GN trdtgatt Daily Sixty-Eighth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN "When Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily ex press the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This mus t be noted in all reprints. ESDAY, APRIL 22, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: DAVID TARR U.S. Should Aid Democratic Strugglers "Lewis Strauss Says That To Stop Nuclear Tests Would Be A Tragic Mistake" -j TO O- - tn~r +"VIP' ry w ..; r l~ ~ 7V41 AT THE CAMPUS: A Look into the Past J N THE DAYS before Cinemascope, before Technicolor and before sound, the film industry was an active, growing business that took advantage of every opportunity, felt the good breaks with the bad and had the perspective to turn around and see the humor in its own day-to-day work. "The Golden Age of Comedy" is a brief look at the movies of the silent twenties and, more particularly, at a few of the best-known personalities of the silent celluloid generation. If anything, "The Golden Age of Comedy" is too brief. Only Laurel "A SOMEHOW the United States manages to miss almost every opportunity to increase the number of its foreign friends. Following last year's shameful standoffish- ness toward Hungary, the country had no right to expect any further outburst of anything re- sembling pro-Americanism, but the Sumatran rebels in' Indonesia offered another opportu- nity to assist in replacing a neutralist, Commu- nist-supported government with an anti- Communist (and therefore more disposed to the West) regime. The rebels, of course, figured to lose, and they have because the United States did ab- solutely nothing. It would have been easy to in- sist on a partition of the utterly unhomogene- ous set of islands lumped together as "Indo- nesia." It would have been easy to tie up the government's gold supply in foreign countries, at least until some stability appeared in the country. But above all, it would have been easy to call the rebels and the government to a conference, with the United States offering its good offices to work out a peaceful settlement -- in the tra- dition of Theodore Roosevelt. However, all such opportunities are now gone, probably forever, as the Jakarta forces near the last rebel stronghold. In their place, the West is once again faced with the unstable Sukarno regime, propped up by the Indonesian Communists and so patently unable to solve its own internal problems that it must drive out the Dutch inhabitants as a diversionary tactic of-the lowest order. PRAWIRANEGARA and the other rebels had one virtue lacking in Sukarno: they were not anti-Western, proclaiming the same tired imperialist-colonialist cliches. Sukarno has consistently demonstrated, since his country's founding in 1947, his neutralist, Communist- leaning tendencies. Prawiranegara proclaimed his willingness to side with the West against Communism. A friend of his caliber in Indo- nesia might have gone far to strengthen the West in Asia, counterbalancing the loss of northern Indo-China and the ousting of the pro-Western Kotelawala in Ceylon. Instead, the United States again sat back and watched Sukarno win out and the Com- munists establish firmer relations with the government. There is a developing possibility of a Communist coup in Indonesia when Su- karno outlives his usefulness; such a coup could have been disposed of in advance by a rebel victory. The United States cannot afford to pass up these opportunities to aid friends in foreign countries. The country does not have enough of them, and they decrease every time Wash- ington fails to provide the support it should, as in Indonesia. Continued lack of action will eventually make it clear to even the staunch- est ally that United States help will never be forthcoming. In consequence, attempts to es- tablish pro-Western governments will cease. When that happens, the United States will be in trouble. -JOHN WEICHER WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: A itr st Forces at ork By DREW PEARSON 'The Hidden Persuaders' PRODUCING a greater impact upon the American public than any psychological study since "Compulsion," the best-selling "The Hiden Persuaders," bitterly attacks the adver- tiseys, politicians and consumers of today. Producing not the slightest impact upon the advertisers assembled at the 1958 Advertising Conference held at the University last Thurs- day was Vance Packard, author of "The Hid- den Persuaders." However, when he later addressed listeners at the Journalism Lecture series that same day, Packard picked up the tone of his book, coming through with some heavy criticism of the whole advertising "plot" and the consumers who are "hooked" by it. To this latter audience, Packard detailed carefully the similarities between the Utopia of Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World," and the United States of America's "self-indulging, over-commercialized life." He used, as the basis of his analogy, the planned psychological obsolescence and image- ry, irretrievably thrust daily at the public through advertising. Claiming that advertisers now concentrate on making the public style- conscious, and then switching styles, Packard said that making colored refrigerators and lengthening and slimming car chases each year, are advertising tools which promote discontent with the old and eventual purchase of the new. In "Brave New World," too, everything had to be thrown away. As we were amazed at the people portrayed in "Brave New World," and their susceptibility to the brain-washing which their leaders gave to them, so too Packard told of his amazement at this trait in us. N OT ONLY are images created in our mind of the products we buy, but also of the people we elect to office. He explained that ac- tually in the presidential election, the con- test centers upon which party can create the - better image, the one most appealing to the American people. In his questioning of the morality of this planned obsolescence and imagery, Packard's points were well-made. Truth was kept to a maximum, exaggeration to a minimum. His examples hit home. They influenced us to his way of thinking or at least to a consideration of such. What we do not and cannot understand was why he did not hit the members of the Adver- tising Conference with these examples in his speech to them. He had information for his side of the picture at his finger tips, the advertisers at his feet. And yet, he coddled them. He didn't speak on the "morality" of their actions as he did at his later talk. Rather, he spoke on the "Whys of Our Behavior," to men who make it their business to know these whys. He touched upon their wrongs, but in such a way that it seemed rather like a mother ad- monishing her child for stealing one cookie, when in reality he took the whole box. This makes one wonder, and with this won- derment comes doubt, that Packard's analysis is all that it has been proposed to be. He hasn't sold us, not completely. In his campaign, he seemed to lack the courage of his convictions. -JUDY DONER W ASHINGTON - It isn't sup- posed to be known, but the heat is on the Justice Department for another big compromise in an antitrust case. It involves the price of gas to millions of people. Secret huddles have been taking place in the Justice Department to stop a grand jury, now meeting in Mil- waukee, which is considering criminal indictments against the big three which supply gas to Il- linois, Indiana, Wisconsin, Michi- gan and Minnesota. Four of the biggest law firms in the country represent the gas companies: Sullivan and Crom- well, the former firm of John Fos- ter Dulles; the Tom Dewey law firm in New York; Sidley, Austin, Burgess and Smith of Chicago; and Cravath, Swaine and Moore of New York. TWICE BEFORE, this case came up for prosecution, and twice it was suddenly called off. On one occasion, the Justice De- partment's Anti-trust Division even had a press release prepared and was ready to file a bill of complaint on July 8, 1957, in the U.S. District Court in Milwaukee. The case is against the Ameri- can Natural Gas Co., Peoples Gas, Light and Coke, represented by the Dewey law firm, and Northern Natural Gas, all under investiga- tion for conspiring to prevent Tennessee Gas Transmission from supplying gas to the north cen- tral states from a pipeline linking Canada with Texas. John Merriam, president of Northern Natural Gas and broth- er of Eisenhower's assistant direc- tor of the budget, who, ran for mayor of Chicago, had an ap- pointment with AssistantaAttor- ney General Victor Hansen yes- terday (April 21) to try to call off the dogs. Prediction: This time new At- torney General Rogers will not yield to big utility pressure. Inside story can now be told how President Eisenhower got on the telephone to congressional leaders in a last-minute attempt to block the highway bill before it was sent to the Whit, House for his reluctant signature. * * * BEFORE THE final House vote, Ike phoned Illinois Congressman Les Arends, the Republican whip, and urged him to send the bill back to the Public Works Commit- tee for further study. The President explained that he wanted better highways, but objected to financing them out of current cash. He thought a high- way fund should be raised first by taxing tires and gasoline. He also didn't like the Democrats' plan to require the states to pay only one- third of the highway cost. He pre- ferred a fifty-fifty arrangement. Arends promised to sidetrack the bill, if possible, and hastily put through a long-distance call to Congressman Harry McGregor, top Republican on the Public Works Committee, who had gone home to West Lafayette, Ohio, ahead of the Easter vacation. Arends asked McGregor to come back to Washington to help ma- neuver the highway bill back into committee. Back in Washington, McGregor also received a phone call from Ike. First, Assistant President Sherman Adams phoned and asked McGregor to remain in his office for 30 minutes to await a call from the President. When Ike got on the phone, he repeated the same arguments that he had given to Arends against the Democrats' highway bill. McGregor, who has been a battler for better highways, gave in to the President's personal plea and tried to sidetrack the bill. In the end, however, the Democrats pushed through their bill and the President reluctantly signed it. VICE-PRESIDENT Nixon's pri- vate comments about American foreign policy are almost as criti- cal as the Democrats' public com- ments. Nixon admits America has slipped in world leadership, blames it upon Secretary of State Dulles. Nixon complains that Dul- les lacks imagination, is unwilling to take bold diplomatic gambles. The Vice-President claims Dul- les may be more willing to meet Russia halfway now that Harold Stassen is no longer disarmament negotiator. Dulles disliked Stassen so intensely, Nixon says, that the Secretary opposed Stassen's ideas for purely personal reasons. (Copyright 1958 by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) and Hardy, who take up about half treated with the care and selec- tivity necessary to an accurate impression of their talents and history. Yet Laurel and Hardy are the very people whose reputations and old films are. already best known to this generation through television. Meanwhile, other comedy "greats" of the time, Will Rogers, Ben Turpin and Harry Langdon, are treated much too quickly and with so few scenes that one can only catch a single, sentimental impression of each of them. a * * CAROLE LOMBARD and Jean Harlow are thrown into the collec- tion, too. But their presence-for while they started briefly in com- edy, their major achievements in later movie years were in more serious films-their presence in a few very short scenes serves only to add a little femininity to the twenties. Reservations aside, "The Golden Age of Comedy" is a long series of laughs as well as an interesting historical approach to the film. Laurel and Hardy enjoy some of their best, as well as first moments on film, which can be very funny most of the time, Will Rogers is most memorable in his parodies on the honest, local-yokel politician, the Douglas Fairbanks-type adventurer and the Tom Mix cowboy who never, even when chased by outlaws, ex- ercises a conventional means of getting on his horse. THE KEYSTONE COPS are there, too, with the usual tricky maneuvering in automobiles. Harry Langdon and Ben Turpin add to the laughter which by this time has reached giant proportions. In spite of its briefness and the ill quality of its unimaginative nar- ration, "The Golden Age of Com- edy" has something to teach in showing how a recent generation laughed and what it laughed at. Accompanying the feature is a W. C. Fields Festival, a collection of three Fields shorts of the 1930's that goes much further than "The Golden Age" in capturing the tone of comedy for one time and one actor. As Mr. O'Hare the barber, Mr. Dilweg the druggist, and Mr. Snavely the northwoodsman, Fields produces a kind of humor that encompasses subtlety with nai- vete and occasional near-farce, He helps to make the evening a very hilarious one indeed. -Vernon Nahrgang LETTERS to the EDITOR History ... To the Editor: I AM SURE neither a Michigan alumna, the NAACP nor The Daily wishes unclear phrasing or hurried "re-writes" to give erron- eous impressions about University housing in the 30's. Victory Vaughan, adjacent to the University's one-track, one- engine private spur is the only "separate dormitory down by the railroad tracks" Michigan ever owned. This was not built in Mrs. Bissell's time. Neither was the Food Service Building; although part of that block was already Uni- versity property and its houses leased to private persons. One of these homes was a League House holding Negro women students. Today's students cannot imagine the University without its tremen- dous housing plant. In 1930, how- ever, there existed: Helen New- berry (1915); Martha Cook (1916); Adelia Cheever and Betsy Barbour (1920); Alumnae House, second University-owned co-operative (1922); Couzens, for nurses only (1925). There was no University housing for men. Mrs. Bissell, then Hillary Rear- don, transferred to Ann Arbor in 1931. That year Mosher-Jordan opened, first residence on "the Hill." According to her registra- tion card, Mrs. Bissell's first Mich- igan residence was in that "new dorm." Another Negro woman- student in Mosher-Jordan that year was a Miss Roxborough, niece of the wise manager of Joe Louis in the great days. Subsequent addresses where Miss Reardon lived as a student in- cluded a women's boarding-house where East Quadrangle now stands. Remembering my own job ri,,,. v ,. er. nr c inn finnr ri, i of this collection of aged films, are DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is as. 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. TUESDAY, APRIL 22 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 140 General Notices yhe University of Michigan Marching Band will march in the Michigras pa- rade. Band members are asked to report to Rm. 108 in Harris Hall before wed., Apr. 23, to register and receive instruc- tions and information relative to this performance. The following persons have been se- lected as ushers for the May Festival, and may pick up their usher tickets at the Box Office of Hill Auditorium fror 5:00 to 6:00 p.m. on Tues. and wed., Ap- ril 22 and 23: Rosamond Bairas, Ruth Cobb, Glynn Davies, stanley 0. Day, Marsha-Jo Demarest, Martha Ellen Fire- baugh, Marcia G. Flucke, Carolyn Grow, Nancy Greenhoe, Nancy Gardner, Don- ald W. Honkala, Don Huldin, Lois Hul- din, Carole Herndon, Erna Kochendorf- er, Alice Kinietz, Robert D. Leyrer, Gene Mrowka, Margaret MbCarthy, Dennis Murray, Paul A. Moore, David L. Mills, Antoine Meyer, Barbara Nicula, Joyce Paquin, Judith Pike, Caroline Poertner, Sue Shanklin, Charlotte Schwimmer, Cary A. Sheilds, Shirley Shaw, Keneth. Shaw, Barbara Shade, Gary Sampson, Judith Savage, Esther Tennenhouse, Terry A. Wood, Wesley Wilson, Thomas Welton, Mary Sue Willey, Geson R. Yee, Eugene Zaitzeff. The next "Polio Shot" Clinic for stu- dents will be held Thurs., April 24, only from 8:00 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. and 1:00 p.m ot 4:45 p.m., in the Health Service. All stduents whose 2nd or 3rd shots are due around this time are urged to take advantage of this special clinic. Stu- dents are reminded that It is not ne- cessary to obtain their regular clinie cards. Proceed to Room 58 in the base- ment where forms are available and cashier'shrepresentatives are present. The fee for injection is $1.00. Lectures Lecture: "The Changing Image of Catholicism in the United States." Rob- ert D. Cross, Prof. of History at Swarth- more. Tues., Apr. 22, 4:15 p.m., Angell Hall Aud. B. Astronomical Colloquium. Tues., April 22, 4:15 p.m., the Observatory. Dr. Wil- lem v. R. Malkus of Woods Hole Ocean- ographic Institute will speak on "Prob lems in Convection and Stability." Archaeology Lecture: "The Phrygian Royal Tomb of Gordion " Rodney S. Young, University of Pennsylvania and University Museum. Tues., April 22, 4:15 p.m. Aud. C, Angell Hall. Prof. 0. A. Saunders of the Tmperia College of Science and Technology, Lon. don, England, will lecture on "Some Recent Developments in Heat Trans- fer," in Aud. D, Angell Hall, Wed., Ap- ril 23 at 3:00 p.m. Sigma Xi Lecture: "Michigan Mush- rooms." Alexander H. Smith, Proffessor of Botany Wed.; April 23, 8:00 p.m., Rackham Amphitheater. Public Invited. Refreshments served. Concerts, Student Recital Postponed: The re- cital by George Papich, violist, origin- ally announced for April 22, has been postponed until Tues., April 29. Student Recital: Douglas Lee, pianist, will present a recital in partial fulfill- ment of the requirements for the de- gree of Master of Music at 8:30 p.m., Wed., April 23 in Rackham Assembly Hall. Mr. Lee, who is a student of Jo- seph Brinkman will perform composi- tions by Beethoven, Schumann, Bach, Ravel and Prokofieff. Open to the gen- eral public. Academic Notices The Third Session of the Seminar for New Teachers of the College of Engi- neering will be held at 7:30 p.m., wed., April 23, in Rm 1042 E.E. The meeting will deal with student-teacher rela- tionships and those appearing will be Harry Benford, who will lead the dis- cussion, with assistance from Robert Hoisington, David Ragone and Wilfred Kaplan. Doctoral Examination for Modesto Iriarte-Beauchamp, Nuclear Engineer- ing; thesis: "Dynamic Behavior of Boil- ing Water Reactors," Wed., April 23, Phoenix Memorial Laboratory, at 3:30 p.m. Chairman, H. J. Gomberg. Foreign Visitors Following are the foreign visitors who will be on the campus this week on the dates indicated. Program arrangements are being made by the Internataional Center: Mrs. Clifford R. Miller. U Myo Min, Secretary, Prime Minis- ter's Office, Head of Dept. of English, University of Rangoon, Burma, April 21-23; U Ba Myint, Dean of Faculty of Education, Uuiiversity of Rangoon, Bur- ma, April 21-23; Minoru Nakatani, Pro- fessor of Economics, Kyoto, Japan, Ap- ril 22-30; and Walther Baier, Chair- man of the organization serving all stu- dents at Munich institutions of higher learning, Member of the Fulbright se- lection committee for Land Bavaria, Germany, April 26-28. A 4 A .j A { J' .. 'y_ INTERPRETING THE NEWS: The Fate of Obsolescence THE CULTURE BIT: The Problem of Book Banning By DAVID NEWMAN By J. M. ROBERTS Assoclated Press News Analyst THE DEATH of Gen. Maurice Gustav Game- lin in France serves as a reminder of the dangers of resting the fates of nations in the hands of men who don't keep up with the times. A brilliant staff officer before World War I, Gamelin suffered much the same fate as Gen. Charles de Gaulle before World War II Gamelin made so much noise about his theory that Germany would attack France through Belgium that he was shifted to get him out from under the feet of the higher com- manders. When Germany did strike, he was brought back and made himself a hero by drawing the plans for the defense of the Marne, Editor i Staff PETER ECKSTEIN, Editor JAMES ELSMAN, JR,.- VERNON NAHRGANGQ Editorial Director City Editor DONNA HANSON ................Personnel Director CAROL PRINS....................Magazine Editor EDWARD GLRULDSEN .. Associate Editorial Director WILLIAM HANEY.....................Features Editor ROSE PERLBERG.....................Activities Editor JAMES BAAD ,...........#.............Sports Editor BRUCE BENNETT ............ Associate Sports Editor JOHN HIL YER .... .......Associate Sports Editor DIANE FRASER............. Assoc. Activities Editor THOMAS BLUES........... Assoc Personnel Director BRUCE BAILEY ................ Chief Photographer where "Papa" Joffre's taxicab army saved Paris. When World War II came, Gamelin was France's commander in chief, and then over-all allied commander. Charles de Gaulle was a young general who had made too much noise about mobile warfare. GAMELIN sat behind the Maginot Line, be- hind what he had helped lead the world to believe was the world's greatest army, after Hitler's mobile armies ripped through Poland. The months of the "phony war" passed. Gamelin referred only obliquely thereafter to what happened - the involvement of poli- tics in his failure to see what was going to happen again. If his old perspective continued, he made no crusade for it. Years before Marshall Petain had opposed extension of the Maginot Line along the Belgian border. Leon Blum had been more interested in the socialization of France. The German panzers repeated the exploits of Poland. They struck south from Belgium, be- hind the Maginot guns which could aim only at Germany, and the "world's greatest army" looked little better than had the scattered Po- lish cavalry. GAMELIN HAD NOT learned about mobile warfare, had kept his peace with the poli- ticians but lost his job and the peace of his old age while many a Frenchman considered hirh almost a traitor. De Gaulle went on to help in the rescue of France and became her first postwar premier, THE PROBLEM of book banning makes headlines with increas- ing regularity these days. The recent "Ten North Frederick" case in fair Detroit seems to bear out that the current literary problem is not Why Johnny Can't Read, but What Johnny Can't Read. If Johnny is a college student, nurtured on ideas of free thought and liberal education, such restric- tions give him considerable cause for worry. The gentleman who knows more about this particular social blight than anyone else on campus is one Gordon Mumma of the Institute of Social Research. Mumma became interested in the problem of banned books while employed in a campus book store. "I was embarrassed one day," he told us. "Someone came in and asked if I would order a book by Henry Miller, and I did. I had no idea it was banned. In fact, I had no idea any books were banned-I thought Freedom of the Press ap- plied to books. My fellow em- ployees yakked when they heard about it and I determined never to be caught again." * * * - AS A RESULT, Mumma has done considerable research in banning, and the results are illuminating. illegal. Pirated, unauthorized edi- tions ran rampant in the States, and it wasn't until Random House took the case to the Supreme Court that Ulysses was declared legal. Books, Mumma told us, are ban- ned by the U.S. Post Office or by state laws or, as in the Detroit case, by local police forces. Under the Michigan code, any book which is "lewd, obscene, or lascivious" is given the old heave-ho. The bookseller who errs is liable to imprisonment, as well as the pub- lisher, the author, and, in a few cases, the poor buyer. S* * * "PRESSURE GROUPS cannot ban books," says Mumma. "A league of private citizens has no authorization to do so, but they can exert pressure and register complaints." Similarly, religious bans are not legally binding. The Catholic Church's Index, however, can be very important to a Catho- lic bookseller, or a bookseller in a Catholic neighborhood. "There are two prime reasons for Federal bans," Mumma said. "They are alleged obscenity and alleged political subversion. Al- leged, that is. There is no 'quali- fied' person, in the literary sense, °uli mara +. ria cim e rr-n "Complete editions of De Sade are rare," commented Mumma. "Most of it is even banned in France. The countries with the least literary censorship are Swe- den, Japan, Austria, and France. The countries which have the highest percent of book readers have the lowest amount of literary censorship. Whether one is opera- tive on the other," he said, "hasn't been determined." Those of us with eyes can plainly see that trash is still openly sold. "Many places, especially in the bigger cities, pay protection money to semi-corrupt police depart- ments," Mumma figures. * * * HE CITED, with some annoy- ance, the current case of Nabo- kov's Lolita which is partially ban- ned. "Published in Paris, it is limited by the Post Office to 1200 imported copies a year. How- ever, they are now enforcing a boycott against the publishers, confiscating any orders to them through the mails. The custom's decision on this book is note- worthy. It said: Although Lolita contains no four-letter words, it contains four-letter ideas and is therefore restricted." Mumma has definite ideas on i