L714rMlrhtan Dall 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 "A Thousand Apologies, Gentlemen, He's A New Man" "When Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" r'7 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. < S $ tiA~ )AY, FEBRUARY 14, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: RICHARD TAUB f. j FL~' 061 w\top;Mi- AT THE STATE: Teen Problems Probed With Axe and Sabre WO OF THE MANY problems which plague teen-agers in this age of gree and hypocrisy are sensitively and brutally explored in a socially-oriented double feature currently being screened at one of the local headache mills. "Eighteen and Anxious" is a shocking story of teen-age lust, parental weakness, bad music, fast cars and slow women. The charac- ters are all genuine. They live, they breathe, the step right out of the chapters on stereotypes in psychology books. Here we have a sensitive and misunderstood girl. Her mother is weak. Her step-father is stingy. No feelings. Looking up from it pile While They're Talking, They're Not Shooting HYPNOSIS can effect many "miraculous cures." It can be lower temperatures, it can calm, and it can kill pain. Yet the medical profession does not consider hypnosis to be a panacea. Although hypnosis is effective against the symptoms, it does not attack the underlying disease. In medical use hypnosis is, in effect, an opiate. Indiscriminate use of. this opiate is dangerous, because it tends to produce a false sense of security which may discourage de- termined effort to discover a cure for the basic problem. Disarmament is a hypnotic idea, but disarm- ament is not an end in itself. The arms race between the United States and Russia is un- comfortable and dangerous, but arms races do not cause wars. Wars are caused by govern- ments which feel that war is the most effective way of solving their problems. To prevent war, the problems of governments must be solved. Just as hypnosis can reduce the fever of the patient, but still let the patient die, disarma- ment can reduce the heat of 'the arms race, but there will never be any secure world peace until the basic problems between Russia and the West are resolved. After the first world war there was, as there is now, great popular sentiment for disarma- ment. The governments of the world were skeptical and prqceeded cautiously, but honest attempts at disarmament were made, particu- larly by England, Japan and the United States. From these unsuccessful attempts we learned that three basic principles apparently govern disarmament negotiations. No nation will re- duce its strength absolutely unless it maintains or increases- its strength relatively. No nation will relinquish its right to increase its military efficiency by research and development. And, no nation will abide by disarmament agree- ments if it feels that it is in its best interests not to do so. I'H E FIRST of these principles is equally applicable today. Both Washington and Moscow have made it clear that they will not agree to any disarmament plan which gives any military advantage to the other. The principle that no nation will relinquish its right to military research and development is even more pertinent now than it was in the twenties and thirties. Compared with post- second world war standards, research in those days was slow and relatively insignificant-at least over a relatively short period of time. Now any nation with better blueprints than another has a distinct military advantage. Therefore the'cold war can progress just as heatedly in the laboratory as in the factory. If it is generally true that no nation will abide by disarmament agreements if it is not in its best interest to do so, Russia, with her long history of broken agreements, certainlyj is not likely to be the exception. Perhaps the major "justification" of disarma- ment talks is the theory that "while they're talking, at least they're not shooting." If this theory were true, it would, of itself, justify dis- armament talks. But the stratagem ,of the Japanese in sending a special envoy to Wash- ington immediately before attacking Pearl Harbor conclusively proves that this theory is not true. Pearl Harbors are caused by practical di- plomacy being replaced by dreaming. Equally important, concentration on this type of pan- acea precludes determined work on the basic problems with split Russia and the West. To secure a peace, the political problems must be settled, not merely the superficialities. -JAMES SEDER A Psalm To Our Lawmakers OH LEGISLATURE, great savior of our souls, we cry in agony to thee -- save us! We are wayward men on a globe of hell. By thy laws may we purge the burden of our sin. Compel our youth to mouth 10 Bible verses every day. Leave the indelible truth of the Lord's Prayer, the Ten Commandments on our lips. By the sixth grade may we be made holy. May we recite the Lord's truth. Let no Constitution block the way of the orthodoxy when we seek to make out youth good. Maketh man - every man - to confront his Maker in the quiet of the classroom. Lead state monies to the task of purification. Toler- ate not dissent from the Law, not from Protes- tants, Catholics, Jews, others or pagan men. Alienate from us those who choose the, path of hell. Let the state dictate the curricula for the orthodoxy and the state, by right, should be one, Let us be saved by the wisdom of our congressmen. Oh IsrAel, Oh Christ! --J.E. _.>: . ot9Yg 4 ArS-1Nntvo.I P ST . ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE: 'Mia Mine' Competent, Entertaining WHAT OTHERS ARE SAYING: Jacob's Report Excerpts A WELL-WRITTEN Hopwood . play seems to be a rare phe- nomenon these days; one that is suitable for production as well must then be still more unusual. Therefore, it is especially grati- fying to see the Ann Arbor Civic Theatre's production of "Mia Mine," a play which is both com- petently written and reasonably entertaining. The Civic Theatre group is to be congratulated for giving Ann Arbor people the opportunity to see and evaluate an example of significant student writing. The theme of "Mia Mine" is not a new or original one. The author attempts to show in three acts the effects of high-pressure liv- ing upon the men and women at the top of an extensive corpora- tion hierarchy. * * * HER EMPHASIS, however, dif- fers slightly from the usual, since it concerns frustration of "organi- zation wives," rather than the de- terioration of their equally frus- trated husbands. , The heroine of the play, Mia Kertman, becomes increasingly aware of the destruction of her husband Kip's will and integrity as he is forced to jump at the slightest crack of the presiden- tial whip. Receiving little security from her hurried, harried husband, she turns in desperation to an artist who has the time to love her, and attempts' to carry on a half- hearted illicit affair. Mia cannot flee the Company. Her attempt is no more success- ful than are the attempts of her female friends to drown similar frustrations in assininity or drink. A reconciliation with her husband is attempted. For a moment, social pressures are ignored. But Kip cannot fight his job. In the end, the Company wins, and Mia is promised, for the future, only more loneliness and exasperation. Mrs. Hamme seems at ease in dramatic writing, and although the play is more exuberant than powerful, more interesting than craftsmanlike, she nevertheless handles her medium far better than' have many past Hopwood winners. * * * THERE is unfortunately, a cer- tain lack of care in building up motivation for the over-violent explosions of temper that seem to come from every character upon the slightest provocation. The suddenness of these outbursts seems to indicate intensity, but it makes for a rather jerky play. The women are characterized in tie play more skillfully than the men. Mia, especially, seems to be the only really three dimensional character; the others appear to have been observed by the author rather than understood. Kip, for instance, is a stereo- typed picture of the young, am- bitious executive rather than a Adlai .Leads IFTErEN months after his sec- ond defeat for the presidency, Democratic Adlai Stevenson still runs slightly ahead of the strong- est Republican possibility for 1960, Vice-President Richard Nixon, the Gallup poll has reported. Prefer- ences among the voters of both parties: Stevenson ............. 46% Nixon ................. 42% Undecided............12% -Time real person, while Lui, the artist, is hardly more than a paper doll. Mia becomes a more sympathe- tic character in proportion to the shallowness of the people sur- rounding her, but the contrast is at the expense of the play's final effectiveness. The author made several changes in the award-winning manuscript, most of them for the better. A contrived ending was fortunately removed, and much was made implicit that had been awkwardly explicit before. As is usual in Civic Theater pro- ductions, the writing in the play was far better than the acting. The only real star was Mary Lee Merriman, who brought to the role of Mia a vitality which made the character warmly living and en- tirely believable. Robert Eshelman and Peggy Hayward, in minor parts, did the only other really commendable jobs. DAVE PRINGLE, as Kip Kert- man, controlled his voice level too spasmodically and seemed to self- conscious to make his rather hol- low part very convincing. Tom Edwards in the role of Lui almost destroyed his part by com- plete lack of modulation in tone and color. The character was not too real to begin with, and an apathetic interpretation by the actor was hardly the way to in- crease credulity. The most serious casting error, however, was made when the po- tentially powerful role of Dr. Hel- wig, the corporation psychiatrist, was entrusted to Gary Johnson. His misdirected energies succeed- ed in making the doctor only amusing where he should have been sinister. -Jean Willoughby of bills he tells her to get on the stick and stop spending money on clothes and sodas. Mother sits tearfully by. Father's advice is not entirely ignored, for daughter promptly has a baby, courtesy of a recently- killed hot rod man. No one will believe that the couple were secretly married. Abandoned by family and friends, the girl decides that she's got to "be somebody." She hangs around an Elvis Presley type musician who is strictly no good. But what a lip. AFTER still more orgies, jam sessions, all-night binges, and crack-ups, she is rescued from this life by a kindly disc jockey who takes her home. Meanwhile, the missing mar- riage licenseturns up, so the wo- man from the Dean's Office who has been waiting up in the pro- jection booth with a blackjack can relax. It's all strictly legal, and they live happily ever after. "Girl in the Woods" sticks a cinematographic probe into this strange teen-age world from yet another direction. In the little lumbering village of See Saw there lived a beauti- ful young girl who was really sad. Her father, "Big Jim," kept her away from the coarse lumberjacks and she never got, late per. She tries her best; gets 'some- one killed, provokes a couple of men into an axe fight, spreads ugly rumors, but finishes up worse off than she started. IT IS HOPED that no one gets lured into this theatre under the illusion that this film, is filled with "Giant Men," "Reckless Love," "Primitive Conflict," "Vir- gin Forests," or anything of the kind. This is merely another of the long procession of films which promise much but deliver little. The female lead offers nothing but an ample bosom, and you can find better in the League base- ment any afternoon. Only comic relief is the appear- ance of Jim Backus in "Eighteen and Anxious." He looks as well as sounds like Mr. Magoo with his heavy glasses. -David Kessel Gurgle TOASTS were drunk and con- gratulations exchanged at a launching celebration recently ... . Vice-Admiral Stig Ericsson ex- plained that the new Swedish sub- marine Bavern not only was a beauty but had "many hitherto untried-devices. But meanwhile, back at the ship- yard, strange gurgling noises were issuing unheard from the Bavern's sister sub, the Illern. When Navy men returned, they found that the Illern had sunk to the bottom of the harbor. Some- one had forgotten to' close a vul- nerable hatch. -Newsweek IDAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin Is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editori- al 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. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1958 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 93 General Notices School of Business Administration. There will be a faculty meeting on Fri., Feb. 14, at 3 p.m., in B.A. 164. Women's Hours: Women students have 1:30 a.m. permission on Sat., Feb. 15 Required seminar for Southeast Asia applicants. Sat., Feb., 15 at 2:00 pm. in the Student Activities Building. Di- cusslon will follow an introductory lec- ture by Professor Crane. Summary, action taken at Student Government Council meeting of Feb. 12, 1958. Approved: Minutes of meeting o January 15. Accepted: Resignation of Linda Rain. water. Appointed: To the committee which Is to study and compile information concerning progress made in the area of fraternity and sorority membership restrictions: Kent Van, Mal Cum- ming, Nancy O'Toole, Amy Welman, Don Young, Marg Brake, Ron Shorr, Chairman. Elections Director: Roger Mahey. To serve with the Executive Committee as an Interviewing Board to fill the Council vacancy: Marilyn Houck, Ron Gregg. Approved: Transfer of $216.50 from Central Pep Rally Fund to the Wolver- ine Club to reimburse the Wolverine Club for pep rally expenses incurred for the Michigan State and Ohio State games in the fall of 1957. On recommendation of the Course Evaluation Committee, further consid- eration of publication of a student evaluation of courses was referred to the Education and Social Welfare Com- mittee. which is to report its recom- mendations for implementation to the Council. Calendared: April 19, Israeli program; Oct. 25, Homecoming for fall, 1958, Min- nesota game. Activities approved: March.15, Michi- gan Union, Campus United Nations, Rackham, 9-6. March 25, Christian Science Organ- zation, lecture, Arch. Aud., 8 pm. Tabled to next week: Motion *o change name of Education and Social Welfare Committee to Educational Af- fairs. Petitioning open: For Council va- cancy, to close Tues., Feb. 18, 12 noon. For Student Activities Scholarship Board, 3 positions, to close Feb., 26, 6 p.m. For Student Activities Building Admin. Board, 3 positions, to close Feb. 26, 6 p*m. Administrative Wing Tryout -meeting, March 4, Union, 3:15 p.m. Reviewed: App'ts to Joint Judiciary Council: Norman Miller, Stevan 'Sim- ich, Emil E. Sattler, H. Roger Netzer, Susan Price. Lectures Psychology Colloquium: Dr. James J. Gibson, Cornell University, will speak on "The Laws of Motion: Physicl and visual Considerations." Fri., Feb. 14, 4:15 p.m., Aud. B, Angell Hall. Astronomical Colloquium. Fri., Feb. 14 415 p.m., the Observatory. Dr. W. Unno will speak on "The Convection and Pulsation in the Stellar Atmos- phere." Concerts Faculty Concert: Gustave Rosseel , Lecturer in Violin and Chamber Mu- sic, and Second violinist of the Stan- ley Quartet, and Benning Dexter, As-, soc. Prof. of Piano in the School of Music, will appear in a joint recital at 8:30 p.m. Sun., Feb. 16, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. The program will include Bach's Sonata in A major, Hindemith's Sonata in D major, Op. 11, No. 2, and Franck's Sonata in A major. Sponsored by the School of Music. Open to the general public without charge. Academic Notices Interdepartmental Sem4 on Ap- Feb. 14, 3:30 pm., Room 5500, East En- gineering Bldg. Donald C. Winner wil speak on "Relationships between Point and Areal Precipitation"-- Chairman: Prof. Ernest F. Brater. Political Science 163, MW? at 1:00, will meet in Room 229 Angell Hall In- stead of Room 209 Angell Hall. Law School Admission Test: Candi- dates taking the Law School Admission Test on Feb. 15 are requested to report to Room 130 Business Administration Bldg. at 8:45 a.m. Saturday. The National Teacher Examinations: Candidates taking the National Teach- er Examinations on Feb. 15 are request. ed to report to Room 140 Business Ad- ministration Bldg. at 8:30 a.m. Satur- day. The Logic Seminar will continue its program on the Logic of Algebra and Decision Problems during the spring semester. The meeting time will be Fri.,, at 3 p.m. in 3010 Angell Hall. (Note the change from the old meeting time ot 4 p.m.) The first meeting will be on -I t 4 (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following are selected excerpts from Prof. Philip E. Jacob's recent book, - "Changing Values in College," published by Harper / and Bros. A merican college students today tend to think alike, feel alike and believe alike. To an extraordinary degree, their values are the same wherever they may be studying and whatever the stage of the college careers. The ,great majority seem turned out of a common mold, so far as outlook on life and standards of conduct are concerned.' 'A dominant characteristic of students in the current generation is that they are glori- ously contented both in regard to their present day-to-day activity and their outlook for the future. Few of them are worried-about their health, their prospective careers, their family relations, the state of national or international society or the likelihood of their enjoying secure and happy lives. They are supremely confident that their destinies lie within their own control" rather than in the grip of external circum- stances. "Social harmony with an easy tolerance of diversity pervades the student environment. Conformists themselves, the American. students see lIte need to insist that each and every person be and behave just like themselves. They are for, the mrost part (with some allow- ance for sectional difference) ready to live in a mobile society, without racial, ethnic or in- come barriers. But they do not intend to cru- sade for non-discrimination, merely to accept it as it comes, a necessary convention in a homogenized culture. "Students normally express a need for reli- gion as a part of their lives and make time on most weekends for an hour in church. But there is a 'ghostly quality' about the beliefs and practices of many of them, to quote a sensitive observer. Their religion does not carry over to Editgrial Staff _ PETER ECKSTEIN, Editor JAMES ELSMAN, JR. VERNON NAH~RGANG Editorial Director City Editor DONNA HANSON............... Personnel Directo' CAROL PRINS ..... .........Magazine Editor EDWARD GERULDSEN .. Associate Editorial Director WILLIAM HANEY.................Features Editor o.M ~V %T. D.C - --O - --. A ,.+4.,4+4 R ifn guide and govern important decisions in the secular world. Students expect these to be socially determined. God has little to do with the behavior of men in society, if widespread student judgment be accepted. His place is in church and perhaps in the home, not in busi- ness or club or community. He is worshipped, dutifully and with propriety, but the campus is not permeated by a live sense of His presence. "A real hiatus separates religious interest and social responsibility. Few students seem to recoginize social or humanitarian implica- tions in their religious faith. Firm belief in God does not seem to diminish prejudice toward people- of other races. Indeed, strong religious belief tends to be associated with racial and ethnic prejudice. Students' religion does not usually increase their willingness to accept others if it involves some expense to themselves. Nor does it lead them to become personally active in the promotion of justice iri human relations. The devout are no more sympathetic than others toward public action to advance human welfare. Actually the less religious tend to be the more humanitarian, and the more concerned about social injustices and misery. 'As one moves away from the concept of an all-powerful and all-wise God one finds greater acceptance of the practical application of the concept of the brotherhood of man,' concludes the major study of the religious beliefs of youth. "There is more homogeneity and greater consistency of values among students at the end of their. four years than when they begin. Fewer seniors espouse beliefs which deviate from the going standards than do freshmen. The student has ironed out serious conflicts of values or at least achieved a workable compro- mise. Throughout, no sharp break seems to occur in the continuity of the main patterns of value which the students bring with them to college. Changes are rarely drastic or sudden, and they tend to emerge on the periphery of the student's character, affecting his applica- tion of. values, rather than the core of values themselves. "To call this process a liberalization of stu- dent values is a misnomer. The impact of the college experience is rather to socialize the individual, to refine, polish, or "shape up" his values so that he can fit comfortably into the ranks of American college alumni. "Some students have a set of mind so rigid, an outlook on human relations so stereotyped CONCERNING SGC: Council's Accomplishments, Plans Listed By JOHN WEICHER Paily Staff Writer STUDENT Government Council spent much of the first semes- ter charting the areas in which it will act this year; it now remains for the Council to take action, as the committees studying these areas complete their work and report back to SGC. The Council has shown a great- er concern with academic matters this year than in previous years. Motions asking that final ex- aminations be returned to stu- dents and that students be placed on educational policy committees have been approved. Letters have been sent to the deans of the colleges and schools informing them of the final ex- amination motion; at Wednes- day's meeting President Joe Col- lins read a letter from Philip N. Youtz, dean of the architecture college, saying the college would consider the possibility. - * , , * A COMMITTEE is studying the prospects for student representa- tion on department and college The matter was then turned over to the Education and Social Welfare Committee, headed by Ron Gregg. He now faces the task of working out a detailed plan for a course evaluation booklet, get- ting SGC approval, and carrying the project through to completion -all in time for the booklet to be available to incoming students next fall. If he and his committee can do this - and Gregg originally sug- gested the evaluation - SGC will have provided a tangible answer to those critics who contend that "SGC doesn't do anything." In terms of public relations value and direct benefit to the student body, the course evaluation could be SC's most worthwhile achieve- ment this year. * * * THE COUNCIL has recom- mended to the University that a more precise grading system be established. Action in such a mat- ter, of course, is solely the right of the faculty and administration, but SGC in so asking has fulfilled stein, are serving on the steering committee. Further in the academic field, but not too closely related to most of the student body, SGC is seeking a replacement for the Free University of Berlin ex- change program. The Council abolished this program in Decem- ber, and Jean Scruggs' National and International Affairs Com- mittee has been seeking substitute programs since then. Wednesday Miss Scruggs sug- gested to Council that a South American exchange might be set up. This initiated a general dis- cussion of exchange programs, which showed that the discontinu- ance of FUB remains a live issue for the Council. If the exchange program can be expanded or improved, SOC will have an accomplishment to its credit for this year. This, however, must be placed in the "doubtful" category for this semester. Time is growing short. * * * IN NON-ACADEMIC matters, the Membership Restrictions Com- mittee, after a bad start because bership restrictions. In the realm of policy, it is not likely to do much. This purpose, however, is secondary. Student Book Exchange is showing a profit this semester, for which credit goes to Manager, Phil Zook. The importance of this is the hoped-for development of SBX into a student bookstore in coming years. A profitable SBX, of course, must be the first step. The end of Campus Chest, though a positive action, cannot be counted as an SGC achieve- ment. It is merely the reversal of a previous action, signifying the admitted failure of an experiment. Of great importance to SGC, but only indirectly so to the stu- dent body, are the Evaluation Committees, set up to study areas of the Council which the Council feels could be improved. * * * i EXECUTIVE Vice - President Ron Shorr, who is responsible for these and other committees, said Wednesday they would hold their first meetings soon. What these committees accom- plish, also, will become evident to I