Sixty-Eighth 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 I When Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This mus t be noted in, all reprints. "Okay-Keep at It" v'...-. sill The Dressmaker' Ripping OldComedy FERNANDEL is back at the Campus Theatre in a ripping new French comedy, "The Dressmaker," which will leave you in stitches, or any- way, make you drop a few. "L'incomparable amazone," whispers Fernandel into a half-dressed lady's ear 'while fitting some material to her bosom. "Une chaarmante aurore qui paraissoit a Ia pointe du jour de nos malheurs plus grandee esperances et toute rouge du feu d'une juste colere." The lady slinks in a meaningful way and whispers back, "Mangez. moi!" And the English subtitle reads: "Do you like the style?" At any rate, something of this sort was happening, because the French women sitting next to me always seemed to be laughing most AT THE CAMPUS: ATURDAY. MARCH 8.1958 NIGHT EDITOR: RICHARD TAUB The Silent Generation Answers Its Critics- rHE "SILENT" GENERATION boomed last week. Those elders who have denounced the resent college crop for lacking color, serious hinking and individuality had their words ooked, seasoned and placed on a platter. The bhefs were University students as a number f surprising incidehts erupted across campus. The madness began mildly enough when omeone capitalized on the razing of the tomance Language Building by painting on the idewalk a Shakespearian epithet, "Then let fall our horrible pleasure." A few days later, however, a more serious rank developed, this time on the wall of the attered building. A swastika, black and im- osing, materialized on the gray bricks. In ddition, a number of Hillel posters were found amped with the same symbol, the insignia f the Nazi party. Soon swastikas appeared i windows, on doors, and blackboards. Hillel eported receiving anonymous threats. A stu- ent Zionist heatedly concluded that the swas- kas were the Work of a "sick" anti-Semetic ith a soul "warped" and "twisted" by hatred. thers laughed off the incident as a foolish >ke, however. Several mysterious posters also appeared on he Day of the Swastika. They advertised a else speech by a false speaker representing an pparently false organization, "The United Free-World Pro-War Front." Their meaning still remains clouded. THEN AN AMERICAN INDIAN, the cigar- store variety, partially diverted student in- terest from swastikas and posters. The Indian's name was Minerva and it seems she had been stolen and counter-stolen from her original owners, Theta Delta Chi fraternity. Another fraternity representative, Theodore Bomb, made interesting news by gaining 350 signatures on a Student Government Council petition, thus qualifying for possible election. Theodore was later found to be a dog belonging to Acacia. A spirited interest in University Affairs also manifested itself last week. The number of human candidates for SGC totalled nearly 20, an all time high. At the same time, the issue of discrimination in campus housing boiled over at a meeting of the Political Issues Club when a coed confronted Dean of Women Deborah Bacon with a charge of bias in a League House. So much for the lack of color and individual- ity. By their slanders, the wise fathers have falsely represented this generation. We hope they took notice of last week's events. We hope they were embarrassed. To be blunt, we hope they gagged. -THOMAS HAYDEN WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Cotton Farmers in Trouble By DREW PEARSON A Union Tap Room? when the characters were talking most and the sub-titles were say- ing least.' Fernandel Is the French exag- gerationist who has achieved a certain fame by playing a broad and splashy comedy with no holds barred. So that it really isn't very subtle. And everyone is amused. HERE WE HAVE Fernandel as the husband of a short-tempered lady dressmaker. Only he is a dressmaker too. But his wife doesn't want him fitting other women. He does anyway, on the sly, but she doesn't know. Whenever Mrs. F. is out, Fer- nandel sneaks down into the shop to smooth a few fabrics. And a few bosoms. When his wife comes back, she is furious. Fernandel spends a "delightful" night with an eccentric woman. When she is killed in a plane crash, she leaves him controlling interest in a big dressmaking house. While Mrs. F. thinks he is still working as a cutter in a tailor's shop, Fernandel is actually fixing up this new shop, which is in bad shape. He is also fixing up one of the models who is in good shape. But what can you expect? Fer- nandel proves to this model that all dressmakers aren't "alike." At least he isn't. His wife finds out and runs off with a wealthy fop she picks up at the big opening. Of Fernandel's new shop, that is. * * * NOW WE HAVE a funny scene. At last. The two couples sit op- posite each other at a night club: Fernandel and the model, Mrs. F. and her fop. And they try to make each other jealous. After a time, the Fernandels are reconciled, and the rich fop and the model drive off together. And the screen says FIN. Although this type of humor tends to get tedious after a while, it should be mentioned that this is one of Fernandel's early films, about 10 years old I would guess, revived to accomodate the recent fame this actor has accumulated. -David Kessel O)Pti*mism RUSSIA is still in midpassage in its transition from Stalinism. But the "thaw" to which Ilya Ehrenbourg called attention only months'after Stalin's death is by no means ended. The Soviet people are too tal- ented and, today, too educated to remain forever content with a sys- tem in which their lives and their fates are decided by a few oli- garchs sitting around a table. It is not utopian to hope and to expect that the gains the Soviet people have made toward a more tolerable life during the the past five years will be extended in the years to come. -New York Times INTERESTING if impractical solution to the campus drinking problem lies in the cently proposed Union tap room. Though it might appear as if local liquor strictions would be eased by this or a com- arable project, in actuality such is not the ise. As it now stands the State of Michigan rohibits any person who has not reached venty-one years of age or over from pur- iasing or consuming alcohol in a licensed bar r package store. The University's policy forbids ny student, regardless of age, fron storing r indulging in liquor in student quarters. Since Union tap room would in no way modify the isting laws, other than a municipal ordi- ance, which has established a zoning restric- on on the operation of bars east of Division treet, it, is somewhat dubious as to whether ie plan is advantageous. The only foreseeable enefit is one of convenience-not having to alk that added two blocks to Division Street. The effect on those who have not reached the gal age might be very disquieting. By making em more cognizant of their own inequalities, Minors might resort to alcoholic indulgence in eir quarters on a broader scale. Lear1ing to drink properly is an inextricable ,rt of ones personal educational process. Since e four years a student spends at college that formative period of his life in which he ould cultivate sensible drinking habits, the portunity should not be denied him by out- oded legal restrictions. Though it is not the ity of the state or University to provide stu- dents with intoxicants, by the same token, it is not necessary for them to discourage and limit drinking. These limitations encourage weekend trips to other cities and expose the student to an atmosphere not at all conducive to the ful- fillment- of these ends. LIQUOR laws in this and many other states are simply the puritanical remnants of the unsuccessful Prohibition legislation. Existing liquor laws have proven themselves a failure, in that, generally speaking, American society has not educated itself maturely in the use of alcohol. The fact that an increasing number of automobile deaths resulting each year. from drunkeness continues to rise illustrates this point. To say that drunkeness in the United States has become a social problem is not an overstatement. Excepting isolated instances, inebriation in Western Europe is almost non- existent. It is worth noting that on the Conti- nent few if any legal ,restrictions are placed on the purchasing or consumption of intoxi- cating beverages.- At an early age European children learn to enjoy wines and beers without over-indulging in them. By making liquor more accessible on a properly supervised basis students would learn, to consume it in a moderate, intelligent manner. Alcohol is not a vice, nor is it the devil in disguise. It is a commodity which ought to be both valuable and enjoyable to man, and should be treated as such. -RICHARD CONDON WASHINGTON - Ten grim- faced Alabama state legisla- tors made a pilgrimage to Wash- ington this week todlay before Congress the life-or-death situa- tion confronting cotton farmers in the Southeast. The picture was a solemn one, summed up in the words of a cot- ton farmer, E. F. Mauldin of Leighton, Ala., now serving as a consultant to the state legislators. "Our farmers are more demoral- ized than ever before," Mauldin told then-House Agriculture Com- mittee. "They find farm labor. gone, their tenants vanished or barely existing, their plows rust- ing, their tractors down, their mules converted to dog meat, their fields vacated and lying idle, their rural communities disap- pearing, and their country homes, churches, and schools standing vacant lite corroded monuments to haunt the "memory of what once was a cherished and respect- ed way of life." .* * * THE CAUSES are low prices andra gigantic 35 per cent slash, since 1953, in the number of acres allowed to be planted in cotton under Secretary Benson's "flex- ible" support system. For, as the nation's cotton surplus mounts, the acres planted to cotton are cut. Meanwhile, the Southeast - Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, North and South Carolina - has borne the brunt of the decline, while the acreage of such western states as California, Arizona and New Mexico has fared proportion- ately better. This is because a state's share of the national cotton acreage is based upon its average acreage in the preceding five years. And with poor cotton farmers 4n the South- east abandoning the soil for city jobs, Alabama's allotment has de- creased, which has penalized farmers remaining on the soil. For, when their neighbor quits cotton farming, other farmers get their acreage cuts, so that some individual allotments have been cut to 70 per cent since 1953 in contrast to the national acreage decrease of only 35 per cent. The trouble, says Mauldin, is that Benson's plan reckons in terms of states and counties. The fate of the individual farmer is crassly ignored. RESULT: In Alabama, 125,000 farmers have signed up with, the State Employment Service for off-farm jobs. One tractor deal- er reports that he sold 60 tractors in 1955, only 32 in 1956, and just 14 in 1957. Most of the 14 he sold in 1957 had to be repossessed when farmers couldn't meet their payments. Ginners, bankers, e r u s h e r s, farm laborers, fertilizer manufac- turers, warehousemen, and cotton merchants are all affected. According to Maynard Layman, farm editor of the Decatur Daily, the solution is not in moving farmers off the land. What Ala- bama needs, he says, is more mar- ginal farmers, not fewer. He points out that it doesn't solve anything for farmers to sell out and move to the city. There they merely add to unemployment rolls and create all kinds of social prob- lems. Moreover, in many cases it's just plain impossible for a man who has been a farmer all his life to make the shift to city life at the age of 45 or 50. "A pestilence has been visited upon the land of cotton," Farmer Mauldin told the IHouse commit- tee. He proposed these solutions: 1) An increase in cotton-acreage allotments, not across the board by state, but Just enough to guar- antee every farmer his historic share of the nation's production. 2) A BRANNAN Plan for cotton, whereby all American cotton would be sold without price sup- ports at the normal level. By let- ting the price seek its own level, cotton would better compete with nylon, dacron, and other synthet- ics. Instead of price supports, farmers would receive direct pro- duction payments to the extent necessary to raise their income to parity with industrial workers. (Copyright 1958 by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer. sits of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding pubication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. SATURDAY, MARCH 8, 1958 VOL. LXVI, NO. 112 General Notices Summer Housing Appictons for graduate and undergraduate women' housing will be accepted from women now registered on campus beginning at noon. Mon., Mar. 10, at the Office of the Dean of women on the first floor of the Student Activities Building. Ap- plications will be accepted for residence halls and supplementary housing. Faculty, College of Literature, Science andi the Arts: The freshman five-week progress reports will be due Wed., March 12, in the Faculty Counselors Of- fice for Freshmen and Sophomores, 1210 Angell Hall. Reminder: New initiates of Sigma Xi and members planning to attend the Initiation Dinner on March 12, should send their reservations by Mon., March 10, to Sigma Xi, Racham Bldg. Late Permission: Women who attend- ed the Burton Holmes Travelogue Thurs. evening, March 6 had late per. mission until 1055 p.m. Lectures Fourth Southeast Asia Lecture: Prof. Russell Fifield will speak on "Inter- national Politics of Southeast Asia," Sat., March 8, 2:00 p.m. at Friend's Center, 1416 Hill St. All interested people welcome. Concerts Student Recital: Robert Blasch, stu- dent of organ with Marilyn Mason Brown, will present a recital at 8:30 'Sun., evening, Mar. 9, in Hill Auditor- ium. The progran, which will bepre- sented in partial fulfillment of the re- quirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music, will include compositions by Buxtehude, Pachelbel, Bach, Franck and Messiaen. Open to the general public.; Student Recital: Ruth Keraus, stu- dent of oboe, with Floian Mueller, will present a recital at 4:15 p.m., Sun. Mar. 9 in Aud. A, Angell Hall, in par- tial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music, Wind Instruments. Shp will be assisted by Marguerite Long, piano and harpsi- chord, and by Kay LaDouceur, oboe and Kenneth Holm, English horn. The program will include compositions by Telemann, Haydn, Szalowski and Beet- hoven. Open to the general public, South Quadrangle Music Committee presents the second program of the 'spring series at 1:30 p.m. Sun., March 9 in the west Lounge of the Quad- rangle. The program will include a. baritone soloist, bassoon soloist and a clarinet quartette. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for George Ed- ward Dombrowski, Electrical Engineer- ing; thesis: "A Small-Signal Theory of Electron-Wave Interaction in Crossed Electric and Magnetic Fields," Mon., March 10, 3076 E. Engineering Bldg. at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, W. G. Dow. Placement Notices The following school systems hav. listed teaching vacancies with the Bureau of Appointments for the 1958- 1959 school year. They will not be here to interview at this time. Arlington Heights, I2. - Elementary: Elementary vocal Music; Jr. H.S. Eng- lish/Social Studies; Sc;ence; Mathe- matics; Girls Physical Education; In- dustrial Arts. .Avon Lake, Ohio (Lorain County) -- Elementary; Elementary Music/Art; Elementary Music; H.S. Mathematics; English; Social Science; Science (Gen- eral); Speech/Hearing; School Librari- an; Coordinator for elementary physical education. Bellevue, Ohio - Elementary; Voca- tional Home Economics; H.S. English; Vocal Music; Social Science. Buffalo, N.Y. - (Cleveland Hill Schools) - Jr. H.S. English; Science; Music; Sr. H.S. English; Mathematics: Social Studies; Science; Music; Nurse. Copley, Ohio - (For April) - Ele- mentary English. (For Sept.) - Elo- mentary; Art; English; Home Econom- ics. Hancock, Mich. - Girls Physical Edu- cation; Mathematics/Commercial; Eng- lish/Social Studies; Librarian. Hartland, Wis. (Arrowhead H.S.) - Speech; English/Rrench, Spanish, Ger- man, or Latin; Girls Physical Educa- tion; Mathematics/Physics; Industrial Arts. For any additional information, con- tact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Administration Building, NO 3-1511, Ext. 489. Personnel Interviews: Representatives from the following will be at the Bureau of Appointments: Mon., March 10 National Security Agency, Washing- ton, D.C. Location of work - Wash- ington, D.C. Men and women with B.A., M.A., or Ph.D.. in Languages (Slavic, Middle Eastern, Far Eastern, Etc.), History, English, Political Sci- ence, Government, etc. for Linguists SI I. INTERPRETING THE NEWS: ',Masters of Deceit' LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Integrationists Attack Minority 'Exploitation' By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press Foreign News Analyst NEW YORK - FBI Chief J. Edgar Hoover appeals to Americans today to keep up their guard against a conspiratorial communist movement which "has been and is engaged in an. all-out war against American freedom." Despite convulsions, fiipfiops, defections and setbacks, the communist party's hard core in the United States still is a vast reservoir of spy material posing a "tremendous and present danger" to American security, the director of the Federal, Bureau of Investigation warns in a new book, "Masters of Deceit," published today. When the party was founded in 1919 by a rag-tag group of grotesque revolutionaries on the Bolshevik model, it planted an infection which, though limited to a relative few, could spread dangerously, Hoover says. "Something utterly new has taken root in Editorial Staff PETER ECKSTEIN, Editor JAMES ELSMAN, JR. VERNON NAHRGANG Editorial Director City Editor DONNA HANSON............ Personnel Director CAROL PRINS ...... ....Magazine Editor EDWARD GERULDSEN .. Associate Editorial Director WILLIAM HANEY ................. Features Editor ROSE PERLBERG ................ Activities Editor JAMES BAAD .. ......Sports Editor BRUCE BENNETT ............ Associate Sports Editor JOHN HILLIER ............ Associate Sports Editor DIANE FRASER .........Assoc. Activities Editor THOMAS BLUES .......... Assoc. Personnel Director BRUCE BAILEY ................ Chief Photographer America during the past generation, a com- munistvmentality representing a systematic, purposive and conscious attempt to destroy Western civilization and roll history back to the age of barbaric cruelty and despotism, all in the name of progress," the FBI director writes. "EVIL IS DEPICTED as good, terror as justice, hate as love, obedience to a foreign master as patriotism." The attempt to create a "Communist Man" will fail, Hoover says, "but we cannot afford the luxury of waiting for it to, run its course," because its weapons become more formidable as guards are lowered. Moscow normally tries to separate the party from spy activities, Hoover says, but the party's thousands of members still play an important role in Soviet espionage. "The party is doing much to prepare the way for Soviet espionage and, when the need arises, will unhesitatingly supply vital assistance," Hoover says. The FBI director's book, subtitled "The Story of Communism.in America and How to Fight It," is a painstaking survey of communism in America and its political savagery. The book could serve as a guide to community activities in any free country. "Communism in brief, has bitterly indicted communism," Hoover says. "Communist prac- tice has indicted community theory; com- munist actions have indicted the perverted -use of such lofty words as'peace,' 'justice' and 'liberty'." HOOVER SKETCHES communist tactics, le- gal and illegal; its attempts at infiltration of labor groups and mass organizations, its use of fronts and a communist infighting which "is vicionus a n ttrly mev ofmnr,41 nrin- Frustration . . . To the Editor: WITH reference to Mr. Robert Olson's Letter to the Editor, March 6: I am sure that everyone present at the forum concerning the inte- gration problem in the residence halls is aware of the position which Dean Bacon vigorously maintains. There are those, how- ever, who cannot seem to realize that the- outbursts of emotion and irrationality were not an expres- sion of disrespect toward Dean Bacon, but no're the frustration usually resulting when an intelli- gent woman refuses to answer clear questions which would clear- ly show the University's policy concerning this problem - ques- tions, let it be remembered, which are motivated by a genuine con- cern for ascertaining reasons for practices which emphasize and coddle "the rights and feelings" of certain students at the expense of human dignity. It seems to me that when rational and intelligent people as- semble for the expressed purpose of an interpretation of policies and rules governing an institution, the speaker should certainly be capable of direct answers or justi- fications for contradictions. Fail- ure to even attempt this is disre- spect for the audience and not, as your ruffled vanity would have it, disrespect for the snpekerp recognize or respect the views of others in favor of your own arbi- trary conception of what is "right." May I remind you that the ob- jections of Tuesday night and the efforts of we "fanatics" are not directed toward coercing any im- mature person to "like" or even "tolerate" people with whom they obviously cannot get along. Rath- er, it is to abolish a social evil, that of the sanction and perpetu- ation of a deliberate and malicious exploitation of individuals and groups within a so-called demo- cratic society. As a University in the focus of international attention that openly advocates better human relations and accepts the tuition of a large percentage of minority groups, one would expect that its administration would take pains to concentrate on the best inter- ests of all involved - that is, "practice what it preaches" in its own household as well as assume a more responsible approach to the students it "takes within its fold." One is constantly reminded that attendance at the University of Michigan is not a right but a privilege. The administration has a tendency to ignore, occasionally, some members of the "privileged." I am reminded of Orwell's .obser- vation that "all animals are equal, but some are more equal than others." apply solely to friendships of those of different races or reli- gions nor to those who date inter- racially, but it has meaning to all who are obligated to University regulations. "Instead of taking this as a means of improvement for future relations between students and the administration, many of the 'interested' demonstrated that her criticism was true," is an obscure and illogical sentence. An accusa- tion of emotionality has never been, so far as I know, considered a logical refutation of an argu- ment - nor has it been a valid justification for ambiguous and incoherent statements. May I remind you that the stu- dents are sincerely making sug- gestions so that the University might be what it represents it- self to be. -Barbara Juppe, '57 -Durward Collins, '58 Disrespect . , To the Editor: LOOKING down from a very lofty place, apparently, Mr. Olson finds himself "disgusted" with the emotional outbursts he observed at the. Tuesday night forum on integration. Deploring the unwillingness of the audience to be swayed by the speeches of Dean Bacon and Mr. Hale, he disregards the fact that idealistic young man or woman. Nor, apparently, can he see why repeated references to the sancti- ty of private property should ring with a hollow ache in the minds of the many minority group mem- bers present who had already learned first hand how often hu- man rights take a second place to property rights. All he saw was "disrespect." That this meeting was a sad and painful scene is true. That the sorrowrand the pain deserve nothing more than a verbal repri- mand by the proper Mr. Olson ap- pears a shoddy evasion of reality. --Allen Krebs, Grad. -Carol Slater, Grad. Concerned . . To the Editor: BEING a German student at this University, I was natural- ly concerned by reading that a swastika was found painted on a University building. As you all know, this 'symbol, which has brought the German people into the most desperate situation of its history, stands for brujal force, for illegality, for racial discrim- ination and persecution. The fact that six million Jewish people were killed when the swastika governed, should be enough evi- dence. I do hope that the painters of these signs were not Germans. According to The Daily there seem , ,: 4., k . B,,'si1e *Arff