N1w Mie ii grn ?&zil Sixty-Seventh Year EDrrED 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 2-3 241 "Let Me Repeat-I'd Like Some Volunteers '--" "When Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staf writers ar the editors. This mnust be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: VERNON NAHRGANG 4 4 DRAMATIC ARTS CENTER: Oe Is Pay Poor; P erfrmance Good 4R ITS SIXTH offering of the current season, the Dramatic Arts Center has unfortunately chosen a bad play. Clifford Odets' "The Country Girl," despite the Oscars of its film stars, is a sad work with a happy ending and no transition between the two. Odets seems to operate under the theory that any emotional mess can .be straightened out if only one understands one's motivations. Consequently, he goes in heavily for third-act psychoanalysis, where all the characters sit around and pick at each other's traumas. But between the psychoanalysis and the play's resolution, however, there is no transition. We are not allowed to watch the characters change. IN "THE COUNTRY GIRL," Odets attacks the problem of a fine actor-turned-drunk, Frank Elgin tRalph Drischell), who loas a chance St. George and the Dragon- Humphrey and the Budget S HE SURVEYED the world from the office of the head of the Mark Hanna enterprises, George Humphrey cultivated a great distrust of bureaucrats, economic planners and govern- ment spenders. That distrust didn't completely vanish, either, when an appointment by Presi- dent Eisenhower led George to join the ranks of the enemy. But for several years he seemed happy in the office of Secretary of the Treasury, a portrait of. Andrew Mellon smiling approvingly from the wall. He could slash a little off this budget, a little off that, and glory in the notion that whatever governmental service he was cutting, the American Businessman would have to pay fewer taxes because of it. Incentive, which had long been absent from the business world, was being restored, confidence was being bol- stered, investment spurred, and jobs created. George was the strongman of the Cabinet, and for a while he was able to see to it that creeping socialists stopped wasting the people's money. That's what Mark Hanna was doing when he was running McKinley, and Mellon with Hoover, and those were the days when a man, a rugged individual, like George for ex- ample, could get ahead. ATMONTH the bubble apparently burst. The Eisenhower Administration, which came into office with a target budget of $60,000,000,- 000 was recommending something over $70,000,- 000,000, and as Secretary of the Treasury George was forced to approve it. It seems you can only put off national needs so long. The budget called for increased defense costs, aid to education, increased welfare appropriations and, while offering a small surplus, left no room for the tax cuts which would keep Amer- ica strong, even in time of inflation. George was clearly uncomfortable. He called in the press. He wasn't, he ex- plained, criticizing the current budget, but he hoped Congress would cut it. It was a good budget, a fine budget to be sure, but if the government kept up this way--spending, taxing, spending, taxing, even if at levels no higher than those the Administration was currently recommending-George could predict a "de- pression that will curl your hair." After all, said George, "you can't spend yourself rich," and if anyone ever tried to deliberately unbalance a budget, say to pump money into the economy to fight a depression, he would resign. Newsmen, who remembered the President's. promise to use any Constitutional methods to combat depressions, responded with a gasp. Newsweek magazine, which remembered last year's corporate tax return, responded by put- ting George's face on its first possible cover. LATER IN THE WEEK, during a television interview, George clarified things a little. There was no hyprocrisy in his stand. He ad- mitted he hadn't been doing a very good job as Secretary of the Treasury, else all this spend- ing never would have happened, and he was determined to do better. As for depressions, confidence was what was really important. Imaginative television viewers swear that as he spoke George's face rounded, cheeks flattened, and collar stiffened. Though George didn't quote sources, it was like Herbert Hoover always said, you needed a balanced budget always, always, always; in depressions,j with which Herbert had had some experience,' it was especially important, "indispensable to the restoration of confidence." As George rephrased Herbert, it was truej that government spending in excess of receipts might in itself prove valuable in time of depres- sion. But It's the repercussions that are harm- ful. The government only spends one dollar for the many businessmen and consumers have to spend. (As to just how many George's figures were consistent only in always being too high.) If the government's spending of that one dollar, as a weapon against depression, so terrified businessmen and consumers (a re- markably timid lot, apparently) that they cut their spending, i.e. if confidence was destroyed by deficit financing, then the depression Is only made worse, and besides it costs money. "You can't spend yourself rich." AND GEORGE IS almost right. You can't spend yourself rich. But if no one spends, no one grows rich. And, as even George seems to imply, consumers can spend businessmen rich, businessmen can spend labor rich, and govern- ment, if the economy is operating at less than full speed, can spend them all rich by simply buying more goods, making for more jobs and more profits. Profits which result from govern- ment spending can make jobs just as nicely as can profits resulting from tax cuts, and both come faster, when jobs have to be made, when the budget is unbalanced. And he's almost right on another point, too. Confidence in the future of the economy can bolster consumer and business spending. But maybe a government which tries to counteract a downturn by buying more goods than it pre- vents from being bought via taxation does more for confidence than a government which clings to the fetish of an annually balanced budget whether or not taxpayers can afford one. On the other hand, George may be right, and confidence may be better restored when the government contributes to a depression by at- tempting to balance the budget in the face of a downturn. But if he is right, isn't this a terrible reflection on the intelligence of the American Businessman, and wouldn't enlight- ened people like George be better off teaching businessmen the value of intelligently flexible government spending policies rather than re- inforcing their ignorance which, after all, is the only obstacle he cites to the effectiveness of such policies? THE STORY may yet have a happy ending. Time magazine reports that George may soon be leaving the Cabinet. Down the portrait of Andrew Mellon will come from the Secretary of the Treasury's office, and up it will go onto a wall in the Mark Hanna enterprises. And maybe, after he's gone, the timid busi- nessmen of America will no longer have their all-important confidence shattered by nonsensi- cal predictions by responsible officials of de- pressions that will curl their hair and obstinate refusals by those same officials to use the powers the people gave them and the brains God gave them to counteract such depression. --ETER ECKSTEIN WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: . Problems With King Saud By DREW PEARSON THE STATE DEPARTMENT has had its problems in handling King Saud and his retinue. Some of the problems, such as the re- fusal of Mayor Robert Wagner of New York to greet the King, have been widely publicized. Most of them haven't. One problem, for instance, is purely budgetary. The State De- partment is restricted by Congress in the amount of money it can spend on entertaining foreign not- ables, and therefore has set a rule that Chiefs of State cannot bring along more than 10 retainers. This was stretched to include 15 aides for President Sukarno of Indo- nesia, but the State Department's budget will not~stretch to the point of King Saud's retinue of 70. Therefore the Saudi Embassy, with an assist from the Arabian- American Oil Company, is pick- ing up the check for the balance. ng u>.e . SAUDI ARABIA, not the United States, also paid for the King and his retinue's passage on the USS Constitution. When the King leaves, he will go by way of Europe and will be flown by a U.S. plane, though not the Columbine. Twenty of the King's party are at Blair House, paid by the gov- ernment, and the rest at the Shoreham Hotel, paid by Aramco. The housekeeper at Blair House was only ready for a three-day visit by his majesty and has really been sweating since Saud decided to spend his entire 10 days in Washington. Ten days, incidental- ly, is the unofficial limit on time a Chief of State is supposed to re- main at government expense. The King's change of plans also caused a sweat at the State De- partment. Originally, it was plan- ned to take him on a tour of Am- erican factories and farms to im- press him with modern America. But he said no. He was very posi- tive on this point, said his two sons could make the inspection trip, that he would relax in a near-by palace. Hastily the State Department arranged for him to stay at the Greenbrier, White Sulphur Springs, W. Va. Then he changed his mind a second time and decided to remain in Wash- ington. Blair House, across from the White House, was quite good enough. * * * ANOTHER MINOR problem for the State Department has been the procurement of the King's lamb. The King doesn't know it, but two-thirds of his lamb while in Washington has been purchas- ed from either Jewish or Catholic wholesalers. The District Hotel Supply Co., owned by Morris Kraft, supplied the top-grade saddles of lamb for the King's dinner at the May- flower. The Southern Hotel Sup- ply Co., owned by Thomas Keane, sold 12 loins of lamb and 30 ribs of top midwest beef to the May- flower for another dinner. The Columbia Hotel Supply. owned by Armour and Co., sold a lot of whole lambs to the White House for the King. A govern- ment agent accompanied the ship- ment. Another problem that worried the State Department was an earlier arrangement to have young Prince Mashur treated at the Kessler Institute for Rehabilita- tion at West Orange, N. J., one of the leading institutions for treating crippled children. At the last minute, arrangements were canceled, because Henry Kessler, head of the institute, is Jewish. The State Department was not prompted by any distrust of Dr. Kessler,. who it knew would treat the Moslem Prince just as con- scientiously as any other patient, but rather from the fear that King Saud would misunderstand if anything went wrong. The State Department itself knew that Arab children are given exactly the same treatment as Jewish children in the government hos- pitals of Israel. * * * BARBERSHOP singing was the main entertainment when Presi- dent Eisenhower and Mamie en- tertained an elite group of the Supreme Court, Congress, and the Diplomatic Corps the other night. The program was given by the Society for the Preserva- tion and Encouragement of Bar- bershop Singing (SPEBS), and included "Minnie the Mermaid," "Back Home in Indiana," "Caro- lina in the Morning," and "Wait- ing for the Robert E. Lee." Ike, an alumnus of West Point quartets, seldom sings at the White. House but likes to see his guests join in . . .there are few "silent" men left in Congress. One, how- ever, is GOP Rep. 'William R. Willianis of Cassville, N. Y., a former sheriff, a fourth-termer who boaststhathe "has never made a speech in Congress and probably never will." He raises potatoes and is known to col- leagues as "Potato Bill." His dis- trict, however, is better known for its cheese. Congresswoman Edith Green of Oregon has been raiding the staffs of present and retired Sen- ators to build up an experienced team in her office. (Copyright 1957 by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Reviewers A short meeting for all re- viewers will be held in the Conference Room, Student Pub- lications Building, at 7 p.m. Monday. Those who have previ- ously reviewed for The Daily are asked to attend. Those in- terested in becoming reviewers are also invited. to make a comeback offered him by director Bernie Dodd (John MacKay), Without his wife Ger- gie's (Audrey Ward) backing, he hasn't the self-confidence to do the part succesfully. But because he is unable to reveal his own weakness, Elgin blames it on Geor- gie, and Dodd becomes convinced that she is the cause of Elgin's trouble. When Dodd tried to get rid of her, Elgin goes to pieces. But Elgin needs more than his wife to regain his self-respect, and Odets' ending is far too facile and inexplicable. The play is also hampered by last-act love interest between Dodds and Georgie, a love-interest that is both super- fluous and unconvincing. And the dialogue is a mass of cliche which AT THE ORPHEUM: 'Adlver"se' R .eview STUDENTS of Comparative Lit- erature in Ann Arbor will be pleased to note the arrival of an- other twentiethhcentury epic at the Orpheum this weekend. En- titled Anthony Adverse, the film, an adaptation of the old best- seller, is a fascinating conglomer- ation of historical trash. Apparently, in the past twenty years, audience taste has changed. Of the same vintage as the Monte Cristo movies, the picture is noth- ing but an unsubtle series of swashbuckling scenes from the days of fine horses and fine wine. The episodes, (interspersed with written comments intended to connect the action,) are extreme- ly unconvincing and, if one pays iattention to audience reaction,, also extremely funny. Anthony Adverse is the aban- doned son of an obnoxious Span- ish lord, or at ,least, the son of his wife. Apprenticed unknowing- ly to his Scotch grandfather, the boy grows up filled with a grim determination to make his name mean something in the world. He tries many methods and never quite succeeds. THE STRUGGLE for self iden- tification, however, seems to lead Anthony all over the world. Aft- er traveling from Italy to Cuba on a business deal, Anthony spends five years in mysterious Africa as a slave dealer, and after a fur- ther sojourn in Paris, ends up on the way to Mexico. His wife, the buxom daughter of his grand- father's butler, is predictably un- faithful and eventually ends up in France with a rotund charac- ter known by name, although not recognizable, as N. Bonaparte, I. The curious thing about this film is its complete lack of subtle- ty or even, probability. Every sort of incongruous situation imagin- able, from slave hunting to opera singing, appears at least once within the two hour stretch. No pretenses of reality are made, for- tunately, for none of this could possibly be believed. A final note: Don't be fooled by the names of well-known ac- tors on the marquee; they hadn't learned to act yet when this was filmed. -Jean Willoughby E. is incompatible with the supposed intelligence and sensitivity of the leading characters, ' IN LIGHT of the poor property with which it worked, the DAC did a surprisingly good job. Most of the acting was adequately handled, some of it very well done. Dirschell, in an unaccustomed switch from comedy to drama., displayed his usual polish, al- though he was most convincing in scenes requiring humor. MacKay and Miss Ward lapsed occasionally into melodrama, but for th most part they were realistically in- tense. DAC Director Joseph Gis- tirak, as producer Phil Cook, built to a peak in the first act and had no place to go thereafter. The play's best performance was turned in by Reg Graham, as author Paul Unger. His British accent was incongruous amid Am- erican nasality, but he was con- sistently likeable and convincing. And Nell Burnside's Nancy Stod- dard was properly bouncy and en- thusiastic. The performers coped admirably with 'an inferior vehicle, but at 'times, Odets' flat prose and lack of dynamism dragged themdown. With the mobility of the arena theater and the world's stage lit- erature at its fingertips, the DAC should be able to present a better play than "The Country Girl," --Tammy Morrison DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN N T -C I, r r Quad Expulsions-A Messy Affair R ECENT expulsion of three students from South Quadrangle raises a number of dis- turbing questions. Two of the students called the Detroit pa- pers during the recent food riots, presumably to get publicity. The third rooms with one of the two. All three deny participating in the riots.. All three petitioned to leave the dormitory and were denied permission in January, a month after the riot. At the close of the se- mester the three received curt notes from Resi- dent Director Mark Noffsinger telling them to get out of 'the dorm 24 hours after their last final and stay out. Two were called "undesirable residents." Reasons given were "good of the community" and "ethical considerations." PROCEDURALLY the whole affair is messy. South Quad Judiciary was completely by- passed, despite Mr. Noffsinger's claim that he wants to build a strong quad judic, and none of the three were given an opportunity to ex- plain their actions before the decision to ex- pel them was reached. Editorial Staff RICHARD SNYDER. Editor RICHARD HALLORAN NLEE MARKS ditoriai Director City Editor Business Staff DAVID SILVER, Business Manager MILTON GOLDSTEIN Associate Business Manager WILLIAM PUSCH ............. Advertising Manager CHARLES WILSON .............. Finance Manager PATRICIA .AMBERTS----------AccontMan aer The University's antics in denying them per- mission to leave so it could expel them are amusing. This appears to be a modification of the "don't quit, you're fired" routine, which should be too adolescent for University officials. More serious were Mr. Noffsinger's references to "undesirable residents" and "ethical con- siderations." Asked to explain if the "ethical considera- tions" consisted of phoning the Detroit papers, Mr. Noffsinger said the three were always complaining loudly. We see nothing unethical in complaining, and judging from the lack of rapport between staff and students, we can understand that it is often loud. iT ALSO seems unreasonable to claim that students have an ethical obligation to pre- vent the University from incurring bad pub- licity. The University has a highly competent public relations bureau for this job. While it is fair to expect that in their con- duct students will reflect creditably on the in- stitution, it is not fair to expect that they will help hide its defects. The food incident was not isolated. The riot occurred after a 'number of frustrating at- tempts to get someone in the administration to listen to sincere complaints. Instead of picking on such a little point and making "scape-goats" of three students to soothe their ruffled feelings, quad adminis- trators could better spend their time trying to improve the food. T HERE is one more shibboleth that should be thrown out - that it is a privilege to live in the residence halls. For some unfathomable reason. quad administrators often invoke this The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 2553 Adminsitration Building, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1957 VOL. LXVII, NO. 82 General Notices The University of Michigan Wolver- ine Band will play for the Basketball Game Sat. evening, Feb. 9. Conductor, George Lavender, asks all memberas to be present at 7:20 p.m. in the field house for this engagement. Tryouts for the 3rd Experimental Playbill presented by the Department of Speech will be held at 7 p.m. Mon., Feb. 11, Room 252, Temporary Class- room Building. Lectures University Lecture in Journalism, touglass Cater, Washington aorres.. pondent of The Reporter magazine, will speak on "The Role of the Press in the Conduct of Government" Mons, Feb. 11 at3 p.m. in the Rackham Am- phitheatre. A cademic Notices Candidates taking the National Tea- cher Examinations on Feb. 9 are re- quested to report to Room 130, Busi- ness Administration Bldg. at 8:30 a.m. Sat. Sports and Dance Instruction-Wo- men Students: women students who have completed their physical educa- tion requirement may register for classes electively in Barbour Gymna- sium on Mon. Feb. 11 8 a.m. to 12 noon. Instruction is available in swimming, diving, Red Cross Water Safety In- structors course, fencing, modern and social dance, and riding. Placement Notices The following school has listed va- cancies on their teaching staff with the Bureau of Appointments. Dearborn, Michigan: Junior High Art; Girl's Physical Education; (Se- nior High Auto Mechanics; Social Stu- dies (begins now.) Grade 1 (begins March 9). Grade 3 (begins February 22), Grade 3 (begins April 1). Grade 4 (begiais in April) Elementary Girl's Physical Education (begins March 31). Senior High Auto Mechanics (begins September 1957). For additional information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Ad- ministration Building, NO. 3-1511, Ext. 489. Personnel Interviews: Representatives from the following will be at Engrg.; Thurs., Feb. 14 Beech Aircraft Corp., wichita, Kansas -al levels in Aero., Civil, Elect. and Mech. for Summer and Regular Re- search, Development, Design, Compu- ter, Structures and Test. U.S. citizens. Borg-Warner Corp., Chicago, Illinois -all levels in all E. programs and Bus- Ad. for Research, Sales, Development, Production, and BusAd. Civil Aeronautics Administration, Kansas City, Mo. - all levels in Elect., Instr., and Engrg, Physics, B.S. or M.S. in Civil. Constr.. and Mech. for Sum- 1i I j. I TODAY AND TOMORROW: Mathematics in United Nations Problems 4 By WALTER LIPPMANN THE AMERICAN position in the United Nations has become very difficult, especially during the past year. We find ourselves relying more than at any time in the past on the competence and the capacity of the United Nations to deal with great issues-as in Eastern Europe and in the Mid- dle East. When we say the United Na- tions, we really mean the General Assembly of eighty nations which is now the central organ of that institution. In this General As- sembly, since the admission of so many new members from Africa and Asia, we can no longel count, as once vve could, on a working majority vrho agree 'vith us. From this fundamental weak- ness come the confusions, the equivocations, the double stand- ards of the UN's dealings with the Soviet Union over Hungary, with T H E GENERAL ASSEMBLY consists of blocs, and American foreign policy is in very large measure determined by the desire to have the United States play a leading part in a combination of blocs which will yield a majority when the votes are counted. We are acting on the official belief that we must not be pushed into the opposition within the United Nations, that we must participate in the ruling majority. The mathematics of our prob- lems are worth fixing in mind. The General Assembly has eighty nembers. But since South Africa and Hungary are absent, there are now in fact seventy-eight mem- bers. On any important question a two-thirds majority is needed, which means fifty-two votes. Now what is the maximum num- ber of votes that we can hope to rally on an issue which is of prime importance to the Western world? There are twenty-one inter-Amer- ican states ,al of the Western with the situation for the United "tates, to find the necessary eleven votes? There are ten Soviet. votes and there are eleven Arab votes that he cannot get. That makes twenty-one votes that he cannot get and it takes only twenty- seven votes-one more than one- third of all votes-to veto any pro- posal the United States makes. There is still one more bloc of fifteen votes, and it hols the bal- ance of power. This is the Afro- Asian bloc. In it we can count fairly reliably on four votes, the Philippines, Thailand, P a k i s t a n and Nationalist China. But. as we have seen, we need eleven votes to get a majority. So we are still short seven votes. These we have to obtain by bargaining with India, in plain fact by working out com- promises with Mr. Krishna Menon. This means that the United States, working loyally through the UN, can on the crucial issues take no positive or afifrmative position to which Mr. Menon is that the United States incr.ices the Western blocs to vote with the Arab, Soviet and Afro-Asian blocs. The first of the resolutions passed last week, the one calling for the withdrawal of Israel to its old frontiers; is an example. The other condition of agree- ment in the General Assembly is that the real differences between the Westerners and Easyrners are befogged to the point where none of the blocs is publicly committed to anything specific. The second resolution, which appears to deal with the substantial issues in Pal- estine, is an example of an agree- ment by deliberate equivocation. What goes on behind this equiv- ocation? What goes on is secret diplomacy-the only kind of dip- lomacy that has the remotest chance of working in the conflicts of the Middle East. The General Assembly is a place where nobody can afford to stand up in public and be resonable. He will be re- garded at home as s traitor. 4 I