Man.Listen To That Beat" 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 BEETHOVEN'S NINTH: 'U' Symphony Plays Good Friday Music "When Opinions Are Fres Truth Will PrevalV Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, APRIL 20, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: VERNON NAHRGANG BEETHOVEN'S 9th Symphony and music from Wagner's opera "Parsifal" received well-balanced, painstaking performances at the University Symphony Orchestra's concert at Hill Auditorium yes- terday afternoon. The "Ninth" was a truly remarkable performance. Notwithstand- ing incorrect notes, a trombone blooper in the choral movement, and an off-beat cymbal, the orchestra kept the fiery pace set by conduc- Little Progress Made Toward Dorm Integration 'HE RESIDENCE HALL Board of Governors accomplished nothing toward integration Tuesday. Everybody seemed to agree segrega- tion was bad and integration was good. But the meeting did help to point up the complexity of the problem. It is clear there are no simple answers. Both the Dean of Men's and Dean of Women's offices emphasize the importance of adjustment for incoming fresh- men. They don't want unhappy freshmen or unhappy parents of unhappy freshmen. One can disagree with this point of view, but the argument is clearly one of a differ- ence of emphasis, not one of purpose. What is needed is a careful examination of a great many facets of the problem and an open mind in each area. No idea can be pooh- poohed or glibly treated if one actually desires some kind of integration. Vice-President Lewis, Dean Bacon, Jean Scruggs, women's representatives all felt an intensive educational program selling the ad- vantages of inter-cultural living after the stu- dent arrives is the proper way to encourage integration. They are all right. Such a program would help. But this is not the only way. Jack Hale, senior resident director of men's residence halls, raised questions about the cur- rent room application, but little constructive attention was paid to this area. Unfortunately the questionnaire has too much become a whipping boy and panacea by those who are eager for inter-cultural living. Its importance has been made too great. But it cannot be over-looked because it is another facet, no matter how big or small, in the prob- lem of segregation. EAN BACON'S attitude toward any ques- tionnaire change was unfortunate. Calling students "torch bearers" or crusaders who re- quest foreign students or those of other back- grounds for roommates, the Dean is caught in an inconsistency. She claims there are educational values in inter-cultural living, but if students request it they fall under her derogatory title. There are people who wish to maximize their education at the University by living with someone of an entirely different background. This is one of the advantages of a large, cosmopolitan University, and it may be the reason the stu- dent is coming here at all. Most of these people would flinch if they were called "torch bearers." They just want a good education. They're aware of these values before they got here and won't have to be "ed- ucated" to them after they arrive. And the men's application is nowhere near even the women's for an unbiased approach. Questions asking for language spoken at home, religious preference and would you prefer to live with somebody different are all unjustified. The difficulties here have all been belabored already. Why not just provide a neutral ques- tion such as the women's application. This form just asks for any room preferences. LIKE THE educational program, this applica- tion change will not provide the only an- swer, but it will help. And it can be accom- plished with the least effort. It could be ac- complished at one meeting. No great all-heal- ing step, it still will carry the program for- ward at least a little. Hale told the group certain people respon- sible for placing students were probably not as completely aware of the board's attitude to- ward integration as they might be. Prof. Laing noted these people were pretty old and set in their ways, and there's little chance they'd change. The answer here is to take room-placement out of their hands and move it to the Dean of Men's office. This problem would then be elim- inated. THESE THREE suggestions are not the only answers. But each one is an answer, a dif- ferent approach to a complex problem. The more ways any problem can be approached, the quicker it may be solved. Few people want a residence hall transfor- mation overnight. Most realize attitudes can't be legislated. But a calm rational approach without blinders, without name calling, with an eager eye to any and all possibilities is nec- essary for things to be accomplished to their optimum. -RICHARD TAUB WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Summeryfield Does Good Job By DREW PEARSONV tor Josef Blatt. The first move- ment, with all its complexities in constructionremained a unified whole. The second movement vi- vace was really vivace, with the fastest trio section this reviewer has ever heard. A large contribu- tion to the success of this move- ment was provided by timpanist David Effron. Highlighting the third move- ment was a flawlessly played horn passage by Howard Howard. (The passage has been the curse of many professional performers.) It was apparent, however, parti- cularly in the third and fourth movements, that the weakest part of the orchestra was the 'cello section, which, to begin with, numbered only five. * * * THE ORCHESTRA received able assistance from the com- bined University Choir and Michi- gan Singers in the fourth move- ment, sung in English from a translation by conductor Blatt. Soloists June Law, soprano, Mary Mattfeld, alto, Jerry Langenkamp, tenor, and James Berg, bass, man- aged to surmount the difficulties inherent in the music, particu- larly in the quartet "cadenza." Granted some liberty was taken with the phrasing in the solo parts, they sang adequately and enthusiastically, nevertheless. The trumpets, which too often hide behind a blur of misplaced strings and woodwinds, this time played with brilliance and power, continually emphasizing the Ode to Joy. The 'cello and double bass sections, on the other hand, re- mained too weak to provide pro- per balance with the rest of the orchestra. They failed to bow in unison when they introduced the chorale theme. Yet the movement considered overall was a success, as was the entire symphony. The orchestra opened the con- cert appropriately with the Pre- lude to Act I and the Good Friday Spell from "Parsifal." The violins, noticeably out of unison at first, labored with the slow melody, but a barrage of trumpets announcing the second theme made the or- chestra virtually sizzle. - r * s THE GOOD Friday Spell, sung by baritone John Zei, received careful performance, although the orchestra proved too overpower- ing for Mr. Zei. He has a pleas- ing, controlled voice, with good diction, but pitted against the orchestral forces, his voice re- mained in the background, and at times was inaudible, at least from the balcony. Both works which, said orches- tra manager Lawrence Hurst, the orchestra and choir rehearsed since January, were performed not only with precision approach- ing that of a professional orches- tra, but also with enthusiasm sur- passing most orchestras. Com- pared to a performance of the Ninth Symphony given two weeks ago by the Washington National Symphony - a high ranking or- chestra - yesterday's was a far greater emotional experience. -Arthur Bechhoefer SGC Agenda Resolution Potentially Risky Precedent POSTMASTER GENERAL Sum- merfield called me a liar the other day when I reported that he had pulled wires to shut down the Congressional probe of Jimmy Hoffa and Teamster racketeering in the Detroit area. Now that he's being kicked around by Congress and the public generally, it might be a good time to come back at him. Forgetting Mr. Summerfield's political errors, however, a n d sticking to his record as Postmas- ter General, it's hard to come back at him. For, despite his hassle with. Congress, the facts as I review them are that Summerfield has done a pretty good job. I have watched quite a few Postmasters and I don't know anyone who has done better. Let's look at the record. Though the U.S.A. has expand- ed, Summerfield has run his 1 uge operation with fewer employees. There were, 523,757 in 1952 when he took over. There were 508,587 in 1956. In that same period, mail had jumped from 49.9 billion pieces in 1952 to 56.4 billion pieces in 1956. There were 300,000 new home owners in 1956 and 250,000 new business concerns. Yet Summer- field ran the postoffice with less personnel. * * * THE RECORD also shows that Summerfield has been careful with the taxpayers' nioney. He has gone back to Congress only once before for more money. This was in fiscal year 1956 when he needed and got an extra $166 million. In 1954, on the other hand, he turned back $105 million to the Treasury, and in 1955 he turned back almost $50 million. His trouble this year is that he made a mistake in estimating the increased volume of mail. * * * THE CURLY-haired Postmaster General, who once was the world's biggest Chevrolet dealer, has made a lot of people sore at him by re- vamping outmoded postal equip- ment and operations. He also hasn't hesitated to tackle the big magazine mailers, whose second-class privileges run him into the red deeper than any other item. It happens that these big maga- zine owners are the best support- ers the Republican Party has. Every major magazine in the U.S.A. was for Ike in 1952 and 1956, and some of the publishers were also heavy campaign contri- butors. Henry Luce and his beautiful wife contributed $30,875 to Ike last November, while their publica- tion, Life Magazine, cost the Post Office Department and the tax- payer $9,310,000-the difference between the actual revenue re- ceived by the Post Office from Life Magazine and what it cost the Post Office to deliver it. Roland Harriman and Vincent Astor, chief owners of Newsweek, contributed $34,350 and $7,500 re- spectively to Ike last year. News- week, in turn, cost the Post Office a substantial loss in second-class- mailing expense, so that the tax- payer indirectly helped subsidize the magazine even though he may have voted for Stevenson. John and Mike Cowles, publish- ers of Look Magazine, are also strong Ike supporters. According to the latest figures available, their magazine costs the Post Office and the taxpayers $3,482,000 an- nually to deliver. * * * McCALL Corporation now has a new president, none other than ex- Gov. Arthur Langlie of Washing- ton. He too was a strong Ike sup- porter. And his McCall's Magazine costs the Post Office a formidable annual loss of $1,507,000. However, it should be said for Summerfield that, though he's a politician and though he's raised plenty of cash for the GOP-some of it by means that brought some convictions of Michigan auto deal- ers - he has bucked the big maga- zine owners. The inescapable fact is that the 10 top magazines of the nation ac- count for three - fourths of the second-class mail. And Summer- field knows he has to beat the magazine lobby if he's going to come anywhere near balancing the postal budget. In my opinion, the Postmaster General has made some bad poli- tical boners in his day, but run- ning the Post Office is not one of them. (Copyright 1957 by Bell Syndicate, Ine.). DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin Is c. official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michi- gan Daly assumes no editorial re- sponsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3553 Administration Building, be- fore 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daly due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. SATURDAY, APRIL 20, 1957 VOL. LXVII, NO. 139 General Notices Music Society Orchestra: The balance of the rehearsals for May Festival mu- sic (in Hill Auditorium) will be con- ducted by Thor Johnson (Conductor of the Cincinnati Symphony Orches- tra). The schedule is as follows: Mon., April 22, 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. Wed., April 24, 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. Thur., April 25, 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. Sun., April 28, 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. Mon., April 29. 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. Tues., April 30, 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. Wed., May 1, 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. Lectures Dr. Ralph Bunche, Under-secretary of the UN will be presented In Hill Auditorium tonight, 8:30 p.m. as the closing number on the Lecture Course, speaking on "The UN and world Peace." Tickets are on sale today 10 a.m. - 8:3 p.m. in the Auditorium box office. The Henry Russel Lecture will be de. livered by Louis I. Bredvold, Professor of English, Tues. April 23, at 4:15 p.m.. in the Natural Science Audi- torium on Some Basic Issues of the Eighteenth Century." Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Edmund Begole Brownell, Political Science; the- sis: "EPT-The Politics of a Tax," St, April 20, 4609 Haven Hall, at 10:00 a.m. Chairman, J. K. Pollock. DoctoralExamination for Russell Earl MacDonald, Bacteriology; thesis: "The Physiological Basis for the Inactivity of Citrate Oxidase in Escherichia Colt and Brucella Abortus," Mon., April 22, 1564 East Medical Building, at 10:00 a.m. Chairman, P. Gerhardt. Placement Notices PERSONNEL INTERVIEWS: Representatives from the following will be at the Bureau of Appointments: Tues., April 23. City of Detroit, Department of Park and Recreation, Detroit, Michigan. In- terviewers. Miss Betty Lloyd, Recrea- tion Career Counselor; Mr. Bill Ryder, Recreation Career Counselor. Location of work, Detroit, Mich. Men and wo- men with any degree in Liberal Art for Permanent-Full Time Recreation Directors. The Wurzburg Company, Grand Rap- ids, Michigan. Interviewers - Miss Por- tia H. Deacon, Personnel Director; Miss Louise Ayres, Employment Manager. Lo- cation of Work, Grand Rapids, Mich. Men and Women with any degree in- terested in' Merchandising, Personnel, Advertising, Control & Operations for Executive Trainees. Men with majors in Accounting for Accountants. Wed., April 24 Marine Officer Procurement, Detroit, Michigan. Interviewer - Lt. P,.M. Peter- son, Marine Officer Procurement Offi- cer. Location of Work - All over the world. Men in all fields except Pre- Medical, Pre-Dentistry, Music, Art, and Pre-Theology for Unrestricted Officers in USMC. The William B. Hoyer Agency of the John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co., Columbus, 0., Interviewer: James B. Finley, Agency Supervisor. Location of Work, Northwestern Ohio and four counties in West Virginia around Wheeling. Men with any degree for Sales. If you have taken a job, will you please notify the Bureau so that may take your name off our available list, Summer Placement DATE: Wednesday, April 24, 1957. LOCATION: Michigan Union Room 3-G. TIME: 9-4:45 p.m. POSITIONS: Jobs available in Re- sorts, Camps and Industry. The Chicago, Duluth and Georgian Bay Transit Co. have an opening for a nurse (R.N.) to work on the SS South American for the summr months. Pr further dtails, contact the Bureau. Personnel Requests: Plymouth Cordage Co., Plymouth, Mass., needs Sales Representatives for the Western District and for Michigan. Cincinnati Council of Camp Fire Girls, Cincinnati, Ohio, is looking for a full time Camp Director-Field Direc- tor. Should be a woman who has a. degree in Educ., Rec., or Social Work, with experience in camping, group work, and some previous camp direc- tor experience. Dunlap and Co., Columbus, Indiana, has an opening for a graduating Archi- tect or Architect Engineer to work in the Residential Planning Dept. Atlantic Refining Co., Philadelphia, Pa., needs a man with a PhD in Econ- omics, with special emphasis on econ- omic analysis, monetary economics, in- ternational economics and economet- rics. Must have had responsible analy- tical experience. For further information, contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin. Bldg., ext. 3371. Organization Notices Hillel Foundation, April 21, 7:15 Hil- lei: Student Zionist Organization Dis- cussion, "Viewpoints on the Arab-Is- raeli Dispute." Also Israeli singing and dancing. .,' -i "I ALLOWING ACTION by other groups to directly influence Student Government Gov- ernment Council's discussion topics is perhaps an honest admission of weakness, but SGC's attempts to more effectivly receive "student opinion" could hinder the organization even further. Hoping to create greater interest in student government, SGC has granted the League Sen- ate and the Union Representative Body the power to place on the SGC Agenda any resolu- tions that might stem from their discussions of problems and issues. Through these bodies, consisting of repre- sentatives from student housing groups, con- stituents would have a channel to express opinion to SGC. Theoretically, this would provide an excellent method for aiding the 18 member of SGC in hearing the thoughts of 22,000 students, Sup- posedly, both the women's and the men's groups would represent no special interests and would provide an effective means of communi- cation. "We have no monopoly on ideas or opinions," SGC president Joe Collins during discussion of the motion and the common hope was expressed that the groups might provide SGC needed, stimulation. The stimulation received might well be worth the price of SGC's granting these two outside groups a degree of control over the agenda. But in making the assumption that these groups would provide effective representative channels, SGC established a potentially risky precedent. Will these two groups be the only ones with contributions for student government? What about the myriad of other student organiza- tions, or the faculty . . . or even the administra- tion? Undercutting SGC's assumption is the fact that the Union Representative Body has yet to be formed and the League Senate has existed only a year in its present form. Knowledge that their resolutions would ap- pear on the SGC agenda might provide incenta- tive for worthwhile discussion in the two groups, but for the expression to be representative and valuable, the membership must also be reflec- tive and able. These channels of communication will be no stronger than the communicating groups. If SGC's granting of this power to the two groups is to be worth the risk, more than wish- ful thinking is needed to keep them from be- coming bogged in the apathetic mood of the campus. Without concentrated and continual effort, these channels might well crumble and should SGC lean too heavily on the groups of its stim- ulation and ideas, it might easily do the same. -MICHAEL KRAWT I, .I TODAY AND TOMORROW: mide Anti-American Feeling Obvious in Europe INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Press Freedom at Stanford THE STANFORD DAILY returned to publi- cation last April 1, after a three-week walk- out. That paper circulated a petition asking a referendum to repeal or let stand a bylaw al- lowing the student legislature, the Associated Students of Stanford University, to pass on the Daily's selection of its editor, and make him subject to ASSU's recall. The petition was signed by almost double the necessary five percent to put the referen- dum on the spring election ballot. With the issue given to the students to de- cide, The Stanford Daily resumed publication. In their first issue, an editorial "Why We're Back" states: "We are opposed to the by-law because we believe that the power to approve constitutes the power to control. And control in this form is particularly objectionable." A letter-to-the-editor in The Michigan Daily recently stated that Stanford's paper is in fact owned by ASSU. And the masthead of that paper confirms this: "Owned and pub- circumstances, ASSU should have the right to select and fire, if necessary, the editor of the paper. THE STAFF of the paper complained that this aspect of control was an unnecessary restriction on the paper - that they could not criticize as effectively the government they were controlled by. ASSU was accused of try- ing to make the paper a "trade journal." But ASSU should have this right, as long as they own the paper. If ASSU did in fact want a "mouthpiece" of their own in the form of The Stanford Daily, they apparently made the "mistake" of giving them too much freedom. Ask any dictatorship: It's difficult to with- draw one aspect of liberty having given your subject a taste of it. BUT UNDER the concept of journalism in a democracy, the newspaper is not expected to fall under any control of the government By WALTER LIPPMANN ONE OF the things that has im- pressed me in Great Britain and again in Italy is that in for- eign affairs there are no clear and sharp issues. Ther:2 was, of course, a deep di- vision of feeling over the Suez af- fair. But now that the intervention has failed and has been liquidated, there does not seem to be any- where i definite difference of view as to what the Western world or the United States should do next. My impression is that here in Italy there is a feeling of solidarity with the British and the French but that this feeling is checked by a strong practical sense that it is the national interest of Italy to go along with the United States. In moving about and talking to a variety of people from the coun- tries of Western Europe I have found a remarkable amount of agreement, almost a consensus, about the Soviet Union, about the Middle East, and about the United States. I have seen no one who thinks the Soviet Union is planning and is preparing tor a general war. For that reason the resounding decla- rations of the so-called Eisenhower Doctrine are -?c PYed with I:uzzled ihcredulity. Vcn'e think that the Presidernt -nd Mr. Dulles are living in an un- real world, emphasizing dangers that will probably not come and Army from Eastern Germany and from Poland. This would mean the fall of the East German Communist Regime, and along with that a turning of Poland and Hungary against Rus- sia. Some whom I have seen think that there is nothing for the West to do but to back up Dr. Adenauer ,and accept the fact that Europe is partitioned. Others, who are, I be- lieve, more farsighted, think the West should keep on trying to ne- gotiate, offering the Soviet Union terms which Moscow, were it less frightened and suspicious, could find reasonable, There is a general view, I found, that in the rivalry for the so-called uncommitted nations of Africa, the Middle East, and South Asia, the Soviet Union has an easier hand to play than has the United States. There is a feeling that the So- viet Union has won the game in Nasser's Egypt. Certainly it would be a pleasant surprise in Europe if Eisenhower and Dulles are able to hold their own in the game. ALTHOUGH I have not encoun- tered it myself, there is obviously wide anti-Amerieon feeling. There is, on the one hand, a big distaste for'the manners and the bearing of Americans traveling abroad or talking to the outer world. The comforts and the conven- iences of the American way of life LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler mous as one learns not only in private. conversation but also in blunt correspondence in the re- sponsible European press, that the President is a tired man living in a kind of semi-retirement. *~ * * ALL THIS tends to strengthen the feeling in favor of projects, like the common market, of Euro- pean solidarity. I have no doubt that the brilliant reception of Queen Elizabeth in Paris reflects in some considerable measure this new feelirg of European solidarity. Yet I am unable to judge, nor is anyone I have talked with, wheth- er the general feeling of European solidarity is strong enough to over- come the national feeir.gs and the vested interf sts which keep Europe divied. It will be years before we know. FKt in the meantime the common effort to h c-rk at these common pltjects is in itself a healthy mani- feAation of Europea:'m solidarity. 1957 New York Herald Tribune ( THJ NK4OF HWMSELF ""'YOU CAN FIND HIM IN HIS OFFIC DAYANP~.~ N T O R T O O F V 0 O K E N T IE O F $ L JM O R T I j7ij I