Thr Ifirtigan Daily 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" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1957 NIGHT EDITOR: JAMES BOW Athletic Department Should Yield to Full Semester "Button, Button, Who Gets The Button?" Y f ,. t k\! * 4, r Fus N"BUT\O .: y WEA*O BASE AT HILL AUDITORIUM: Williams Captures Spirit of Thomas A SINGLE MAN, reciting poetry and prose from a simple wooden chair in the center of the mammoth stage at Hill Auditorium com- manded the attentions of a less-than-capacity audience for almost two and a half hours last night. The man was Emlyn Williams, a Welsh actor most recently famous for his bearded readings of the works of Charles Dickens. His subject was officially titled, "A Boy Growing Up; An Enetertainmert from the Stories of Dylan Thomas." Armed with only the above-mentioned chair, a sheaf of notebooks and manuscripts which he entirely ignored, and a microphone, Mr. i THE UNIVERSITY CALENDAR seems to have come full circle. At least it will have if the Dean's conference and the President approve the University Calendar Committee's recommendation. In 1953 a Calendar Committee was set up to devise a school calendar with two fifteen- week semesters. Five years and two committees later, we will have a school year with two 14 and one-half week semesters. The first committee, the 1953 group, reported its findings to the Board of Regents in May, 1955. It had devised a calendar with fifteen- week semesters, and further, with the Tuesday- Thursday-Saturday class sequence as full as the Monday-Wednesday-Friday one. Because of some dissatisfaction with this new calendar, which went into effect in the 1956-57 school year, SGC requested Assistant to the President Erich Walter to set up a committee to evaluate this new calendar. IN JANUARY, 1957, SGC recommended crea- tion of a new committee to evaluate the present calendar and submit to the administra- tion recommendations for changes. This committee, to date, has done just that. It heard student complaints of having to return to school on a Friday after Christmas vacation, and those two days were dropped. It heard faculty complaints about starting, classes the day following registration and this schedule was altered. However, the group had also planned to try to work out a new long-term calendar, a most difficult task. It seems that the calendar has to be sand- wiched between a late starting date and an early concluding date. Add to that a great deal of time necessary between semesters to carry out administrative tasks, plus some kind of Ohrfistmas vacation and there seems to be an insoluable problem. The early concluding date appears necessary for at least two reasons. That time is needed to carry out administrative tasks before com- mencement is the first. The second is that stu- dents have to get out of school early enough to get good summer jobs. With the increased costs of education, this becomes of paramount im- portance.- Starting school earlier in September seems to be the only answer to the problem. This way there could be full length semesters and there need not be any special rush in between. The biggest objection it seems would come from the athletic department. Because of a Western Conference ruling football practice cgnnot begin until Septmeber 1. Before school starts the team is able to get in two or three practices a day and moving school up a week might be devastating to the team's showing against other Big Ten schools. BUT THE IMPORTANT thing to remember is that a University is designed to provide an education. Athletics were at one time anyway considered an educational adjunct not an edu- cation and it would seem a shame if this were the only road-block to a proposal to start school earlier. There may be some dispute on the value of a 15-week semester over a 14 and one-half week one. But it was interesting to note at the last calendar committee meeting the vehemence with which Profs. Dwyer and Steinhoff backed the full semester. If one believes in the necessity of a full semester then it seems the athletic department would have to take a back seat. For, there is little place else the extra week could be added, and there can be no calendar produced which will please everybody. --RICHARD TAUB WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Satellite Lag Traced to 1948 By DREW PEARSON Cotton on the Golf Courses AMIDALL THE RUCKUS about economy and at the same time more defense spending, everyone in Washington has overlooked one of the most likely places to effect substantial sav- ings-the, Department of Agriculture's subsidy programs. Savings could be made here on a large scale without impairing any vital government func- tion, while at the same time restoring a measure of sanity to our agricultural programs. Recently the Department announced that it could not go through with an agreement to pay the Casa Grande Valley Country Club in Arizona $4,000 not to grow cotton on its golf course. Four thousand dollars will not build any rockets, but multiplied by the number of golf courses which do not grow cotton on the fair- ways, it mounts up. The incident suggests the basic absurdity of paying people either to grow cotton or not to grow cotton (or any of a half dozen other commodities), at their pleas- ure. It is to be hoped that the Department re- $rains from agreeing to any similar lunacies in the future, but this is not the heart of the "farm problem." Basically, the trouble is that there are just too many farmers and too much land being used for farm production. Agricultural tech- nology has so far outstripped population growth that each new advance in production which increases supply, lowers price. Nor can the surplus farm workers be absorbed in industry. So fast have come the improvements in farming methods, that manpower is becoming available from farms at a greater rate than it can be absorbed by industrial expansion at present. It is this problem that three administrations have set themselves to solve through price sup- ports and similar devices. The farmer finds him- self living off the government to a large de- gree; naturally, he is willing to continue doing so, rather than start all over in a new job. He stays on, producing or not producing, as the case may be, building up more surpluses or taking more money not to build them up, as the stockpiles pyramid and the Department of Agricultural chases itself in circles. CURRENTLY, farm group leaders are talking "learning to live with surpluses"- using them for the general good. However, the only way in which this might be accomplished with- out reducing prices at home (and thus creating further problems) would be to sell the crops Editorial Staff PETER ECKSTEIN. Editor JAMES ELSMAN, JR. VERNON NAHRGANG Editorial Director City Editor DONNA HANSON ............ Personnel Director TAM4MY MORRISON .. Magazine Editor EDWARD GERULDSEN .. Associate Editorial Director WILLIAM HANEY ......Features Editor ROSE PERIBERG ..................Activities Editor CAROL PRINS ...... Associate Personnel Director JAMES BAAD ..... «............... .. Sports Editor BRUCE BENNETT............ Associate Sports Editor JOHN HILLYER.............Associate Sports Editor CHARLES CURTISS.............Chief Photographer Business Staff abroad at the going price in foreign markets. This might eliminate the problem at home, but only at the cost of creating additional ones abroad; foreign markets would then be sub- jected to periodic disruption, making neither for stability or goodwill in the zest of the world. The farmer is caught in the same web of progress that snared the knight and the black- smith. To be sure, farmers will always exist, but only in decreasing numbers, barring a catastro- phe. One of two things must happen eventually; either more people must "leave the land," or farmers must accept lower prices for the crops they do produce. Neither of these alternatives is particularly pleasant, but unless farmers are willing to return to the longer-hours, lower- yields days, these alternatives are the only ones which offer any permanent solution. And until some solution is reached, the coun- try can do very well without payments to non- cotton-growing golf courses. -JOHN WEICHER A Mature Approach To An Ugly Film THE SHOWING of "The Birth of a Nation" Thursday and Friday represented an im- portant landmark in attitudes on the campus. Previous showings of the film had been marked by rather vigorous 'demonstrations against its even appearing, and there is serious question. as to whether the groups involved helped or hurt the cause of human equality by 'such actions. This year the local NAACP and the Culture Club both discussed at some length the impli- cations of the appearance of the film. Some members favored a strong protest against its presentation. But they decided that rather than align themselves with the forces of censorship they would attempt to indicate that they con- sidered the film a not-too-subtle piece of anti- Negro propaganda and leave the matter at that. One can understand why there should be strong feelings against the film. It describes and perhaps exaggerates all the excesses of the Reconstruction period, ignoring completely the degradation inherent in slavery and the blood- chilling aspects of its practice before the war. It depicts every post-war advocate of human equality as either lecherous, slovenly hypocriti- cal or completely depraved. The-only favorable characterizations of Negroes are those of the "mammy" stereotype who "know their place" and love and respect their masters. The Klan is described as the noble savior of the South and of white supremacy, and its lynching are described as efforts at a "fair trial." But the film's propaganda is much too heavy- footed to be effective. Cinema Guild was very careful-perhaps overly so-to disavow any sympathy with the sentiments of the producers of the film, presenting it merely as an artistic milestone, however dubious its claim to that distinction may seem 40 years later. And the maturity displayed by the campus' strong pro- ponents of racial equality in their approach to this distasteful film is to their credit. It will serve them well as they attempt to remove ORIGINAL fault for our lag be- hind Russia on satellites goes back to the Pentagon regime of big, balding, sometimes bumbling Louey Johnson, whom Truman fired as secretary of defense. Under his predecessor, the late James Forrestal, the Defense De- partment had begun working on satellites, and, by pure accident, let this highly secret fact slip into his annual report for 1948. Forrestal was claiming that he had brought the armed forces un- der unified command in 1947, and as an ilustration told of earth sat- ellite development. "THE EARTH satellite pro- gram," he wrote, "which was be- ing carried out independently by each military service, was assigned to the Committee on Guided Mis- siles for coordination. To provide an integrated program with re- sultant elimination of duplication, the committee recommended that current efforts in this field be lim- ited to studies and component de- signs; well-defined areas of such research have been allocated to each of the three military depart- ments." An alert security officer should have deleted this, but he didn't. The Pentagon still keeps secret the military records of our revo- lutionary war 181 years ago, plus our civil war, so newspapermen can't ascertain the mistakes of the past. But it let this vital para- graph slip into print in December, 1948, for all the world to read. Since the Russian military care- fully study every published -docu- ment from the Pentagon, there's some reason to believe Moscow may have got its Sputnik idea from Forrestal's report. Certainly it is a fact that Russia began its satellite program in that year - 1948, But while the Russians were going ahead, likable Louey John- son, who succeeded Forrestal a. few months later, lopped the sat- ellite program off. Like the pres- ent Eisenhower Administration, he was out to save military money. IN FAIRNESS, however, it must be pointed out that Johnson got 100 per cent support for his econo- my from none other than the then Chief of Staff, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower. Eisenhower's testi- mony before Congress that the curtailed budget was adequate made such an impression on sen- ators that they actually called it "the Eisenhower Budget." Gen. Eisenhower, recently re- turned from Europe as a conquer- ing hero, was by all odds the most commanding military personality on the American scene. His word carried great weight. The long-range Intercontinen- tal Ballistic Missile or ICBM also got lopped by the Johnson econo- my wave. It had been started in 1946 as Project MX-774, but cut in 1948. Later, in 1951, it was re- vived in the Truman Administra- tion as Project MX-1593. ^ * * * IT SHOULD also be pointed out, however, that Russia, was making few known technical ad- vances in Johnson's day, whereas its advances were well known and frequently published in techni- cal journals and in this column during the Eisenhower Adminis- tration. The Eisenhower Administration had positive proof that Russia had surpassed us in developing a trig- ger mechanism for the H-bomb. It had ample evidence that Russia had caught up with us in A-bomb and H-bomb design. It was defi- nitely known that Russia, in only a few short years, had caught up with us in design of jet planes and out-stripped us in production. Our technical intelligence made detailed examinations of Russian planes which showed that, where- as Russian technology lagged be- hind ours up until 1952, since 1952 it has equaled our best efforts and even surpassed us in some fields. * * 4' YET WHEN Trevor Gardner, the man Ike appointed assistant secretary in charge of guided mis- siles, resigned in protest over the lagging program, the President immediately reassured the nation that the United States was ahead of or keeping abreast of the world. (Copyright 1957 by Bell Syndicate Inc.) Williams faced the audience withi of the late poet, he captured it with a minimum of faltering re- treats. Opening with a slight introduc- tion, Emlyn Williams, as Thomas, recited selections from "Quite Early One Morning" and "Portrait of the Artist as a Young Dog" dealing with the poet's memories of his early childhood. After a ten minute intermission, he continued the impersonation with four stories of Thomas' adolescence; the third and last part of the program consisted of a later self-portrait, a fantasy called "Adventures in the Skin Trade," and "A Memory of Older Youth." * * * FOR THE most part,the longer pieces went over better than the short ones. Mr. Williams' inter- pretations were full of sympathy and vigor, but the size of Hill Hill Auditorium was destructive to the atmosphere of intimacy that his voice and his subject matter would naturally encourage. The listener there must be wooed for a time, before he will give his complete attention to a story, and the very short reminis- cences were, unfortunately, over before their humor o their emo- tion could find any real response. The works of Dylan Thomas are extremely well suited to this kind of presentation. Rich with adjec- tives and careful alliteration, the prose chosen was sprinkled with bits of humor and unexpected in- congruities throghout. Even the simplest essays seemed to be con- structed dramatically. * * * WILLIAMS, apparently trained by Thomas for the first produc- tion of that author's play, "Under Milk Wood," impersonated him DAILY 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 ho 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, NOVEMBER 23, 1957 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 58 General Notices Late Permission: Women students who attend Fortnite on Mon., Nov. 25, will have 45 minute permission at the end of the event, Women's Hours: women students have 11:00 p.m. permission on Tues., Nov. 26 and Wed., Nov. 27. The D e t r o i t Edison Uper-Class Scholarships. Applicants must be resi- dents of the State of Michigan and have completed at least one year of study in the Universityin a field that relates to the electric utility industry such as mechanical or electrical engi- neering, economics, accounting, busi- ness, and personnel administration. Scholastic ability, character and per- sonality, citizenship, extra-curricular activity, seriousness of purpose, and fi- nancial need will be considered by the selection committee, Applications may be obtained at 2011 Student Activities Building and should be on file by Dec. I. Concerts The Michigan Men's Glee club will present its 6th Annual Combined Con- cert tonight at 8:30 p.m. In Hill Audi- torium. The guest club this year is Ohio State. Tickets will be on sale at the Hill Auditorium Box Office from 9:00 a.m. until 1:00 p.m. and from 4:00 p.m. until concert time. Academic Notices Analysis Seminar, auspices of the Department of Mathematics. Prof. (Continued on Page 5) smiling bravado and, in the guise with his face, his hands, and his flexible voice. Although the more serious parts of the program, notably the be- ginning of "Just Like Little Dogs" in the second act, threatened at times to become more dull than necessary, an excellent job of spotlighting added to their ef- fectiveness and saved enough of the requisite atmosphere to make the overall impression of the evening a favorable one. -Jean Willoughby AT HILL AUD.: Symphony, Exciting H E UNIVERSITY Symphony orchestra, under the direction of Prof. Josef Blatt, presented a varied program of works by Stra- vinsky, Mozart, and Berlioz in Hill Auditorium Thursday even- ing. Each year finds this group im- proved and nearer to the goal of an excellent ensemble of pro- fessional calibre. Unfortunately, the orchestra has not reached that goal as yet, but the trend is def- initely in that direction. The program opened with Stra- vinsky's short and exciting "Feu d'artifice" ("Fireworks," not to be confused with his famous "Fire- bird Suite".) This is a colorful complicated work which demands great technical precision and im- mense tonal color. The orchestra members gave their all in a truly exciting and en- thusiastic performance. The ex- cellence of their work in this piece gave strong indications of splen- did things to come, not all of which were realized. * * * THE SPLENDOR and excite- ment of such a work as the Stra- vinsky opus calls upon the full re- sources of an orchestra, but it is a symphony of Mozart which pro- vides the real test of the quality of the string section, which is, after all, the main body of any sym- phony orchestra. Mozart's Symphony No. 34 in C major is not one of his most fa- mous works, but it is a fine work and one which deserves many more performances than it re- ceives. From the first movement of the Mozart through the third move- ment of the Berlioz, the intona- tion of the higher strings was not all it should have been. This is the major fault of most non-profes- sional orchestras. Aside from this major defect, the performance had a good deal of spirit and beauty. The develop- ment section of the first move- ment found the first violins rush- ing, which was the only important fault in their otherwise excellent, rhythm. If Mozart in general shows the strength of the strings, his slow movements are the absolute test. Again, intorn at i on problems plagued the upper strings. The whirlwind finale to this work was given an energetic read- ing. * * * AFTER THE intermission, the orchestra returned to perform the major work of the program, Ber- lioz' "Symphonie Fantastique." Berlioz was one of the greatest masters of orchestration in the history of the orchestra; this sym- phony is all the proof needed for that. The work is a real tour de force for any orchestra and de- mands nearly everything except the proverbial kitchen sink. Most school orchestras refrain from taking on this immense and challenging work. Therefore, all, the more credit should go to Mr. Blatt and his organization for their daring and initiative in un- dertaking it. All in all, it was an excellent performance. When I look back over the total work, I must give much praise for their playing. Again, poor intonation made the violins ragged and a little dull. The performance got off to a slow start, but picked up as it went along. The second movement waltz really lacked sparkle, which was unfortunate. * * * THE THIRD movement opened with a lovely dialogue between the English horn and oboe, which was beautifully performed. From there on, the rest of the ensemble be- gan to show more and more in- 4 . 4 1 4 ; 4C i LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Soph Show Defended To the Editor: IN REPLY to Mr. Jan K. Tannen- baum, we feel that there are a few points to be stressed in Soph Show's defense. First, r eg a rd i n g production costs. A show comparable to this year's is impossible to produce on a small budget and still maintain the desired quality, costumes, scenery and script. This is evidenced by other so called (to use Mr. Tannenbaum's expression) "bush league" produc- tions which charge as much as, or more than Soph Show and are al- ways widely accepted on campus, Mr. Tannenbaum's criticism ob- viously represented a minority view. Soph Show turned away over 200 people from full houses, illustrating that there is a place for this type of show on campus and that people will pay $1.50 to see it. We feel that Mr. Tannenbaum displayed a prejudiced and unin- formed criticism of Soph Show. Still, what else could be expected from someone whom we know for a fact didn't even see the produc- tion? -Soph Show Central Committee To Block '.11' * To the Editor: WHILE OUR season has been ine Club, and the University some- thing of which we can be proud. -Block "M" Central Committee Compliments *** To the Editor: AS A devoted subscriber to The Daily, I would like to compli- ment the staff upon the recent series of articles devoted to the much maligned landlords and landladies of this city. There has been a great deal of general abuse and complaint di- rected against those who so gen- erously provide the housing which shelters our students here at Ann Arbor, cultural oasis of the mid- west. Your sensitive portrayals of these good people will certainly help to correct much of the cur- rent misunderstanding on the part of the student population here at the University. I firmly believe that in general the landlords and landladies of this city typify the "American way of life" as well as Christian toler- ance and brotherhood. --Don Shore, Grad. Sardines . . To the Editor: I'VE SEEN overflow crowds be- fore - I've never seen them Finally, somebody got up to an- nounce that the Michigan fire laws did not permit this; every- body in the aisles would have to leave. Remember the visit of e. e. cum- mings? The Rackham Hall lobby was packed, effectively blocking most exits. And then the overflow crowd was misdirected to Hill Auditorium. Must close in the traditional way, now. Something must be done . -Dainis Bisenieks, '60 _I. 'Hey, Benny!' ::....:.+ ~- ,-' - S i