hermits - or the war-torn specimens which often adorn the at least try. Wear cotton in your ears when street .corners), must share the honors with y . edn your eassen some sort of "gingerbread house". you do your Christmas shopping. Sunglasses ou es r s "gangrrthdih Sle Night" are wonderful for blocking out all sights on Loud-sreakers rasp forth with "Silent Night'" a dismal winter day. or "Ooh, ooh, Santa Baby". The question is which is in poorer taste. Then, on the quiet night of December 24, you can reach for your radio, turn on the tele- IMPRESSIVE? Oh, yes; we're promoting vision, or attend church. The carols will be Christmas . . . but let us, please, finish our familiar but not grating - then is the time Thanksgiving- turkey first! to acquire your Christmas Spirit. But people make money - yes, indeed they -JANET REARICK do. And when Mr. Average American is not Associate Editorial Director INTERPRETING THE NEWS: U.S. in Baghdad Paet? .. t : P, Up TAd~FR h 9 . A5fMi#c-rc>^l PosylT - The Great American Fight:* .dull IT IS QUITE obvious that playwright Susan Glaspell has set out , to give us the historical and ideological background of Americana and to focus the great modern dilemma in "Inheritors," the current Dramatic Arts Center offering. Aside from her incompetency in handling dialogue and her tendency to let her play become a series of monologues. Miss Glaspell has the further ingratiation of shabby thinking. Briefly, "Inheritors" tells how pioneer Silas Morton gave part of his land to the public for the construction of a college in 1879. Morton's decision is prompted by Felix Fejevary II, his best friend's Harvard-educated son, who quotes Matthew Arnold and Darwin to cement the farmer's ideas into a block of truth. > - ~ , $.. ' a TODAY AND TOMORROW: Hungary-The Longer View The college is going to standa tion of all ideas. But, after coffee and cigarettes, we discover that by 1920 Morton College has only pre- served some ideas. MADELINE is upholding the rights of "Hindus" to distribute posters for Indian independence and Madeline is there beating po- licemen on the head with her ten- nis racket, upholding free expres- sino. Obviously, what Madeline (and all Americans) has "inherited" is the fight for liberalism. And lib- eralism must combat anti-libera- lism, which means, in Miss Glas- pell's terms, stupidity, authority, reactionary senators, insane far- mers, narrow-minded wives, im- potent professors and comprom- ising college presidents - oh, Madeline floats down a river of cliches, buoyed up by her trusty tennis racket. In playing her little game, Miss Glaspell is not a very considerate hostess: she gives all the chipped checkers to the anti-liberals, all the good checkers to the liberals. And while the anti-liberals must make their moves under the ana- lytical sneer of the writer, the liberals play with abstract con- cepts, universal truths and a mish- mash of poetic metaphors. Jesus Christ, Lincoln, Darwin- they are all on Madeline's side; and at the play's end, Madeline, with a spanking newdtennis rac- ket, goes off to fight for liberal- ism.. WITH SUCH a tedious play, the DAC performers get little op- portunity to display their talents. Nell Burnside plays Madeline with the breathlessness of a pre-debu- tante attending her first formal, which is exactly how Miss Glas- pell creates the character. Sydney Walker is fine in the double role of Morton and his son. Audrey Ward is first cast as a grand- mother whose entire body has dis- sipated to the point of immobility, yet whose lungs are so well pre- served she can ring local bells by sheer vibration; but in the role of Madeline's aunt, she gives her best performance this season, a studied 1920's community leader that is clearly defined and believable. David Metcalf as Felix has the physical handicap of looking and acting young enough in the first act, but too young in the subse- quent scenes where he is a sixty- plus-year-old man. The remain- der of the cast contribute what they can, but Miss Glaspell has already doomed the audience to a dull evening. -Ernest Theodossin By WALTER LIPPMANN There can be few in this country who have not felt how sharp is the contrast between what we have been saying about Hungary and what we are doing. The stark and brutal fact of the situation is that Hungary lies wholly within the iron grip of the Red Army, and that neither we nor our Allies in the Atlantic alliance have the means to intervene and to chal- lenge tle Red Army. This has left us doing two things -protesting and trying to arouse world opinion on the one hand, and on the other doing something to bring aid and comfort to the large and growing mass of refu- gees who are fleeing into Austria, This, most of us would feel, is not nearly enough, and that be- sides words and charity the coun- try should at least be preparing, even if it is too early to propose, a solution of the underlying prob- lem from which these horrors and agonies arise. THE ESSENCE of the underlying problem is manifest in the plight of the refugees. According to the latest figures available, nearly 90,000 refugees have fled across the border into Austria. Before they came there were already in Austria-a small country of about 7,000,000 inhabitants-170,000 re- fugees from the world war. Austria does not have the buildings to house this mass of refugees, and as a makeshift the Austrian gov- ernment has closed all the schools in eastern Austria and most of them in Vienna, and it is using all public buildings available and also railroad cars. The tempera- ture in Austria is now about eight degrees above zero. Obviously, Austria cannot carry the burden except on an emer- gency basis. Nearly 20,000 of the refugees have found at least tem- porary asylum in other countries, foremost among them Switzerland. According to the United Nations estimate, it may be possible to resettle outside of Austria some 30,000, which would include 10,000 for the United States. But this leaves a mass of 60,000 to be cared for in Austria, not taking into consideration the refugees who will be coming from now on. At the last official count available here they were still coming at the rate of 3,500 a day. ** * WHAT THE FIGURES do is to raise a fundamental question of policy. Is the Western world go- ing to assume that the refugees are permanent expatriates from Hungary for whom new homes and new jobs must be found in Europe and in the New World? If so, there is a work of planning and of international cooperation to be done on a scale and of a scope beyond anything now being im- provised. Or is the Western world to as- sume as the principle of its policy that the great mass of these re- fugees should regard their exile as temporary, and that they can expect to go back to Hungary? If so, then the problem to which we must address ourselves is whether by negotiations with the Soviet Union we can contribute anything substantial to an Hungarian set- tlement. * * * FOR A BROAD settlement, what has been happening in Poland and in Hungary has demonstrated, I think, two- critical propositions. The one is that in Eastern Europe the hope of national freedom has behind it the masses of the people, not only the old privileged classes, but the workers, the peasants, and the students. This hope of national freedom is opposed by the power of the Red Army, and would pre- vail everywhere, as it did first of all in Yugoslavia, if the Red Army were withdrawn. The second proposition, demon- strated negatively in Poland and positively in Hungary, is that the , Red Army will in fact be used ruthlessly against any East Europ- ean government which threatens to move outside of the strategic orbit of the Soviet Union. * * * THE CRUCIAL question is whe- as an institution for the preserva- ther terms can be offered to the Soviet Union which would bring about the withdrawal of the Red Army from Eastern Europe. This withdrawal would carry with it not only the reunification of Ger- many but also the national free- dom of Poland, Hungary and Czechoslovakia. We do not know whether the Soviet Union today would agree to such a military withdrawal at any price. But we should be getting ready, it seems to me, to find out whether there is a price which is tolerable, at which so much can be done for the peace and free- dom of Europe. 1956 New York Herald Tribune Inc. MTimes' Comment With obvious concern over the rift in free world solidarity caused by the British and French mili- tary action in Egypt, Western statesmen. are now taking steps to mend this rift, to iron out their differences and, above all, to save their alliances from serious dam- age. These alliances, as instruments of collective self-defense and as power reservoirs of the United Na- tions, are and must remain the priincipal bulwarks against the great menace of our days - the threat of continued communist aggression. This characterization applied especially to the North Atlantic alliance. It is not only the main- stay of our other alliances; it is based on a common civilization with common ethical and moral values which have their roots in the Judeo-Hellenic-Roman heri- tage and have flowered into the democratic way of life. Any real impairment of this alliance can only encourage the Communists. -The New York Times DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an of- ficial publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. No- tices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3553 Administration Building before 2 p.m. the day preced- ing publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1956 VOL. LXVII, NO, 57 General Notices Professional Qualification Test: Na- tional Security Agency. Students tak- ing the Professional Qualification Test on Dec. 1 are requested to report to Room 100, Hutchins Hall at 8:45 a.m.' Sat. Board in Review, Student Govern- ment Council. In accordance with regu- lations established by the Board in Review, a meeting has been requested by one of its members to review action taken by Student Government Council at its meeting of Nov. 28 with respect to a request from Galen Society for permission to hold a campus fund drive on Dec. 7, 8. Accordingly, a meeting of the Board in Review has been called for 10:30 a.m. on Sun., Dec. 2, in Room 3A, Michigan Union. The calling of this meeting, therefore, operates as a stay- of-action until such time as the Board in Review makes its determniation. Mark VIII Graduate Women's Coop- erative House, located at 917 S. Forest St., presently has vacancies for room- ers and boarders. The average cost is $13.75 per week for roomers and $8.75 per week for boarders. Approximately five hours of work per week is re- quired for both roomers and boarders. For further information and a free in- troductory dinner contact Celia Brown, NO 3-5974 or Luther Buchele, NO. 8-6872. Lectures University Lecture in Journalism. Norman Isaacs, managing editor of the Louisville (Ky.) Times, will speak on "Selling Newspaper Readers Short" in Rackham Amphitheatre, 3:00 p.m., Mon., Dec. 3. Open to the public. Concerts "Messiah" (Handel) will be presented by the University Musical Society Sat., Dec. 2, at 2:30 p.m. in Hill Auditorium. Participants will include the University Choral Union, the Musical Society Or- chestra, Mary McCall Stubbin, organ- ist; with soloists; Adele Addison, so- prano; Patricia Fraher, contralto; How. ard Jarratt, tenor; and Kenneth Smith, bass; and Lester McCoy, conductor. It is respectfully requested that tick- et holders be seated amply in time, since latecomers cannot be seated aft- er the performances begin. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for John Wil- bur Price, Political Science; thesis; "British Attitudes Toward European Unity as Reflected by the Participa- tion of the United Kingdom in the Council of Europe" Sat., Dec. 1, East Council Room, Rackham Building, at 9:30 a.m. Chairman, N. M. Efimenco. Events Today A Career Clinic for all University wo- men, sponsored by Scroll, Mortarboard, and Senior Society assisted by the Bu- reau of Appointments, will be held this afternoon at the Michigan League, from 2:00 to 5:00. Each speaker will talk for fifteen minutes at the beginning of the hour indicated. All of the speak- ers will be available to talk informally to anyone Interested during the rest of the afternoon any time between ) and 5. Undergraduate women are urged to attend for information which will be helpful to them In deciding on a field of concentration and later In a choice of jobs. The program will be as follows: 2:00: Advertising - Genevieve Hazzard, Acct. Exec., Campbell Eward, Detroit. Counseling - Mildred Snell, Em- ployment Manager, A & P Co., De- troit. Civil Service - Dorothy Kirkoff, U.S. Social Security Admin., Detroit. Banking - Jeanette Edlund, Nation- al Bank of Detroit. Bilological Research - Dr. Rhoda Michaels, Upjohn Co., Kalamazoo, Michigan. 3:00: Journalism - Laurena Pringle, Fashion Editor, Detroit Free Press. Librarian Work - Louise Lage, Chief Librarian, Eli Lilly Co., Indianapolis, Indiana. Insurance - Ella Lyons, E. B. Lyons Insurance Co., Detroit. Personnel - Virginia Phillips, Col- lege Relations, Michigan Bell Tele- phone Co., Detroit. Physical Therapy - Virginia Wilson, University Hospital, Ann Arbor. 4:00: Publishing - Fred Wieck, Direc- tor of University Press, Ann Arbor. Radiot& TV - Fran Harris, WWJ, Detroit. Retail - Ruth Dunn, Counselor, J. L. Hudson Co., Detroit. Social Work - Detroit Dept. of Pub- lic Welfare -- Roberta Tarbell. Airline Hostessing - Virginia Roiz, I 4 i ' 4 Y i By J. M. ROBERTS THE American warning to Russia and Syria against interference with Iraq is likely to be followed by renewed pressure on the United States to join the Baghdad Pact directly. Pakistan, Turkey, Iraq and Iran can point out that membership itself would hardly entail any greater responsibility than is assumed under the warning statement, which said any move against them would be viewed "with the utmost gravity." In the beginning the United States, which proposed the pact, considered it sufficient to link it with the North Atlantic Treaty Organ- jzation through Britain and Turkey. It was considered better that Russia, al- ready agitated about American military bases from which she could be hit, should not be faced directly by the United States on that part of her perimeter. BRITAIN has now, however, made herself persona non grata with her smaller partners in the pact, and since her invasion of Egypt their meetings have been held without her. Iraq has always promised her loyalty to the pact on the reservation that if the other Arab countries became involved with Israel she would go to their aid. Israel would cer- tainly be involved in any general outbreak in the area. Iraq has asked for more U.S. arms with which to face the Russian buildup of Syria. But there is a question whether she would be able to use them with her present mobiliza- tion, and also the question of what Turkey's reaction would be to a further buildup on her flanks. First reaction among Turks seems to be that they would not worry, since aid for one Bagh- dad Pact member can be considered aid for all, but that it would be better, first, if the United States would join the pact and send training missions to Iraq. VJHE United States, of course, issued her statement not as an invitation to further discussion about joining the pact, but as a part her long-standing policy of trying to fore- stall any misunderstanding among the Com- munists as to where her interests lie. This could be even more firmly expressed by joining the pact. It could be done without putting Iraq in the position of becoming an American base - and Iraq has made it clear she does not wish to become such. It can be argued, of course, that joining more pacts cannot make the position of the United States any clearer. She is already in- volved, around the world, in what many ob- servers consider an overcommitment to de- fend other nations. Buther membership in the pact would serve to replace the loss of Britain's position in it. I I I LETTERS to the EDITOR _< HUMAN UNDERSTANDING: 'Tragedy in a Temporary Town' dti gian ait New Books at the Library Editorial Staff RICHARD SNYDER. RICHARD HALLORAN l Editorial Director Editor LEE MARKS City Editor GAIL GOLDSTEIN ................Personnel Director ERNEST THEODOSSIN.............. Magazine Editor JANET REARICK .....Associate Editorial Director MARY ANN THOMAS................ Features Editor DAVID GREY. ................ Sports Editor RICHARD CRAMER..........Associate Sports Editor STEPHEN HEILPERN .........Associate Sports Editor VIRGINIA ROBERTSON....... .. ..Women's Editor JANE FOWLER ............Associate Women's Editor ARLINE LEWIS..............Women's Feature Editor JOHN HIRTZEL................. Chief Photographer Business Staff DAVID SILVER, Business Manager MILTON GOLDSTEIN ....AssociateBusiness Manager WILLIAM PUSCH................. Adertising Manager CHARLES WILSON.................Finance Manager PATRICIA LAMERTS...---. Ap.m.... fccontyner Crankshaw, Edward-Russia Without Stalin: the emerging pattern; NY, Viking, 1956. Garraty, John A.-Woodrow Wilson: a great life in brief; NY, Knopf. 1956. Holbrook, Stewart H.-The Rocky Mountain Revolution; NY, Holt. 1956. Jones, Virgil Carrington-Gray Ghosts and Rebel Raiders; NY. Holt. 1956. Mencken, Henry L.-A Carnival of Bun- combe; Baltimore, John Hopkins Press, 1956. Morris. James-As I saw the U.S.A.; NY, Pantheon, 1956. Murray, Pauli-Proud Shoes; NY, Harper, 1956. Smith, Ethel Sabia-The Dynamics of Aging; NY, Norton, 1956. Swinnerton, H. H.-The Earth Beneath U1s.; Boston, Little Brown. 1956. Atkins .Tohn-Tnmorrow Revealed: NY Rnv By SOL PIAFKIN The repeat performance of Regi- inald Rose's provocative tele- play, "Tragedy in a Temporary Town," last Sunday was a refresh- ing reminder that television is still capable of producing imagi- native, intelligent work. Reginald Rose is one of the more socially - conscious young writers whose work has appeared on television. Though he does not possess the deep, personal, "slice of life" insight of writers like Pad- dy Chayefsky, he writes more pur- posefully and with a greater in- tensity. He is trying to "say" something. "Tragedy in a Temporary Town" received national attention when it was originally presented last spring, Actor Lloyd Bridges had used the ad-libbed expletive "god- dam" in a scene in which a group of transient workers were beating had gotten intensely involved in his role. Some of the residents of the "temporary town," frustrated, restless transient workers, had formed a lynch mob and, seeking a scapegoat for their own anxie- ties, began beating the high- strung Puerto Rican for a sup- posed attempt of rape, Bridges, whose own son had actually been the perpetrator of the act which had frightened the girl-an impetuous peck on the lips in the dark-did not act at first. BUT when he saw the grotesque nature of the mob's behavior, he stormed against the men, initially calling them, as directed by the script, "stupid pigs." Feeling his role strongly, he found himself involved in more than a condem- nation of the actors who were iAmnner-r, yhis ntAonnwe an the concerns himself more with an analysis of therindividual than social commentary, has described TV's creative capacity in an an- thology of his own plays. a * "TELEVISION," he writes," is a strange medium, limited by a thousand technical problems, hemmed in by taboos and adver- tising policies, cheapened by the innumerable untalented and of- ficious people you will always find in a billion dollar industry. Never- theless, for the writer there is still area for deep and unprobed work.. .This is an age of savage introspection, and television is the dramatic medium through which to expose our new insights into ourselves. . .More and more, the television writers are turning away from the slap-dash activity of the violence show and turnin tn the Re: Two Differences To the Editor: Open letter to Woody Hayes: We read with interest your comments as to the gentlemanly behavior of your boys after their ignominious defeat last Saturday. It is indeed fortunate that you have not been corrupted by the maturity and sportsmanship of your team. -Edward H. Poindexter Res. Assoc. -John J. Stephens, Grad. -Stanley C. Wecker, Grad. Jews In Egypt . . To the Editor: WHEN an armed attack was launched against Egypt, much was said about UN Charter and peace. Moral, as well as human, declarations were made against aggressors, regardless of the amount of Soviet arms collection or Fedayeen raids-carried out by 'victims'. Racial (or religious)) discrim- ination is being now brought into force in Egypt against Jews. The Jewish community as a whole has never admitted and has hardly been accused of having connec- tion with Israel. I fail, however, to read or hear now the 'moral' and 'human' declarations; nor have I come across a meeting' "Upholding" ... UN Charter. It would be too much to expect from people to get excited about a matter which: (a) occurs miles away, (b) apparently has hardly any effect on Middle East mess - certainly not on U.S. (c) might (?) have 'legal' justification. I hope. however, that the campus is