"My Dear Fellow, Why Don't You Raise Money?" 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 "When Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Vast Difference Between Who and What is Right By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst EPREMENTATIVES of government are meeting in London to study disarmament. Representatives of society are meeting in Washington to study the human roadblocks on the way to peace. And it seems probable that in the span of history, if there is to A *a Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: CAROL PRINS Another Year of Growth: Some Anniversary Suggestions 0 rI DAY the University enters its 141st year. In many ways it has grown immeasurably in stature. Throughout most of its history, mater- ial development has been accompanied by intellectual growth. For the most part, the University's growing plant has been structured at each step around re-enforced intellectual girders. Now we are in an unprecedented period of rising enrollment, a period which will see the University's student population double in size in the next 15 years. The University is accordinglynmaking plans to meet the physical requirements of the in- creased student body. Tons of bricks are going into new residence halls, a bigger and better athletic plant, a new undergraduate library, research facilities and other buildings on North Campus and the addition to the old Ann Arbor High School. Although physical expansion is not taking place at the same rate the University would like, most of the necessary material plans are coming to life. UNFOATUNATELY, evidence suggests that the University's intellectual growth is not keeping pace with its material expansion. Vice-President Niehuss recently pointed to the increased competition the University is facing in trying to maintain an outstanding faculty. Faculty members' time is constantly being taken up by committees to solve problems created by expanding enrollment. Furthermore, it is becoming increasingly more difficult to distinguish between the last year of high school and the first two years of college with respect to curriculum core. Many students are getting a lukewarm rehash of subject material they have already mastered, elementary grounding which should be obtained at the high school level. Most students en- rolled at the University probably have intellec- tual capacity; the number with intellectual purpose is far smaller. IIODAY, as the University enters its 141st year, we would offer a few suggestions-some imaginative, some impractical, but all sincere: One, the University should keep in mind that it is not the center of all educational activity in the state. It should remember that other schools are better equipped to cover some disci- plines, that it is not necessary to have a special- ist in every area of intellectual endeavor, that it is better to cover well some of the disciplines than to cover all of them in general. Two, the University should play a greater role in guiding educational policy in primary and secondary schools. Its obligation lies in this area, not in giving a university education to students who have not received a proper high school education. THREE, if there is question as to putting money into bricks or more into brains, the latter should receive primary consideration. If appropriations do not permit both, the Uni- versity should have a sufficient number of high quality faculty members instead of stadium press boxes and buildings to house student ac- tivities. Four, the University should consider a pro- gram designed to recruit promising students into the teaching profession. A constant faculty- student ratio is a mockery if the quality of faculty members is not also increased or at least held constant. At present the University is not producing enough qualified students to replenish its own faculty needs, and a large majority of above- average students take jobs in government or industry. The University should not blithely pass off problems caused by increasing enrollment by promising to maintain a constant faculty-stu- dent ratio. The real question is where does the University plan to get the faculty members? FIVE, students should be given more responsi- bility for their own education. Lectures on material readily available in text books, courses geared to pass exams, and blackboard-outline recitation sections represent poor use of faculty and student time. More personal contact between faculty and students, perhaps on a tutoring basis, would be advantageous to both. Six, less attention should be devoted to the below-average student and more to the superior student who is unsure of which academic disci- pline he should master. The University is not obligated to educate students who have no seriousness of purpose, the same as it is not obligated to educate stu- dents who lack capacity. Primary attention should be focused on able students who have a genuine desire to make the best use of a college education. -RICHARD SNYDER Editor N4 GENERATION: Winter Issue Large, Light, Pleasant be any peace, it will come more nity leaders than from diplo- mats. in Washington ministers, edu- cators and other civic leaders are discussing with public officials the relationship of moral force to physical force. The meeting was arranged by the National Conference on Spir- itual Foundations and paid for by the Ford Foundation. IT IS PART of a worldwide movement operating in various fields under various guises which usually comes back to the thesis that peace will be made not by governments but by peoples. Yet peoples hardly understand what peace is all about. Their history is to move from war to War. Governments are addicted to the old tenet that leaders cannot risk the fates of their nations on fallible human judgments. With few exceptions, governments be-, gin their intercourse in an atmos- phere of openly expressed distrust. PEOPLES. will be so well in- formed about each other that demagogues will not be able to convince them that they should become enemies. Men who preach hate, and that man's end is to make war on oth- er men, will be classified with the men who curse because they lack vocabulary. People have learned to live peaceful in' their local commu- nities. Peoples have not learned to do so in the world community. In very recent days we have war substituted for ingenuity of two of the world's most highly civilized nations. * * IN LONDON the diplomats are trying to establish who is right. In Washington the representa- tives of society are trying to es- tablish what is right, and how to foster it. There is a vast difference. Stock Market By The Associated Press A LATE improvement left the stock market higher yesterday after mixed trends had prevailed most of the day. Copper, steels and most oils led the late upturn, which was ac- companied by a slight pickup in volume. Until the last hour, trading had been even slower than in Mon- day's very dull session. Expansion in demand toward the finish coincided with news of a cut in bankers acceptances rates, which was interpreted by some market analysts as indicat- ing a slight easing in the tight money situation. from the efforts of such commu- THE WINTER issue of Genera- tion is by far the best looking issue of the magazine I can re- member seeing. Nor is David Rohn's beautiful cover (in the top half of the space a sharply deli- cate pen-and-ink landscape draw- ing, in the bottom half the name of the magazine in contrastingly thick brush-strokes of India ink, the whole design admirably spaced on a good buff paper) betrayed by inner lay-out or typography. The magazine is large, light, and pleasant to hold, poems and plates especially are well placed and scaled in the page-space, and there aren't too many misprints. For better or worse, Generation is an inter-arts magazine rather than a strictly literary one. The present issue contains two short stories, one impressionistic essay, eleven poems, a one-act play, the score of a sonata for unaccompa- nied cello by a young but experi-' enced composer, and black-and- white reproductions of two paint- ings in oil, two lithographs,. one etching, and one piece of sculp- ture. * * * PERHAPS it is only a personal reaction, but I wonder if it's pos- sible to present such a wide range of forms in a single fifty-page is- sue without a resulting sense of thinness for rather too many indi- vidual readers. I wonder, further, if the inter- arts idea could not be preserved even more effectively if it were not felt necessary to follow it out with complete literalness in each issue. Might it not be a good plan to let one or the other of the arts predominate in a given issue, even at the cost of totally neglecting one or two of the other arts? BUT GRANTED the policy, the current number carries it out on a commendably high level. The two stories can be read with gen- uine pleasure, and one of them, Ronald Beck's "A Pattern of Courtship," displays a compassion and lightly wry wit that one would like to see at work in a less speed- ily concluded story. There are some very good poems, and only one or two bad ones. Michael Millgate's two poems are in a class by themselves, but ,J. R. Staal's "Negro on a Street" is an admirable piece of work too, a poem founded in per- ception both of detail and of hu- man truth, written not merely against a background of lessons in how to read literature and how to write it, but against a back- ground of sharp-visioned experi- ence. Nancy Willard's essay, "Song Without Words," overcomes an underlying preciousness with an amazing image-making power. Victor Perera's play embodies an intefesting and amusing idea butI doesn't quite manage to come up with clever dialogue of the quality the idea demands. * * . I AM SORRY that I am not competent to describe or judge George Crumb's sonata. Most of the works of art reproduced are evidently in black-and-white in the original, but since we live in an age that is rapidly convincing itself that if it isn't a Skira it isn't a Leonardo, let it ,be said at once that it is nothing against the reproduction of Bruce Gabel's attractive oil that it is in black- aid-white. . This picture, like David Rohn's lithograph and Lenore Davis' etching, is among the strongest and most satisfying items in the magazine. -Herbert Barrows 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 for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20, 15 VOL. LXVII, NO. 120 General Notices Late Permission: All women students who attended the Travelogue at Hilt Auditorium on Thurs., March 14, had late permission until 11:10 p.m. Late permission: All women student who attended Gilbert and Sullivan's "Princess Ida" at Lydia Mendelssohn on Thurs., March 14, had late permission until 11:45 p.m. Lectures University Lecture, auspices of the Department of Fine Arts, by John ward Perkins, director of the British School at Rome on March 20, at 4:15 p.m. in Aud. B, Angell Hall. "Excavations under the Church of St. Peter at Rome." University Lecture. E. E. Cummings "in a reading from his poetry." Rack- ham Lecture Hall, Wed., March 20, 4:15 p.m., auspices of the Departments of English and Philosophy and the. Col- lege of Architecture and Design. - University Lecture: J. A. Westrup, professor of music at Oxford University, England, 4:15 p.m., Wed., March 20, in Aud. A, Angel Hall, "Adventures in Translating Opera." Open to the gener- al public. Professor Westrup is a Lec- turer in Musicology in the School of Music for the current semester, Annual History of Education Lecture, sponsored by the Department of His- tory and the School of Education. "Main Currents in Progressive Ameri- can Education." Louis Filler, Professor of American Civilization, Antioch Col- lege, Wed., Mear. 20, 4:15 p.m. Aud. 0. Military Science Lecture. Prof. Dwight L. Dumpnd, Department of History, will speak on "The Civil war," Wed., March 20, 7:30 p.m. Aud. C, Angell Hall. Open to the public. The Research Club in Language Learning presents a lectre by Miss Vi. ola Waterhouse entitled "Practelal Pho- nemics" on Wednesday, March 20 at 8:00 p.m. In the East Conference Room of the Rackham Building. Open to the public. University Lecture, auspices of the Departments of Fine Arts and Near Eastern Studies. Prof. David Stotm Rice, University of London, Thurs., March 21, Aud. B, Angell Hall at 4:15 p.m. "Harran: From Sin to Saladin, Ex- cavations, 1956." Films Regular Wednesday noon showing for March 20, will be "On the Spot - Sur- vival in the Bush". 12:30 p.m., Audio- visual Education Center Auditorium, 4051 Administration Building. Concerts University Symphony Band, William D. Revelli, conductor, will present its annual spring concert at 8:30 p.m. to- night in Hill Auditorium, Composi. tions by TexidorS Latham, Frescobaldi, Weber, Erickson, Jenkins, Herman, Williams, Niblock, Gould, Fillmore, and Goldman. Open to the general public. Academic Notices Seniors: College of L.S.&A., and Schools of Business Administration, Ed- ucation, Music, and Public Health. Ten- tative lists of seniors for June gradua. tion have been posted on the bulletin board in the first floor lobby, Adminis- tration Building. Any changes there- from should be requested of the Re- corder at Office of Registration and Records window Number A, 1513 Ad- ministration Building. Architecture and Design students may not drop courses without record after 5:00 p.m. Wed., March 20, Architecture and Design Students who have incompletes incurred during the fall semester, must remove them by Wed., March 20. History 50 midsemester, March 21, 9:00 a.m.: Sctions 1, 4, 7 (Lurie), 1035 Angell Hall; Sections 8, 12, 13 (Lurie), 25 Angell Tall: Berry's Sections, 102 Architecture; Pennington and Drum. mond's sections, Natural Science Audi- torium. Interdepartmental Seminar on Ap- plied Meteorology: Engineering. Thurs.,, March 21, 4 p.m., Room 307, West E~n- gineering Bldg. Fred V. Brock will speak on "The Influence of Meteor- ology on Reactor Safety Problems: Air. Borne Materials" - Chairman: Prof. Henry J. Gomberg. 402 Interdisciplinary Seminar on the Applications of Mathematics to Social Science. Room 3401, Mason Hal. Thurs., March 21, Dan Suits, "Evolution of the Potato Market." Applied Mathematics Seminar, Thurs., March 21 at 4:00 p.m. in Room 246, West Engineering. Prof. C. L. Dolph will speak on "An Example of E. Hopf Illus- trating his Conjecture on the Nature' ., i A New Game on Campus WE ALMOST didn't vote yesterday. We want- ed to, but things were just against us. On the way to our first class, we passed three voting booths. None of them were attended. Well, we figured, it's early yet. We'll vote on the way back. So, on.the way back, we passed the Mason Hall booth. People eager to exercise their stu- dent duty were lined up four deep, a good sign. We passed on, knowing there were two more along the way. The one in the Law Club was attended all right, by three rather forlorn-looking people. We stopped, started fumbling for our I.D. and one of them said, "Don't bother. We don't have any ballots." T HE ONE in the Quad was attended too, but as we handed over our I.D., the girl said "Oh. You're a Junior. I don't have any ballots for senior class officers in Lit. School. I guess you'd better try somewhere else." ,We had a meeting at noontime, so we didn't have time to stop and vote. But we did stop to ask the two attendants we passed how the ballot situation was. "Well," said the one in the Quad, "we don't have any for Ed School or Bus Ad School." In the Law Club, they were a little more violent. They were missing Ed School ballots. And one said, "If you're an elections officer, would you get somebody to relieve us? We were supposed to leave at 12." It was then 12:30. AFTER OUR afternoon classes, we happened to be at the League, with a little time on our hands. So we stopped by the voting booth there. They didn't have any ballots for the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics, but by this time were were tired. So we voted-for SGC candidates, Publications Board candidates and Lit School officers only. It occurred to us during the course of the day that this was not the best way to run an election. People are generally inclined to be lackadaisical about voting in campus elections anyway, But it seemed almost as if this particular election was designed to tax the voter's inge- nuity. It's a new game, where you try to find the booth that is attended and has ballots. Lots of fun, but tiring. And it's likely to bring the already small number of student voters down considerably. -TAMMY MORRISON LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Comments on Alcorn Strike, Stanford 'Daily' Buns Problem Solved? Uncle-Tomism' .. . To the Editor: I WOULD like to offer an ex- planation for the recent boycott of Alcorn College by its entire student body. Put simply, they were rebelling against "Uncle- Tomism." To the Negro people, this phase has a particular his- torical significance. It represents a position taken by a Negro which either states or implies that the Negro should "stay in his place." Because Dr. King's criticism of the NAACP reflects such a philos- ophy, he lost the respect of his students. These students, striving for political equality, economic opportunity, and educational ad- vancement - all the features of first-class citizenship - did not feel that they could be led by a man whose very philosophy short- circuits the attainment of those goals. No one who is not a Negro can fully understand why conduct branded as "Uncle-Tomism" is thought by the Negro to be so odious. We may thus come to ap- preciate the action of the Alcorn students. As for "education being at a premium," as suggested by Mr. Ball in his editorial March 14, know- ing the quality of education in Mississippi as I do, I think that the students lost very little by the boycott. In fact, they gained immensely in self-respect. --Berkley Branche Eddins Stanford Daily To the Editor: IN HIS March 16 Daily editorial, of publication are defrayed by that body, through a Student Leg- islature appropriation. The editor of the Daily is a salaried employee of, the Associated Students. Mr. Geruldsen says, "The Legis- lature's action has every appear- ance of a deliberate, calculated railroading of the editor." A rule by which the governing body of a publishing firm may dismiss one of its employees does not fit the common notion of the word rail- roading. Mr. Geruldsen speaks of "an ob- viously hostile legislature," and says, "such control gives a small body of young legislators power over information . . " I submit that the legislature is certainly not hostile to its own newspaper, and that the judgement of a small body of young legislators, all elect- ed by the student body, may be on a par with that of the young editor of the paper who is selected not by the students at large, but by the equally young members of the working press. The Stanford Daily has been owned and operated by the ASSU for over fifty years, and has criti- cized student government at will. It has never outraged any student group to the point where that group suggested that it be cen- sored, primarily because it has con- sistently gotten the facts, and based its editorials on them. Mr. Geruldsen quotes numerous platitudes about the freedom of the press. I would like to point out that the press also has respon- sibilities, the most important of which is to findmout the facts, and present them. Those papers which shirk this responsibility lend strength to the arguments of those who favor a controlled press. lem is not uncommon among other large universities which can afford to talk about independent student newspaper editing. Edward Geruldsen's comment that "when a supposedly free press becomes an arm of a governmental body - any governmental body - (press) freedom is lost" seems es- pecially pertinent to me. At Stanford and many other universities, including Michigan, student editors have not particu- larly objected to having an ex-offi- cio role in student government, a position which automatically makes them an arm of government (though not in the sense Geruldsen meant) and exposes them to the type of attack which has occurred at Stanford. In essence, accepting a position in student government allows an editor to have his cake and eat it, too-for a while at least. It gives one organization an un- usually desirable power to vote, re- port, and criticize all major mat- ters affecting student interest-a power which others will covet, no matter how carefully the paper tries to distinguisn the three roles by having independent reporters cover meetings, requiring signed editorials, and the like. As an ex-college student news- paper editor, I believe there are many long-term advantages to be gained in keeping student news- paper representatives off the stu- dent governing body, with the ex- ception of staff members who may seek and win election on their own as individuals and not as represen- tatives of the paper. This insures arseparation of powers between newspaper and student government which gives the paper a more justifiable posi- Inaccuracy . . To the Editor: AS A FORMER city editor of The Daily andnow aS editor of a suburban weekly in Michigan, I know how it feels to be accused of inaccuracy in the news columns. Either lousy, or indignant. Like all accusations, some are justified and some are not. And, very often, the fault for an in- accuracy in reporting lies more with the source than with the newspaper. On the other hand, no newspaper claims t' be infal- lible. As a small newspaper serving a relatively small , and integrated community, The Daily is one of the most consistently accurate news- papers in the state, even though its writing is by college students rather than professionals. Most of its readers know of the facts behind a story, or someone who does. Result: more pressure to be accurate and more detectability of errors. Pick up a big city daily and count the inaccuracies, if you can. Of course you can't; because you don't 'know the , facts. But, re- member ono you know - the food riot. The Detroit papers mu- tilated that one with a dull knife. I have found the Detroit papers to be very inaccurate on several other occasions, also. A big newspaper fears no con- sequences for inaccuracies, which are never detected by more than a minute percentage of its read- ers anyway. Add the fact that it prefers a "good story" to accuracy, and you have good reasons why big papersare more inaccurate than The Daily, or any other newspaper of its size and/or circu- { FOR THE FIRST TIME since last fall, Ann Arbor is not faced with the possibility of being without a transit system. The request for a franchise by the Ann Arbor Transit Corpora- tion represents the concrete proposal to oper- ate a bus system in the city. At present, indications are that a Washington bus company will make an offer. The D.C. Editorial Staff RICHARD SNYDER, Editor RICHARD HALLORAN LEE MARKS Editorial Director City Editor Business Staff DAVID SILVER, Business Manager MILTON GOLDSTEIN ... Associate Business Manager WILLIAM PUSCH ..............Advertising Manager VI TAtRiEA TTT~ROX innn l'nn~ Transit System, Inc. discussed setting up af transit system last week. Since then, the city has heard nothing from the company. It is doubtful that the city will receive a better offer than the one from the Ann Arbor company. The city will get better service from a company locally owned and operated than from one whose management is not located in Ann Arbor. Although buses would not run from 7 p.m. to 6:30 a.m. or on Sundays and holidays, this lost service will not materially affect Ann Arbor's bus riding population. Heavy bus serv- ice is generally required only during the hours when shopping areas are open. ONLY ONE PROBLEM faces the Ann Arbor Transit Corporation, making the bus line a solvent business. The Greyhound lines moved out of Ann Arbor because they were losing money. The new company proposes to run as many i -t. : I