3idPxgan an 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 "When Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" I' 1 . AT THE STATE: 'Bridge' Deserves Its Seven Oscars W ITH CINEMASCOPE, technicolor- and adjusted admission prices, "The Bridge on the River Kwai" has opened to what should be a very profitable local run in the wake of favorable Academy Award publicity. After all, seven Academy Awards-even though they represent rela- tive judgments over a year of films and film production-do indicate that the picture is something out of the ordinary. In this case, the Oscars serve to illustrate the film's highlights with a rather methodical thoroughness. An Award for Best Screenplay reflects the new way the writers have Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. ATURDAY. MARCH 29, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: DAVID TARR I., ii .LVa.ras r a. +.. r v. . . _ _ . New Composition of SGC Should Warn Sigma Kappa T HAS BEEN over a year since Student Government Council's decision that Sigma Kappa was in violation of the University tegulation that reads "recognition will not be granted any organization which prohibits members in the organization because of race, religion or color." It will be six months until SGC must decide whether Sigma Kappa is at that time acting "in good faith with the spirit of the regulations for recognized organi- zations." During this 18-month period all but two of the members of SGC will have changed -both the elected and ex-officio members alike. Next fall, there is a good chance that SGC will be faced with a national that has done little or nothing to face up to SGC's decision that found the national in bad faith. In the summer Sigma Kappa may make a statement to the effect that they are not in violation of University regulations. But the difficulty in accepting this has already been pointed out-how can SGC consistently accept this statement from Sigma Kappa while re- jecting a similar one in 1956? There are two reasons why the national may decide to do nothing. They may decide that an almost completely changed SGC will be less positive in acting than the 1956-57 one was. Two, they may easily decide that the grace period will work in Sigma Kappa's favor. And these two things must be added to a national that was in the first place extremely reluctant to provide positive explanation or action of any sort concerning the Tufts or Cornell chapters. The conclusion that can easily be drawn from this is that the national may decide at the summer convention that the best action it can take would be one of inaction. THIS WOULD LEAVE SGC holding the same bag that it held in 1956, a bag that presents problems in getting rid of. For with the same information, what can SGC do? It can decide that the national is in violation of University regulations. This means that the local, no matter what else is done, cannot remain a Sigma Kappa chapter. The resultant bitterness --all directed toward SGC-would be consider- able. Or SGC can reverse its previous decision and say that Sigma Kappa national does not violate any University regulation. By reversing itself on such an important question, SGC would make itself an organization for deciding trivial affairs only. What can the Council do now to make sure that the summer convention of the national does not lightly pass by SGC's action? What it would need to do is to direct Sigma Kappa's attention to the fact that it is first up to the national, not SGC, to take positive action in this case. SGC should again reaffirm its 1956 decision and ask for further positive evidence before it can reverse its decision. This action should relieve SGC of a burden the Sigma Kappa national should carry-the primary re- sponsibility for deciding the fate of the Sigma Kappa local. -LANE VANDERSLICE 7a 'p %Maple xu S t eeb _ ty T t s r E 'r a -+=+ f I:;--, ct 4DlitsS -r" wa s}l+r lQ e Ft+sr . WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: r Soviet Trade Expands By DREW PEARSON INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Eased Bankf Credit I. ;I By . LM. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst URING THE 1953-54 recession government economists convinced numbers of people that they had found the key to a stable economy. They thought runaway deflation was a thing of the past. Inflation was still to be dealt with, but run-away deflation, accompanied by wide- spread unemployment, was what always caused the really serious trouble. The key was supposed to have been the ability of the Federal Rerserve System to pump credit through easement of interest on loans to member banks. It was supposed then that a recession had been overcome without resort to various blue- prints for pepping up the economy in other ways. Now there is a suspicion, although time -has been too brief for thorough analysis, that eased bank'credit is not having great effect, certainly not a decisive effect, on the current recession. BANKERS ARE SAYING that the Federal Reserve interest cuts have been too small. But their own figures show reserve funds avail- able for loans are above demand for credit. It also has become obvious that the so-called blueprints held in reserve for other recession- beating action were not very detailed, or else not designed to meet the type of thing which is going on now. The big trouble seems to be that there is no applicable yardstick. Unemployment and decrease in business has reached proportions considerably beyond 1953- 54. But it is happening at a far higher level- with unemployment, prices and business at record levels when compared with only a few years ago. THE SPECTACLE of millions of unemployed facing rising food costs is unusual. Among the first reactions is to extend unemployment benefits. Vast unemployment benefits, however, failed to reverse the business trend during the great depression of the '30s. The economy sat up and took a little nourishment by 1937, but expan- sion was not resumed until the war orders from Europe began to arrive in 1939.L Unemployment benefits had proved a main- tenance dosage, but not a muscle builder. Great sections of business still doubt that this is a serious recession, and few think it is the forerunner of a real depression. Many think that when the automobile business goes back to utility, instead of pointing at style and obsolescence, things will settle down. But Britain has just cut her bank rate, which she raised less than a year ago, and spots are showing up in the booming West German economy. The blueprinters are being'called on for some quick revisions. WITH TEXAS oilmen demand- ing new restrictions on oil im- ports from Latin America and Sen. Ralph Yarborough of Texas introducing legislation to that end, Russia has been quietly open- ing new fields of trade among this country's good neighbors. Here is the score of Soviet bloc penetration in Latin America re- cently. Colombia - Talks are in prog- ress between the USSR and the National Coffee Federation on an exchange of 50,000 tons of Colom- bian coffee for 50,000 tons of Sy- rian wheat. Chile - Sale is being discussed of 500 tons of copper wire to Czechoslovakia and 350 tons to Red China. The wire would be within the 6-mm. limit allowed by the Battle Act. *.* * ARGENTINA - An Argentine mission has just returned from a tour of the Soviet bloc which re- sulted in the purchase of $29,000,- 000 worth of Communist goods. Negotiations are continuing for additional purchases. The pur- chases are being financed with a $40 million credit left over from a trade agreement signed by Peron. Under it, Russia received Argen- tine goods but until now has been unable to supply anything in re- turn that the Argentines wanted. Today, however, the Russians are going to supply equipment for the state-owned Rio Turbio coal mines. Uruguay - A trade agreement was signed in 1956 but has not been ratified by the Uruguayan Congress. With Uruguay sore over the high U.S. tariff on wool tops, Russia is reported offering to send economic aid and technical as- sistance in exchange for wool. Brazil - Moscow is reported of- fering $1 billion in economic aid in exchange for the restoration of diplomatic relations and legaliza- tion of the Communist Party. The Reds reportedly have offered to supply 5,000 Muskovitch cars, plus oil, equipment, and technicians for the Petrobras State Oil Com- pany. The Russians would buy coffee, cocoa, cotton, sugar, hides, and minerals. Note - Soviet progress in Latin, A m e r i c a results from United States neglect, increased Russian prestige following the Sputniks, the fall in raw-material prices, and the unwillingness of the Eisenhower Administration to give economic aid or technical advice to state-owned enterprises in Latin America, especially the gov- ernment oil monopolies of Brazil and Argentina. ** * HOUSEWIVES don't know it, but they are in for either faulty inspection of meat or a slowdown in meat production. This is be- cause the Federal Meat Inspection Service is short 412 meat inspec- tors and can't get the Administra- tion to ask for more money to hire them. What's happened is that the population of the United States has grown by 3,000,000 a year, the cattle population of the United States is up to record levels, but the number of U.S. meat inspec- tors stationed in the slaughter- houses by the Department of Ag- riculture remains about the same. The number of packing plants under inspection has risen by 55 per cent in the past 15 years, but in the same period of time the number of inspectors has been re- duced by six per cent and the number of federal veterinarians by 23 per cent. Last year, Eisenhower asked Congress for additional funds to hire more meat inspectors, but didn't get them. This year he isn't even asking. This is because of the White House rule that all non- defense funds are being held back in favor of armament. Results of the meat inspector shortage: curtailed income for farmers, higher prices for consu- mers, less profits for packers, and sometimes faulty inspection. SPEAKER Sam Rayburn never objects to a good story on himself. Here is one he tells himself: "I was invited out to dinner the other night and found myself sit- ting alongside a handsome young man whose face looked familiar. I couldn't quite pla'ce him, so I asked him, 'Aren't you in the Jus- tice Department?' " 'Yes,' the young man told me, 'I'm the Attorney General.' " Note - Bill Rogers, the new At- torney General, is not new to Washington. He served as counsel for the old Truman Committee, also served for four years in the Justice Department as deputy to Herbert Brownell. However, he has so kept his youthful appear- ance that few people recognize him as a sedate member of the Cabinet. (Copyright 1958 by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) found to restate the old problem ofl British soldiers, prisoners of the Japanese in Ceylon in 1943, is told it must connect Bangkok with Rangoon by constructing a railway bridge across the River Kwai, the battalion commander finds he must resolve the situation to the codes of war. WHILE the commander, Colonel Nicholson (Alec Guinness), takes the rule-book approach, the Amer- ican prisoner Shears (William Holden) places humanity above following oiders. With the two extremes set up, a variety of other soldiers take middle points. Cap- tain Joyce (Geoffrey Horne) is the youth who has to learn to kill; Colonel Saito (Sessue Hayakawa) is the Japanese who follows a dif- ferent rule book, one in which the loss of face is the supreme loss; the medical officer (James Donald) is the neutral who sees only "mad- ness" in War in which he will take no part. The screenplay of "The Bridge" allows a balanced, continuing re- presentation of these views, alter- nating times of tense action with moments of relaxed humor, finally bringing the two sides together in a powerful, head-on climax. An Oscar for Best Cinemato- graphy is earned by a definite realization throughout the film of its Asiatic setting and by the ex- pressiveness with which the ele- ments are brought into play with the mingling of occidental and oriental. AN OSCAR for Best Editing comes by way of one of the more technical aspects of film produc- tion, but one which stands out in relation to the film's overall in- flection of mood. The Award for Best Musical Scoring is particularly appropriate. The theme, an old march tune whistled at times of high morality in the British troops, is squeezed for its last drop of sentimentality, and in this way it comes to repre- sent the great false sense of decor necessary to keep such an artificial thing as an army in line. A fifth Oscar weit to Alec Gum- ness for Best Actor; it was cer- tainly a deserved Oscar in light of Guinness' long association with movies and with "The Bridge on the River Kwai." As Col. Nichol- son, Guinness must balance humor with seriousness at all times, for his role tends to excite laughter in moments that are far from funny. * * * GUINNESS' face, throughout the film, stays a meaningful showplace for reaction and expression as its owner must continually adjust personal hardship to the rule book and human considerations to the threat of personal sentiment. William Holden, who also has an Oscar for the portrayal of a prisoner of war in "Stalag 17" of a few years ago, has a less diffi- cult role this time, but one which he fills with care. Hawkins, Horne and Donald are interesting faces to watch and minds to follow, while Hayakawa's supporting role evidences much feeling. The sixth Oscar for "The Bridge" is that for Best Direction on the part of. David Lean, who seems to make the very most of his screenplay and cast, coming up with a sentimental but stirring film. * * * FINALLY, the Academy Award for Best Picture of the year-and what more can a film ask?-"The Bridge" has combined many ex- cellences, but chief among them is the approach of the film to its subject. In spite of a few tortuous moments, "The Bridge" is sheer Romanticism. While no conclusion is really reached on which is the best way to fight a War, either by humanity or the rule book, the implication is that the former just cannot be ignored, and that sooner or later the rule book approach must come around. For the ultimate, final decision between the written codes and sentimental humanity is indeci- sion-and mere oblivion. At "The Bridge on the River Kwai," when all is over, war is just "madness" and the folly of man. -Vernon Nahrgang ETERS to the EDITOR Trivia? . To the Editor: LAST Saturday over 300 people took in a stimulating U. of-M. OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official -publication of the Univer- sity 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 publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. SATURDAY, MARCH 29, 1958 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 130 General Notices Square Dance: at Barbour Gym, Sat., March 29, 8:30 p.m. Refreshments and folk-singing. Admission free. Everyone welcome. Sponsored by the Inter-Co- operative Council. Faculty, College of Literature, Science and the Arts: Midsemester reports are due Wed., April 2, for thse students whose standing at midsemester is "" or "E'. Report cards have been distributed to all departmental offices. Green cards are provided for reporting freshmen and sophomores and white cards for juniors and seniors. The reports for freshmen and sophomores should be sent to the Freshman-Sophomore Coun- selors Office, 1210 Angell Hall; those for juniors and seniors to the Junior- Senior Counselors Office. 1213 Angell Hall. Students not registered in this College but who elected L.S.&A. courses should be reported to the school or col- lege In which they are registered. Addi- tional cards may be obtained in 1210 Angell Hall or 1213 Angell Hall. "Atoms for Peace" Exhibition: The Exhibit Museum: Schedule of Open Hours: Daily - 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.; Sundays -2:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.; Even- ing hours as follows: Sat., March 29, Students' night, 7-10; Thurs., April 3, University Faculty night, 7-10; Sat., April 5, University Employees' night. 7-10. Lectures Gallery Program: The Book Fair for Children and Young People. East Gal- lery, Mezzanine Floor, Rackham Bldg. Sat., March 29, Films: "Red Carpet, "Mike Mulligan," Audubon and "The Birds of America." showings: 10:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Parents invited to bring their children. The Roger Williams Fellowship; show- ing of the film: "I Beheld His Glory." Sun., March 30, 7:00 p.m. First Baptist Church. University Lecture: R. J. H. Bever. ton, author, Lowestoft, England. "Fish populations and Fishery Regulation." Mon., March 31, 10:30 a.m., 1139 Nat. St, Bldg. Concerts' Student Recital: William Doppman, who Is a pupil of Benning Dexter, will present a piano recital on Mon., March 31, at 8:30 p.m., in Aud. A, AngellHall. The program will include a Sonata by Schubert and an Aria by Bach, with thirty vaiations. Mr. Doppman's re- cital is presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degreerof Master of Music. Open to the general public. Academic Notices Department of Aeronautical Engineer- ing Seminar: "Preliminary Design of Nose Cones on Missiles," by Dr. Maurice A. Bruit, Assoc. Prof. of Applied Me- chanics, Univ. of Pennsylvania, Mon., March 31, 4:00 p.m., Rm. 1042 E. Engrg, Bldg. Registration for the second series of Reading Improvement Classes will be held from 8:00 to 5:00 on Tues. and Wed., April 1 and 2 in Rm. 524 Univ. Elem. School. Tues. registration is for those students who have already re- served a place. All other students should register on Wed., April 2. Allow , hour for registration. Call ext. 648 for further information. Anatomy Seminar: Dr. G. R. L. Gaughan, on "The Lateral Pharyngeal Space." and Dr. M. J. C. Showers on "Somatic and visceral Responses from the Cingulate Gyrus." Mon., March 31, Room 2501 E. Med. Bldg. Coffee will be served one-half hour before each sem- inar in Room 3502 E. Med. Bldg. Dr. George Stoddard, Dean, School of Education, New York University, will meet with the Interdepartmental Seminar on College Teaching on Mon., March 31, 4:00 p.m., Aud. C, Angell Hall. This Is the final lecture in a series; the subject will be "The Issues That Divide Us." Meetings are open to teaching fellows and faculty. Doctoral Examination for James Frederic Watson, Metallurgical Engi- neering; thesis: "A Study of Gas De- sorption of Nickel Powders," Mon., March 31, 3201 E. Engrg. Bldg., at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, M. J. Sinnott. Placement Notices The following schools have listed teaching vacancies with the Bureau of Appointments for the 1958-59 school year. They will not be here to inter- view at this time. Newaggo, Mich.--High School English, New Hyde Park, N.Y.-Business Edu- cation/Distributive Education; Indus- trial Arts/Driver Training; Guidance (Woman); Chemistry; Art/Mechanical Drawing. North Tonawanda, N.Y. - mementary Diriector of Pupil Personnel Services; 11-- Man vs. War. When a battalion of DAILY ,F WHAT OTHERS ARE SAYING: Entrance Requirements BEFORE LEGISLATURE: (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following appeared in "The New York Times." It was written by. "The Times' "Benjamin Fine, recently departed educa- tion editor. AMERICAN colleges and universities are be- ing urged to re-examine their entrance re- quirements in order to improve the quality of higher education. 'The 1958 "Report of the Commission on Liberal Education of the Association of Amer- ican Colleges" recommends that the colleges demand more of their entering freshmen than ever before. The commission was headed by President Richard D. Weigle of St. John's College (An- napolis). The members were college presidents representing every section of the United States. S "Whatwe need today," said Dr. Weigle, "is more quality in our education and not great- er numbers of inadequately educated students." 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 HILLYER .........Associate Sports Editor DIANE FRASER .............. Assoc. Activities Editor THOMAS BLUES...........Assoc. Personnel Director BRUCE BAILEY........Chief Photographer f IF EDUCATIONAL standards in the country are no longer as demanding as they should be, the commission asserts, the colleges them- selves must bear a share of the blame. Relaxa- tion of requirements in the two great areas of mathematics and languages has been a mis- take, the report says. The commission recommends that each member college re-examine its entrance re- quirements, its course standards and its degree requirements so that the quality of education can be improved. A general stiffening of stand- ards of admission, it holds, will be in the inter- ests of all - the student, the school, the col- lege and the nation. The report proposes that the colleges adopt these minimum entrance requirements: four years of English with emphasis on grammar and composition; two years of a foreign lan- guage, two years of mathematics and one year of a laboratory science at the junior or senior year level. HOWEVER, this would be a temporary pro- gram. The commission recommends that the entrance requirements be raised as rapid- ly as possible to this level: four years of Eng- lish, four years of one foreign language or two years each of two, four years of laboratory sciences. In addition, each student would be grounded in history and geography. "It is the conviction of the commission on liberal education," the report says, "that minds rigorously disciplined, broadly stretched, an- alytically sharpened, imaginatively challenged, and Judiciously matured provide the only real hope in a nuclear and planetary age. T'ax Proposal May Aid 'U' Budget (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is the first of two articles discussing the state's financial situation and its relationship to the University.) By MICHAEL KRAFT Daily Staff Writer MORE MONEY for the Univer- sity may possibly be wrapped in a bill placed on the House floor yesterday amidst some indications of changing legislative attitude. It is Gov. G. Mennen Williams' plan to nearly double the tax on intangibles, including stocks and bonds, thus adding between 191/2 to 211%2 million dollars to the state's undernourished treasury. When the plan was first pro- posed, Republican legislators re- acted violently against the gov- ernor's method of overcoming the state deficit. "We feel economy should be practiced on a year- round basis, not resorted to as a political expedient, Speaker of the House George M. Van Peursem (R-Zeeland) declared in January. * *I * RECENTLY, however, legisla- tors voted approval of Rep. Rollo Conlin's (R-Tipton) plan to man- age this year's deficit through di- recting the state liquor commis- sion to pay its bills on a 90-day basis, instead of the former 30-day tax increase proposal. But yester- day, even after hearing condem- nations from bankers who oppose it, the House Taxation Commit- tee spirited the bill to the House floor. The bill would have automati- cally died if the House had not resorted to its almost annual practice of suspending the dead- line for reporting bills out of com- mittee. Now, Speaker Van Peursem says "We want to have this bill to lean on if we need it. It's the only tax proposal in the Legislature this year and we don't want to put ourselves in the position of hav- ing no tax ,plan to pass if we find that state revenues aren't enough to pay for the state budget we adopt." Earlier this year, legislators were saying that the state budget should be adapted to fit the reve- nue. Sen. Elmer Porter (R-Bliss- field), chairman of the key Sen- ate Appropriations Committee em- phasized that the state should live within its means. Rep. Harry Phil- ips (R-Port Huron) said the gov- ernment must "cut the cloth to meet the situation." * r* *t OTHER legislators .joined them increases claim it would act as a deterrent to thrift by bank depos- iters and discourage new industry from locating in the state. "If banks do not absorb the tax, the passage of this act would cause millions of dollars of bank deposits to leave the state per- manently," warned Charles Hew- itt of the Michigan Bankers Asso- ciation. The present tax on bank depos-. Its is 40 cents per $1,000. This is now paid by the banks who balk at paying Gov. Williams' pro- posed rate of one dollar per $1,000. His legal advisor, Alfred B. Fitt contends that net earnings of state banks in 1957 were more than two million dollars higher than any previous year, and a rec- ord would have been set even if the proposed tax level had been in effect. DIVIDENDS are now taxed at the rate of three and one half per cent. Gov. Williams proposes to raise it to five per cent, but this would apply only if a person re- ceives at least $575 from these in- vestments. However, points out Prof. Brazer, only $30 would be paid on the first $1,000 because of exemptions. ; i. 5