Sixty-Seventh Year EDITED AND MANAGED BYS TUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 TWO VIEWS FROM SOUTH ASIA: Indians, Pakistanis Discuss Kashmir "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. SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: JAMES ELSMAN Education for the Masses: Whither the Superior Student Claim UN Mediation IN EXTENDING advance college credit to ex- ceptional high school students, the Literary College has taken another step toward recog- nition of the superior student. High school students may now take special advanced courses prepared by University faculty and high school teachers. If they pass an ex- amination prepared by the Educational Testing Service, they may enter college with as much as 16 hours' credit. THE PROBLEM of the exceptional student, be he superior or below average, has long been the chief bugaboo of American education. In our democracy, goals are directed toward the majority, the average, the Golden Mean. Even in grade school the better-than-average pupil is mocked by his fellows and soon learns to either hide his light under the bushel of medi- ocrity or direct it toward outside activities. High school courses, geared to the average, bore him. And, to a great extent, college bores him too. Instead of finding the intellectual bril- liance he anticipated, he finds more mediocrity. Today's college students demand spoon-feeding, and professors, weighed down by the American Ideal, education for the masses, are faced with two alternatives: flunk a great many students (Ed. note. The following articles were written, at the requ est of the Daily, by groums of Indian and Palistani students.) (which speaks ill, at least on the surface, of their teaching ability) or mark on that mathe- matical deity, the curve. In America 1956, everyone who has the money and can main- tain a two-point goes to college. A B.A. is now the equivalent of a high school Education a few decades back, and it's almost impossible to get a job without one. EDUCATION-FOR-EVERYONE is compatible with American ideals just as long as it doesn't exclude the really bright student who, after all, will be the teacher and thinker of America's tomorrow. He must be challenged, not spoon-fed; encouraged rather than crushed; praised instead of ridiculed. The Literary College is steaming slowly along toward this goal with honors programs, tutorial sections and now, advanced college credit for high school students. But the fact that selected high school students last year did better on the ETS examination than a random college sample should be proof positive that education geared to the average is not ade- quate. f It's time the superior student be allowed to come into his own. -TAMMY MORRISON Poor Vacation Scheduling THE UNIVERSITY calendar is a vivid ex- ample of the old truism "You can't pleace everyone." While most of the complaints are either dismissed as insignificant in themselves or deemed minor because they are peculiar to only one small interest group, this year's Christ- mas season is stirring no little controversy among University students. The complaint is simply that since vacation starts Dec. 21, students will not be able-to get pre-Christmas employment. It isn't so much that students enjoy work-. ing over the holidays; its more a matter of necessity. The full-time college man usually has little or no income nine months of the year, and three months' earnings during the summer is .seldom sufficient to last out the long, ex- pensive campus winter. AND EVEN if the student doesn't need the money to directly finance his own educa- tion, the hundred dollars or so a yuletide job usually brings has come to be relied on for Christmas gifts and "mad" money. The United States Postal Office, which has given Christmas employment to literally thou- sands of University students in the past, is not hiring this year from the Ann Arbor campus because Michigan students can work only two days. The same is true of the many stores and shops back In the home-towns. Businessmen simply won't hire a student as a cashier or clerk for the week between Christmas and New Year's Day. The result is students are going to have to look elsewhere for that, necessary nest egg Christmas vacation usually offers. And because in many cases this quirk of the University schedule is creating a definite hardship, stu- dents are wondering just how essential it was that the Administration arranged the Christ- mas break as they did. LOOKING AT the issue from an adminis- trative standpoint, the scheduling of the Christmas vacation is justified by its consis- tency with the other holidays, the exam sched- ule and the break between semesters. Only radicals will postulate an intentional malicious- ness on the part of' the Administration for the hardship such spacing has placed on the stu- dent. But even though this difficulty was not in- tended by the schedulers, and even though it was perhaps deliberated upon and deemed sec- ondary to other considerations in drawing up a full-year's program, the student does have a legitimate complaint. Christmas employment is not only desirable, in many cases it is essential to the college stu- dent. Therefore, the pressure put on the stu- dent by such a financially useless vacation as this year's schedule has created, should not be merely A consideration of the officials draw- ing up the exam; it should be the FIRST con- sideration.. -WILLIAM HANEY Failure In the year 1947 the historic struggle of the Indian people for freedom culminated in the de- cision of the British to "quit" India and leave the people to govern themselves. In the last few years of British rule com- munal passions rose so high that it was thought necessary to par- tition the Indian Sub-continent into two sovereign states. It was hoped that the partition would mean the end of all this. But unfortunately this new situa- tion created new regions of dis- pute. Outstanding among these is the Kashmir Question. India under Britain consisted of British ruled provinces and princely states that had acceded certain of their rights by various treaties. On the British withdrawal these princely states regained their original sovereign status. This left them with an alternatice to accede to one of the two Domin- ions or to remain independent. Geographical, historical, cultural, economic and other ties left them little choice except to join one of the two Dominions. If these states had to join one of the two do- minions the next questiontwas to which of these two dominions should these states join? The Indian policy in this mat- ter was consistently uniform. Ac- cession to either Dominion must be based on the wishes of the people and not on their religious affiliations. As a secular state India cannot value their position. This principle was earlier accepted when a referendum was held in the nothwest frontier province even though 90% of its popula- tion was Moslem. In view of this difference of approach between India and Pak- istan a dispute arose on the ques- tion of accession of Kashmir. The claim of Pakistan that because a majority of people of Kashmir are Moslems, she must join Pak- istan, was one that India could not accept. Kashmir, however, was one ex- ception. This state has a common boundary with both India and Pakistan. While the question of accession was still undecided "volunteers" from Pakistan in- stigated and armed by their Gov- ernment attacked Poonch which lies along the border of Pakistan. Unable to cope with large in- vading forces the ruler of Kash- mir requested for help from India and expressed a desire to accede. In view of the fact that Kashmir was ruled by an autocratic ruler while the popular leaders were in prison the Indian Government asked the Ruler to declare a gen- eral amnesty and install a popu- lar and responsible government. On the question of accession, India accepted only a partial ac- cession. At the moment the pur- pose of the Indian Government was to assure that the aggression was repelled so that the decision on accession may be taken by a plebiscite in a civilized manner in stead of by aggression and in- timidation. In his address to Indian Nation- al Congress Mr. Nehru expressed this sentiment when he declared, "We are quite content to have a plebiscite in a civilized manner in- because we are committed to it, but because we are quite sure of its results. But the plebiscite must be a fair one and must not be held under the conditions which give encouragement to aggressor and justify aggression." It was to achieve this purpose that the Indian army was air- lifted into Kashmir. The Indian army immediately forced a re- treat of the invaders and could have achieved a complete expul- sion of invaders from the state. At this stage, however. India decided to bring the matter be- fore the UN so that this could be achieved without further blood- shed. The UN intervention turned out to be a bitter disappointment to India. Not only did they fail in obtaining a withdrawal of in- vaders from Kashmir territory but they also failed to name Pakistan an active collaborator, despite ample evidence. For several years India stood by her commitment to hold a plebiscite as soon as Kashmir was cleared of all invaders. India could not accept a plebiscite while a part of Kashmir was still occuppied by invaders because it was felt that a plebiscite under these con- ditions would mean giving "en- couragement to the aggressor and justifying the aggression." It was this failure of the UN that compelled India to accept the accession of Kashmir as rati- fied by the Constituent Assembly elected by the people of that part ofV KaC,1',r .f..,-., ...Ii. ;v v-. ,a m e 62 I ., : . K-. I y. I i I . a n~k MG~ qTC, It 1 Plebescite Evasion "t TALKING ON TELEVISION: TV Needs Good News Coverage Proposal and Considerations ON FRIDAY Vice-President Richard Nixon proposed a U.S. aid program for Britain, but he gave no details. In his address to. the American Manufactur- er's Association, the Vice-President called such assistance "vital to the cause of freedom." Certainly it is not difficult to see the reas- oning behind this proposal, especially if we think in long range terms-terms which in- clude Russia's objectives. To strangle Europe, avoiding a direct clash with the United States and thus leave America alone in any final struggle could very well be the present Soviet plan. And, in order to see this plan is not fulfilled, it is imperative that the United States sees that England is not .economically strangled. However, while the general idea behind Nix- on's proposal is certainly valid, the reasoning behind the unmentioned details needs consid- eration. For instance, Britain's action in the Middle East shows that American dollars are not bind- ing, that we cannot buy trust nor can we ex- Editorial Staff RICHARD SNYDER, Editor RICHARD HALLORANLEE MARKS Editorial Director Clty Editor GAIL GOLbSTEIN . ................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 REPERN ..... . Associate Sports Editor VIRGINIA ROBERTSON........ .Women's Editor JANE FOWIER ............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 pect to be consulted on matters which directly affect England and indirectly influence the United States. There may be those who would refuse Eng- land aid because of her present aggression in Egypt, and there may be others whose complete devotion to democracy over communism would permit them to overlook recent events and propose aid with no strings attached. While these views may well represent un- selfish standards, they exclude the fact that it is a selfish principle, the principle of self- preservation, which plays a big part in the actions of free nations. Two countries, the United States and Great Britain, desire to stay free and powerful, and Britain's action in Egypt has shown that this desire trancends unwritten bonds with the United States. THEREFO4E, in giving aid to Britain, America would be wise to establish pro- visions for stronger bonds-economic and mili- tary-between herself and England. In other words, the proposed program should involve a bargain. a bargain which would force Britain to think of a common preservation of democ- racy rather than mere self-preservation in future actions. Just how this is to be done, of course, is the problem, a problem for economic, political, and military strategists. Nixon's aid proposal could very will be an im- portant step in the right direction, if this poli- tician's skelton statement is given the substance of strategic reasoning. -JAMES BOW RARELY. if ever, before have the honor and the prestige of the United Nations been so endangered as they are now with respect to Hungary. The United Nations has stood idly by and has done nothing to prevent the slaughter of patriotic Hungarians by Soviet troops in that country. By LARRY EINHORN Daily Television Writer Television has proven itself as capable of being the most ef- fective medium for communicat- ing -news to the people. In this area it far surpasses radio, be- cause of the addition of the vis- ual, and far surpasses newsreels and newspapers because of the immediateness of transmission. Yet television has, at -least on any regular basis, faltered in this essential element of our com- munications process. News presentation has been at a standstill; television newscast- ers are human relay systems. John Daly, Douglas Edwards, David Brinkley and Chet Hunter are not in any sense of the word news analysts. Their function is only to give prepared introduc- tions to newsfilm and other mock newscasters and to cue the com- mercial announcements. Most of them are still sitting behind a desk with books on it so they can hide the scripts writ- ten by editors who have done nothing more than select and somewhat re-write stories from the wire services. Behind the desk is the inevitable map of the world. NBC recently made a vain attempt to try to remedy this situation by putting Hunter and Brinkley in a modern setting, but it was to no f avail, for the only diffe- *rence is that there is no desk. ,,"commentators" are standing and they have to hold their scripts in their hands. But this is still some improvement, a transition which might bring results. TELEVISION TAKES great pride (and has the right to) in its news, special events and docu- mentaries. They are presented in an interesting way, using all of the technical and physical re- sources available, and these are many. But they don't use them often enough, The best example of this was of the political convention cover- age. Every conceivable piece of technical equipment that enabled a more complete instantaneous coverage of these events was transported to Chicago and San Francisco and used. Every new idea for clearly presenting the best visual effect was employed. But these ideas and technical equipment will not be used in presenting news until another convention or similar event a- rises and necessitates it. It is only at these special events, that television attempts to crit- ically communicate to the public. It is only at these events that the televiewers can see some re- semblance to a news analyst. THERE IS NOTHING elaborate sessions were in progress. Tele- viewers responded quickly to the McCarthy and Kefauver hearings. They did not give such acclaim to the various newspapermen- meet-politician programs, where the only objective is which journ- alist can appear sharpest by ask- ing irrelevent questions. This is especially true on programs of this type where the interrogators are college students. If John Daly, Walter Kronkite, Edward R. Murrow and other com- petent news analysts would be given the opportunity to appear on television in that capacity, in- stead of just performing their, present chores, television would' benefit greatly. And men like H. V. Kaltenborn should be given the opportunity to bring back the news analyzing that flourished in radio during World War II. There is never any doubt that factual reporting is a necessity, but it would be supplemented if instead of hopskotching the world for headlines, television could open a news show with the familiar strains of "There's good news to- night." WHAT WOULD be wrong with Edward R. Murrow and Eric Seve- reid sitting in two plain chairs, sans scripts, and analyzing the situation in Hungary, Israel or Tennessee? It is done on radio, in the newspapers. And the same freedom of sqeech prevails on television. 9 i Sunday "See It Now" presented a special program starring Danny Kaye which was produced for the benefit of UNICEF. Thursday "Project XX" presented "The Jazz Age", a documentary view of the 1920's narrated by the late Fred Allen. "See It Now" has presente similar documentaries. But they have been few and far between. "Project XX" last year had two excellent documentaries, one tell- ing of the rise of Communism in the world and the other dealing with the rise and fall of Adolph Hitler. But two shows of this type a year are much less than the number which should have been presented. * * * THE QUIZ, variety, comedy, mystery, and children's programs all have their rightful place in American television, as do com- mercials. Straight factual news programs are also a necessary. But if you could add to this list a more regular schedule of special event coverage and news analyzing as seen at the conventions and- more documentaries of the caliber of "See It Now" and "Project XX", television would be more ef- fectively demonstrating the real reasons why the Federal Com- munications System originally sanctioned it. Claimed The Indo-Pakistan subcontinent was subdivided into two sov- ereign nations, India and Pakis- tan, in 1947 upon the termination of the , British rule. The creation of the two states pas the cul- mination of a long struggle by that the Hindus and the Moslems were two different nations and that their only hope for economic and social justice, fair treatment, and the freedom to follow their religious and cultural beliefs lay in the creation of a separate state of their own. Partition also caused the great- est migration in history, with a- bout 8 million Moslems and about 4 million Hindus crossing the bor- ders. To make things even worse, the colassal influx of Moslems from In- dia deranged the entire economic system. While Pakistan was grap- pling with these almost isur- mountable problems, India started 4 her militaristic action in the princely states of Kashmir, Jun- agadh, Manavadar, and Hyder- abad. Under the Independence Act of India, 1947, every Princely State was given the right to either ac- cede to one of the two nations,' India and Pakistan, or to remain independent. The Princely States of Junagadh and Manavadar, hav- ing Hindu majorities of popula- tion but Moslem rulers, acceded- to Pakistan. India attacked and sacked these states on the plea that these Hin- du majority areas should go to India, even though their Moslem rulers had joined Pakistan. The Princely State of Hyderabad, also with a Hindu majority but a - Moslem ruler, decided to remain independent. India attacked and occupied Hyberabad under the pre- text of 'police action'. The case of Hyderabad is pigeon-holed in the United Nations. The Princely State of Jammu ,and Kashmir had over 80 per cent Moslem population, but the ruler was a Hindu. India sent her army into Kashmir allegedly on the request of the Hindu ruler, who wanted to keep 'peace' in his state. Pakistanis position is that the Maharaja of Kashmir had no lega authority to accede to India because he had signed a "stand still" agreement with the Govern- ment of Pakistan the day the British Paramountcy terhinated over the state. Moreover, if India can claim Junagadh and Iydera- bad because they were Hindu ma- jority states, why shouldn't Kash- mir, a Moslem majority area, be at least granted a Plebiscite to determine her future. While accepting the Maharaja's offer of accession in 1947, Lord Mountbatten, then Governor-Gen- eral of India, said, "The question of accession should be settled in accordance to the wishes of the people of the state." While India is committed to holding a plebiscite in Kashmir, she has always hindered its im- plementation. Numerous United Nations Plans for holding an im- partial plebiscite in the state were accepted by Pakistan but were rejected by India. India seems determined to con- tinue the occupation of Kashmir and has stooped to every means to this end. Sheikh Abdullah the most popular Kashmir leader, once Prime Minister of the state, was brought before the United Nations under false promises and was mis-' led to declare that accession of Kashmir to India was in the best interests of the sta te The chain of events following his return to Kashmir convinced him otherwise and when he tried to make his convictions known, he was deposed and put in jail- he is still there. India knows that a free plebiscitethmeans loss of Kashmir, and therefore insists that the plebiscite, if at all, should be conducted under Indian bayo- nets. Out of the thirteen-division In- dian Army, seven divisions are in Kashmir to help the puppet goV- ernment of Kashmir to help rule " the state. That there is a ruthless suppression of public opinion in Kashmir has been reported by- many impartialobservers on the scene. India tries to evade the plebiscite committments one way or another, In the words of Prime Minister Nehru, "Since Pakistan has joined SEATO and thesBaghdad Pact, the situation has changed so much that India is not bound by any promise of plebiscite any more." Now, a puppet constituent as- sembly has been installed in In- dian-occuppied Kashmir, and it I AT THE MICHIGAN: Mountain Unimpressive R EALISM, and self - identifica- tion by the audience are two of the primary aims of the visual arts. Hollywood has succeeded, during the past forty years, in developing photographic and tech- nical skills to a point from which these goals can be realized. The good director may manipulate the emotions of his audience in almost any way he chooses, merely by the proper use of the camer, of color, and of sound. With such -techniques available, it is always sad to see a director ignore them. A potentially im- pressive story, one with all the necessary ingredients for success, often fails to absorb or even in- terest an audience, simply because it lacks the proper co-ordination of acting, and technical skills. The viewer becomes too conscious of lack. This sort of conscious effort to impress is especially obvious in The Mountain, the movie that just opened at the Michigan. The plot, although simple, might be good if it were handled the right way. Un- fortunately it is not. A preoccupa- tion with itself prevents this movie and documents they can from the bodies. After a prolonged struggle up the almost perpendicular slope, they reach the top, and find with- in the, plane a female survivor. They are forced to make a choice between saving her life or keeping their booty. Complications arise, however, when the brothers, who have been antagonistic from the start, dis- agree on the proper course of action. The younger one, intent on profit, attempts to kill the girl, and is left by his noble brother to find the way down the mountain alone. He falls from a snow bridge, and the evil he is supposedly symbolizing is destroyed. Good- ness, as usual. wins out in the end. The acting was bad, but seemed fairly congruous with the rest of the production techniques. Spencer Tracy and Robert Wagner, the two brothers, seemed more like a poor father and son combination. Tracy was too sanctimonious to be be- lievable and Wagner was merely incompetent. The photography was rather good, but again, the audience is