- f K ,, " +! S - q , ' -, .. -.q~ .. Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, 'May 26, 1957 Sunday, May 26, 1957 THE MICHIGAN DAILY e .. Student Organizations BU*LLFIGHT: TRANQUILIZERS Fad or Legitimate Fight Against Fear? i 'IS DITTO 0-11 I By DEBRA DURCHSLAG THE SPECTACLE of a man pay- ing his respects to a bull in- spires the greater part of the American public with a feeling somewhere between disgust and loathing. In our eyes bullfighting is a bar- baric, inhuman and rather inde- cent relic of the days before civi- lization. Or as the lady from the Society for the Prevention of Cru- elty to Animals delicately put it: "I have never seen anything quite as revolting." The lady had a point. -ullfight- ing runs counter to all the rules of fair play and sportsmanship that Americans have been taught since the first grade. As a sport it is indefensible. But as an art it contains moments of extraordinary intensity that makes the brutality seem eminently rea- sonable-and this is what Ameri- cans find difficult to understand. A TTEMPTS have been made to educate the public. The first and perhaps stiU the best was Ernest Hemingway's Death in the Afternoon, published in 1932. Hemingway had been before the public for ten years by the time he came around to writing his more or less non-fictional account of the bullfighting world in an at- tempt to explain the spectacle "both emotionally and practical- It was evident even then that he was something important in American letters, and many read- ers learned about the bulls simp- ly because ten years earlier they had learned about Hemingway. Death in the Afternoon is not (Continued from Page 7) problems arise. Tranquilizers can only be sold on a prescription basis. Some unscrupulous dealers are capitalizing on the popularity of the drugs and operating "peace pill" black markets. Also, overen- thusiastic users share their supply of pills with friends. People who bypass their doctors and acquire tranquilizers on their own face the possibility of undesir- able side effects due to overdosage or over-sensitivity to the drugs. . More important, however, they may accept the tranquilizers as a substitute for the psychotherapy which they may require for ade- quate mental health. The American Psychiatric Asso- ciation has warned the public and doctors that the casual use of1 these drugs to relieve everyday- tension is "medically unsound and constitutes a public danger." "Use of these drugs," the Associ- ation says "is no more to be en- couraged than use of any other drugs except where medical diag- nosis shows a drug is needed to maintain the life and functioning of a person. "The prescribing of the tranquil- izing drugs for emotional illnesses carries with it an obligation for continuing appraisal and super- vision by physicians fully aware of the psychiatric symptoms in- volved and the potentials of their course of development, alteration or remission." THAT'S A pretty big order for the family doctor to fill. The burdens of a general practice often preclude a complete knowledge of psychiatric procedure. Evidence that doctors may be succumbing to pressure from the public and drug companies comes from the fact that of the 10 com- pounds most frequently prescribed in 1956, three were tranquilizers. What are the social implications of having a large share of the na- tion on tranquilizers? Dr. Miller poirus to speculation that "if this of a psychology class agreed toI take an unnamed pill an hour be- fore the test. Half the students, selected at random, received a Mil- town.- The -rest received a blank pill which has no effect- on the nervous system. Performance on the exam was not impaired ror those who re- L~..z ceived Miltown but was, in fact, slightly better than that of the neople who received the blank pill (though not significantly so). Per- haps the Miltown reduced the arxiety and apprehension which interfere with efficiency on exams. One student who took a Miltown before a French 31 final last semester later remarked: "I still had a few butterflies in my stomach but I didn't worry about them." There doesn't seem to be any imminent danger of Miltown re- placing No-nods as the pre-exam apertif. Living in an automotive age, we might wonder whether the increas- ing use of meprobamate means that we have many drivers on our highways who are constantly "doped up" or whose reactions are slowed. The Mental Health Re- search Institute finds that mepro- bamate, even in double the usual dosage, produces no adverse effects on driving ability, steadiness and vision TRANQUILIZERS s h o u1.d be around in our society for a long time. We'll probably discover new and better ways of using them. But like atomic energy, tran- quilizers can both create and de- stroy. They may help solve the problem of juvenile delinquency by transforming destructive, in- corrigible children into calm, co- operative, and well-behaved child- ren who no longer resist psychi- atric efforts to help them. Or they may assist wartime brainwashers in controlling the minds and ner- vous systems of captives. There's still much to be learned about tranquilizers. Congress is aware of this. The same Congress which provided the death penalty for persons convicted three times of peddling narcotics has granted two million dollars for research on the tranquilizers. In doing so, it named Dr. Gerard the national chairman of the advisory national committee for the use of psycho- pharmaceuticals. Tranquilizers may have herald- ed a new era in medical research, during which scientists will unlock many of the mysteries of mental and emotional disturbances. Come in-watch the new DITTO D- 11 liquid duplicator turn blank paper into crisp copies of anything you type, write, draw or trace through reproducing carbon-at the touch*of a button! It's amaz- ingly low-pricedl the most finished work that Hem- ingway has produced. It is a dis- organized book that contains something on practically every one of Hemingway's favorite topics. It also -contains some paragraphs that will probably be the best writ- ten on bullfighting. But for all Hemingway's rambl- ing, he did little more than make a small section of the public-his public-tolerant of the violence. The philosophy of the art was foreign to Americans, and it was going to take something more ex- plicit than Death in the Afternoon . L. Mencken, the fair, judicious surveyor of the American scene, could say after reading Hemingway's book: ".. . the sport is brutal, but there is no evidence that it is any more brutal than football." The point is that bullfighting is brutal beyond the wildest inten- tions of football. The polite code of sports ethics has no place in the bullring. It is not that the to make them appreciate that phi- losophy-or even recognize it. I odds are against the bull-the bull has no odds. The animal is part of a highly organized, formal drama of death. Its death is essential to the suc. cessful culmination of the drama, and no amount of blustering from the SPCA can change that salient fact. For strictest accuracy, however, it must be admitted that every now and then a bull gets off scot free, on the grounds of exceptional bravery, and then goes on to be- MORRILL'S I 314 South State I i ,1 - ___ .. R 'w :.lrx"1 Y J '. Sl ' 2.- 4 ,: .. . " : 6 as "'4:' }:: :":>S~y ti~ .y,', f," :ji:24.n':}i -"t". " "- - .o. NWIX e w yy<_j ::: i ".;u. .; ' e. 4" k ". . fit; %<; .4, S, , it 4- 4 4'. A4. 'N :.4 5, 4 'X"., b 4 b $ 4 \ '- 2 . 4 x' l'4.4- 'N. 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A cool change for the warm weather ahead. Campus." Whether or n "Saffell & Bush" of one thing we are ce spent an hour in our clothing education is When you arr come in and introdu personnel. It will be o to put you in the "Saf trend continues we may lose our Yankee initiative. We may lie down and let the Russians come over." We might hope that tranquiliz- ers, properly used, will helpus operate at peak efficiency, un- hindered by unnecessary worry and anxiety. It's too early/to tell what the net effect of tranquilizers upon our society will be, but some clue to the answer may have come in a recent experiment at the Univer- sity., I~ CONNECTION with a regular midterm exam, the 276 members SAFFILL 6 CAMPUS MAT 7SHOP STATE STREET For Over a Qua L ,,.,,,. 619 East Liberty NO 2-0266