c1 Atir4ljoau Batty 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, MICH. * Phone No 2-3241 We'd Love To Have You Drop In Some Other Time" -- - hen Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" READERS' THEATRE: 'Infernal Machine' An Uncoiling Spring SINCE SOPHOCLES first bound Oedipus in the sticky coils of irrevoc- able fate, that tragic here has walked endlessly on his pierced feet through the fields of literature. criticism, and psychology The horror that surrounds a man who, though all unknowing. murders his father and marries his mother has a universal fascination No one has been able to improve on the Sophocles original: later uses of the story story have been mostly those of free adaptation or analysis. Dramatists. Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. AY, DECEMBER 8, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: PETER ECKSTEIN Science in Liberal Education: A Broad Intellectual Experience? pHE FOUR new "liberalized" science courses announced by the literary college represent real progress in adjusting distribution require- ments to the educational needs of the students. Any one of them can be used to satisfy the four hour non-laboratory science requirement of the literary college. The college's adminis- trators are to be congratulated for attempting to make that requirement more palatable. But the average "non-science major," as the literary college catalogue describes him, must still face the stiffer requirement of eight val- uable hours spent in a laboratory science. The advisability of a compulsory requirement can be questioned, but it might be more profit- able to discuss the present system of required introductory laboratory science courses in terms of the philosophy of the requirement it- self-"to provide all students with a broad in- tellectual experience in the major fields of knowledge and to ensure that every graduate of this College will have personal experience with the content, method, and system of values of the various disciplines by which men try to understand themselves and their environment." This is a noble aim, and one quite in line with the educational needs of all who seek a "liberal" education, whatever the field of ma- jor emphasis. And it is certainly desirable, at a, time when science i so powerful a material and intellectual influence, that the educated man understand its methods, philosophy and his- tory. IN MOST departments, however, introductory laboratory courses are designed to provide a firm grounding for students planning to do further work in the field. They must be tech- nical and specialized enough to dothis impor- tant job, and are not designed to provide a "broad intellectual experience" as much as to equip technicians with the tools of their trade. And those who plan to do further work in the field are necessarily searching harder for the technical data needed for good grades. This cannot help but put at a heavy disadvag - tage those nbn-science majors in search of a. "broad intellectual experience," not always best gained by learning the names of mouth struc- tures of grasshoppers or the mathematics of computing distances between stars. What is needed in the literary college is a course in science generally, or in a specific science, designed to meet the needs of the stu- dent seeking intellectual and philosophical values -- if not the myriads of facts and de- tails - which the sciences have toyoffer. It need not be a course any "easier" than those now provided, though the compulsory nature of the requirement might be cause for think- ing along those lines. What is important is that the course be geared to the college objec- tives, not to the needs of technicians and pro- fessionals. Such a course or courses might take as a framework the fascinating history of man's attempt to understand his physical environ- ment. If the general history of science is too broad a topic to provide much depth of under- standing, the history of a specific science alone might be covered or correlated with a general history. T HE LATTER suggestion seems the most in- triguing. A course might be designed with one or two lectures a week describing the in- tellectual atmosphere and general scientific advances of a period. A second lecture or part of a laboratory period could be devoted to de- scribing in more detail how a specific science was able to capitalize on these advances and itself progress. The rest or all of the labora- tory periods could then be used to recreate and analyze classic experiments in the field. Lectures and labs could be supplemented by4 moderate doses of homework from the exten- sive literature in the field. Such a course would serve the purpose of putting science, so often viewed with either too much awe or sheer contempt, in proper his- torical perspective. It would make clear that the world of science was not discovered in the Twentieth Century, nor was it very clearly un- derstood by Aristotle. And it would provide working illustrations of the methods, philo- sophies, values and logic - as well as the fal- lacies - with which scienctists have worked for centuries. It would be an ambitious year of study, and its objectives could not hope to be fulfilled a "snap " course. There would need to be no compromise of academic standards in teaching it. But it would be a year much more reward- ing to the non-science-major - perhaps to the science major as well - than the eight hours of technical lectures and dreary labor- atory now required if one expects to become a graduate of the literary college. -PETER ECKSTEIN Grass Roots Work Pn Student Counseling STUDENTS have been screaming about lack of counseling facilities for years - and we suspect the screams are justified. Certainly the academic counseling is no more that a troublesome rubber-stamp operation. In the past the screams have produced little except noise, and even that dies down fast. The reason nothing has gotten done is that a counselin'g system can't be revised overnight. We've often gotten discouraged at all the grass roots work that has to be done 'before revision can even be considered. Before any improvements can be instituted all sorts of information must be compiled - where we are now, where we 'fall short, what students expect, what it costs. STUDENT Governments counseling commit- tee has finally gotten around to the grass roots work. To get information on which to base recomendations for a general overhaul of our deficient counseling services, a question- naire is being sent to every tenth student. This questionnaire shouldn't get heaved in the circular file. If you get one, please sit down and write out some thoughtful answers. If the counsel- ing committee gets cooperation perhaps the students who come after us will have the coun- seling we're always screaming about. -LEE MARKS City Editor fi t- C> TODAY AND TOMORROW: Hammarshjold Mission Denied however have attacked the myth from all angles. The Infernal Machine, Jean Cocteau's version of the events surrounding Sophoeles' hero, is presented as an "experimental playbill" by the Department of Speech. This means that the play is delivered by readers standing behind a row of lecterns and is presented without benefit of scen- ery, costumes, make-up, or stage business. Expression is limited to faces, voices, and manual gestures. Few modern plays conceived for conventional presentation can stand such a test. "The Infernal Machine" is an exception. Cocteau is concerned here with the "unwinding" of the inexorable machine of human life-a ma- chine constructed by the gods. In the unwinding he deals in the first three acts of the play with events which antedate those of the Soph- ocles play. Like all of Cocteau's work it bears the stamp of his sensitivity, his unconventionality, his delicate style. A pioneer in film-making, Cocteau made movie history with such films as "La Belle et la Bete," "Les Parents Terribles," and its companion- play, " Les Enfants Terribles," which appeared in the United :States as "The Strange Ones." By WALTER LIPPMANN ontrary to what the Secretary General of the United Nations had been led to believe by the Kadar delegate in New York, the Kadar government in Budapest is not willing to discuss arrange- ments for a visit on Dec. 16. For all practical purposes that govern- ment is not only refusing to admit the observers from the UN, it is refusing to admit the Secretary General himself. How can this refusal be recon- ciled with the obligation of a member? Surely there can be no 1real doubt about the inherent right of the official agent of the United Nations to discuss with any government that belongs to the United Nations any question with which the United Nations are concerned. In the Egyptian affair no ,)ne, not Britain, France and Israel, not Egypt, not the governments which are hesitating and abstaining a- bout Hungary, has questioned the right of the Secretary General to go to Cairo to implement a reso- lution of the General Assembly. On what ground can his right to go to Budapest be questioned now? And on what ground could any member of the UN justify its own failure to uphold the authority and to defend the rights of the United Nations? KADAR'S delegate in New York, Mr. Imre Horvath, should be re- fused the right to speak or to vote in the General Assembly until his government in Budapest ad- mits the Secretary General. This would be the appropriate reply to what is in substance a refusal by the Kadar government to main- tain full diplomatic relations with the United Nations. It does not, of course, mean the "expulsion" of Hungary, which as a nation is a lawful and wel- come member of the United Na- tions. Nor is it a withdrawal of the recognition of the Kadar gov- ernment, even though in law it is not the legitimate government of Hungary. The proper rule for the United Nations is to deal with de facto governments, But the refusal to let Horvath speak or vote in the General Assembly would be to sus- pend in New York the diplomatic relations which have been sus- pended in Budapest. * * * THE REFUSAL to receive the Secretary General is consistent with the fundamental policy of the Kadar government, of the So- iet Union and of its satellites, This is to prevent the United Na- tions from dealing with Hungary. This policy is being enforced by the paramount power of the Red Army in Central Europe. Because of that military power the reso- lutions of the UN are ignored, its agents are kept at a distance. Hungary is a country under the military occupation of the Red Army and the supreme law in Hungary is the law laid down by the Red Army. But this assertion of military force is being rationlized by the claim which has made an impres- sion in many capitals, that the Red Army is acting lawfully in Hungary and that to interfere with what it is doing is to vio- late Article 2 of the Charter. This article denies the right of the UN "to intervene in matters which are essentially within the domestic jurisdiction of any state." IN THIS connection, I would recommend the study of a mem- orandum, first published in the middle of November, by the Inter- national Commission of Jurists, which has its headquarters at the Hague. This memorandum is called "Hungary and the Soviet Defi- nition of Aggression." It contains the clearest and most succinct ac- count available of the events in Hungary which led up to the Ka- dar usurpation. I would be surprised if anyone whd reads it with an open mind will disagree with its conclusions -that Kadar is a usurper and a puppet, that his government is illegitimate, and that by the So- viet Union's own official defini- tion of "aggression," as proposed to the United Nations in 1953, the Soviet Union's action in Hungary is aggression. 2956 New York Herald Tribune Inc. SIMULTANEOUSLY subtle and direct, Cocteau writes on several levels of meaning-he seldom ap- pears obscure, but there is always more to be uncovered beneath each new surface. This stark performance allows the poetry of the work to be re- vealed. Much credit must be given to the cast members, who, for the most part, made excellent use of the limitations imposed on them. Some of the minor roles were only read, no more. But the fine timbre of Beverly Canning's voice placed Jocasta in three dimensions; Glen Phillips, the narrator, might well have been John Daly, and Richard Allen as Oedipus progressed con- vincingly from arrogant youth to blind penitent. -Roberta Hard AT THE ORPHEUM Israel War Dramatized THE current showing of the Is- raeli film, "Hill 24 Doesn't An- swer," certainly comes at an ap- propriate time, only several weeks after the cessation of recent hos- tilities in the Middle East. Despite the definite pro-Israel bias of the movie, which, inciden- tally is in English, it depicts some of the historical background es- sential to an understanding of present politics in the Mediter- ranean. "Hill 24" is the story of four Israeli soldiers assigned to obtain and protect a key hill overlooking an important road out of Jeru- salem just before the establish- ment of the UN cease-fire of July 18, 1948. IN A somewhat disjointed fash- ion, primarily through flashbacks of two of the soldiers - a New York Jew who had originally come to the Holy Land as a tour- ist and an Irish "Christian" form- er British detective who had fal- len in love with an Israeli girl -- we learn something about the Zionist dream and the conflicts of the Jews, first with the British and then with the Arabs. The story does not flow smooth- ly, the acting is far from impec- cable and the technical quality of the film does not meet Holly- wood standards However. there is a sincerity of purpose in its production, with the reality of the war atmosphere present during the actual filming, that succeeds in giving a reason- able presentation of the Israeli position. * * * THE FILM is a reminder that it was the Arab states. not the new-born Jewish nation, that ini- tiated hostilities in the spring of 1948 following the termination of the British mandate. Some of the success of the Is- raeli military campaign is ex- plained by the fervor and devo- tion of its people - many only recently released from Nazi con- centration camps. Before the young New Yorker joins the Israeli army, he asks various residents about their pros- pects in the war with the Arabs. * * * "NO CHOICE -- that is our se- AIY i 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 inTYPEWRITTEN 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 8, 1956 VOL. LXVII, NO. 63 General Notices The University Senate will hold its regular fall meeting on Mon., Dec. 10, at 4:15 p.m. in Rackham Lecture Hall. In accordance with regulations es- tablished 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 Dec. 5, 1956 with respect to National Sigma Kappa. According- ly a meeting of the Board in Review has been called for Sun., Dec. 9 at 10:30 a.m. The calling of this meeting, therefore, operates as a stay-of-action until such time as the Board in Re- view makes its determination. Lectures Fifst annual Carl V. Weller Lecture, auspices of the Michigan Pathological Society. 5:00 p.m., Sat., Dec. 8 in the Rackham Building. Howard T. Karsner, M.D., L.L.D., research adviser to the Surgeon of the U.S. Navy and pro- fessor emeritus of pathology, Western Reserve University, will speak on "The Place of Pathology in Biomedical Re- search." Thomas Spencer Jerome Lectures "Greek Architecture in Ancient Italy", by Prof. William B. Dinsmoor of Col- umbia University. Third lecture, "The Ancient Approach: Dimension and De- sign", Mon., Dec. 10, Aud. B, Angell Hal, 4:15 p.m. University Lecture, auspices of the Department of Romance Langages. Dr. Walter Starkie, former director of the British Institute in Madrid. "The Wanderings of Don Quixote and San- cho.' Mon., Dec. 10. Rackham Amphi- theatre 4:10 p.m. Plays Hansel and Gretel will be presented by the Department of Speech and the School of Music at 2:30 and 8 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Late- comers will not be seated during the overture. The Infernal Machine, by Jean Co- teau, will be presented by theDepart- ment of Speech in a Readers' Theatre performance tonight at 8 p.m. in Aud. A, Angell Hall. This Second Experimen- tal Playbill is open to the public with no admission charge. Academic Notices Astronomical Colloquium. Sat., De. 8, 2 p.m., McMath-Hulbert Observa- tory, Pontiac, Michigan. iDr. Leo Gold- berg will speak on "Recent Studies of the Chromosphere." Doctoral Examination for Munir Ridha EI-Saden, Mechanical Engineer- ing; thesis: "Viscous Flow through Small Clearances with Application to the Problem of Leakage in Recipro- cating Pumps", Mon., Dec. 10, 329 West Engineering Bldg., at 3:00 p.m. Chair- man, G. V. Edmonson. Placement Notices The following vacancies have been listed with the Bureau of Appointments. Chapel Hill, North Carolina (North Carolina Symphony Society, Inc.) - cellist; double bassist. Chicago, Illinois (Institute of News- paper Operations, Inc.) training assis- tant - Newspaper mechanical opera- tions. Englewood, Florida -3rd grade for January; 2nd grade for August, 1957; 5th grade for August, 1957; 6th grade for August, 1957. For additional information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Ad- ministration Building, NO 3-1511, Ext. 4811 Personnel Requests: Bauer & Black Co., Chicago, Ill., is setting up a new branch in Kalamazoo, and is looking for a man for the Sales Dept. U.S. Army & Air Force Exchange Serr vice announces vacancies for steno- graphers, accountants, statisticians, managers, supervisors, and buyers working with food, automobiles, and other equipment in France, Germany, Libya, Fr. Morocco, England, Spain, Turkey, Japan, Guam, Iceland, Green- land, Labrador, Newfoundland. Hawthorne Center, Northville. Mich. needs two students for the switch- board and reception desk, work Sat. and Sun. Civil Service: U.S. Civil Service Commission an- nounces an examination for Student Trainee in Forestry, GS-3 and 4, for duty with The Dept of Interior - Bu- reau of Indian Affairs and Bureau of Land Management, and the Dept. of Agric. - Forest Service. Requires at least one full academic year of study. New York State Civil Service an- nounces the Professional and Techni- cal Assistant Exam, open to any coi- lege seniors, juniors or graduates. The tests will be given in New York and at various colleges and universities throuechout thecontnrv on Fb 6 1 4 .1 I .4 I N sA :; Equalization Not Amateurism, LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: SGC Decision Comes Under Fire "EQUALIZATION" plan for subsidizing Big Ten athletes raises at least as many prob- lems as it hopes to solve. Equalization is a financial formula where- by athletes will be paid subsidization dollars publicly by member universities. They will be given the difference between their families' financial means and the cost of going to school, Conference athletes may average more dol- lars in aid grants than under the present sys- tem. One observer close to the scene com- mented, "about $1500 should be par". This 'plan places the athlete in a highly fa- vored position compared with other students who must prove scholastic prowess or need to get aid. Advocates of the plan argue, "Money will be doled out on the basis of need". It might also be argued that "being an athlete" is an- other basis. Also, the football player will still be awarded gratis tickets which can be sold for "financial aid". Last, oral recruiting will no doubt have its heyday. High school player will still be invited to "drop down and see the campus" by Con- ference coaches. \FQUALIZATION is more than a stone's throw from amateurism. There are some valid presumptions it will intensify an already rot- ten situation, Chances are this proposal will be adopted by the Big Ten soon. It should be adopted only, on a trial basis. - JAMES ELSMAN, JR. g ti ian EuiI4 New Books at the Library Broader Scope -. - To The Editor: Democracy involves two main types of responsibility. Individ - uals and minorities are responsible for upholding the rules 'and laws. of the majority. At the same time. the majority has the responsibility for protecting the rights of its constituent minorities. In our Democracy these minority rights are internal in nature. That is, a minority is entitled to freedom of action as long as their action does not injure anyone else. In the present Sigma Kappa con- troversy the goal of SGC is cer- tainly desirable and SGC is en- titled to take action against Sig- ma Kappa under existing rules, However, membership in fraterni- ties and sororities is not compul- sory. and it is possible to get a good education without belonging to one. Therefore, a serious prin- ciple is at stake. Fraternities and sororities are minority groups, and as such they should be allowed to set up their own internal rules. Interference by SGC in internal affairs is in conflict with the Democratic principles stated above, SGC is using undemocratic means to reach a desirable end. In light of this approach, the question takes on a broader scope. It is not whether there should be bias clauses or not, but whether there should be fraternities or sororities or not. If you are going to en- courage minority groups you are Airp n. '. ionA, -.nn fn n r ctnne government has sunk to a new low in political cowardice. It is evident that the majority of the council chose to apply a technical and completely unfair University regulation to escape the real question. Whether or not Sig- mb Kappa has violated a rule which applies to only a minute percentage of our students, is not the question. The issue. which a student gov- ernment worthy of the name would have considered is this: "Is dis- crimination practiced by any of our Greek letter societies? And, if so, should discrimination be per- mitted to continue?" Why should Sigma Kappa and the other groups which have come on this campus since 1949 be pena- lized for discriminating when, pre- sumably, everyone else can? More- over, why hasn't the SGC tried to develop a more comprehensive rule? Could one of the reasons be that some of the fearless fighters for racial equality whc sit on the Council are themselves members of fraternities and sororities which do discriminate? -George Denison '57 -Lloyd W. Mason '57 -John Maire '58 RuitNation To the Editor: have patiently endured the ris- erable treatment accorded mo- tion pictures shown at the Cinema Guild. But Thursday evenings's was cut? - only the most impor- tant sequences necessary for s complete comprehension of the theme. The director's magnificent speech on the essence of theatre was completely missing - so was the sardonic staircase sequence during the party scene - and fi- nally, the most cutting cut of all came a: the end which was not the end at all. The last scene origi- nally had the young girl take the coveted award from the hands of the critic, don the mantel, hold the prize tightly in her hands and bow to herself in the threeway mirror. This ironic and bitter end- ing gives complete meaning to the movie and was completely omitted from this version - the result, a hollow triumph with the audi- ence missing much of the original intent. All About Eve was a re- cipient of several Academy Awards and many continental prizes. It is one of the most distinguished movies ever made and surely one of the wittiest. It needs to be kept intact, and it certainly needs bet- er handling than it was accorded Thursday. I sincerely hope that the Cine- ma Guild does not keep up this deplorable practice of ruining great motion pictures. --Leonard H. Manheim, Grad. h, But They Can! ... j To The Editor: Fvidently, the sororities at Tufts and Cornell are given at least 4< .u 1 Editorial Stafff RICHARD SNYDER. Editor RICHARD HALLORAN LEE MARKS Editorial Director City Editor GAIL GOLDSTEIN................Personnel Director ERNEST THEODOSSIN.............r.Magazine Editor JANET REARICK ...Associate Editorial Director MARY ANN THOMAS................ Features Editor DAVID GREY .............. Sports Editor RICHARD CRAMER..........Associate Sports Editor STEPHEN R'EILPERN .........Associate Sports Editor VIRGINIA ROBERTSON....... .. ... Women's Editor JANE FOWVLER............Associate Women's Editor ARLINE LEWIS..............Women's Feature Editor JOHN HIRTZEL................ .. Chief Photographer Business Staff DAVID SILVER, Business Manager MILTON GOLDSTEIN.... Associate Business Manager WILLIAM 2135CH................ Adertising Manager Brooks, Van Wyck and Bettmann, Otto L. - Our Literary Heritage; A Pictorial History of the Writer in America. N.Y., Dutton, 1956. Cather, Willa - Willa Cather in Europe. N.Y., Knopf, 1956. Compton, Arthur H. - Atomic Quest. N.Y., Oxford University press. 1956. Fane, Francis D. - The Naked Warriors. N.Y., Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1956. Fife, Austin and Alta - Saints of Sage and Saddle; Folklore Among the Mormons. Bloom- ington, Ind., Indiana University Press 1956. Horgan, Paul - The Centuries of Santa Fe. N. Y., Dutton, 1956. Neutra, Richard - Life and Human Habitat. w.. 1