. - "When Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" 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 "Who's Coming Or Going?" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily exlpress the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: EDWARD GERULDSEN Legislature Must Answer Problem of Needy' Student TUITION, a faculty member remarked re- cently, used to be what the student paid his fees for-instruction. Now tuition is the term applied to the fees themselves, and people talk in more terms of the fees than instruction. This distinction in meaning is significant in view of the Legislature's current hearings on the University's $34,000,000 operating budget request. The hearings indicate the Legislature is thinking of tuition more in terms of money than of instruction or education. While the University has justified its budget increase as necesary to uphold the University's high academic standards, some legislators have argued that, since students are prime benefi- ciaries of these high standards, students should accept more of the burden in paying for therp. As State Senator Graebner said last week, if the students are receiving a "superior product, their earning capacity is being increased and they'should be willing to pay more.'' Answering his own question of how many students cannot find the means to go to college, Appropriations Committee chairman Porter said Monday, "I can't conceive of any family that can't afford to send a child to college." IF SENATOR PORTER really meant this re- mark, we wonder how much opportunity he has had to survey the various income brackets which students today come from. We wonder }how many parents and students are actually in the position which the senator said he was in, of not having to "ask the taxpayers" to provide schooling. The State Legislature is in a difficult situa- tion. Total budget requests this year are at a' record high. Taxpayers have already indicated distaste for further tax increases. Some of the requests must be cut. Student protests of a possible increase in tuition fees are not all valid. Many students are in a position to accept a steep increase in fees. But many others find it difficult, even at the present rate, to attend college. Still others, who are in relatively good financial positions now, would be forced to work long hours during the school year to meet a fees hike. So in some cases, Senator Porter's desire for higher tuition rates would work little hardship., In others, students would be economically forced out of school or required to work excessively while in school, thus detracting from their aca- demic performance. IN MANY CASES, increased fees would mean a return to the time when college acceptance depended on whether a student could meet the costs. Ability was considered irrelevant if not accompanied by money. We suggest that the State Legislature first consider the problem of the needy student with ability if it is interested in educating people solely on the basis of their ability, a concept originated by the state university. If an answer can be found to this problem, then an increase in tuition fees would be rea- sonable. -RICHARD SNYDER Editor I if - a I'xo SPAIt4 JA 6E IAotM' 11, -. 4 "A Manual for Southerners," first the current edition of the Citi- zens' Councils official newspaper. THE TABLOID-SIZE newspa- per is printed in this delta city, headquarters of the 10-state Citi- zens' Councils of America, and is distributed to a paid subscriber list throughout the United States. W. J. Simmons of Jackson, edi- tor of "The Citizens Council" and administrator of the State Coun- cil, declined to identify the auth- ors of the manual. "I will say only that they are two public school teachers in Mis- sissippi," said Simmons. "They don't want to be identified for fear of reprisals. "The part of the manual which appears in the current edition is for third and fourth graders. The sections for fifth and sixth grad- ers and for junior and senior high, school students, run much longer. It will take about a year to complete serialization of the man- ual in our monthly paper. The manual has never been published before.'' The Citizens Councils say they are dedicated to preservation of segregation by peaceful means. CITIZEN'S COUNCIL MANUAL: 'Southern Way of Life' Described in Tabloid By The Associated Press GREENWOOD, Miss. (A) - "Negroes and white people do not go to the same places together. We live in different parts of town. And we are kind to each other. This is called our Southern Way of Life. "Do you know that some people in our country want the Negroes to live with the white people? These people want us to be unhappy .. . They want to make our country weak." Aimed at third and fourth graders, the quotations are from witsr7 C * l s~vjkt r o& pQoT r ~ LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Disinterest in Democracy. Apathy and SGC Candidates THE RIDICULOUSLY low number of an- nounced candidates for election to Student Government Council next month indicates the powerfully apathetic nature of University of Michigan students. When only 13 or more of 22,000 students can find the time or the interest to participate actively in student government, especially at this time in SGC's history, it seems that all concern for student matters has disappeared and pure complacency has taken over. In the days of the old Student Legislature, a weak organization that had none of the power or prestige of SGC, a typical election would see 30 or more candidates vying for a few seats. gINCE THE CONCEPTION of SGC, the num- ber of contestants each semester has steadily declined, perhaps indicating a fear or unwilling- ness to participate in something more than a debating club. The students who do run for council positions are too often those who already hold important offices in other campus organizations and there- by create a sometimes dangerous but always suspicious quality. At the other extreme, the students who should run, and who are desperately needed by SGC, are the freshmen and sophomores in all schools who have had little contact with student activities and need a broader perspective of student and community affairs. Indeed, there is both the satisfaction of per- sonal service to the University community and a wider educational and social background to be obtained from student government. Nor should any possible candidate fail to try for one of the six available seats on SGC this semester for fear of insufficient support-the candidate, through campaign and platform, can win or lose his seat on SGC. FURTHERMORE, with a re-evaluation of SGC, reports from the council's lecture com- mittee study committee, counseling committee and deferred rushing, the coming year should not be an uneventful one. Add to all this SGC's new facilities in the Student Activities Building, and the decided lack of council candidates appears to indicate that student government at the University is not highly regarded by its students. -VERNON NAHRGANG Student Complacency To the Editor: NEVER has the complacency of American students been more obvious than it was Thursday night in Angell Hall when the question "Is Democracy a Farce?" was debated by six students from. various parts of the world. Granted that there was a con- cert, granted that there is always homework and many other things to do. Nevertheless out of a- student body of 22,000 it seems to me that more than 30 would be interested in hearing the views of the for- eign students on our campus. It would also seem that at a time when democracy is being threatened tboth internally and externally that the faculty, and especially the students who are allegedly the future leaders of our democracy, would not only want to witness this debate but also take part in the discussion. I certainly hope that Thursday night's attendance was not an expression of Michigan's attitude toward ISA functions or toward democracy. -Ruth Weinstein '60 Analytical Criticism To the Editor: a IF Ernest Theodossin would ana- lyze instead of criticize, he might have written something pertinent in his Sunday editorial. Mr. Theodossin has a good com- mand of critical terms, but fails to see the issues. He claims that the DAC has failed because "this sea- son has been dull and unimagina- tive . . . (the plays) are hardly 'excellent' . . . it has completely ignored Shakespeare and his con- temporaries." He also forecasts a poor Medea for "DAC has put itself under unnecessary hardships in doing Greek tragedy." He ends with the evading comment that "(DAC) cannot compete with speech de- partment playbills for interest." I should like to point out that every Saturday evening there are lone lines of students clamoring to see "dull and unimaginative' mov- ies which "are hardly excellent." I should also like to point to the apriori reasoning that concludes that Shakespeare is more adapted to theatre in thesround than is Greek tragedy. I might also note that the Speech Department usually plays its selections fewer nights than does the DAC. Hence their play- bills would seem more popular. -John Fisher, Grad. No Disservice . * To the Editor: I WAS Dave Gumenick's room- mate last semester and I can honestly say that he never con- ducted himself in any manner that would discredit either himself or the Quad. Dave Gumenick never performed an act which was detrimental to the residence hall system, and therefore the implications by Dean Rea that Gumenick is an undesir- able are completely false. Instead of doing a great dis- service to the Quad, I believe Dave has done a great service. For the first time there has been serious attention given to the poor quality of the food served in the Quads. Dave did not exaggerate about the poor quality of the food, but only expressed the opinion of most of the students living in the residence hall. Dave was not involved in the demonstration that took place out- side the Quads, but instead he used a media which he believed could bring publicity to the poor condi- tion of the Quad food. If an individual who reports the facts to the newspapers is guilty of poor conduct, then I say that the University of Michigan is try- ing to suppress one of the basic freedoms which we prize, and which was granted us by the Bill of Rights, that of free expression of the truth to the American people, no matter how unpleasant the matter. I think that the Residence Halls Conference Committee made a grave error in the expulsion of these three boys, and they are try- ing to cover up their mistakes by all the means at their disposal. -Wilbert Snyder, '59 (Letters to the editor must be in good taste and should not exceed 300 words in length. The Daily re- serves the right to delete material for space considerations.) * * * THE MANUAL, written in sim- ple, easy-to-read language, also appeals to Southern children to think of themselves as Southern- ers and says God wanted the races to live apart. "Do you know what part of our country you live in" it asks. "You live in the South . . . We are called Southerners. Southerners are people who live in the South. You are a Southerner. You live in the South." The manual says "God put the white people off by themselves. He put the yellow, red and black people by themselves. God wanted the white people to live alone." "White men built America," the manual says. "The Negro came to our country after. the white man did. The white man has al- ways been kind to the Negro. But the white and black people do not, live together in the South . . The manual says those seeking integration ''say we are not good if we don't live together. But we know it is wrong to live together ... They want to make our coun- try weak. If we are not happy, our strong and free country will grow weak. Did you know our country will grow weak if we mix our races? It will." New Books at Library STORIES, by Jean Stanford, John Cheever, Daniel Fuchs, Wil- liam Maxwell; N.Y., F a r r a r, Straus and Cudahy, 1956. Tehilla and Other Israeli Tales; N.Y., Abelard-Schuman, 1956. Tyler, Royall - Tht Emperor Charles the Fifth; Fair Lawn, N. J., Essential books, 1956. Villiers, Alan - Posted Missing; N. Y., Scribner's, 1956. Waltari, Mika - The Etruscan; N. Y., Putnam's 1956. Waugh, Edgar Wiggins - Sec- ond Consul; Indianapolis and N.Y., Bobbs-Merrill, 1956. installment of which appears in DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices. should be sent In TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3553 Administration Building, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices 4for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1957 VOL. LXVII, NO. 103 General Notices Regents' Meeting: The March meet- ing of the Regents will be held Fri., March 22, instead of March 15, as was previously announced in the Daily Of- ficial Bulletin. Communications for consideration at this meeting must be in the President's hands not later than March 13. Hopwood Awards: Petitions to the Hopwood Committee must be in the Hopwood Room (1006 Angell Hall) by March 1. Late Permission: All women students who attended the concert at Hill Audi- torium on Tues., Feb. 26, had late per- mission until 11 :15 p.m. The following student sponsored so- cial events are approved for the coming weekend. Social chairmen are reminded that requests for approval for social events are due in the Office of Student Affairs (2017 Student Activities Build- ing) not later than 12 noon on the Tuesday prior to the event. March 1, (1:00 closing hour): Acacia, Alice Lloyd, Chicago House, Delta Kap pa Epsilon, Delta Tau Delta, Delta Theta Phi, Kappa Alpha Psi, Phi Delta Phi, Phi Kappa Psi, Psi Upsilon, Phi Kappa Sigma, PI Lambda Phi, Sigma Chi, Tau Delta Phi, Triangle. March 2: Alpha Epsilon P, Alpha Kappa Alpha, Alpha Kappa Kappa, Al- pha Sigma Phi, Beta Theta P, Chi Phi, Chinese Student Club, Delta Sigma Pi, Delta Theta Phi, Delta Upsilon, Evans Scholars, Gomberg, Hnsdale House, Huber House, Kelsey House, Lambda Chi Alpha, Nelson Intern'l House, Nu Sigma Nu, Phi Delta Phi, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Epsilon Pi, Phi Gamma Del- ta, Phi Kappa Sigma, Phi Rho Sigma, Phi Sigma Kappa, Scott House, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Alpha Mu, Sig- ma Nu, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Taylor House, Theta Xi,uTrigon, Wenley House, Zeta Beta Tau, Zeta Psi. March 3: Delta Theta Phi, Phi Delta Phi. Lectures Travelogue "Cruise to Rio" tonight at 8:30 in Hill Auditorium. Opening the series sponsored by the University Ora- torical Association, to be presented on Thursday evenings through 'March 28. Others in the "eries include: "Sweden", March 7; "Today's Japan", March 14, "Charm of the South", March 21; "Por- tugal", March 28. All are motion pic- tures in natural color filmed by the Burton Holmes organization. Tickets noweon sale at the Auditorium box office. University Lecture, sponsored by the Committee on Studies in Religion and the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures. Rt. Rev. Georges Flor- ovsky, professor of the History and Theology of Eastern Orthodoxy, Har- vard Divinity School, "Religious Themes In 19th-century Russian Philo- sophy and Literature." Thurs., Feb. 28, 4:10 p.m. in Aud. A, Angell Hall. Research Seminar of the Mental Health Research Institute. Dr. W. Ray- mond Keeler of the Children's Psychia- tric Hospital will speak on "Some Ob- servations on Somatic Deviations in Childhood Schixophrenia" on Thurs., Feb. 28, at 1:15 to 3:15 p.m., Children's Psychiatric Hospital, Conference Room. English Journal Club, February meet- ing Thurs., the 28th at 8:00 p.m. in the East Lecture Room, Rackham. Mark Spilka will read a paper entitled: "The Death of Love in The Sun Also Rises." Discussion period. All graduate students invited. Thaddeus J. Obal, senior economie analyst, Economic Analysis Depart- ment, Central Finance Staff of the Ford Motor Company, will speak in the Rackham Amphitheater Fri., March 1 at 4:15 p.m., the first in a series on "Use and Conservation of Raw Mater- ial in Ourconomy." nHis subject "Economic Considerations of Conser- vation". This series of five lectures led by the staff of the Ford Motor Com- pany and sponsored by the Michigan Student Chapter of The Soil Conserva- tion Society of America and the Con- servation Department. School of Nat- ural Resources, is open to the public. Academic Notices Doctoral Candidates who expect to receive degrees in June, 1957, must have at least three bound copies of their dissertations in the office of the Graduate School by Fri., April 26. The report of the doctoral committee on the final oral examination must be filed with the Recorder of the Gradu- ate School together with two copies of the thesis, which is ready in all re- spects for publication, not later than Mon., May 27. Interdepartmental Seminar on Ap- plied Meteorology: Engineering. Thurs,, Feb. 28, 4 p.m., Room 307 West Engi- neering Bldg. James J. B. Worth will speak on "Industrial Dusts as Factors in Public Health Engineering"-Chair- man: Prof. Earnest Boyce. 4.k 1 4 a .: I A Sanctions Against Israel? THE CURRENT problem of persuading Israel to evacuate Egypt should be approached as part of the larger Middle East situation. While a conflict in legitimate principles is in- volved, the principle that invasion of another country shall not be the method of settling disputes should prevail. Unfortunately, the sentiment that Israel's withdrawal without the guarantees she seeks would end her chance of gaining her rights in her dispute with Egypt has grown up in some quarters. England and France view such a withdrawal as a victory for Nasser, a prospect not particularly appealing to them. While these beliefs further complicate an already emotional situation, it should not basi- cally change U.S. policy. President Eisenhower has made it clear that Israel's withdrawal was just one step in the process of obtaining lasting peace in that area. Once this action is taken, it opens the way for further progress. But the first step is Israel's withdrawal. It is, of course hoped that some solutions can be found which will avoid the use of sanc- tions or even a UN debate about them. However, sanctions against Israel should remain a real possibility. FURTHER ARGUMENTS that Israel can not be punished until Russia is punished are unrealistic. There has been a double standard for a long time and there will continue to be a double standard for many years to come. Senators Knowland and Johnson have made no great discovery that the little guy generally gets the short end of the deal. Russia has not been punished by the Truman or Eisenhower administrations for precisely the reason the President named. Russia is too big. If the United Nations is unable to take any action against any country until it takes com- parable action against Russia, then there isn't going to be any action at all. IN MANY CASES, increased fees would mean an ineffective organization to a totally suc- cessful one in one giant stride.. If they make it at all, it will be by solving one perplexing problem after another in a pain- fully slow progress. -RONALD PARK A ANN ARBOR SELF-SURVEY: Employment Practices Suggest Discrimination I .1 I 4 INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Franco-A merican Harmony (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the sec- ond in a series of articles about the Ann Arbor Self-Survey, completed in December. Today's article will deal with two areas. covered by the sur- vey-employment and new residents.) By TAMMY MORRISON Daily Staff Writer W1 HAT CHANCE has a Negro to get a job in Ann Arbor? The Self-Survey report says "The factor of race as such does play a substantial part in the em- ployment of Negroes in Ann Ar- bor." Most Negroes work at manual jobs (semi-skilled or unskilled labor, maids, cooks and dishwash- ers). Two or three per cent of white collar jobs are filled by Negroes. Is this because of Negroes' com- parative lack of education? Evidently not, says the report. Of the people interviewed (124 white adults, 81 Negroes), more than half the white men with high school education hold white collar jobs. Nine out of ten Negro men with high school educations work at manual jobs. White men with college backgrounds are all white collar workers, while one-fourth of college-trained Negro men have manual jobs. The contrast is even sharper for women. Almost all white women employed in various kinds of or- ganizations. This is not the case." BECAUSE of Negro concentra- tion in manual rather than white collar jobs, the report analyzed both kinds of jobs separately. And the University didn't do particularly well. The academic branches of the University employ only one or two per cent Negroes in office and professional jobs, while hospitals and government units employ eight or nine per cent. In manual jobs, the University again employs only one or two per cent, while hospitals, financial institutions, service organizations- (like restaurants) and schools em- ploy more than 30 per cent. The University isn't alone in its non-employment of Negroes in white collar jobs. No type of or- ganization except government and hospitals employ more than one or two per cent. Stores and manufacturing firms employ about 15 per cent Negroes in manual jobs. (However, six of the 17 manufacturers interviewed do not at present employ any Negroes. Only utilities join with the University's one or two per cent Negro manual employment. Although Negroes report no size- able evidence of discrimination in seeking education or training, its results, volunteers interviewed 124 adults who had lived here more than a year ago, 63 adult newcomers, 28 international stu- dents and 60 community officials. The report says "Outside of get- ting acquainted, housing has been the newcomer's major difficulty." Chief problems as far as housing is concerned, the Survey found, were scarcity and high cost, rather than quality. International stu- dents particularly have encoun- tered some unwillingness to rent to them. To find housing, inter- national students make little use of newspapers and real estate agents, relying mainly on friends. Other students use both news- papers and friends. Surprisingly enough, interna- tional students have been wel- comed even more than other stu- dents. More than three-fifths have been contacted by community or- ganizations (mainly churches and religious groups), in contrast to one-half of the regular students. Churches, the report says, are doing the best job of contacting newcomers. One-third of the stu- dents report contacts by churches, while only 12 per cent of the non- students do. This is probably due to religious preference cards filled out at registration. -j -i By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst THERE'S A GOOD possibility that French Premier Mollet has received a clearer under- standing of President Eisenhower's views on national morality as opposed to international opportunism. That should make it easier for France to estimate the American position in advance of any more unilateral decisions she may feel called upon to make. One of the purposes of the talks, of course, was to give the President a chance to explain just why the United States reacted as she did to the Anglo-French invasion of Egypt, ontcts hetween Washington and Paris have deadlock, with Israel before today's final con- ference. France, which encouraged the Israeli invasion of the Sinai Peninsula, has been supporting the Israeli's ever since against loss of the fruits of that action. The United Nations, which made considerable hay with the Arab nations'by her condemnation of the Israeli-French-British attacks on Egypt, has been trying to retain those gains with an even-handed approach. A part of the American argument, however, is that nations should not be permitted to retain the fruits of force. At the same time she wishes to avoid putting Egypt back into position to re- x' ;.. ::. - I