M' 3r1iman M tj 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 Representative Contemporary Books -1957 gam 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. DAY, MAY 12, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL KRAFT Rlates Desperate Flight from Terror THE BRIDGE AT ANDAU, By James A. Michener. NewYorki Random House, 1957. By ROBERT F. HAUGH THE ATTENTION the world gave to the Hungarian revolt of October and November, 1956, was in many ways astonishing. Why should there be news in more Russian terror, more sadistic .brutality, more graphic accounts of refined tortures by secret police? The answer is that world attention was not electrified by such mass brutalities, appalling as they were. The quality of the Hungarian affair that struck fire was the image of Hungarian youths throwing rocks at Russian tanks, magnified a hundred, a thousand times by other young Hun- garians, armed with little more than unquenchable spirit. ONE FEELS, upon reading James A. Michener's The Bridge at L: 'I Robert Goheen One of a Dying Species ROBERT GOHEEN will never declare him- self high priest in Princeton's temple of learning. In fact, he is firmly opposed to the suggestion that such places continue to exist. Speaking at Friday's Honors Convocation, the president-elect showed no inclination to isolate his students in "the world of learning" from the inhabitants of "the world of action." The continued well-being of our complicated, technological society is, he insists, dependent on "our universities being effective centers of teaching and research." But the picture of American education a cen- tury from now projected by the young Greek Scholar is a chilling one. Although he was careful to avoid overt optimism, there might well have been a more threatening tone to his address. NEARLY two-thirds of the college students technological or strictly professional courses." Only one-third are enrolled in arts and hu- manities programs. Prof. Goheen maintains that this growth into the study of vocational and mechanical problems has not radically "debased our aca- demic coinage." But the continuing race for technological tal- ent, spinning mud in the face of relatively feeble surges in the humanities, forecasts a dark future. THE WOODROW WILSON Fellowship pro- gram and the Ford Foundation's $25,000,000 grant to it, while magpificent beginnings, are virtually the only large-scale attempts to de- velop either teachers or scholars. Until like efforts are doubled and re-doubled, their effec- tiveness against the incredible flood of indus- trial offers is slight. The nation is only begin- ning to realize the importance of higher edu- cation; but it has not begun to look beyond the immediate, or past the next rocket plat- form. The Robert Goheens of America, educated in the traditions of the past in order that they might transcend the present and guide the future, may well be a dying species. If so, we may say the same of our way of life. --ALLAN STILLWAGON -Daily-John Hirtzel Panhellenic Contact Rules NOT SO FORMIDABLE:I Faulkner Power Shows Slow, Steady Decline THE TOWN, by William Faulkner. New York: Random House, 1957. By JAMES E. IRBY NOW THAT WITH the passage of time it is possible to gain a cer- tain perspective on the voluminous production of William Faulkner, it seems apparent that in the past twenty years his work has shown a gradual but steady decline in the powers which make The Sound and the Fury, As I Lay Dying, Light in August and Absalom, Absalom! such undeniably formidable novels. At times, this decline-marked by increasingly'needless and ir- relevant digressions, greater paroxyms of rhetoric, more schematic treatment of character and episode and ceftain unfortunate experi- ments in theme and structure-has been partially hidden by occasional pasages of fine writing (in Go Down, Moses and Intruder in the Dust, for example). Nevertheless, the fading of narrative vigor has become more and LAST THURSDAY, Panhellenic Board of Delegates considered a proposed set of con- tact rules to comply with next year's spring rushing program. In the next few days, affiliated women will be hashing over the merits of a proposal that provides: From "September registration until pledging, March 2, no sorority member shall enter 'any dormitory or independent League House and no independent woman shall enter affiliated housing units except during ap- proved rushing parties ..." Rationale behind restricting normal and necessary social relationships of women on campus and virtually erecting a barrier be- tween affiliates and independents is to pre- vent the thing at which Panhel points a tremb- ling finger and labels "dirty rush." WHILE this recommendation is still open to suggestion and revision, it might be a good idea to weigh and examine very carefully con- sequences that could follow its adoption. There can be little doubt that some degree of "dirty rushing" or rivalry among sororities for prospective pledges, will ensue with a se- mester between the beginning of the school year and the beginning of rushing. This is not the crux of the situation. It lies rather in determining whether or not holding so tight a rein on sorority women will help or hurt in.- the long run. Undoubtedly it will do more harm than good. Its negative aspects can be seen in several areas: 1) Contact rule effectiveness. Would pro- hibiting sorority women from entering dorms and forbidding independents to set foot in sororities really snuff out dirty rush? It seems rather naive to think that affiliates intent on 'dirty rush" couldn't just as easily contri- bute to the "undermining of the sorority sys- tem" from places other than their residences. Panhel would also have to contend with viola- tors who wouldn't have thought of "dirty rush" until such a big issue was made of it, or oth- ers who broke rules just because they hated imposition -of so, rigid a constraint. 2) Affiliate-independent friendships. These would be the hardest hit under the restriction. Understandably most sorority women, espe- cially newly initiated freshmen have many ,good friends living in dorms, not to mention sisters or cousins. Is it fair to break these ties? Will telling a sorority member, new or old, "Sorry, you can't go back to the dorm to see your friend, even if she isn't planning to rush," make her feel any closer to the sorority sys- tem? WHAT ABOUT those ineligible to rush - se- niord or coeds living in Martha Cook? It would certainly serve no logical end to ban them from visiting friends in sororities and vice-versa. Aside from purely social visits, the placing of an iron curtain around the Greek system would deal a death blow to any sort of dorm and/or sorority exam seminaring. 3) Outsider's view of the rushing and sorority system. Semester long contact rules could very well do the opposite of what Panhel seeks - alienate the sorority system from prospective rushees. It is not hard to picture a coed shying away from the whole idea of rushing when she knows that such rules would bind her as a ° sorority member. And, anyone in or out of the system would be justified in wondering what kind of a University puts college women in the juvenile position of being told whom they can talk toand where. 4) Place of sororities on campus. Rushing and sororities have been considered a part of University life but their importance has not, so far been exaggerated. There is scarcely the "if - you're - not - in-a-sorority, you're-no- body" feeling that pervades so many other campuses. It would seem to our advantage to keep it that way. By putting unnecessary strain on independent-affiliate relationships, too much attention may soon focus on sororities. The consequent rage to rush and pressure to pledge may also be responsible for heightening disappointment that must follow when sorori- ties can bid a mere one-third of the rushees. PANHEL RUSHING counselors are meeting Thursday to discuss contact rule proposals. If they are really concerned with both the in- dividual's happiness and strength of the soror- ity system, they would be wise to: Set up a no-contact-rule program for the first semester. Rules could be put into effect at the beginning of the spring semester and function like those of previous fall rush years. Appoint a study committee to decide whether "dirty rush" threatens the system enough to take ;steps against it; if so, to define "dirty rush"; and finally to provide for a body to investigate and deal with complaints. The issue must soon be settled. We trust that those in whose hands the decision lies will have the foresight to realize the conse- quences of their action. -ROSE PERLBERG more perceptible until finally, wit] years ago, even the most devoted admirers of Faulkner were forced to admit that, despite its sincere preoccupation with man's struggle against war, this tedious and ob- scure neo-Christian allegory was essential a failure. Some critics sUggested that such a failure might be the result of Faulkner's having abandoned his natural habitat, Yoknapatawpha, that mythical fragment of the South from whose tradition-rid- den social order the author has been able to draw artistic suste-. nance, somewhat as Dostoevsky did from the decaying feudalism of pre-Revolutionary Russia. * * * THEREFORE, it is particularly interesting ,to examine Faulkner's most recent novel, The Town, in which he returns to Jefferson and enlarges still more on the seem- ingly endless saga of Yoknapa- tawpha. The author now an- nounces that The Hamlet, first published in 1940, is to be con- sidered as the first volume of a trilogy on the Snopes family and that The Town is the second nov- el in this series. Although The Hamlet is not one of Faulkner's "great" novels, it is certainly a very good one which contains some of his most vivid characterizations and most extravagant humor. It would be reassuring to have in The Town a comparable book, at least in quali- ty, iut unfortunately this new novel will probably go down as a further example of the author's decline, notable more as another link in the Yoknapatawpha story than as a well-achieved work of fiction. Like The Hamlet, The Town is made up of a loose series of epi- sodes whose unity is primarily one of theme: in this case, the mov- ing of Flem Snopes from French- man's Bend to Jefferson and his rise to power in "the town". Unlike The Hamlet, in The Town these episodes are narrated by three "witnesses": V. K. Ratliff, Charles Mallison and Gavin Stevens, all well known to veteran Faulkner readers. In the first part of the novel, there is a great deal of re- capitulation of events already pre- sented in The Hamlet, particularl- ly those concerning the marriage of Flem Snopes and Eula Varner, as well as happenings related in Sartoris and other works. AND JUST as The Hamlet in- cor p o r a t e s several stories of Faulkner which had previously been published separately, The Town contains in altered form two such stories in which Flem is prevented from carrying out some minor skulduggery by two Ne- groes ("Centaur in Brass)" and an old widow ("Mule in the Yard"). Essentially, what Faulkner shows here in The Town is how, even though he manages to be- come president of the Jefferson the publication of A Fable three have always been characterized by a lack of true action; rather, their impact and force stem from the assiduous cultivation of the art of the "fait accompli," which is either thrust violently upon the reader for shock effect or is craft- ily insinuated piecemeal to create an overpowering atmosphere of intrigue and suspense as the parts of the puzzle fall slowly and in- exorably into place. In Faulkner's best novels, this technique is effectively applied to a theme conceived and communi- cated by the author with great ur- gency and descriptive power. In The Town, however, Faulkner seems to be either fundamentally confused as to what he wants to 'Torch' Full Of Warmth, Sensitivity THE GILDED TORCH, by Iola Fuller. G. P. Putna.m's Sons, New York: 1957. Pp. 343. $4.00 By F. CLEVER BALD THE COURT of Louis XIV at Versailles, the village of Que- bec, the Great Lakes region, and the Mississippi River during the years 1678 to 1682 are the setting for Iola Fuller's most recent his- torical novel, The Gilded Torch. Robert Cavelier, Sieur de la Salle, is the central figure. Other his- torical persons who are important in the story include Louis XIV, Colbert, Madame de Montespan, Madame de Maintenon, Count Frontenac, Henri de Tonti, and. Father Louis Hennepin. The fictional heroes are the twin brothers, Victor and Marc, sons of the Marquis de Lorennes. Both are soldiers of the King. Victor, recently promoted to Cap- tain of the Guard, is a born fight- er, proudly wearing the sword of D'Artagnan, which the doughty old musketeer had- given him. Al- though Marc prefers study to fighting, he is a courageous com- rade to his brother. * * * INTO THE ARTIFICIAL atmos- phere of Versailles comes La Salle, the hardy explorer, with a request for permission to explore the Mis- sissippi, to claim the interior of North America for France, to for- tify it against the Spaniards and. the English, and to have a mono- poly in the trade of buffalo skins to pay the expenses of the expedi- ton. With the support of Colbert, Louis' able minister, La Salle wins a grudging consent from the King. Suspicious, however, of La Salle's motives, Louis orders Victor to join the explorer as a volunteer and to report his every action. During La Salle's stay at Ver- sailles, the twins had met him and had been so deeply impressed by his confidence of success that they had invested money in his project. Nevertheless, Victor feels that he is being exiled to a barren Editor's Note: F. Clever Bald is assistant director of the Michi- gan Historical Collections and a lecturer in history at the Univer- sity. See IOLA, page 8 Andau, that he missed the point. finishing the book is that of more terror, more relish in gruesome de- tail. The AVO man, the antics of Major Meatball (whose doings were given wide circulation in a Readers' Digest reprint of this sec- tion of the book), and the ferocity and barbarism of the Russian re- taliation, make this not so much the story of strong spirits fighting magnificently against hopeless odds, but a recapitulation of an old, old story.. Looking at the book with a cold editorial eye, one must acknow- ledge that Michener has done the one thing wrong that would blur the meaning of the remarkable story, and place it in the ranks of sensational atrocity stories, where it must inevitably rank below Da- chau, the Bataan death march, the Warsaw ghetto, and the Katyn Forest massacre. MICHENER'S TITLE, w h i c h seems a badly chosen symbol for the revolt, calling attention as it does to desperate flight from ter- ror, at least suits the book as Michener wrote it. The bridge at Andau is a foot- bridge across the muddy Einser canal; upon crossing it the refugee The residual impression left after SATIRE Charming,. Stimulating. SOME MUST WATCH, By Edwin Daly. New York: Charles Scrib- ner's Sons, 1956. 306 pp. $3.95. By JOHN B. DALBOR It is not at all unusual to find a new novel which satirizes the American scene. Yet it is rather startling to learn that a quite commendable novel in this vein has been written by a 20-year-old college student-and most of it was composed when he was only 16. Edwin Daly, now a junior at Yale, because of his first novel, Some Must Watch, has already been tabbed "a very adequate American an s w e r to France's Francoise Sagan (authoress of Bonjour Tristesse). Yet his portrayal of a young man going through the painful transition from teens to manhood smacks more strongly of F. Scott Fitzgerald and Sinclair Lewis, The novel, however, has a cer- tain charming awkwardness, a (puppy-like enthusiasm, and an adolescent verve that gives it a tone which such accomplished writers as Fitzgerald and Lewis would certainly not even have been interested in imparting to their novels. * * * v ti A 4' 4 V ( is still in Hungary. He must still negotiate a mile of swamp before reacling free Austrian soil.' The confused geography of the bridge is a fitting symbol for the confused focus of Michener's ac- count. The emphasis placed upon flight, upon sadistic reprisals and mass terror, is an unfortunate re- flection of Michener's vantage point. He-stayed for six weeks in Aus- tria, interviewing refugees who came across the bridge, so perhaps it is understandable that he told it as he saw it. The revolt of the Hungarian people deserves a story worthy of their splendid fight. The story of the young people who stopped tanks with their bare hands de- serves better than the hasty efforts of a journalist stationed at the exit. Editor's Note: Robert F. Haugh, a conrtibutor to last year's Daily Book Review page, is an Associ- ate Professor in the English de- partment. DALY DISPLAYS the creative talent and psychological percep- tion, rare in one so young, to exa- mine himself rigorously, to pierce the externals of an apparently frivolous and vacuous life, and to perceive its real significance. We are presented with the often hinted-at, but seldom captured view of the inner existence of an American teen-ger, a creature whom many pessimistically hold to be totally lacking in any pro- fundity whatsoever. Richard Colby, the protagonist, is a young man just out of -high school, whose steadily-growing in- tellectual and artistic interests have brought him irretrievably to the position where he cannot help but see his family, his friends, and his own provincial hometown in an ironical and unfavorable light, These phenomena are presented from the perspective of this rest- less and dissatisfied youth, whose questioning and, critical attitude toward his previously smug exist- ence has begun to clash with the efforts of others to help him along the path to safe conformity. * * * THE READER is struck by a sensation of immediacy, largely- through Daly's use ,of the interior monologue. Occasionally it is car- ried to annoying extremes, but this, although perhaps not inten- tionally, fits in well with the gen- eral atmosphere of adolescence and immaturity. Certain descriptions seem In- appropriate'and tedious, and many trivial incidents are not only in- cluded, but narrated with great relish. At first glance, this would seem to be a serious defect in the novel, but after careful appraisal we see that this is the author's attempt to represent the mosaic of life as perceived and inter- preted by a teen-ager. An example of thir is the constant preoccupa- tion' with sex in a rather immature way. THE MAIN CHARACTER, Rich- ard Colby, completely dominates the novel. If character develop- ment is a virtue in the novel, the author has succeeded with Colby as we follow him from the gawky stage to the "collegiate" years, from pedestrian high school doings through a period of hobnobbing with the "smart" set at summer resorts to a shocking introduction to the responsibilities of,the adult world. The other characters, however, are generally unsuccessful. Colby's father is an obvious but unskillful imitation of Sinclair Lewis's Bab- bitt Most of the other. are stereo- types from the teen-age or college atmosphere. L Mother's Day MOTHERS the world over will be honored to- day for their kindness, patience and inde- fatigable devotion. Children everywhere will pause to pay tri- bute to the wonderful women that have served them so faithfully. Candy, flowers and cards are but a few of the many mementos that will be given in acknowledgement of a debt that can never be paid. The daughter of a Sunday school teacher in the litle town of Grafton, W. Va., is accredited with the original idea of Mother's Day. Miss Ann Jarvis believed that one day out of the Editorial Staff RICHARD SNYDER, Editor year should be set aside in remembrance of mothers. N MAY 10, 1908, Miss Jarvis began her campaign by sponsoring a Mother's Day service in Graf ton's Andrews Methodist Church. This was the beginning of a drive that eventually was to take her fortune and health. The carnation, flower of sweetness, purity and endurance, was chosen as the symbol of -the day. Letters were sent to churchmen, Con- gress and the President. By 1911, every state recognized one day of the year as Mother's Day. Miss Jarvis realized her dream when on May 9, 1914 Congress adopted Public Resolution 25. President Wilson set aside the second Sunday in May "as a public expression of our love and reverence for the mothers of our country." WHEN FLORISTS realized the commercial significance of the day and began raising the price of flowers, Miss Jarvis renewed her campaign. Her fight against commercialization of Mother's Day took her fortune as well as the fortune left by her mother and brother. Years later she was found sick and impover- *say about the Snopes or simply taken up by matters of small im- port. HIS METHOD of having his characters talk all around some- thing before it is finally named and brought out into the open is here more annoying than in- triguing and seems to be used more because it has become sec- ond nature with the author than because of some real need of form. Faulkner has always had diffi- culty in opposing some positive force or resistance to the Snopes invasion. Here, in The Town, if it can be said that Flem Snopes is defeated, it is by the eternal fem- inine and not by any element in Jefferson, not even Ratliff and Gavin Stevens, who are either passive onlookers or essentially in- effectual meddlers. Faulkner merely stresses a point which he has made many times before: that women are inscru- table and incorrigible schemers who serve only to confound and defeat, in some mysterious way, even the most scheming of rmen. Which is, in the author's order of things, equivalent to leaving the good citizens of Jefferson in the hands of a blind fatality, a fatal- ity which here is not even invested with the attributes of the noble LITERARY 'EXTRA': Book Reviewer's Lot Lonely, Thank less By DONALD A. YATES Daily Book Reviewer THE BO9K REVIEWER'S lot is a lonely and usually a thankless one. Ever since publishers began playing up the merits of their books on the flaps of the dust jacket, many people have argued that the book reviewer is not much more than an "extra" or "stand-in" in the field of literary endeavor. His duties, they claim, are performed by a salaried "blurb-writer" who more often than not throws more enthusiasm and zest into the task of describing the nature and intent of a book than does the some- times hungry, sometimes bored, and oftentimes superficial reviewer. Yet the book critic, who refuses to be silenced, is still with us. Magazines and newspapers give him space to air his opinions. And if' he handles his assignments well, honestly, the magazine and newspaper editors are happy, and they boast' that they have a review section as a regular department or a Sunday feature. To judge from this, the need for some kind of commentary to be made on the titles constantly flowing forth from presses all over the world is definitely felt. {TILL, HOWEVER GREAT the reviewer's audience, he can make him- ;A i RICHARD HALLORAN Editorial Director LEE MARKS City Editor Business Staff DAVID SILVER, Business Manager MILTON GOLDSTEIN, ... Associate Business Manager WILLIAM PUSCE............. 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