oig Mldiigan BatIl9 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" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: VERNON NAHRGANG We're Not Getting Our Money's Worth "You people are getting a lot less educa- IT WILL GET WORSE-we are gathering tion than you should be getting for the momentum as we slide downhill. A literary money you're paying . . . classes are too college committee is reportedly exploring ways large to accomplish anything . .. and it will to get more efficient use of top faculty men. get worse before it gets better . : ."-said In the near future professors may handle their by a lit school professor as he glumly sur- classes only two hours a week, turning the third veyed a "discussion" class of close to 100 over to a teaching fellow. This would enable students. them to handle four classes instead of three. And ed school has sent out a questionnaire THE PROFESSOR who opened the semester asking professors how they would react to on the above note was discouraged, as a teaching by television. lot of people are, over the increasing difficulty of making education mean something. If we now suggest bucking expansion we are We've got education by the grade-book and told of our "moral obligation" to the people of lecture now. Information passes from professor's the State, and of the pressure that would build mouth - to - student's - notebook - to - blue- up to cut out-state students. book without ever hitting the minds of either, T IS BECOMING increasingly obvious that to reiterate the well worn cliche.I SCdMINGstndasilydobvos thUn Students' grasp of theory is tested by ob- versity grows. And If this is true theUn perhaps jective exams (referred to jokingly as "multiple- vertymgrobifatisnis tugitenfpehdu- gues" tsts becusethee jst in'ttim to our real moral obligation is to give a fine edu- guess" tests) because there just isn't time to cation to few rather than a mass-produced job read 100 or more essays for each of severalc classes. to all. Lectures are becoming ossified by repetition Two students who can think are worth more -but how can a professor reconsider and work to the State than five who can memorize. over each of the 300-odd lectures he is called -LEE MARKS on to deliver in a school year? City Editor DAR'Patriotism' FOR THE PAST eleven years, the Denver THE QUESTION now arises-does Mrs. Rush chapter of Daughters of the American Revo- speak for the DAR? The Denver DAR would lution has sponsored a Lincoln's Birthday do well to take a good look at itself, answer the pageant at the Colorado Industrial School question, then prove it with action. for Boys. -EDWARD GERULDSEN This year, thanks to the personal prejudice of one woman, there will be no such celebration. SBX Operations Hindered Because many of the pupils at the school t are Americans of Mexican descent and because By Inconsistent Hours the program includes their carrying the Ameri- can flag, Mrs. Charlotte C. Rush, chairman ofT HE CRUSHING EXPENSE of books is most the Lincoln Day program committee, objected. keenly apparent early in every semester. The "I wouldn't want a Mexican to carry 'Old Student Book Exchange, through which used Glory,' would you?" she asks. , We would ask, "Why not?" books may be bought and sold, provides some We wold ak, "hy nt?''relief from the burden but is hampered by a Most of.the students, Mrs. Rush admits, werer born in the United States and thus are Ameri- failure to acquire books for resale. can citizens. But, she says, their parents came Inconsistency of collection hours is a partial from Mexico - "They're Mexican boys, not reason for this limited supply. During exam American boys." period, SBX advertised collections from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. On Mon., Jan. 28, a constant IF CHILDREN born in the United States of stream of students beat a path to the locked foreign-born parents are not American, then door in the Union basement. During the noon an awful lot of us are foreigners. And not hour, the line of impatient students with even fit to carry the American flag, by Mrs. cartons of books stretched up the entire stair- Rush's standards. way from SBX. The irony of the situation is that Mrs. Rush Gradually the line diminished as disgusted is chairman of the Denver DAR's "Patriotic sellers wandered toward book stores. After Education Committee." sleswnee oadbo trs fe EduchpreCudie.nbigtseveral tramps through the slushy snow with If such prejudice, and bigotry are examples armloads of weighted books only to find locked of patriotism, our "patriotism" needs an over- doors, many students resorted to the speedy haul. If this is the fruit of "patriotic education,' but less profitable selling at the book stores. ignorance is much to be preferred. Despite the absurdity of Mrs. Rush's position, SBX could have increased book receipts the powers that be in the Denver DAR have merely by remaining open during advertised seen fit to drop plans for the Lincoln Day hours. By working as hard to collect books as program. The incident has been publicly de- it does to sell them, the SBX could become a plored by at least two officials involved, but tle real service to this campus. pageant remains cancelled. -DIANE FRASER INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Fundametntal Differences "How Dare You Disregard Our Instructions!" THE WAY OF THE ATRANSGRESSOR S H AED a !-f 44E~44 " 1 E 0s /Wsho rsr AT THE STATE: 'Barretts' on Film Still a Big Yawn THERE are people who think "The Barretts of Wimpole Street" is one of the loveliest, most touching plays of all time. There are others, this reviewer included, who find the old Rudolf Besier war- horse to be the dramatic equivalent of a Miltown pill. Therefore this review is biased insofar as I disliked the play before I saw the film. Now I dislike the film, too. The celluloid "Barretts" is a good try, however, and screenwriter John Brighton has done his best to a little life in the proceedings. But still, the major hunk of it consists of long, long repititious dialogues in a dusty, musty draw- ing room. The characters, though derived from RealLife, are wood- en and dull. The conflict is handled as in an old-style melo- drama. FOR THOSE who have not peen the play in a highschool produc- tion, a little theatre group, a tele- vision adaptation; or a comic book, the plot concerns the efforts of Elizabeth Barrett to escape the drab confines of her sickbed and the tyrannical rule of her stern father to live a normal and happy life with fellow poet and ardent swain Robert Browning. It's rather a nice story, but as set down in the film, it comes out soap-opera and not much else. We soon realize what a dis- turbed man Barrett is and to what lengths he will go to keep his daughter from the rest of the world, and we gather that sooner or later there will be fireworks when she, runs out on him. But until this happens, the reels un- fold a steady, stream of boredom. The picture at'least moves the characters around to a few dif- ferent settings, such as a park, a street, and so on. It's needed, believe me. It seems a shame that one of the world's great actors, John Gielgud, has an unhappy time with Mr. Barrett. The fault lies in the fact that Gielgud has apparently done a great deal to instill complicated -and profound qualities in his character. We can see a good actor at work. The re- sult, however, is less than satis- fying since the part itself is so ,strictly melodramatic that the performance seems pompous. JENNIFER JONES tackles Eliz- abeth in rough style, speaking as if she were combating a bad head cold tossing out a different gri- mace with each new line. Bill Travers sadly errs in making his Browning a bumptious clown. The problem is not that the script is dated, but that it is stodgy. Try as it might, the film can't overcome the faults. Maybe they shouldn't have bothered in the first place. -David Newman AT THE MICHIGAN: r an o' Contorts rejuvenate the script and to instill DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 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 3553 Adminsitration Building, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1957 VOL. LXVII, NO. 89 General Notices University Figure Skating Club will meet on Wed., Feb. 13 at 6:00 p.m. in- stead of its usual Tues. meeting. Museum of Art, Alumni Memorial Hall. American Paintings from the Uni- versity of Nebraska Art Galleries, Feb. 10 - Mar. 10 Hours: 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. weekdays, 2-5 p.m. on Sundays. The public is invited. Art Print Loan Collection. Feb. 19-21 prints from the collection will be on exhibit in the Rackham galleries. Re- servations may be made at that time. Feb. 25-March 1 prints may be picked up in 510 Administrataion Building, Burton Holmes Travelogues. Tickets are on sale for the Burton Holmes Travelogues in Hill Auditorium box of- fice. The Oratorical Association spon- sors this series on five Thursday eve- nings, Feb. 28-March 28. Colored mo- tion pictures will be shown including "~Cruise to Rio", "Sweden,,, "Today's Japan", "The Old South", and "Portu- gal". Box office hours are 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Correction-Late Permission: All wo- men students had 11:00 p.m. permis- sion on Wed., Feb. 6, 1957. Trained Fencers, both men and wo- men, are invited to meet and fence with a student-faculty group meeting Wed. evenings from 7 to 9 p.m. in the main second floor room of the WAB at Forest and N. University. First meet- ing of the spring semester Wed., Feb. 13. Foils and some protective equipment can be provided. Spectators welcome. For more information about this or (beginning fencing classes, call NO 2-2400. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Dulles' Ef forts Successful i By DREW PEARSONr I DIPLOMATIC observers, looking over the entire calling. list of Arab visitors here during the past two weeks, chalk up a plus mark for Mr. Dulles's efforts to woo the Near East. Charles Malik, the Christian For- eign Minister of Lebanon, Abdul Ilah, the pro-British Crown Prince of Iraq, and King Saud, the waver- ing, onetime friend of Colonel Nas- ser, all were part of an attempt to box in the army colonel in Egypt whom Dulles once picked as Amer- ica's best friend, but who has turned out to be Russia's best friend. Biggest diplomatic victory was scored by none of the above, but by little Prince Mashhur, 3%- year-old son of King Saud. The generous outpouring of gifts and good will to the little Prince warm- ed the heart of his father more than all the regal receptions and state dinner parties given in his honor, elegant as they were. THE FACT that the American people spontaneously contributed all sorts of presents and deluged the little boy with get-well mes- sages, touched the King's heart and convinced him that the Amer- ican people had no designs on his country. His staff purchased two extra trunks to carry the load of copybooks, miniature racing cars, and other knickknacks the Ameri- can public sent to the hospital. In addition to this, the King was delighted with the U.S.A. - ranging from his talks with Ike to Gali-Gali, the Magician, who spoke in Arabic at the Arabian- American Oil Co. dinner given him at the Mayflower Hotel, to the fact that John Foster Dulles gave him practically all of what he wanted from the United States. Dulles's real problem, however, is going to be after King Saud returns home. The King's influen- tial brother, now acting as Lord Chamberlain in his absence, is in- tensely anti-Western and pro- Nasser. In addition, Nasser has managed to infiltrate the Saudi Arabian army with pro-Egyptian officers, thanks to the Egyptian military mission stationed in Saudi Arabia. This is why Dulles's policy of sending more arm to Saudi Arabia is so risky. Chances are they will eventually fall into the hands of the pro-Nasser clique inside the Saudi Arabian army which has the support of the King's brother. * * * THE KING himself went home glowing with praise for the U.S.A. However, he is almost blind, reads only that which his advisers give him, and naturally is subject to all sorts of pressures. In the past, he advanced oil royalties to help Nasser buy arms from Russia, also adanced money to Nasser when the Egyptian budget was low, and just recently, while en route to Washington, stopped off in Cairo where he promised money to bal- ance the Jordanian budget. Today the King's own budget is low, and he is asking more aid from the U.S.A. This puts Mr. Dulles in somewhat the position of siphoning money from Ameri- can taxpayers, indirectly, to pay for Russian arms sent to Egypt. The Crown Prince of Iraq, who some day will rule his oil-rich nation, was completely friendly to the U.S.A. before he arrived. He and his government have been hoping that the United 'States would join the Baghdad Pact of which Britain is a member, to- gether with Turkey and Pakistan. The Prince sounded one note of warning, however. He told Presi- dent Eisenhower and John Foster Dulles that Iraq, which has already lined up with the West, expects and deserves better treatment than Saudi Arabia, which has openly backed Col. Nasser. COL. NASSER has served notice on the United Nations that Egypt will not put up a single penny for clearing the Suez Canal. It was Nasser who ordered the bridges. barges, and derricks dumped into the Canal, but he says the West will have to pay for clearing it if they want to use his waterway. Result: Uncle Sam will probably pick up most of the $40 million tab. King Saud tried to persuade Eisenhower that other Asian lead- ers, including Nasser, should be invited to the White House. He thought it important for them to receive personal assurances that the United States has no designs on the Near East. King Saud ordered 60 air-condi- tioned Cadillacs from Detroit. They will have special interiors, bullet- proof glass, and some will have gun mounts. (Copyright 1957 by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) A By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst PRESIDENT EISENHOWER, when he meets the British and French chiefs of state for the first time since the big split over Suez, will be facing some fundamental difficulties as well as the specific problems under discussion. He will be trying to make a new beginning on a united approach to Middle Eastern prob- lems with America's foremost allies, each of whom has specific national interests not shared by the United States and which do not fit into Washington's general policy. Indeed, the Washington administration has Editorial Staff RICHARD SNYDER. Editor RICHARD HALLORAN A LEE MARKS Editorial Director City Editor GAIL GOLDSTEIN ................Personnel Director ERNEST THEODOSSIN ............Magazine Editor JANE'T REARICK ... Associate Editorial Director MARY ANN THOMAS..............Features Editor DAVID GREY. ................ Sports Editor RICHARD CRAMER........... Associate Sports Editor STEPHEN HEILPERN.........Associate Sports Editor VIRGINIA ROBERTSON......... ...Women's Editor JANE FOWLER . . ....... Associate Women's Editor ARLINE LEWIS..............Women's Feature Editor JOHN HIRTZEL................ .Chief Photographer Business Staff DAVID SILVER. Business Manager MILTON GOLDSTEIN Associate Business Manager WILLIAM 0USCH ........ Advertising Manager CHALE 1T- mU'_3 ' eM a,.e made it clear that it feels there is greater chance of success for its currently developing Middle East program if Britain and France, now under a deep cloud in the area, are not directly involved in it. THAT'S ONE REASON the President thought it better to meet Macmillan and Mollet sep- afately, to avoid the appearance of collusion on anything that might look like a "colonial" policy. That's why Dulles said he wouldn't want British and French soldiers beside him under current circumstances, meaning 'Britain and France were not desired as coguarantors of the military assurances the United States is pre- paring to offer. The President, by going to meet Macmillan on British soil, is demonstrating a desire to get back on a give-and-take basis. But he will be seeking assurances, above everything else, that there will be no more secret unilateral actions, such as the invasion of Egypt, which reflect on the whole free world position. It is quite probable that nothing in their conduct of international affairs has so shocked Eisenhower and Dulles as the efforts to blind Washington in the preparation of that affair. One of the problems to be resolved with France is her continued alliance with Israel in the United Nations following their collabo- ration in the attack on Egypt. United States policy is in support of Israel, also, but within limits set by the danger of another military flareup in the Middle East, and with the desire fn- on n-nnharrla +tf1m-+ +her. THE RIGHT TO READ: Laws Lag Behind Relative Morality (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first of a two part series concerning sex and obscenity laws in our society and the machinery for enforcing them. Public attention in this area was recently excited when John O'Hara's best selling novel "Ten North Frederick" was removed from the book shelves in Detroit. Part II sue. Today's article reviews the free- will concern itself with this local is- dom to read.) By JAMES ELSMAN Daily Staff Writer SOMEWHERE along the way of man's emergence from the caves of his state of nature he acquired a reticence toward sex. Paul Blanshard, in his well-done book, "The Right to Read," argues that, "Man, left to himself with- out social discipline or formal law, has no apparent antipathy to de- scribing or using any of the acts or words of sexual life." Prudish shyness, judged by to- day's standards, reached a peak, it seems, just before the industrial revolution. Man's sex morals now seem to be heading downhill using the biblical orthodoxy of our Ju- deo-Christian heritage as a stan- dard. Among others, Dr. Kinsey provoked us to "talk about it," something considered the height of vulgarity a century ago. Motion pictures, the stage, and like to live under the morality "of the good ole days." * * * THIS SETS forth the argument which puts defenders of the Chris- tian orthodoxy and most sociolo- gists at loggerheads-is morality relative only to time and environ- ment? The sociological school hes- itates to label the "1957 morality" depraved, arguing that it is merely a by-product of the transition from an agrarian to an industrial society. Organized Christianity, of course, argues that morality should be as immutable as the word of God in the Bible. This school, manifested in pressure groups from the major faiths, parent- teacher associations, and the American Legion, are having the say in Detroit. The battle of beliefs should be seen in the environment where it struggles-reading life in America. Reading is big business. In 1953 publishers sold 250 million paper- backs, 500 million hardbacks, 960 million comics, and 3 billion maga- zines, plus the 55 million news- papers sold every day. The paper-back (Blanshard calls it "the greatest literary innovation of our time") is the most frequent violator of sex and obscenity sta- tutes. The top five sellers of these THE COURTS of the United States have been burdened with reconciling the social philosophies of the orthodox and relative schools in interpreting existing law. Two things can be said: The Supreme Court has gone out of its way to protect the freedom of the press and in doing so "obscen- ity" has received a cloudy defini- tion. The Court, in a Minnesota case, found censorship prior to publi- cation was illegal and further, in the Schenck case, that the free- dom was limited if a "clear and present" danger loomed over the society. Regarding obscenity particularly, the Court ruled a book must be read "as a whole" in judging its literary worth. As yet the Court has failed, though, to draw the freedom to read and print under the protec- tive wing of the First or Four- teenth Amendments as religious freedoms and others are, thus as- suring protection from Congres- sional and state encroachment. ALTHOUGH NOT. a Supreme Court judge, Judge Learned Hand's incisive definition of obscenity probably is the best yet written and most representative of the Court's thought. He said, THE CURRENT kiddies' program at the Michigan Theatre fea- tures an hour-and-a-half study of 20 or 30 different (but not too different) ways to look abashed, discouraged, beaten, helpless, dis- turbed, defeated and generally up- set. It's the story of "Drango". It all begins in the post-Civil War days in Georgia, "when the hated Yankees again rode upon their land," when out of the dusk rides the great military governor, Major Clint Drango, and his faithful Yankee-captain sidekick. Yankee law has come to the Southern town of Kennesaw Pass and the Rebs don't like it one bit. There's a convenient crowd on Main Street, and someone throws a rock at Drango. Someone spits. Someone else spits. Even the children spit. There's a hound dog running around, and if he knew how, he would probably spit, too. But Jeff Chandler -- that's Drango -- knows just how to react. He grimaces. The muscles in his jaw and cheek begin flex- ing. His eyes burn. He swallows. His poor horse jumps a little when the rock hits him, but Drango remains stern. So much for the townspeople. ** * DRANGO and the faithful side- kick ride on to the judge's house, presumably to announce that he has arrived, but, after all, the rest of the characters have to be introduced, and it just happens that the judge's son is the bad man who keeps Yankee hatred alive in Kennesaw Pass. The. son tells Drango, "If you stay here, they (the townspeople) will kill you." Drango reacts. His eyebrows rise, then drop. He grits his teeth. The muscles move. He glances at his sidekick who glan- ces back at him. The sidekick is reacting, too. Then Drango harbors a turn- coat Reb, who has shot one of his own people in self-defense, and offers to give him a fair trial. Naturally, everything goes wrong and the poor turncoat is lynched hv the judge's son. This gives Student organizations planning to be fictive during the second semester must register in the office of Student Affairs not later than March 2. Forms for registration have been mailed to the executive officer-of each organi- zation registered for the first semester. Additional forms may be secured in the Office of Student Affairs, 1020 Administration Building. For proced- ures and regulations relating to stu- dent organizations, refer to UNIVER- SITY REGULATIONS CONCERNING STUDENT AFFAIRS, CONDUCT, AND DISCIPLINE available in the Office of Student Affairs, Evaluation of Student Government Council. The committee recently ap- pointed by vice-President Lewis to re- port to him an evaluation of Student Government Council invites communi- cations from informed and interested individuals and organizations on the functioning and structure of Student Government Council under the plan adopted two years ago. Please address such communications without delay to Prof. Lionel H. Laing, Chairman, Stu- dent Government Council Evaluation committee, at 301 Michigan Union. Closed Social Events (for members and invited guests only) sponsored by student organizations must be regis- tered in the Office of Student Affairs. Application forms may be secured in the Office of Student Affairs. Requests for approval must be submitted to that office NO LATER THAN NOON OF THE TUESDAY BEFORE THE EVENT IS SCHEDULED. A list of approved so- cial events will be published in the Daily Official Bulletin on Thursday of each week. In planning social programs for the semester, social chairmen are reminded that the calendar is closed seven days PRIOR to the beginning of final ex- aminations. For the present semester, examinations begin May 31. Coocerts Chamber Music Festival: The Quar- tetto Italiano, composed of Paolo Bor- clani and Elisa Pegreffi, violin; Piero Faruli, viola; and Franco Rossi, cellist; will perform in the three concerts of the 17th annual Chamber Music Fes- tival in Rackham Lecture Hall play- ing all numbers from memory. Tickets are on sale at the offices of the Uni- versity Musical Society, Burton Me- morial Tower and will also be on sale in the lobby of the Rackham Build- ing one hour preceding the beginning of each performance. Program of American Music Can- celled. The program by the Alpha Chapter of Sigma Alpha Iota, previous- ly announced for wed., Feb. 13, in Aud. A, Angell Hal, has been postponed un- til Sun. evening, March 17. Academic Notices Mathematics Club: Tues., Feb. 12, at 8:00 p.m. in the West Conference Room, Rackham Building. Dr. B. A. Galler will speak on "Cross Section Theorem." Instrumentation Engineering Semi- nar: Research in the Fundamentals of Automobile Stability and Control will be presented by Joseph Bidwell and Robert Kohr of the Engineering Me- chanics Department, General Motors 4 I 4 4 q I 4 4 I